29 results on '"Paulo Marcos Pinto"'
Search Results
2. Are the Bacteria and Their Metabolites Contributing for Gut Inflammation on GSD-Ia Patients?
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Karina Colonetti, Evelise Leis de Carvalho, Darlene Lopes Rangel, Paulo Marcos Pinto, Luiz Fernando Wurdig Roesch, Franciele Cabral Pinheiro, and Ida Vanessa Doederlein Schwartz
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Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry - Abstract
Recently, patients with glycogen storage disease (GSD) have been described as having gut dysbiosis, lower fecal pH, and an imbalance in SCFAs due to an increase in acetate and propionate levels. Here, we report the fecal measurement of bacterial-related metabolites formic, acetic, lactic, propionic, and succinic acid, a key metabolite of both host and microbiota, on a previously described cohort of 24 patients (GSD Ia = 15, GSD Ib = 5, 1 GSD III = 1 and GSD IX = 3) and 16 healthy controls, with similar sex and age, using the high-performance liquid chromatography technique. The succinic acid levels were higher in the GSD patients than in the controls (patients = 38.02; controls = 27.53; p = 0.045), without differences between the groups for other metabolites. Fecal pH present inverse correlation with lactic acid (R = −0.54; p = 0.0085), while OTUs were inversely correlated with both lactic (R = −0.46; p = 0.026) and formic (R = −0.54; p = 0.026) acids. Using two distinct metrics of diversity, borderline significance was obtained for propionic acid, affecting the microbial structure on Euclidean basis in 8% (r2 = 0.081; p = 0.079), and for lactic acid, affecting 6% of microbial structure using Bray–Curtis distance (r2 = 0.065; p = 0.060). No correlation was found between SCFAs and total carbohydrate consumption among the participants or uncooked cornstarch consumption among the patients.
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- 2022
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3. Jaburetox, a natural insecticide derived from Jack Bean Urease, activates voltage-gated sodium channels to modulate insect behavior
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Raquel Soares Oliveira, Anne H.S. Martinelli, Maria Eduarda Rosa, Célia R. Carlini, Ian Orchard, Steve Peigneur, Jan Tytgat, Angela B. Lange, Ana Paula Zanatta, Paulo Marcos Pinto, Douglas Silva dos Santos, and Cháriston André Dal Belo
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Male ,Insecticides ,Urease ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Cockroaches ,Peptide ,Grasshoppers ,Voltage-Gated Sodium Channels ,biology.animal ,medicine ,Animals ,Plant Proteins ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Cockroach ,Behavior, Animal ,biology ,Sodium channel ,Neurotoxicity ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Electrophysiology ,Biological Control Agents ,Mechanism of action ,chemistry ,Canavalia ensiformis ,biology.protein ,Biophysics ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Locomotion - Abstract
Jaburetox (Jbtx) is an insecticidal peptide derived from Canavalia ensiformis urease, whose mechanism of action is not completely elucidated. We employed behavioral, electromyographical and electrophysiological protocols to identify the cellular and molecular targets involved in the Jbtx entomotoxicity in cockroaches and locusts. In Nauphoeta cinerea, Jbtx (32 μg/g) altered the locomotory behaviour inducing a significative decrease in the distance travelled followed by a significant increase in stopped time (52 ± 85 cm and 2573 ± 89 s, p .05, n = 40). Jbtx (8 to 32 μg/g body weight, respectively) also increased the leg and antennae grooming activities (p .05, n = 40, respectively). Jbtx (8 to 16 μg/g) induced a maximum neuromuscular blockade of 80.72% (n = 6, p .05) and was cardiotoxic, decreasing the cockroach heart rate. The electrophysiological profiles of both muscle and nerve of L. migratoria showed that Jbtx (2.5 × 10
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- 2019
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4. Antinociceptive effects of new pyrazoles compounds mediated by the ASIC-1α channel, TRPV-1 and μMOR receptors
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Paulo Marcos Pinto, Daiany P.B. Silva, Iziara Ferreira Florentino, Flávio Silva de Carvalho, Jan Tytgat, Carina Sofia Cardoso, Luciano M. Lião, Steve Peigneur, Ricardo Menegatti, and Elson Alves Costa
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0301 basic medicine ,Agonist ,Male ,Nociception ,Patch-Clamp Techniques ,medicine.drug_class ,Receptors, Opioid, mu ,Pain ,Action Potentials ,TRPV Cation Channels ,(+)-Naloxone ,RM1-950 ,Pharmacology ,TRPV ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mice ,Xenopus laevis ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Patch clamp ,Receptor ,Acid-sensing ion channel ,Pain Measurement ,Analgesics ,Molecular Structure ,Chemistry ,General Medicine ,Potassium channel ,Electrophysiology ,Acid Sensing Ion Channels ,030104 developmental biology ,Capsaicin ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Ion channels ,Pyrazole compounds ,Oocytes ,Pyrazoles ,Analgesic ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology - Abstract
Pyrazoles are potent medicinal scaffolds and exhibit a wide spectrum of biological activities, such as analgesic, anti-inflammatory and antipyretic. In this paper we report on research we have performed with the aim of continuing the biological evaluation of the regio-isomeric pyrazole compounds, LQFM-020 (fluorine, para position), LQFM-021 (fluorine, meta position), and LQFM-039 (fluorine, ortho position) in models of pain induced by acidified saline, capsaicin, and formalin. We also investigated the mechanisms of action of these compounds via electrophysiological analyses using the two-electrode voltage-clamp technique and heterologous expression in Xenopus laevis oocytes. This enabled us to study different potassium channel subtypes: the ASIC-1α channel, TRPV-1, and μMOR receptors. Our results indicate that LQFM-020, LQFM-021, and LQFM-039 (15, 30 or 60 mg.kg-1) compounds inhibited the nociceptive response induced by acidified saline in a dose-dependent manner. The dose of 30 mg.kg-1 inhibited the nociceptive response induced by capsaicin by 53.3%, 51.4%, and 52.1%, respectively. In addition, we found that naloxone reverses the antinociceptive effect produced by the compounds in both phases of the formalin test. In electrophysiological analyses, we observed that the LQFM-020, LQFM-021, and LQFM-039 compounds did not modulate voltage-gated K + channel subtypes. In contrast, all the compounds tested inhibited the ASIC-1α channel at pH 4.5, with IC50-values of 96.1, 91.6, and 235.2 μM, respectively. All compounds also inhibited the TRPV-1 channel with IC50-values of 139.1, 212.5, and 159.1 μM, respectively. In contrast to the ASIC-1α and TRPV-1 targets, all compounds showed agonist activity on the μMOR receptor with an EC50-value of 117.4, 98.9, and 86.3 μM, respectively. We thus conclude that the ASIC-1α, TRPV-1, and μMOR channels are targets that are directly involved in the antinociceptive effect of LQFM-020, LQFM-021, and LQFM-039. Furthermore, the modifications of the fluorine positions in the phenyl analogs do not change the analgesic effect. However, LQFM-039 showed lower interaction with ASIC-1α channel. ispartof: BIOMEDICINE & PHARMACOTHERAPY vol:115 ispartof: location:France status: published
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- 2018
5. HTT-DB: new features and updates
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Alexandre Freitas da Silva, Túlio de Lima Campos, Paulo Marcos Pinto, Bruno Reis Dotto, Filipe Zimmer Dezordi, Antonio Mauro Rezende, Gabriel Luz Wallau, and Evelise Leis Carvalho
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0301 basic medicine ,Transduction (machine learning) ,Web server ,Horizontal and vertical ,Gene Transfer, Horizontal ,Computer science ,computer.software_genre ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Software ,Transduction, Genetic ,Databases, Genetic ,Internet ,Information retrieval ,business.industry ,Inheritance (genetic algorithm) ,Eukaryota ,R package ,030104 developmental biology ,Database Update ,Horizontal gene transfer ,DNA Transposable Elements ,The Internet ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,business ,computer ,Information Systems - Abstract
Horizontal Transfer (HT) of genetic material between species is a common phenomenon among Bacteria and Archaea species and several databases are available for information retrieval and data mining. However, little attention has been given to this phenomenon among eukaryotic species mainly due to the lower proportion of these events. In the last years, a vertiginous amount of new HT events involving eukaryotic species was reported in the literature, highlighting the need of a common repository to keep the scientific community up to date and describe overall trends. Recently, we published the first HT database focused on HT of transposable elements among eukaryotes: the Horizontal Transposon Transfer DataBase: Database URL: (http://lpa.saogabriel.unipampa.edu.br: 8080/httdatabase/). Here, we present new features and updates of this unique database: (i) its expansion to include virus-host exchange of genetic material, which we called Horizontal Virus Transfer (HVT) and (ii) the availability of a web server for HT detection, where we implemented the online version of vertical and horizontal inheritance consistence analysis (VHICA), an R package developed for HT detection. These improvements will help researchers to navigate through known HVT cases, take data-informed decision and export figures based on keywords searches. Moreover, the availability of the VHICA as an online tool will make this software easily reachable even for researchers with no or little computation knowledge as well as foster our capability to detect new HT events in a wide variety of taxa. Database URL: http://lpa.saogabriel.unipampa.edu.br:8080/httdatabase/
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- 2017
6. Enhanced Synthesis of Antioxidant Enzymes, Defense Proteins and Leghemoglobin in Rhizobium-Free Cowpea Roots after Challenging with Meloydogine incognita
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Thalles B. Grangeiro, Fredy D.A. Silva, Darcy M. F. Gondim, Jose T.A. Oliveira, Marina Duarte Pinto Lobo, Célia R. Carlini, José Hélio Costa, José H. Araújo-Filho, Ilka M. Vasconcelos, Paulo Marcos Pinto, and Jéferson Segalin
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biology ,Clinical Biochemistry ,plant proteomics ,lcsh:QR1-502 ,food and beverages ,defense proteins ,APX ,biology.organism_classification ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Meloidogyne incognita ,lcsh:Microbiology ,cowpea ,Structural Biology ,Botany ,Proteome ,Rhizobium ,Leghemoglobin ,Secondary metabolism ,Molecular Biology ,Terra incognita ,Meloidogyne javanica - Abstract
The root knot nematodes (RKN), Meloydogine spp., particularly Meloidogyne incognita and Meloidogyne javanica species, parasitize several plant species and are responsible for large annual yield losses all over the world. Only a few available chemical nematicides are still authorized for RKN control owing to environmental and health reasons. Thus, plant resistance is currently considered the method of choice for controlling RKN, and research performed on the molecular interactions between plants and nematodes to identify genes of interest is of paramount importance. The present work aimed to identify the differential accumulation of root proteins of a resistant cowpea genotype (CE-31) inoculated with M. incognita (Race 3) in comparison with mock-inoculated control, using 2D electrophoresis assay, mass spectrometry identification and gene expression analyses by RT-PCR. The results showed that at least 22 proteins were differentially represented in response to RKN challenge of cowpea roots mainly within 4–6 days after inoculation. Amongst the up-represented proteins were SOD, APX, PR-1, β-1,3-glucanase, chitinases, cysteine protease, secondary metabolism enzymes, key enzymes involved in ethylene biosynthesis, proteins involved in MAPK pathway signaling and, surprisingly, leghemoglobin in non-rhizobium-bacterized cowpea. These findings show that an important rearrangement in the resistant cowpea root proteome occurred following challenge with M. incognita.
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- 2014
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7. HTT-DB: Horizontally transferred transposable elements database
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Gabriel Luz Wallau, Mauro Freitas Ortiz, Paulo Marcos Pinto, Luiz Fernando Duarte da Silva, Evelise Leis Carvalho, Bruno Reis Dotto, and Alexandre Freitas da Silva
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Statistics and Probability ,Transposable element ,Databases, Factual ,Gene Transfer, Horizontal ,Java ,Computer science ,Gene transfer ,computer.software_genre ,Biochemistry ,Genome ,Evolution, Molecular ,Software ,Species Specificity ,Animals ,Humans ,Molecular Biology ,computer.programming_language ,Database ,business.industry ,Eukaryota ,Computer Science Applications ,Computational Mathematics ,Computational Theory and Mathematics ,Horizontal gene transfer ,DNA Transposable Elements ,business ,Host (network) ,computer - Abstract
Motivation: Horizontal transfer of transposable (HTT) elements among eukaryotes was discovered in the mid-1980s. As then, >300 new cases have been described. New findings about HTT are revealing the evolutionary impact of this phenomenon on host genomes. In order to provide an up to date, interactive and expandable database for such events, we developed the HTT-DB database. Results: HTT-DB allows easy access to most of HTT cases reported along with rich information about each case. Moreover, it allows the user to generate tables and graphs based on searches using Transposable elements and/or host species classification and export them in several formats. Availability and implementation: This database is freely available on the web at http://lpa.saogabriel.unipampa.edu.br:8080/httdatabase. HTT-DB was developed based on Java and MySQL with all major browsers supported. Tools and software packages used are free for personal or non-profit projects. Contact: bdotto82@gmail.com or gabriel.wallau@gmail.com
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- 2015
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8. A CMOS power line communication for EEG
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Paulo Marcos Pinto, Robson L. Moreno, and Tales Cleber Pimenta
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Engineering ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,020208 electrical & electronic engineering ,Transmitter ,Electrical engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,Electroencephalography ,020202 computer hardware & architecture ,Power (physics) ,Power-line communication ,CMOS ,Hardware_GENERAL ,Hardware_INTEGRATEDCIRCUITS ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Electronic engineering ,medicine ,Transceiver ,business ,Cadence - Abstract
New Electroencephalogram — EEG systems demand larger number electrodes, such as ultra-dense EEG network. They are constituted of 256 or 512 electrodes that require a pair of wires for power supply and additional wiring for data communication (active electrodes). In order to reduce the number of wiring to a minimum, we proposed the use of Power Line Communication, over a transceiver (transmitter and receiver). The proposed transceiver was implemented in 0.18 μm CMOS technology using CADENCE tools. The circuit can operate on 1.8 DC power supply and operates at 10 M Hz.
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- 2016
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9. An interchip Power Line Communication
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Tales Cleber Pimenta, Rodrigo da Silva Braga, Odilon O. Dutra, Robson L. Moreno, and Paulo Marcos Pinto
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Engineering ,business.industry ,Transmitter ,Electrical engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,Integrated circuit ,Line (electrical engineering) ,020202 computer hardware & architecture ,law.invention ,Power (physics) ,03 medical and health sciences ,Power-line communication ,0302 clinical medicine ,CMOS ,law ,Hardware_INTEGRATEDCIRCUITS ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Electronic engineering ,Transceiver ,business ,Cadence ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Dense wired networks, such as ultra-dense EEG network, comprised of 256 or 512 electrodes for temporal and spatial analysis of the brain, demand a large amount of wiring. Instead of using a pair of wires for power supply and additional wiring for communication, the use of Power Line Communications (PLC) allows power and communication in a single pair of wires. In this project, we propose a transceiver (transmitter and receiver) 0.18µm CMOS technology, for a 1.8V power supply operating at 10 MHz. Simulations conducted on CADENCE (Virtuoso Analog Design Environment L Editing) demonstrate the circuit is capable of transmitting and receiving data properly.
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- 2016
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10. Phylogenetic positioning of the Antarctic alga Prasiola crispa (Trebouxiophyceae) using organellar genomes and their structural analysis
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Evelise Leis Carvalho, Gabriel Luz Wallau, Juliano Tomazzoni Boldo, Darlene Lopes Rangel, Paulo Marcos Pinto, Laís Ceschini Machado, Filipe de Carvalho Victoria, and Antonio Batista Pereira
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Mitochondrial DNA ,Prasiolopsis ,Genome, Plastid ,Antarctic Regions ,Plant Science ,Aquatic Science ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Genome ,03 medical and health sciences ,Chlorophyta ,Botany ,Plastid ,Phylogeny ,Synteny ,biology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Trebouxiophyceae ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,biology.organism_classification ,Biological Evolution ,030104 developmental biology ,Evolutionary biology ,Genome, Mitochondrial ,Prasiola ,Genome, Plant - Abstract
Antarctica is one of the most difficult habitats for sustaining life on earth; organisms that live there have developed different strategies for survival. Among these organisms is the green alga Prasiola crispa, belonging to the class Trebouxiophyceae. The literature on P. crispa taxonomy is scarce, and many gaps in the evolutionary relationship with its closest relatives remain. The goal of this study was to analyze the evolutionary relationships between P. crispa and other green algae using plastid and mitochondrial genomes. In addition, we analyzed the synteny conservation of these genomes of P. crispa with those of closely related species. Based on the plastid genome, P. crispa grouped with Prasiolopsis sp. SAG 84.81, another Trebouxiophyceaen species from the Prasiola clade. Based on the mitochondrial genome analysis, P. crispa grouped with other Trebouxiophyceaen species but had a basal position. The structure of the P. crispa chloroplast genome had low synteny with Prasiolopsis sp. SAG 84.81, despite some conserved gene blocks. The same was observed in the mitochondrial genome compared with Coccomyxa subellipsoidea C-169. We were able to establish the phylogenetic position of P. crispa with other species of Trebouxiophyceae using its genomes. In addition, we described the plasticity of these genomes using a structural analysis. The plastid and mitochondrial genomes of P. crispa will be useful for further genetic studies, phylogenetic analysis and resource protection of P. crispa as well as for further phylogenetic analysis of Trebouxiophyceaen green algae.
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- 2016
11. Bothriurus bonariensis scorpion venom activates voltage-dependent sodium channels in insect and mammalian nervous systems
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Denis Reis de Assis, Simone Denise Salamoni, Michelle Flores Domingues, Jaderson Costa da Costa, Ricardo Vaz Breda, Angela Regina Piovesan, Paulo Marcos Pinto, Raquel Soares Oliveira, Jeferson Camargo de Lima, Cháriston André Dal Belo, Douglas Silva dos Santos, Thiago Carrazoni de Freitas, Evelise Leis Carvalho, and Juliano Tomazzoni Boldo
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0301 basic medicine ,Nervous system ,Male ,Cell Survival ,Neuromuscular Junction ,Scorpion Venoms ,Action Potentials ,Venom ,Cockroaches ,Tetrodotoxin ,Biology ,Pharmacology ,Toxicology ,Hippocampus ,Nervous System ,Neuromuscular junction ,Sodium Channels ,Scorpions ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Sodium channel blocker ,medicine ,Animals ,Rats, Wistar ,Cells, Cultured ,Mammals ,Sodium channel ,Neurotoxicity ,Extremities ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,medicine.disease ,Kinetics ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Calcium ,Female ,Ion Channel Gating - Abstract
Animal venoms have been widely recognized as a major source of biologically active molecules. Bothriurus bonariensis, popularly known as black scorpion, is the arthropod responsible for the highest number of accidents involving scorpion sting in Southern Brazil. Here we reported the first attempt to investigate the neurobiology of B. bonariensis venom (BBV) in the insect and mammalian nervous system. BBV (32 μg/g) induced a slow neuromuscular blockade in the in vivo cockroach nerve-muscle preparations (70 ± 4%, n = 6, p
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- 2016
12. A scientific note on genetic profile of the mite Varroa destructor infesting apiaries in Rio Grande do Sul state, Brazil
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Juliano Tomazzoni Boldo, Carla Elizabete Octaviano-Salvadé, Paulo Marcos Pinto, Andrés Delgado-Cañedo, Carlos Eduardo Pinheiro Leher, and David De Jong
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0301 basic medicine ,haplotype ,Entomology ,genetic characterization ,biology ,Apiary ,Ecology ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,biology.organism_classification ,Genetic profile ,03 medical and health sciences ,CO-I gene ,030104 developmental biology ,mite ,CONTROLE DE PRAGAS ,Africanized bees ,Insect Science ,Varroa destructor ,Mite ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS - Abstract
International audience; No abstract available
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- 2017
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13. Insecticidal effect of Canavalia ensiformis major urease on nymphs of the milkweed bug Oncopeltus fasciatus and characterization of digestive peptidases
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Célia R. Carlini, Marina S. Defferrari, Paulo Marcos Pinto, Diogo Ribeiro Demartini, and Thiago Beltram Marcelino
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Nymph ,Insecticides ,Cathepsin L ,Proteolysis ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors ,Biochemistry ,Heteroptera ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Coumarins ,Leucine ,medicine ,Animals ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Protein Precursors ,Molecular Biology ,Peptide sequence ,Plant Proteins ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Base Sequence ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,biology ,Hydrolysis ,Dipeptides ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Chromatography, Ion Exchange ,biology.organism_classification ,Trypsin ,Canavalia ,Urease ,Molecular biology ,Peptide Fragments ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Insect Science ,Canavalia ensiformis ,biology.protein ,Digestion ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel ,Pepstatin ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Jackbean (Canavalia ensiformis) ureases are entomotoxic upon the release of internal peptides by insect's digestive enzymes. Here we studied the digestive peptidases of Oncopeltus fasciatus (milkweed bug) and its susceptibility to jackbean urease (JBU). O. fasciatus nymphs fed urease showed a mortality rate higher than 80% after two weeks. Homogenates of midguts dissected from fourth instars were used to perform proteolytic activity assays. The homogenates hydrolyzed JBU in vitro, yielding a fragment similar in size to known entomotoxic peptides. The major proteolytic activity at pH 4.0 upon protein substrates was blocked by specific inhibitors of aspartic and cysteine peptidases, but not significantly affected by inhibitors of metallopeptidases or serine peptidases. The optimal activity upon N-Cbz-Phe-Arg-MCA was at pH 5.0, with complete blockage by E-64 in all pH tested. Optimal activity upon Abz-AIAFFSRQ-EDDnp (a substrate for aspartic peptidases) was detected at pH 5.0, with partial inhibition by Pepstatin A in the pH range 2-8. Fluorogenic substrates corresponding to the N- and C-terminal regions flanking a known entomotoxic peptide within urease sequence were also tested. While the midgut homogenate did not hydrolyze the N-terminal peptide, it cleaved the C-terminal peptide maximally at pH 4.0-5.0, and this activity was inhibited by E-64 (10 μM). The midgut homogenate was submitted to ion-exchange chromatography followed by gel filtration. A 22 kDa active fraction was obtained, resolved in SDS-PAGE (12%), the corresponding band was in-gel digested by trypsin, the peptides were analyzed by mass spectrometry, retrieving a cathepsin L protein. The purified cathepsin L was shown to have at least two possible cleavage sites within the urease sequence, and might be able to release a known insecticidal peptide in a single or cascade event. The results suggest that susceptibility of O. fasciatus nymphs to jackbean urease is, like in other insect models, due mostly to limited proteolysis of ingested protein and subsequent release of entomotoxic peptide(s) by cathepsin-like digestive enzymes.
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- 2011
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14. Distribution and characterization of Corazonin in the central nervous system of Triatoma infestans (Insecta: Heteroptera)
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Marcelo J. Villar, Beatriz P. Settembrini, Melissa Postal, Célia R. Carlini, Daniela De Pasquale, and Paulo Marcos Pinto
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MASS SPECTROMETRY ,Central Nervous System ,CIENCIAS MÉDICAS Y DE LA SALUD ,Physiology ,Central nervous system ,Ciencias de la Salud ,Neuropeptide ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Mass Spectrometry ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Endocrinology ,Cortex (anatomy) ,medicine ,Animals ,IMMUNOHISTOCHEMISTRY ,Triatoma ,Thoracic ganglia ,INSECT CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM ,CHAGAS DISEASE ,CORAZONIN ,Neuropeptides ,Anatomy ,Neuromere ,Immunohistochemistry ,Ganglion ,Otras Ciencias de la Salud ,Corazonin ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization ,Optic chiasma ,Insect Proteins ,sense organs - Abstract
The distribution of corazonin in the central nervous system of the heteropteran insect Triatoma infestans was studied by immunohistochemistry. The presence of corazonin isoforms was investigated using MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry in samples containing the brain, the subesophageal ganglion, the corpora cardiaca-corpus allatum complex and the anterior part of the aorta. Several groups of immunopositive perikarya were detected in the brain, the subesophageal ganglion and the thoracic ganglia. Regarding the brain, three clusters were observed in the protocerebrum. One of these clusters was formed by somata located near the entrance of the ocellar nerves whose fibers supplied the aorta and the corpora cardiaca. The remaining groups of the protocerebrum were located in the lateral soma cortex and at the boundary of the protocerebrum with the optic lobe. The optic lobe housed immunoreactive somata in the medial soma layer of the lobula and at the level of the first optic chiasma. The neuropils of the deutocerebrum and the tritocerebrum were immunostained, but no immunoreactive perikarya were detected. In the subesophageal ganglion, immunostained somata were found in the soma layers of the mandibular and labial neuromeres, whereas in the mesothoracic ganglionic mass, they were observed in the mesothoracic, metathoracic and abdominal neuromeres. Immunostained neurites were also found in the esophageal wall. The distribution pattern of corazonin like immunoreactivity in the central nervous system of this species suggests that corazonin may act as a neurohormone. Mass spectrometric analysis revealed that [Arg 7]-corazonin was the only isoform of the neuropeptide present in T. infestans tissue samples. Fil: Settembrini, Beatriz Patricia. Universidad Austral; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Parque Centenario. Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales “Bernardino Rivadavia”; Argentina Fil: De Pasquale, Daniela. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Parque Centenario. Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales “Bernardino Rivadavia”; Argentina Fil: Postal, Melissa. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul; Brasil Fil: Pinto, Paulo M.. Universidade de Caxias do Sul; Brasil Fil: Carlini, Célia Regina R S. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul; Brasil Fil: Villar, Marcelo Jose. Universidad Austral; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; Argentina
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- 2011
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15. Detection of anti-oxidant enzymatic activities and purification of glutathione transferases from Angiostrongylus cantonensis
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Guendalina Turcato Oliveira, Bibiana Kaiser Dutra, Paulo Marcos Pinto, Carlos Graeff-Teixeira, Alessandra Loureiro Morassutti, and Henrique Bunselmeyer Ferreira
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Immunology ,Superoxide dismutase ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animals ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Glutathione Transferase ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Glutathione Peroxidase ,Reactive oxygen species ,biology ,Superoxide Dismutase ,Glutathione peroxidase ,Angiostrongylus cantonensis ,General Medicine ,Glutathione ,Catalase ,biology.organism_classification ,Rats ,Infectious Diseases ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization ,biology.protein ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel ,Parasitology ,Sequence Alignment ,Algorithms ,Angiostrongylus costaricensis ,Angiostrongylus - Abstract
There are several anti-oxidant enzyme families that play pivotal roles in facilitating the survival of parasites. Glutathione transferases (GSTs) are members of the anti-oxidant family that can detoxify a broad range of exogenous or endogenous compounds including reactive oxidative species. GSTs have been studied as vaccine candidates, immunodiagnostic markers and as treatment targets. Helminths of the genus Angiostrongylus live inside arteries of vertebrates and two main species are associated with accidental human infections: Angiostrongylus costaricensis adult worms live inside the mesenteric arteries and larvae of Angiostrongylus cantonensis become trapped in the central nervous system vasculature. Since the interactions between angiostrongylid nematodes and their vertebrate hosts are poorly understood, this study characterized the anti-oxidant enzymatic activities of A. cantonensis from female worms by collecting excreted and secreted (ES) and total extract (TE) molecules. Catalase (CAT) and superoxide dismutase (SOD) activities were found both in the ES and TE while glutathione peroxidase (GPX) and GST were found only in the TE. GSTs were purified by glutathione agarose affinity column (AcGST) and the pool of eluted GSTs was analyzed by mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) and de novo sequencing (Masslynx software). Sequences from two peptides (AcGSTpep1 and AcGSTpep2) present high identity to the N-terminal and C-terminal from sigma class GSTs of nematodes. It is known that these GST enzymes are associated with host immune regulation. Furthermore, understanding the role of parasite-derived anti-oxidant molecules is important in understanding host-parasite interactions.
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- 2011
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16. Proteomic survey of the cestode Mesocestoides corti during the first 24 hours of strobilar development
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Paulo Marcos Pinto, Carlos Cerveñanski, Henrique Bunselmeyer Ferreira, Arnaldo Zaha, Newton Medeiros Vidal, Karina Mariante Monteiro, Alice Laschuk, and Rosario Durán
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Proteomics ,Proteome ,Cestoda ,Protein Array Analysis ,Biology ,Mice ,Mesocestoides ,Protein biosynthesis ,Animals ,Parasite hosting ,Electrophoresis, Gel, Two-Dimensional ,Peptide-mass fingerprint ,Echinococcus granulosus ,Gel electrophoresis ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,General Veterinary ,Helminth Proteins ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,biology.organism_classification ,Molecular biology ,Infectious Diseases ,Larva ,Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization ,Insect Science ,Female ,Parasitology ,Strobilation ,Chromatography, Liquid - Abstract
Despite the fact that cestodes represent major etiological agents of both human and domestic animal diseases, little is known about the molecular aspects of cestode development. In this work, Mesocestoides corti, a model cestode species, was studied from the early development of its larval form (tetrathyridium) into adult worms (strobilation) using different proteomic approaches. The protein profiles of M. corti tetrathyridia induced or not induced to undergo strobilation were compared. Proteomic mapping by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis showed the resolution of 248 and 154 spots from tetrathyridia that were subjected or not subjected to strobilation induction, respectively, allowing for the detection of at least nine spots exclusive to each group. Spot analysis by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry (MS) or MALDI-TOF MS/MS identified four reference proteins (six spots). LC-MS/MS analyses of protein extracts identified 66 proteins, eight of which were found exclusively in non-induced tetrathyridia, while 13 were found exclusively in strobilation-induced tetrathyridia. Among the proteins exclusively identified in strobilation-induced worms, there was a predominance of proteins with functions relating to chaperone activity and protein synthesis and turnover. Quantitative differential expression analysis between M. corti tetrathyridia prior to and after strobilation induction revealed six proteins upregulated in strobilation-induced worms; these proteins were involved in metabolic pathways, cell proliferation, and cytoskeletal rearrangement. Overall, despite the absence of a sequenced M. corti genome, using sequences from other platyhelminthes, we were able to establish comprehensive protein profiles for tetrathyridia prior to and after strobilation induction and identify several proteins potentially involved in the early events leading to strobilation.
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- 2010
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17. Evidence of alternative splicing of the chi2 chitinase gene from Metarhizium anisopliae
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Angela Junges, Charley Christian Staats, Marilene Henning Vainstein, Augusto Schrank, Paulo Marcos Pinto, Juliano Tomazzoni Boldo, and Karina Bohrer do Amaral
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Metarhizium ,Base Sequence ,biology ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Blotting, Western ,Chitinases ,Alternative splicing ,Intron ,Metarhizium anisopliae ,Chitin ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Molecular biology ,Microbiology ,Alternative Splicing ,Genes ,Gene expression ,Chitinase ,Genetics ,biology.protein ,Northern blot ,Gene - Abstract
Metarhizium anisopliae is a filamentous fungus used in the biological control of arthropods and produces several chitinases in order to break the host cuticle chitin fibers. Chitinase function during fungal cell development and/or infection processes is also an important aspect when analyzing the life cycle of entomopathogens. The expression profile analysis of the endochitinase chi2 gene acquired by RT-PCR experiments indicated the presence of two different transcripts, suggesting the occurrence of alternative splicing in the chi2 gene. The presence of two transcripts, characterized by the removal or retention of the second 72 bp intron, was further confirmed by DNA sequencing, Northern blot and qRT-PCR. Furthermore, we detected the synthesis of two different proteins from the transcripts by two-dimensional Western blot and mass spectrometry analyses. This is the first reported occurrence of alternative splicing in M. anisopliae.
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- 2010
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18. Molecular analysis of an integrative conjugative element, ICEH, present in the chromosome of different strains of Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae
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Leonardo Alves-Junior, Marcos Oliveira de Carvalho, Paulo Marcos Pinto, Irene Silveira Schrank, and Marcelo Brocchi
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Transposable element ,Genetics ,lcsh:QH426-470 ,Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae ,Locus (genetics) ,Mycoplasma ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease_cause ,Genética ,constins ,lcsh:Genetics ,Plasmid ,LGT ,Extrachromosomal DNA ,Horizontal gene transfer ,medicine ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,Genoma - Abstract
Diversification of bacterial species and pathotypes is largely caused by lateral gene transfer (LGT) of diverse mobile DNA elements such as plasmids, phages, transposons and genomic islands. Thus, acquisition of new phenotypes by LGT is very important for bacterial evolution and relationship with hosts. This paper reports a 23 kb region containing fourteen CDSs with similarity to the previous described Integrative Conjugal Element of Mycoplasma fermentans (ICEF). This element, named ICEH, is present as one copy at distinct integration sites in the chromosome of 7448 and 232 pathogenic strains and is absent in the type strain J (non-pathogenic). Notable differences in the nucleotide composition of the insertion sites were detected, and could be correlated to a lack of specificity of the ICEH integrase. Although present in strains of the same organism, the ICEH elements are more divergent than the typical similarity between other chromosomal locus of Mycoplasma hyopneunomiae, suggesting an accelerated evolution of these constins or an ongoing process of degeneration, while maintaining conservation of the tra genes. An extrachromosomal form of this element had been detected in the 7448 strain, suggesting a possible involvement in its mobilization and transference of CDSs to new hosts.
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- 2007
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19. Draft Plastid and Mitochondrial Genome Sequences from Antarctic Alga Prasiola crispa
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Juliano Tomazzoni Boldo, Paulo Marcos Pinto, Gabriel Luz Wallau, Luiz Fernando Duarte da Silva, Pablo Echeverria Macedo, Darlene Lopes Rangel, Laís Ceschini Machado, Filipe de Carvalho Victoria, Antonio Batista Pereira, Evelise Leis Carvalho, Cháriston André Dal Belo, and Alexandre Freitas da Silva
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Genetics ,Mitochondrial DNA ,Eukaryotes ,Organelle ,Prasiola crispa ,Plastid ,Biology ,Bioinformatics ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,Genome - Abstract
The organelle genomes of the Antarctic alga Prasiola crispa (Lightfoot) Kützing have been sequenced. The plastid and mitochondrial genomes have a total length of 196,502 bp and 89,819 bp, respectively. These genomes have 19 putative photosynthesis-related genes and 17 oxidative metabolism-related genes, respectively.
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- 2015
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20. Swine and Poultry Pathogens: the Complete Genome Sequences of Two Strains of Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae and a Strain of Mycoplasma synoviae
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Roger Ferreira Cury Paixão, Anamaria A. Camargo, Sergio Ceroni da Silva, Diego Frias, Thalles B. Grangeiro, Luciana W. Zuccherato, Maristela Pereira, Maria Paula Cruz Schneider, Sandro da Silva Camargo, Odir Antônio Dellagostin, Leonardo Alves-Filho, Maryellen I. Lopes, Adriana F. Schuck, Humberto Maciel França Madeira, Célia Maria de Almeida Soares, Hélio Almeida Burity, Bruno Dallagiovanna, Fabrício R. Santos, Glória Regina Franco, Almeida Rosana De, Deise Porto Potrich, Itamar Antônio Piffer, Sergio C. Oliveira, Claudia Teixeira Guimarães, Anna Christina M. Salim, Gisele Cavalcanti, Paulo Marcos Pinto, Christyanne T. Martinkovics, Rangel C. Souza, Luciano da Silva Pinto, Cristiano Valim Bizarro, Charley Christian Staats, Nara Suzy Aguiar De Freitas, Laurimar Fiorentin, Augusto Schrank, Marcos Oliveira de Carvalho, Maurício Reis Bogo, Marilene Henning Vainstein, Élgion Lúcio da Silva Loreto, Marcelo M. Brigido, Lucymara Fassarella Agnez Lima, Silvia Neto Jardim, Cicero Eduardo Ramalho-Neto, Bibiana Paula Dambrós, Márcia Neiva, J.C.M. Cascardo, Maria Sueli Soares Felipe, Renata Schmitt, Sandro L. Bonatto, Gilson P. Manfio, Andrea Queiroz Maranhão, Clarissa Falcão, Kelly Rose Lobo de Souza, Andrew J. G. Simpson, Luiz Gonzaga Paula de Almeida, Turán P. Ürményi, Edmundo C. Grisard, Marta S. P. Carepo, Sérgio D.J. Pena, Lilian Pereira-Ferrari, Ana Tereza Ribeiro de Vasconcelos, Héctor N. Seuánez, Gustavo Chemale, Miguel Angêlo Martins Moreira, Rosane G. Collevatti, Luiza Amaral de Castro, Darcy F. de Almeida, Rosane Silva, Santuza M. R. Teixeira, Irene Silveira Schrank, Enedina Nogueira de Assunção, Marco Aurélio Krieger, Maria B. R. Steffens, Denise Wanderlei Silva, Dirce Maria Carraro, Jomar Pereira Laurino, Vasco Azevedo, Arnaldo Zaha, Cristina W. Cunha, Marcelo Brocchi, Mariangela Hungria, Fábio O. Pedrosa, Silvia Regina Batistuzzo de Medeiros, Fabiana Fantinatti-Garboggini, Henrique Bunselmeyer Ferreira, and Marisa Fabiana Nicolás
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Mycoplasma gallisepticum ,Genomics and Proteomics ,Swine ,Strain Difference ,Pathogenesis ,medicine.disease_cause ,Genome ,Poultry ,Mycoplasma ,Genome Size ,Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae ,Phylogeny ,Gene Rearrangement ,biology ,Mycoplasma Hyopneumoniae ,Genomics ,Pneumonia of Swine, Mycoplasmal ,Priority Journal ,Adhesin ,Aves ,Dna Sequence ,Gene Sequence ,Gene Transfer, Horizontal ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Mycoplasma synoviae ,Mycoplasma Gallisepticum ,Sus Scrofa ,Microbiology ,Evolution, Molecular ,Porcine enzootic pneumonia ,medicine ,Pathogenicity ,Animals ,Mycoplasma Infections ,Molecular Biology ,Genome size ,Poultry Diseases ,Animal ,Nucleotide Sequence ,Gene rearrangement ,Nonhuman ,biology.organism_classification ,Pneumonia Of Swine, Mycoplasmal ,Metabolism ,Mycoplasma Synoviae ,Genome, Bacterial - Abstract
This work reports the results of analyses of three complete mycoplasma genomes, a pathogenic (7448) and a nonpathogenic (J) strain of the swine pathogen Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae and a strain of the avian pathogen Mycoplasma synoviae ; the genome sizes of the three strains were 920,079 bp, 897,405 bp, and 799,476 bp, respectively. These genomes were compared with other sequenced mycoplasma genomes reported in the literature to examine several aspects of mycoplasma evolution. Strain-specific regions, including integrative and conjugal elements, and genome rearrangements and alterations in adhesin sequences were observed in the M. hyopneumoniae strains, and all of these were potentially related to pathogenicity. Genomic comparisons revealed that reduction in genome size implied loss of redundant metabolic pathways, with maintenance of alternative routes in different species. Horizontal gene transfer was consistently observed between M. synoviae and Mycoplasma gallisepticum . Our analyses indicated a likely transfer event of hemagglutinin-coding DNA sequences from M. gallisepticum to M. synoviae .
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- 2005
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21. 2D-PAGE of Cashew Stem Coupled to LC ESI Q-TOF MS/MS Reveals Abundance of Antioxidant Enzymes and Heat Shock Proteins, Compatible with the Crop Adaptation to the Semi-Arid Conditions of Tropical Countries
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Darcy M.F. Gondim, Jose Ta Oliveira, Frederico Bmb Moreno, Ana Co Monteiro-Moreira, José H. Araújo-Filho, Jéferson Segalin, Paulo Marcos Pinto, José Emilson Cardoso, Ilka M. Vasconcelos, and Célia Rrs Carlini
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Crop ,Salinity ,Abiotic component ,Spots ,Gummosis ,Botany ,Phenol extraction ,Fungus ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Plant disease - Abstract
Cashew crop grown in the semi-arid conditions of tropical countries produces cashew nut, an important commodity both for internal consumption and exportation. Cashew is very well adapted to abiotic stresses such as drought, high temperature, high salinity, and solar radiation predominant in the environmental regions where cashew is cultivated. Besides cashew is threatened by a great variety of fungal diseases amongst them gummosis caused by the devastating fungus Lasiodiploidea theobromae that has increased its severity in all northeastern Brazil producing states. Therefore there is a great interest in understanding the biochemical/physiological traits associated with both the climate adaptation of cashew and the resistance/susceptibility to L. theobromae. This paper reports on the evaluation of a proteomic approach to study the proteins of the cashew stems, a recalcitrant plant tissue, where the L. theobromae infection establishes. After testing different methods for extracting proteins from cashew stems, the precipitation with trichloroacetic acid/acetone combined with the use of an optimized phenol extraction method produced a cashew protein sample free of interfering compounds that showed a highquality 2D-PAGE pattern. The extraction method devised allowed the fractionation of approximately 615 spots from which 130 proteins were identified. Of them 31% are related to plant disease/defense, which is consistent with the excellent fit of cashew to the semi-arid conditions. Therefore, this pioneering map derived from CCP (Premature Cashew Clone) 76, a semiarid-tolerant cashew clone, provides the basis for further investigations of cashew physiology such as detection of genetic reprogramming induced by biotic and abiotic stresses.
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- 2014
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22. High throughput sequencing of the Angiostrongylus cantonensis genome: a parasite spreading worldwide
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Alessandra Loureiro Morassutti, Patricia P. Wilkins, Mike Frace, Marcos Oliveira de Carvalho, Leandro Nascimento Lemos, Paulo Marcos Pinto, Andrey A. Perelygin, Carlos Graeff-Teixeira, and Alexandre J. da Silva
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Genetics ,Proteomics ,Genome, Helminth ,biology ,Angiostrongylus cantonensis ,High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing ,Helminth genetics ,Helminth Proteins ,biology.organism_classification ,Genome ,DNA sequencing ,Homology (biology) ,Infectious Diseases ,Animals ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Parasitology ,ORFS ,Angiostrongylus ,Strongylida Infections - Abstract
SUMMARYAngiostrongylus cantonensis is a parasitic nematode of rodents and a leading aetiological agent of eosinophilic meningitis in humans. Definitive diagnosis is difficult, often relying on immunodiagnostic methods which utilize crude antigens. New immunodiagnostic methods based on recombinant proteins are being developed, and ideally these methods would be made available worldwide. Identification of diagnostic targets, as well as studies on the biology of the parasite, are limited by a lack of molecular information on Angiostrongylus spp. available in databases. In this study we present data collected from DNA random high-throughput sequencing together with proteomic analyses and a cDNA walking methodology to identify and obtain the nucleotide or amino acid sequences of unknown immunoreactive proteins. 28 080 putative ORFs were obtained, of which 3371 had homology to other deposited protein sequences. Using the A. cantonensis genomic sequences, 156 putative ORFs, matching peptide sequences obtained from previous proteomic studies, were considered novel, with no homology to existing sequences. Full-length coding sequences of eight antigenic target proteins were obtained. In this study we generated not only the complete nucleotide sequences of the antigenic protein targets but also a large amount of genomic data which may help facilitate future genomic, proteomic, transcriptomic or metabolomic studies on Angiostrongylus.
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- 2013
23. Biochemical, physicochemical and molecular characterization of a genuine 2-Cys-peroxiredoxin purified from cowpea [Vigna unguiculata (L.) Walpers] leaves
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Cleverson D.T. Freitas, Ilka M. Vasconcelos, Paulo Marcos Pinto, Eduardo B. Barros, Célia R. Carlini, Jose T.A. Oliveira, Fredy D.A. Silva, Vladimir Gonçalves Magalhães, José H.A. Filho, Patrícia G. de Castro, Luciana Magalhães Rebelo Alencar, Marina Duarte Pinto Lobo, Thalles B. Grangeiro, and Leila Maria Beltramini
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Molecular Sequence Data ,Ion chromatography ,Biophysics ,Circular dichroism ,Microscopy, Atomic Force ,Biochemistry ,Antioxidants ,Vigna ,Amino acid sequence ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Electrophoresis, Gel, Two-Dimensional ,Denaturation (biochemistry) ,Cysteine ,Molecular Biology ,Peptide sequence ,Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Sequence Homology, Amino Acid ,Edman degradation ,Molecular mass ,biology ,Chemistry ,cDNA sequence ,Fabaceae ,Hydrogen Peroxide ,Peroxiredoxins ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,biology.organism_classification ,Amino acid ,Plant Leaves ,2-Cys-peroxiredoxin ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel ,SEQUÊNCIA DO DNA ,Oxidation-Reduction ,Vigna unguiculata ,Molecular Chaperones - Abstract
Background Peroxiredoxins have diverse functions in cellular defense-signaling pathways. 2-Cys-peroxiredoxins (2-Cys-Prx) reduce H 2 O 2 and alkyl-hydroperoxide. This study describes the purification and characterization of a genuine 2-Cys-Prx from Vigna unguiculata (Vu-2-Cys-Prx). Methods Vu-2-Cys-Prx was purified from leaves by ammonium sulfate fractionation, chitin affinity and ion exchange chromatography. Results Vu-2-Cys-Prx reduces H 2 O 2 using NADPH and DTT. Vu-2-Cys-Prx is a 44 kDa (SDS-PAGE)/46 kDa (exclusion chromatography) protein that appears as a 22 kDa molecule under reducing conditions, indicating that it is a homodimer linked intermolecularly by disulfide bonds and has a pI range of 4.56–4.72; its NH 2 -terminal sequence was similar to 2-Cys-Prx from Phaseolus vulgaris (96%) and Populus tricocarpa (96%). Analysis by ESI-Q-TOF MS/MS showed a molecular mass/pI of 28.622 kDa/5.18. Vu-2-Cys-Prx has 8% α -helix, 39% β -sheet, 22% of turns and 31% of unordered forms. Vu-2-Cys-Prx was heat stable, has optimal activity at pH 7.0, and prevented plasmid DNA degradation. Atomic force microscopy shows that Vu-2-Cys-Prx oligomerized in decamers which might be associated with its molecular chaperone activity that prevented denaturation of insulin and citrate synthase. Its cDNA analysis showed that the redox-active Cys 52 residue and the amino acids Pro 45 , Thr 49 and Arg 128 are conserved as in other 2-Cys-Prx. General significance The biochemical and molecular features of Vu-2-Cys-Prx are similar to other members of 2-Cys-Prx family. To date, only one publication reported on the purification of native 2-Cys-Prx from leaves and the subsequent analysis by N-terminal Edman sequencing, which is crucial for construction of stromal recombinant 2-Cys-Prx proteins.
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- 2012
24. Biochemical changes in the transition from vitellogenesis to follicular atresia in the hematophagous Dipetalogaster maxima (Hemiptera: Reduviidae)
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Célia R. Carlini, Lilian Etelvina Canavoso, Paulo Marcos Pinto, Silvina Andrea Aguirre, Jimena Leyria, Leonardo L. Fruttero, Edilberto R. Rubiolo, Beatriz P. Settembrini, and Marina S. Defferrari
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Follicular Atresia ,Biochemistry ,Cathepsin D ,Cathepsin B ,Mass Spectrometry ,Vitellogenin ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Vitellogenins ,Internal medicine ,Follicular phase ,medicine ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Cathepsin ,biology ,Follicular atresia ,Ovary ,Vitellogenesis ,medicine.disease ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Insect Science ,Atresia ,biology.protein ,Oocytes ,Female ,Triatominae ,Pepstatin ,Chromatography, Liquid - Abstract
In this work, we have explored the biochemical changes characterizing the transition from vitellogenesis to follicular atresia, employing the hematophagous insect vector Dipetalogaster maxima as a model. Standardized insect rearing conditions were established to induce a gradual follicular degeneration stage by depriving females of blood meal during post-vitellogenesis. For the studies, hemolymph and ovaries were sampled at representative days of pre-vitellogenesis, vitellogenesis and early and late follicular atresia. When examined by scanning electron microscopy, ovarioles at the initial stage of atresia were small but still showed some degree of asynchronism, a feature that was lost in an advanced degeneration state. At late follicular atresia, in vivo uptake assays of fluorescently labeled vitellogenin (Vg-FITC) showed loss of competitiveness of oocytes to uptake vitellogenin. Circulating vitellogenin levels in atresia were significantly higher than those registered at pre-vitellogenesis, most likely to maintain appropriate conditions for another gonotrophic cycle if a second blood meal is available. Follicular atresia was also characterized by partial proteolysis of vitellin, which was evidenced in ovarian homogenates by western blot. When the activity of ovarian peptidases upon hemoglobin (a non-specific substrate) was tested, higher activities were detected at early and late atresia whereas the lowest activity was found at vitellogenesis. The activity upon hemoglobin was significantly inhibited by pepstatin A (an aspartic peptidase inhibitor), and was not affected by E64 (a cysteine peptidase inhibitor) at any tested conditions. The use of specific fluorogenic substrates demonstrated that ovarian homogenates at early follicular atresia displayed high cathepsin D-like activity, whereas no activity of either, cathepsin B or L was detected. Mass spectrometry analysis of the digestion products of the substrate Abz-AIAFFSRQ-EDDnp further confirmed the presence of a cathepsin D-like peptidase in ovarian tissue. In the context of our findings, the early activation of cathepsin D-like peptidase could be relevant in promoting yolk protein recycling and/or enhancing follicle removal.
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- 2011
25. A peroxiredoxin from Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae with a possible role in H2O2 detoxification
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Claudio Xavier Machado, Arnaldo Zaha, Paulo Marcos Pinto, and Henrique Bunselmeyer Ferreira
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DNA, Bacterial ,DNA damage ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Gene Expression ,Microbiology ,law.invention ,Mice ,Porcine enzootic pneumonia ,Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae ,law ,Escherichia coli ,Animals ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Cloning, Molecular ,Peptide sequence ,Gene ,Phylogeny ,Antiserum ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,biology ,Sequence Homology, Amino Acid ,DNA ,Hydrogen Peroxide ,Peroxiredoxins ,biology.organism_classification ,Molecular biology ,Recombinant DNA ,Peroxiredoxin ,Reactive Oxygen Species ,Dimerization ,DNA Damage - Abstract
Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae is the causative agent of porcine enzootic pneumonia, which affects pig farms worldwide, causing heavy economic losses. In the infection process, this bacterium is exposed to reactive oxygen species (ROS) from its own metabolism or generated by the host as one of the strategies used to neutralize the pathogen. Although the presence of classical antioxidant enzymes would be expected in M. hyopneumoniae, important genes directly related to protection against ROS, such as superoxide dismutase, catalases and glutathione peroxidase, have not been identified by sequence homology in the genome sequence annotation. Among the few identified M. hyopneumoniae genes coding for proteins possibly involved with suppression of ROS-mediated damage, one (tpx) coding for a peroxiredoxin (MhPrx) has been recognized. The sequence and phylogenetic analyses perfomed in this study indicate that MhPrx is closely related to the atypical 2-Cys peroxiredoxin subfamily, although it has only one cysteine in its sequence. The MhPrx coding DNA sequence was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli to produce a recombinant MhPrx (rMhPrx), which was purified and used to immunize mice and produce an anti-MhPrx polyclonal antiserum. Probing of M. hyopneumoniae extracts with this antiserum demonstrated that MhPrx is expressed in all three tested strains (J, 7422 and 7448). Cross-linking assays and size-exclusion chromatography indicate that rMhPrx forms dimers, as has been established for atypical 2-Cys peroxiredoxins. Furthermore, a metal-catalysed oxidation system was used to assay the activity of rMhPrx, showing that it can protect DNA from ROS-mediated damage and may play an essential role during infection.
- Published
- 2009
26. Proteomic survey of the pathogenic Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae strain 7448 and identification of novel post-translationally modified and antigenic proteins
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Luiza Amaral de Castro, Henrique Bunselmeyer Ferreira, Gustavo Chemale, Marilene Henning Vainstein, Paulo Marcos Pinto, Jalusa Deon Kich, Ana Paula Metz Costa, and Arnaldo Zaha
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Proteomics ,Swine ,Immunoblotting ,Biology ,Microbiology ,Porcine enzootic pneumonia ,Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae ,Bacterial Proteins ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Heat shock protein ,Animals ,Electrophoresis, Gel, Two-Dimensional ,Mycoplasma Infections ,Gene ,Gel electrophoresis ,General Veterinary ,General Medicine ,Pneumonia of Swine, Mycoplasmal ,biology.organism_classification ,Specific Pathogen-Free Organisms ,Membrane protein ,Proteome ,Protein Processing, Post-Translational - Abstract
Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae is an important pathogen for pigs, being the causative agent of enzootic pneumonia. Recently, the genome sequences of three strains, J, 7448 and 232 have been reported. Here, we describe the results of a proteomic analysis, based on two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of soluble protein extracts, immunoblot and mass spectrometry, which was carried out aiming the identification of gene products and antigenic proteins from the M. hyopneumoniae pathogenic strain 7448. A preliminary M. hyopneumoniae proteome map in two pH ranges (3-10 and 4-7) was produced. A total of 31 different coding DNA sequences (CDSs), including three hypothetical ones, were experimentally verified with the identification of the corresponding protein products by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation time-of-flight mass spectrometry. According to the Clusters of Orthologous Groups (COG) functional classification, the identified proteins were assigned to the groups of metabolism (13), cellular processes (5) and information and storage processing (4). Nine of the identified proteins were not classifiable by COG, including some related to cytoadherence and possibly involved in pathogenicity. Moreover, at least five highly antigenic proteins of M. hyopneumoniae were identified by immunoblots, including four novel ones (a heat shock protein 70, an elongation factor Tu, a pyruvate dehydrogenase E1-beta subunit and the P76 membrane protein). The now available proteome map is expected to serve as a reference for comparative analyses between M. hyopneumoniae pathogenic and non-pathogenic strains, and for methabolic studies based on cells cultured under modified conditions.
- Published
- 2006
27. The Metarhizium anisopliae trp1 gene: cloning and regulatory analysis
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Paulo Marcos Pinto, Marilene Henning Vainstein, Marcia Suzana Nunes Silva, Augusto Schrank, and Charley Christian Staats
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Genetics ,biology ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Intron ,Metarhizium anisopliae ,General Medicine ,Molecular cloning ,biology.organism_classification ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Microbiology ,Molecular biology ,Fungal Proteins ,Plasmid ,Transformation, Genetic ,G-domain ,Aspergillus nidulans ,Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal ,Hypocreales ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Gene ,Glutamine amidotransferase ,Plasmids - Abstract
The trp1 gene from the entomopathogenic fungus Metarhizium anisopliae, cloned by heterologous hybridization with the plasmid carrying the trpC gene from Aspergillus nidulans, was sequence characterized. The predicted translation product has the conserved catalytic domains of glutamine amidotransferase (G domain), indoleglycerolphosphate synthase (C domain), and phosphoribosyl anthranilate isomerase (F domain) organized as NH2–G–C–F–COOH. The ORF is interrupted by a single intron of 60 nt that is position conserved in relation to trp genes from Ascomycetes and length conserved in relation to Basidiomycetes species. RT-PCR analysis suggests constitutive expression of trp1 gene in M. anisopliae.
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- 2004
28. Captura do escorpião Bothriurus bonariensis e determinação da fração proteica de seu veneno
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Douglas Silva dos Santos, Evelise Leis Carvalho, Paola Bolzan Machado, Paulo Marcos Pinto, Cháriston André Dal Belo, Jeferson Camargo de Lima, and Juliano Tomazzoni Boldo
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General Medicine - Abstract
Escorpioes sao artropodes pertencentes a classe Arachinida e ordem Scorpiones. O genero Bothriurus e a mais especiosa da familia Bothriuridae, com 41 especies descritas e 10 especies registradas no Brasil. Este trabalho teve como objetivo caracterizar a fracao proteica do veneno do escorpiao Bothriurus bonariensis em busca de componentes bioativos com interesse biologico e biotecnologico. Os escorpioes foram capturados por meio de armadilhas em Sao Gabriel, RS, Brasil. A extracao de veneno foi realizada por estimulacao eletrica de 35 V, diretamente do ultimo segmento abdominal. Um extrato da amostra do veneno foi submetido a precipitacao com acido tricloroacetico (TCA) 20% diluido em acetona. A analise SDS-PAGE foi realizada com amostras contendo 30 e 60 µg de proteinas. As amostras que nao foram precipitadas com TCA, nao mostraram bandas proteicas. Por outro lado, as amostras previamente tratadas com TCA mostraram sete bandas (de 25 KDa a 250 KDa) na analise SDS-PAGE.
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- 2013
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29. Molecular characterization of ovine zygomycosis in central western Brazil
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João Xavier de Oliveira Filho, Luciano Nakazato, Valéria Dutra, Augusto Schrank, Edson Moleta Colodel, Maria Cristina da Silva, Paulo Marcos Pinto, Daphine Ariadne Jesus de Paula, and Leonardo Broetto
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Sheep Diseases ,law.invention ,Microbiology ,Zygomycosis ,law ,Phylogenetics ,Molecular genetics ,medicine ,RNA, Ribosomal, 18S ,Animals ,Conidiobolus ,Ribosomal DNA ,Polymerase chain reaction ,Phylogeny ,Sheep ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Fungal genetics ,RNA, Fungal ,Ribosomal RNA ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Brazil - Abstract
Zygomycosis is an important granulomatous disease that affects humans and animals, particularly sheep in tropical regions. Rhinofacial and nasopharyngeal zygomycosis were described in sheep in association with Conidiobolus spp. The present study characterized 5 samples of Conidiobolus isolated from 3 herds with clinical disease in Mato Grosso State, Brazil. The clinical and pathological findings were similar to nasopharyngeal zygomycosis. Based on morphological features, isolates were classified as Conidiobolus spp., and molecular phylogenetic analyses based on 18S ribosomal DNA grouped all isolates in a Conidiobolus lamprauges cluster. The current report describes the molecular characterization of ovine nasopharyngeal zygomycosis associated with C. lamprauges.
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