Publications by authors named "Carolina G dos Santos"

The present study shows the factors that modulate the photodamage promoted by phenothiazines. Cytochrome c was irradiated with UV light for 120 min, over a pH range from 4.0 to 8.

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In this minireview, the more recent findings about the effects of peculiar reactive thiol drugs on mitochondria are presented. These include the following compounds: metallo meso-tetrakis porphyrins, palladacycles, telluranes and phenothiazines. Metallo meso-tetrakis porphyrins can exhibit both beneficial and deleterious effects on mitochodria that are modulated by the central metal, cell location, and availability of axial ligands.

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The antioxidant properties of the phenothiazine nucleus (PHT) associated with mitochondrial membranes and liposomes were investigated. PHT exhibited hydrophobic interaction with lipid bilayers, as shown by the quenching of excited states of 1-palmitoyl-2[10-pyran-1-yl)]-decanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phophocholine (PPDPC) incorporated in phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylethanolamine/cardiolipin liposomes, observed even in high ionic strength; and by the spectral changes of PHT following the addition of mitochondrial membranes. Inserted into bilayers, 5 microM PHT was able to protect lipids and cytochrome c against pro-oxidant agents and exhibited spectral changes suggestive of oxidative modifications promoted by the trapping of the reactive species.

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The wax layer covering the insect's cuticle plays an important protective role, as for example, uncontrolled water loss. In social insects, wax production is well-known in some bees that use it for nest building. Curiously, mated-fertile queens of the ant Ectatomma tuberculatum produce an uncommon extra-wax coat and, consequently queens (mated-fertile females) are matte due to such extra cuticular hydrocarbon (CHC) coat that covers the cuticle and masks the brightness of the queens' cuticle while gynes (virgin-infertile queens) are shiny.

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This work characterizes, for the first time, the photochemical behavior of the antipsychotic drugs thioridazine (TR), trifluoperazine (TFP), and fluphenazine (FP) influenced by the aggregation state of the molecules. Samples of monomeric and aggregated forms of phenothiazines were submitted to 20 min of irradiation at 254 nm for intervals of 1, 5, 10, 15, 20, or 25 days. In high phenothiazine concentrations, the irradiation led to the appearance of absorbance bands in the visible region peaking at 633 nm for TR and 509 nm for FP and TFP.

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