47 results on '"Bijovsky AT"'
Search Results
2. THE COINS FROM THE EXCAVATIONS AT MOUNT GERIZIM
- Author
-
GABRIELA BIJOVSKY
- Published
- 2022
3. Coins from the 2017–2018 Excavation Seasons
- Author
-
Gabriela Bijovsky
- Subjects
Excavation ,Archaeology ,Geology - Published
- 2021
4. A Hoard of Solidi of Heraclius
- Author
-
Gabriela Bijovsky
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,Art ,Ancient history ,Hoard ,media_common - Published
- 2020
5. Copper Alloy Coins from the Byzantine-Period Ma‘agan Mikhael B Shipwreck, Israel: Metallurgical Characterization
- Author
-
Deborah Cvikel, G. I. Bijovsky, Alexandra Inberg, Sabine Klein, Dana Ashkenazi, and M. Cohen
- Subjects
Materials science ,060102 archaeology ,Manufacturing process ,Metallurgy ,Metals and Alloys ,06 humanities and the arts ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Economic constraints ,Metallic materials ,Copper alloy ,0601 history and archaeology ,Byzantine architecture ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
After three excavation seasons the Ma‘agan Mikhael B shipwreck has revealed, among other objects, seven coins. The coins were found covered with a black concretion layer, which was carefully removed from five of them. Metallurgical methods were used in order to reveal the composition, microstructure, and manufacturing process of the coins and to determine their date and the origin of the raw material. The coins were made of cast copper-lead alloy and were heated before being stamped. Based on the portrait of the House of Constantine I found on coins 120.1 and 120.2, and the figure on coin 120.5, combined with the composition of the coins, they were dated to the fourth century AD, when high concentrations of lead were added to alloys, most probably due to economic constraints. The study of the coins does not identify the ship’s origin or her ports-of-call, since coins were essentially mobile.
- Published
- 2018
6. Coins of the Hellenistic to Byzantine Periods
- Author
-
Gabriela Bijovsky
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,Art ,Ancient history ,Byzantine architecture ,media_common - Published
- 2019
7. The Coins
- Author
-
GABRIELA BIJOVSKY
- Published
- 2018
8. COINS FROM KHIRBET FAʿUSH, MACCABIM
- Author
-
GABRIELA BIJOVSKY
- Published
- 2017
9. COIN CATALOGUE
- Author
-
GABRIELA BIJOVSKY and ARIEL BERMAN
- Published
- 2017
10. The Coins
- Author
-
Gabriela Bijovsky
- Published
- 2017
11. Cell death and regeneration in the midgut of the mosquito, Culex quinquefasciatus
- Author
-
A. Tania Bijovsky, Henrique Krieger, Fabio Almeida, Renato A. Mortara, Osvaldo Marinotti, and Kendi Okuda
- Subjects
Bedbugs ,Physiology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Cellular differentiation ,Zoology ,Apoptosis ,Insect ,parasitic diseases ,Botany ,medicine ,Animals ,Regeneration ,Ingestion ,Intestinal Mucosa ,media_common ,biology ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,fungi ,Midgut ,Feeding Behavior ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Blood meal ,Culex quinquefasciatus ,Gastrointestinal Tract ,Culex ,Blood ,Enterocytes ,Insect Science ,Female ,Digestion - Abstract
Haematophagy, the utilization of blood as food, has evolved independently among insects such as mosquitoes, bedbugs, fleas, and others. Accordingly, several distinct biological adaptations have occurred in order to facilitate the finding, ingestion and digestion of blood from vertebrate sources. Although blood meals are essential for survival and reproduction of these insects, mechanical and chemical stresses are caused by the ingestion of a sizable meal (frequently twice or more times the weight of the insect) containing large amounts of cytotoxic molecules such as haem. Here we present data showing that the stresses caused by a blood meal induce cell death in the midgut epithelium of Culex quinquefasciatus mosquitoes. The process involves apoptosis, ejection of dead cells to the midgut lumen and differentiation of basal regenerative cells to replace the lost digestive cells. The basal cell differentiation in blood-fed mosquito midguts represents an additional mechanism by which insects cope with the stresses caused by blood meals. C. quinquefasciatus adult females are unable to replace lost cells following a third or fourth blood meal, which may have a significant impact on mosquito longevity, reproduction and vectorial capacity.
- Published
- 2007
12. Two cathepsins B are responsible for the yolk protein hydrolysis in Culex quinquefasciatus
- Author
-
Alexandre S. Moura, André Luis Costa-da-Silva, André F. Cardoso, A. Tania Bijovsky, and Carlos E. Winter
- Subjects
Proteases ,food.ingredient ,Molecular Sequence Data ,lcsh:Medicine ,Cathepsin B ,Vitellogenin ,Vitellogenins ,food ,Cathepsin H ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Yolk ,Databases, Genetic ,Animals ,Amino Acid Sequence ,lcsh:Science ,Phylogeny ,Ovum ,Cathepsin ,Multidisciplinary ,CULEX ,biology ,Hydrolysis ,lcsh:R ,Egg Proteins ,Ovary ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,biology.organism_classification ,Molecular biology ,Culex quinquefasciatus ,Culex ,biology.protein ,lcsh:Q ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel ,Female ,Vitellogenesis ,Peptides ,Transcriptome ,Sequence Alignment ,Research Article - Abstract
Despite the established role of Culex quinquefasciatus as a vector of various neurotropic viruses, such as the Rift Valley and West Nile viruses, as well as lymphatic filariasis, little is known regarding the organism's reproductive physiology. As in other oviparous animals, vitellogenin, the most important source of nutrients for the embryo development, is digested by intracellular proteases. Using mass spectrometry, we have identified two cathepsin B homologues partially purified by self-proteolysis of Cx. quinquefasciatus total egg extract. The transcriptional profile of these two cathepsin B homologues was determined by quantitative RT-PCR, and the enzymatic activity associated with the peptidase was determined in ovaries after female engorgement. According to the VectorBase (vectorbase.org) annotation, both cathepsin B homologues shared approximately 66% identity in their amino acid sequences. The two cathepsin B genes are expressed simultaneously in the fat body of the vitellogenic females, and enzymatic activity was detected within the ovaries, suggesting an extra-ovarian origin. Similar to the transcriptional profile of vitellogenin, cathepsin B transcripts were shown to accumulate post-blood meal and reached their highest expression at 36 h PBM. However, while vitellogenin expression decreased drastically at 48 h PBM, the expression of the cathepsins increased until 84 h PBM, at which time the females of our colony were ready for oviposition. The similarity between their transcriptional profiles strongly suggests a role for the cathepsin B homologues in vitellin degradation.
- Published
- 2015
13. Morphological and enzymatic analysis of the midgut of Anopheles darlingi during blood digestion
- Author
-
Antonio G. de Bianchi, A. S. Caroci, Osvaldo Marinotti, Kendi Okuda, Paulo Eduardo Martins Ribolla, and A. Tania Bijovsky
- Subjects
Time Factors ,Hydrolases ,Physiology ,Nucleolus ,Basal labyrinth ,Biology ,Microscopy, Electron, Transmission ,Anopheles ,medicine ,Animals ,Apical cytoplasm ,Endoplasmic reticulum ,fungi ,Midgut ,Epithelium ,Cell biology ,Gastrointestinal Tract ,Blood ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Biochemistry ,Gastric Mucosa ,Enzyme Induction ,Insect Science ,Ultrastructure ,Digestion ,Female ,Glycogen - Abstract
The midgut of adult female Anopheles darlingi is comprised of narrow anterior and dilated posterior regions, with a single layered epithelium composed by cuboidal digestive cells. Densely packed apical microvilli and an intricate basal labyrinth characterize each cell pole. Before blood feeding, apical cytoplasm contains numerous round granules and whorled profiles of rough endoplasmic reticulum. Engorgement causes a great distension of midgut. This provokes the flattening of digestive cells and their nuclei. Simultaneously, apical granules disappear, the whorls of endoplasmic reticulum disassemble and 3 h post bloodmeal (PBM), nucleoli enlarge manyfold. An intense absorptive process takes place during the first 24 h PBM, with the formation of large glycogen inclusions, which persist after the end of the digestive process. Endoproteases activities are induced after bloodmeal and attain their maximum values between 10 and 36 h PBM. At least two different aminopeptidases seem to participate in the digestive process, with their maximum activity values at 36 and 48 h PBM, respectively. Coarse electrondense aggregates, possibly debris from digested erythrocytes, begin to appear on the luminal face of the peritrophic membrane from 18 h PBM and persist during all the digestive process, and are excreted at its end. We suggest that these aggregates could contain some kind of insoluble form of haem, in order of neutralize its toxicity.
- Published
- 2005
14. Molecular cloning, expression analysis and cellular localization of gomesin, an anti-microbial peptide from hemocytes of the spider Acanthoscurria gomesiana
- Author
-
Gláucia Maria Machado-Santelli, Daniel M. Lorenzini, Aline H. Fukuzawa, A.T. Bijovsky, Sirlei Daffre, and Pedro Ismael da Silva
- Subjects
Signal peptide ,DNA, Complementary ,Hemocytes ,Transcription, Genetic ,Sequence analysis ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Context (language use) ,Peptide ,Molecular cloning ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Gene product ,Complementary DNA ,Animals ,Tissue Distribution ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Cloning, Molecular ,Protein Precursors ,Molecular Biology ,Cellular localization ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Microscopy, Confocal ,Base Sequence ,Spiders ,Blood Proteins ,Immunohistochemistry ,chemistry ,Protein Biosynthesis ,Insect Science ,Antimicrobial Cationic Peptides - Abstract
Gomesin is a cationic anti-microbial peptide of 18 amino acid residues isolated from the hemocytes of unchallenged tarantula spider Acanthoscurria gomesiana. This paper reports the first study of the processing and cellular location of an anti-microbial peptide (AMP) in spiders. Gomesin cDNA sequence analysis indicated that it is processed from a precursor containing a signal peptide (23 amino acid residues) and a negative C-terminal region (43 amino acid residues). The gomesin gene was constitutively transcribed in hemocytes and the gene product localized in hemocyte granules. The constitutive production of gomesin by a spider is discussed in the context of an ancient mechanism of AMP regulation and storage.
- Published
- 2003
15. Morphological aspects of salivary glands
- Author
-
A. Tania Bijovsky, Tiago da Cunha Sais, Antonio G. de Bianchi, Osvaldo Marinotti, P. E. M. Ribolla, and Rosa Maria de Moraes
- Subjects
Water transport ,Salivary gland ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Apical cell ,Apical membrane ,Biology ,Epithelium ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cytoplasm ,Insect Science ,Adenomere ,medicine ,Ultrastructure ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
The salivary glands of Culex quinquefasciatus female mosquitoes are paired organs composed of two lateral lobes with proximal and distal secretory portions, and a medial lobe. All portions comprise a simple epithelium that surrounds a salivary duct. In the apical portion of the medial lobe, non-secretory cells strongly resemble cells involved in ion and water transport. The general architecture of the secretory portions is similar between lobes. The appearance of the secretory material and the morphological aspect of the apical cell membrane are the most distinctive features among the three secretory portions. Cells in the lateral proximal lobe display thin membrane projections extending into a translucent and finely filamentous secretory product. At the lateral distal portion, the apical cell membrane forms an intricate meshwork that encloses a dark secretory product. Medial lobe secretory cells also contain secretory cavities surrounded by intracytoplasmic vesicles, all containing a very dark and uniform product. Scattered cells holding numerous vacuoles, some of them containing a small and electron-dense granule eccentrically located and resembling those of the diffuse endocrine system, are frequently observed in the periphery of all secretory portions. Immunofluorescence assays revealed that the distal portion of the lateral lobes contains apyrase, an enzyme putatively responsible for platelet aggregation inhibition, diffusely distributed in the cell cytoplasm.
- Published
- 2003
16. Functional morphology of adult female Culex quinquefasciatus midgut during blood digestion
- Author
-
A.de Souza Caroci, Paulo Eduardo Martins Ribolla, A.T. Bijovsky, A.G. de Bianchi, and Kendi Okuda
- Subjects
Proteolysis ,Basal labyrinth ,Septate junctions ,Biology ,Digestive System Physiological Phenomena ,Endopeptidases ,Hemolymph ,medicine ,Animals ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Midgut ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Postprandial Period ,Trypsin ,Molecular biology ,Culex ,Blood ,Intestinal Absorption ,Biochemistry ,Ultrastructure ,Female ,Digestion ,Digestive System ,Developmental Biology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The adult female Culex quinquefasciatus midgut comprises a narrow anterior and a dilated posterior region, with epithelia composed of a monolayer of adjacent epithelial cells joined at the apical portion by septate junctions. Densely packed apical microvilli and an intricate basal labyrinth characterise each cell pole. Our morphological studies suggest that, during blood digestion, the anterior midgut region also participates in an initial absorptive stage which is probably related to the intake of water, salts and other small molecules. This activity peaked by 6 h after bloodmeal feeding (ABF) and ended approximately 18 h ABF, when the peritrophic membrane was already formed. After this time, absorption only occurred in the posterior region, with morphologic and biochemical evidence of high synthetic activity related to the secretion of proteases. Chymotrypsin, elastase, aminopeptidase, and trypsin reached their maximum activity at around 36 h ABF. Digestion products were apparently absorbed and transported to the basal labyrinth, from where they should be released to the hemolymph. At 72 h ABF, proteolysis had already ended and protein levels had returned to those observed before blood meal. The epithelium of the posterior region, however, did not return to its initial morphology, appearing quite disorganised. Additionally, from 48 h ABF onwards some epithelial cells showed morphological signals of apoptosis.
- Published
- 2002
17. A monoclonal antibody to Trypanosoma cruzi trypomastigotes recognizes a myosin tail epitope
- Author
-
Tecia Maria Ulisses de Carvalho, A.T. Bijovsky, Walter Colli, Maria da Conceição F. de Oliveira, Maria Júlia Manso Alves, and Wanderley de Souza
- Subjects
medicine.drug_class ,Trypanosoma cruzi ,Antigens, Protozoan ,Biology ,Monoclonal antibody ,Epitope ,Epitopes ,Mice ,Myosin head ,Antigen ,Myosin ,medicine ,Animals ,Chagas Disease ,Myosin Heavy Chains ,General Veterinary ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,General Medicine ,Immunogold labelling ,biology.organism_classification ,Molecular biology ,Microscopy, Electron ,Infectious Diseases ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,Insect Science ,biology.protein ,Parasitology ,Antibody - Abstract
A monoclonal antibody, 1E7, raised against tissue culture-derived trypomastigotes of Trypanosoma cruzi reacted with proteins located at the perinuclear region of the parasite as detected by immunofluorescence and immunogold electron microscopy. The antibody also recognized antigens in all trypanosomatids tested, including T. cruzi epimastigotes, as well as in many mammalian cells. Five principal antigens of 140-270 kDa soluble in 1 M NaCl were recognized by the monoclonal antibody, suggesting that the epitope may belong to more than one polypeptide since the same bands appeared even when the samples were treated with high concentrations of denaturing agents. The antibody reacted in Western blots with muscle myosin. Bacterial clones expressing fast skeletal muscle myosin head or tail cDNAs upon IPTG induction were used to demonstrate that 1E7 monoclonal antibody recognizes an epitope present in the tail region of the myosin heavy chain. This result adds to the on-going discussion related to the possible existence of an auto-immune component in the immunopathogenesis of Chagas' disease due to cross-reactive epitopes shared by the parasite and cardiac myosin.
- Published
- 2001
18. Morphological and biochemical analyses of the salivary glands of the malaria vector, Anopheles darlingi
- Author
-
C. K. Moreira‐Ferro, Osvaldo Marinotti, and A.T. Bijovsky
- Subjects
Male ,Biology ,Cytoplasmic Granules ,Salivary Glands ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Anopheles ,medicine ,Animals ,Malaria vector ,Anopheles darlingi ,Apyrase ,alpha-Glucosidases ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Epithelium ,Lobe ,Insect Vectors ,Malaria ,Microscopy, Electron ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Adenomere ,Ultrastructure ,Female ,Muramidase ,Lysozyme ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Adult Anopheles darlingi salivary glands are paired organs located on either side of the esophagus. The male glands consist of a single small lobe. The female gland is composed of two lateral lobes, with distinct proximal and distal portions, and a medial lobe. The lobes are acinar structures, organized as a unicellular epithelium that surrounds a salivary canal. The general cellular architecture is similar among the lobes, with secretory material appearing as large masses that push the cellular structures to the periphery of the organ. Cells of the proximal-lateral lobes show asynchronous cycles of secretory activity and contain secretory masses with finely filamentous aspect. In the distal-lateral lobes, cells display synchronous cycles of activity, and have a dense secretory product with mottled pattern. Cells of the medial lobe have secretory masses uniformly stained and highly electrondense. Biochemical analysis of the adult female salivary glands revealed apyrase, alpha-glucosidase and lysozyme activities. Alpha-glucosidase and lysozyme activities are detected mostly in the proximal lobes while apyrase is mainly accumulated in the distal lobes. This differential distribution of the analyzed enzymes reflects a specialization of different regions for sugar and blood feeding. Thus, the morphological differences observed in the lobes correlate with functional ones.
- Published
- 1999
19. Axenic cultivation and partial characterization of Leishmania braziliensis amastigote-like stages
- Author
-
Elizabeth M. F. Pral, J M F Balanco, Renato A. Mortara, Silvia C. Alfieri, S.M.A. da Silva, and A.T. Bijovsky
- Subjects
Trypanosoma cruzi ,Blotting, Western ,Adaptation, Biological ,Biology ,Flagellum ,Leishmania braziliensis ,Microbiology ,Mice ,Agglutination Tests ,Animals ,Germ-Free Life ,Axenic ,Amastigote ,Infectivity ,Life Cycle Stages ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Macrophages ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Kinetoplastida ,biology.organism_classification ,Rats ,Microscopy, Electron ,Infectious Diseases ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,Protozoa ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Parasitology - Abstract
Leishmania braziliensis strain M2903 was adapted for growth and serially maintained as amastigotes at 34°C in modified UM-54 medium, with growth curves exhibiting typical log and stationary phases. In late passages, amastigote growth took place in the absence of supplementary haemin and was unaffected when the initial medium pH was adjusted between 5·4 and 6·3. In contrast to promastigotes, which were elongated and exhibited very long free flagella endowed with the paraflagellar rod (PFR), axenic amastigotes were rounded to ovoid and displayed a short flagellum restricted to the pocket area. The absence of PFR in axenic amastigotes was confirmed in Western blots and confocal immunofluorescence microscopy, by lack of reactivity with mAb 1B10. The antibody, which specifically labelled the paraflagellar structure, recognized a 70/72 kDa doublet in Trypanosoma cruzi epimastigotes and two 70/74 kDa related proteins in L. braziliensis promastigotes. Surface 125I-labelling experiments identified promastigote-specific components (>100, 74, 45/47 and 28 kDa) and at least 1, a 76 kDa polypeptide was specific for the amastigote stage. While axenic amastigotes were agglutinated by both peanut (PNA) and Lens culinaris (LCA) agglutinins, respectively at 50 and 12·5 μg/ml, promastigotes were not agglutinated by PNA and agglutinated in the presence of LCA at concentrations of 100 μg/ml and higher. Axenic amastigotes infected rat bone marrow-derived macrophages and were avidly taken up by J774 cells, from which numerous organisms, able to proliferate at 34°C in UM-54 medium, could be recovered 48 h later.
- Published
- 1998
20. Culex quinquefasciatus Storage Proteins
- Author
-
Martins, Larissa A, Fogaça, Andréa C, Bijovsky, A. Tania, Carballar-Lejarazú, Rebeca, Marinotti, Osvaldo, Cardoso, André F, and Hansen, Immo A
- Subjects
Insecticide Resistance ,Pipiens Diptera ,Arthropod Hemocyanins ,Mosquito ,West-Nile-Virus ,Fat-Body ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Life Sciences ,Aedes-Aegypti ,Molecular-Cloning ,Vitellogenin Synthesis ,Vector Competence - Published
- 2013
21. General Background
- Author
-
Bijovsky, Gabriela I.
- Subjects
local imitation [Late Roman coins] ,small change ,Byzantine coin distribution ,Byzantine coins circulation ,Byzantine gold coinage ,Byzantine Empire ,Byzantine copper coinage ,Byzantine Palestine ,Byzantine hoards - Published
- 2013
22. Culex quinquefasciatus storage proteins
- Author
-
Larissa Almeida Martins, Rebeca Carballar-Lejarazú, Andréa Cristina Fogaça, A. Tania Bijovsky, Osvaldo Marinotti, and André F. Cardoso
- Subjects
Male ,PARASITOLOGIA ,Culex ,media_common.quotation_subject ,lcsh:Medicine ,Insect ,parasitic diseases ,Animals ,Storage protein ,Metamorphosis ,lcsh:Science ,Gene ,media_common ,Genetics ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Larva ,Genome ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Ecology ,fungi ,lcsh:R ,Pupa ,biology.organism_classification ,Culex quinquefasciatus ,chemistry ,Insect Proteins ,Female ,lcsh:Q ,Research Article - Abstract
Insect storage proteins accumulate at high levels during larval development of holometabolous insects. During metamorphosis they are degraded, supplying energy and amino acids for the completion of adult development. The genome of Culex quinquefasciatus contains eleven storage protein-coding genes. Their transcripts are more abundant in larvae than in pupae and in adults. In fact, only four of these genes are transcribed in adults, two of which in blood-fed adult females but not in adult males. Transcripts corresponding to all Cx. quinquefasciatus storage proteins were detected by RT-PCR, while mass spectrometric analysis of larval and pupal proteins identified all storage proteins with the exception of one encoded by Cq LSP1.8. Our results indicate that the identified Cx. quinquefasciatus storage protein-coding genes are candidates for identifying regulatory sequences for the development of molecular tools for vector control.
- Published
- 2013
23. Characterization of the main plasma lipoproteins from the ovoviviparous viperid snake Bothrops jararaca
- Author
-
Carlos E. Winter, T. R. F. Janeiro-Cinquini, F.F. Leinz, and A.T. Bijovsky
- Subjects
Gel electrophoresis ,education.field_of_study ,Very low-density lipoprotein ,Bothrops jararaca ,biology ,Physiology ,Population ,biology.organism_classification ,Biochemistry ,Blood proteins ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Vitellogenin ,High-density lipoprotein ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,education ,Molecular Biology ,Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - Abstract
Plasma from estrogen treated males of Bothropsjararaca fractionated by ultracentrifugation showed three main fractions with very low density, intermediate density and high density, respectively. The very low density and high density fractions are mainly composed of lipoproteins detected by specific staining with Sudan Black. Electron microscopy of the very low density lipoproteins shows a single population of particles with a mean diameter of 29.6 nm similar to that of very low density lipoproteins from laying hens. The very low density lipoprotein of Bothrops jararaca is composed of two polypeptides with molecular masses of 450 and 20 kDa. Three main polypeptides are detected in the plasma high density fraction with molecular masses of 190, 160 and 110 kDa. Analysis of whole plasma proteins, from control and estrogen treated males, by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed that the 20 kDa very low density lipoprotein polypeptide and the 160 and 110 kDa high density lipoprotein polypeptides are induced de novo after estrogen treatment. These results suggest that the two very low density lipoprotein polypeptides are the snake counterparts of chicken very low density polypepudes. The estrogen induced high density lipoprotein polypeptides probably make up the vitellogenin(s) of Bothropsjararaca . An antiserum raised against the whole very low density plasma fraction was able to recognize only the two polypepudes found in this fraction in the plasma of treated males. Using this anuserum, in a double immunodiffusion test, we were able to detect only a faint reaction against Bothrops jararaca egg yolk proteins.
- Published
- 1995
24. A dysflagellar mutant of Leishmania (Viannia) braziliensis isolated from a cutaneous leishmaniasis patient
- Author
-
Miriam Leandro Dorta, Fátima Ribeiro-Dias, Milton Adriano Pelli de Oliveira, Ildefonso Alves da Silva, Juliany Cola Fernandes Rodrigues, André Nóbrega Pitaluga, A. Tania Bijovsky, Jenicer K.U. Yokoyama-Yasunaka, Danilo C. Miguel, Yara M. Traub-Cseko, Lucianna Gonçalves Nepomuceno Lemes, Rogéria C. Zauli, Alexandre S. Moura, Silvia R. B. Uliana, Edna Aoba Yassui Ishikawa, and Ledice Inácia de Araújo Pereira
- Subjects
PARASITOLOGIA ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Mutant ,Antiprotozoal Agents ,Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous ,Leishmania braziliensis ,Microbiology ,lcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases ,flagellum ,Mice ,electron microscopy ,Cutaneous leishmaniasis ,DNA, Ribosomal Spacer ,parasitic diseases ,Extracellular ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,lcsh:RC109-216 ,Psychodidae ,mutant ,Amastigote ,Leishmania ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Base Sequence ,biology ,Macrophages ,Research ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,DNA, Protozoan ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Microscopy, Electron ,Treatment Outcome ,Infectious Diseases ,Parasitology ,Flagella ,Mutation ,Female - Abstract
Background Parasites of the Leishmania genus alternate between the flagellated extracellular promastigote stage and intracellular amastigotes. Here we report the characterization of a Leishmania isolate, obtained from a cutaneous leishmaniasis patient, which presents peculiar morphological features. Methods The parasite was cultured in vitro and characterized morphologically using optical and electron microscopy. Identification was performed based on monoclonal antibodies and internal ribosomal spacer typing. In vitro macrophage cultures, murine experimental models and sand fly infections were used to evaluate infectivity in vitro and in vivo. Results The isolate was identified as Leishmania (Viannia) braziliensis. In the atypical promastigotes grown in culture, a short flagellum surrounded or interrupted by a protuberance of disorganized material was observed. A normal axoneme was present close to the basal body but without elongation much further outside the flagellar pocket. A disorganized swelling at the precocious end of the axoneme coincided with the lack of a paraflagellar rod structure. The isolate was able to infect macrophages in vitro, induce lesions in BALB/c mice and infect Lutzomyia longipalpis. Conclusions Notwithstanding the lack of an extracellular flagellum, this isolate infects macrophages in vitro and produces lesions when inoculated into mice. Moreover, it is able to colonize phlebotomine sand flies. Considering the importance attributed to the flagellum in the successful infection and survival of Leishmania in the insect midgut and in the invasion of macrophages, these findings may bring new light into the infectious mechanisms of L. (V.) braziliensis.
- Published
- 2012
25. Gold Coin and Small Change: Monetary Circulation in Fifth-Seventh Century Byzantine Palestine
- Author
-
Bijovsky, Gabriela I.
- Subjects
Antichistica ,Late Roman coins ,Byzantine coin distribution ,Byzantine coins circulation ,Byzantine gold coinage ,Byzantine Empire ,Byzantine copper coinage ,Byzantine Palestine ,Byzantine hoards - Abstract
This book presents scholars a comprehensive analysis of the local coinage that circulated in Palestine from the death of Arcadius until the time of the Arab conquest in the 640s.
- Published
- 2012
26. The First Half of the Seventh Century: Heraclius (610-640)
- Author
-
Bijovsky, Gabriela I.
- Subjects
Palestine ,small change ,copper coinage ,gold coinage ,hoards ,coin distribution ,coins circulation ,local imitations ,Byzantine Empire - Published
- 2012
27. Morphological aspects of Culex quinquefasciatus salivary glands
- Author
-
Tiago, da Cunha Sais, Rosa Maria, de Moraes, Paulo E, Ribolla, Antonio G, de Bianchi, Osvaldo, Marinotti, and A Tania, Bijovsky
- Abstract
The salivary glands of Culex quinquefasciatus female mosquitoes are paired organs composed of two lateral lobes with proximal and distal secretory portions, and a medial lobe. All portions comprise a simple epithelium that surrounds a salivary duct. In the apical portion of the medial lobe, non-secretory cells strongly resemble cells involved in ion and water transport. The general architecture of the secretory portions is similar between lobes. The appearance of the secretory material and the morphological aspect of the apical cell membrane are the most distinctive features among the three secretory portions. Cells in the lateral proximal lobe display thin membrane projections extending into a translucent and finely filamentous secretory product. At the lateral distal portion, the apical cell membrane forms an intricate meshwork that encloses a dark secretory product. Medial lobe secretory cells also contain secretory cavities surrounded by intracytoplasmic vesicles, all containing a very dark and uniform product. Scattered cells holding numerous vacuoles, some of them containing a small and electron-dense granule eccentrically located and resembling those of the diffuse endocrine system, are frequently observed in the periphery of all secretory portions. Immunofluorescence assays revealed that the distal portion of the lateral lobes contains apyrase, an enzyme putatively responsible for platelet aggregation inhibition, diffusely distributed in the cell cytoplasm.
- Published
- 2003
28. Leishmania mexicana: the influence of slightly elevated temperature on the ultrastructure of axenic amastigote-like forms
- Author
-
A.T. Bijovsky
- Subjects
Organelles ,Time Factors ,General Veterinary ,Leishmania mexicana ,Temperature ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Endoplasmic Reticulum ,biology.organism_classification ,Microbiology ,Microscopy, Electron ,Infectious Diseases ,Insect Science ,Ultrastructure ,Animals ,Parasite hosting ,Protozoa ,Parasitology ,Axenic ,Amastigote ,Axenic culture - Published
- 1994
29. A Hoard of Byzantine solidi from Bet She'an in the Umayyad Period
- Author
-
Gabriela Bijovsky
- Subjects
Archeology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Art ,Hoard ,Archaeology ,Byzantine architecture ,Period (music) ,media_common - Abstract
Summary. — This hoard was found in an Umayyad building in Bet She'an, Israel. It includes 75 1 solidi dated to Phocas, Heraclius, Constans II and Constantine IV The hoard was most probably buried for fear of confiscation, after the early 80's of the seventh century, during the unstable decade preceding Abd el-Malik's monetary reform in 696/697 CE., 509 545 510 702, Bijovsky Gabriela. A Hoard of Byzantine solidi from Bet She'an in the Umayyad Period. In: Revue numismatique, 6e série - Tome 158, année 2002 pp. 161-227.
- Published
- 2002
30. Procathepsin and acid phosphatase are stored in Musca domestica yolk spheres
- Author
-
Antonio G. de Bianchi, A. Tania Bijovsky, and Paulo Eduardo Martins Ribolla
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Cathepsin ,animal structures ,food.ingredient ,genetic structures ,biology ,Physiology ,Embryogenesis ,Acid phosphatase ,Proteolytic enzymes ,equipment and supplies ,Enzyme ,food ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Insect Science ,Zymogen ,Yolk ,embryonic structures ,biology.protein ,Vitellogenesis - Abstract
Yolk spheres present in mature invertebrate oocytes are composed of yolk proteins and proteolytic enzymes. In the fly Musca domestica, yolk proteins are degraded during embryogenesis by a cathepsin-like proteinase that is stored as a zymogen. An acid phosphatase is also active in the yolk spheres during Musca embryogenesis. In this paper we show that procathepsin and acid phosphatase are initially stored by a different pathway from the one followed by yolk protein precursors. Both enzymes are taken up by the oocytes and transitorily stored into small vesicles (lysosomes) surrounding the early yolk spheres. Fusion of both structures, the early yolk spheres and lysosomes, creates the mature yolk spheres.
- Published
- 2000
31. Trypanosoma cruzi: monoclonal antibody to cytoskeleton recognizes giant proteins of the flagellar attachment zone
- Author
-
M. J. M. Alves, L. Ruizmoreno, J. Pudles, Walter Colli, and A.T. Bijovsky
- Subjects
medicine.drug_class ,Trypanosoma cruzi ,Immunology ,Blotting, Western ,Subpellicular microtubule ,Protozoan Proteins ,Antigens, Protozoan ,Flagellum ,Biology ,Monoclonal antibody ,Desmosome ,Microtubule ,medicine ,Animals ,Cytoskeleton ,Microscopy, Immunoelectron ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,General Medicine ,Immunogold labelling ,Molecular biology ,Transmembrane protein ,Molecular Weight ,Cytoskeletal Proteins ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,Flagella ,Parasitology ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel - Abstract
Cytoskeletal preparations of Trypanosoma cruzi trypomastigotes and epimastigotes contain a protein recognized by a monoclonal antibody (2G4) which is connected to the flagellar attachment zone of both stages of the parasite. Western blot analysis revealed that the antibody was able to recognize protein bands of molecular masses higher than 700 kDa up to 2500 kDa. These giant proteins do not seem to share sequences with β-connectin since an anti-β-connectin antibody did not recognize the T. cruzi proteins nor did the 2G4 monoclonal antibody recognize authentic β-connectin. Immunofluorescence and immunogold electron microscopy provided evidence that this protein is located inside the cell body of the parasite, closely related to a corset of four microtubules known as subpellicular microtubule quartet. Immunogold labeling shows that the protein accompanies the flagellar attachment zone as long as the flagellum adheres to the cell body. It is proposed that these microtubule-associated proteins recognized by the 2G4 monoclonal antibody exist only in trypanosomatid forms having a junctional complex between the flagellum and the cell body and may act as transmembrane elements connecting the subpellicular microtubular quartet with the flagellum at the desmosome region.
- Published
- 1995
32. Leishmania mexicana: proteinase activities and megasomes in axenically cultivated amastigote-like forms
- Author
-
J M F Balanco, Silvia C. Alfieri, Elizabeth M. F. Pral, and A.T. Bijovsky
- Subjects
Enzyme Precursors ,Lysis ,Immunology ,Leishmania mexicana ,Cycloheximide ,Biology ,Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mice ,Endopeptidases ,Animals ,Amastigote ,Incubation ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Organelles ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Temperature ,General Medicine ,Dipeptides ,biology.organism_classification ,Cysteine Endopeptidases ,Microscopy, Electron ,Infectious Diseases ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Diazomethane ,Protozoa ,Parasitology - Abstract
Proteinase activities and megasomes were examined in axenically cultivated amastigote-like forms, freshly isolated lesion amastigotes, and promastigotes. Megasomes were absent in promastigotes and present in both amastigote stages, but they seemed to be less numerous and more homogeneous in cultured amastigote-like forms. Contrasting with the poor detection of proteinase activities in promastigote lysates, both types of amastigotes shared multiple proteinases, which were classified in two groups: (a) 60 to100 kDa, o-phenanthroline-sensitive activities; and (b) 23- to 40-kDa cysteine proteinases, of which those resolving as 35- to 40-kDa bands in gelatin gels were more clearly visualized in lysates of cultured amastigote-like forms. Incubation of both kinds of amastigotes with 0.25 to 1.0 microM of either Z-Phe-AlaCHN2 or Z-Tyr-AlaCHN2 selectively inactivated cysteine proteinases, but not the 35- to 40-kDa activities, which, again, were detected with higher intensity in cultured amastigote-like forms. The expression of the 35- to 40-kDa proteinases progressively increased when promastigotes were allowed to transform into amastigote-like forms or when lesion amastigotes were incubated at 34 degrees C for different time periods prior to exposure to Z-Phe-AlaCHN2; activities comparable to those of amastigote-like forms were attained within 24 to 48 hr. The activities resistant to Z-Phe-AlaCHN2 in vivo were fully inhibited by E-64 or Z-Phe-AlaCHN2 during gelatin digestion, suggesting that the 35- to 40-kDa proteinases were mainly inactive before cell lysis. The presence of cycloheximide (at 10, 50, and 100 micrograms/ml) during the pulse with Z-Phe-AlaCHN2 abolished the 35- to 40-kDa activities of lesion amastigotes and significantly reduced gelatin digestion by the similar enzymes of cultured amastigote-like forms. In the latter, the 35- to 40-kDa proteinases were no more detected when cycloheximide was given 60 min prior to Z-Phe-AlaCHN2. The results indicate higher rates of synthesis of the 35- to 40-kDa enzymes, and the existence of a more representative pool of inactive enzyme precursors, in cultured amastigote-like forms.
- Published
- 1993
33. Remodeling of the mouse endometrial stroma during the preimplantation period
- Author
-
Telma Maria Tenório Zorn, Paulo Alexandre Abrahamsohn, and A.T. Bijovsky
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Programmed cell death ,Histology ,Stromal cell ,Phagocytosis ,Acid Phosphatase ,Embryonic Development ,Endometrium ,Mice ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Phagosome ,biology ,Histocytochemistry ,Acid phosphatase ,Decidualization ,Cell biology ,Microscopy, Electron ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cytoplasm ,biology.protein ,Female ,Anatomy - Abstract
An ultrastructural cytochemical study of acid phosphatase activity performed in mouse endometrium on the second day of pregnancy showed that stromal cells which were heavily labeled by the cytochemical reaction had disarranged organelles. On the other hand, the cytoplasm of several stromal cells had collagen-containing phagosomes that were also labeled, indicating that the collagen fibrils were being digested by lysosomal enzymes. It is suggested that cell death and phagocytosis of collagen are events of the remodeling of the mouse endometrium that occur prior to decidualization.
- Published
- 1992
34. Improved fixation for cytochemical demonstration of acid phosphatase in mouse decidual cells
- Author
-
Abrahamsohn Pa and Bijovsky At
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Decidua ,Acid Phosphatase ,Histological Techniques ,Acid phosphatase ,Mice, Inbred Strains ,Cerium ,Biology ,Molecular biology ,Fixatives ,Mice ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Enzyme ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Pregnancy ,medicine ,Cytochemistry ,biology.protein ,Animals ,Decidual cells ,Female ,Anatomy ,Fixation (histology) - Published
- 1991
35. Ultrastructural analysis of the interaction between host cells and Trypanosoma cruzi in experimental chagomas
- Author
-
Regina Vugman Milder and A. Tania Bijovsky
- Subjects
Male ,Time Factors ,Neutrophils ,Trypanosoma cruzi ,Mitosis ,Biology ,Host-Parasite Interactions ,In vivo ,Cricetinae ,Lymphatic vessel ,medicine ,Animals ,Macrophage ,Chagas Disease ,Mesocricetus ,Inoculation ,Macrophages ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Microscopy, Electron ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Lymphatic system ,Ultrastructure ,Trypanosoma ,Female ,Parasitology - Abstract
The initial interaction between infective forms of Trypanosoma cruzi and host cells in vivo was studied at the ultrastructural level. In order to follow these events, T. cruzi bloodstream forms were inoculated into the cheek-pouch of hamsters—a peculiar region devoid of lymphatic vessels. This region was chosen as injection site because, unlike other regions, trypanosomes remained there and multiplied locally up to 15 days after inoculation. Parasites were detected initially outside cells or inside neutrophils. Only after the first week following inoculation were developing and multiplying trypanosomes seen inside macrophages or other resident cells. Parasites persisted until 15–20 days after inoculation, but by about the 28th day they were no longer seen.
- Published
- 1988
36. Effects of Wolbachia on fitness of Culex quinquefasciatus (Diptera; Culicidae)
- Author
-
Lincoln Suesdek, André F. Cardoso, A. Tania Bijovsky, Alexandre S. Moura, Carlos E. Winter, and Fabio Almeida
- Subjects
Male ,Microbiology (medical) ,Culex ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Oviposition ,Longevity ,Reproductive fitness ,Zoology ,Aposymbiotic mosquitoes ,Microbiology ,Botany ,Culex pipiens ,parasitic diseases ,Genetics ,Animals ,Symbiosis ,Molecular Biology ,Crosses, Genetic ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Wolbachia pipientis ,Tetracycline treatment ,media_common ,Aedes ,biology ,Reproductive success ,Reproduction ,fungi ,Culex quinquefasciatus ,biology.organism_classification ,Fecundity ,Infectious Diseases ,Wolbachia ,Female ,Genetic Fitness - Abstract
Wolbachia are α-proteobacteria that were first reported in Culex pipiens mosquitoes early in the twentieth century. Since then, the effect of Wolbachia on their host's reproduction has drawn attention and has been increasingly investigated. Given the extreme complexity of this interaction, new study cases are welcomed to enhance its understanding. The present work addressed the influence of Wolbachia on Cx. quinquefasciatus, the cosmopolitan member of the Cx. pipiens complex. Samples of a Cx. quinquefasciatus colony (wPip(+)) originated from individuals naturally infected by Wolbachiapipientis B strain, were cured with tetracycline, yielding a Wolbachia-free colony (wPip(-)). Both the presence of bacteria and the efficiency of bacterial elimination were checked by PCR of the wsp gene. Total reproductive unidirectional incompatibility occurred when wPip(-) females were crossed with wPip(+) males, whereas the other three types of reciprocal crosses were viable. Reproductive aspects were also comparatively evaluated between colonies. Concerning oviposition time during the first gonotrophic cycle, wPip(+) females developed and laid eggs earlier than did wPip(-) females. Reproductive fitness was higher among wPip(-) than wPip(+) females regarding the following parameters: fertility: egg rafts/fed females; fecundity: eggs/raft, and viability: larvae/eggs. Conversely, longevity of wPip(-) females was lower. Summarising, although the infected mosquitoes have the advantage of a higher longevity, they have lower reproductive fitness. Our results are partly distinct from all other reports on Aedes and Culex mosquitoes previously published.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Phagocytosis of collagen by mouse decidual cells
- Author
-
Telma Maria Tenório Zorn, Estela Bevilacqua, A.T. Bijovsky, and Paulo Alexandre Abrahamsohn
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Phagocytosis ,macromolecular substances ,Vacuole ,Fibril ,Endometrium ,Mice ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Decidua ,Animals ,Decidual cells ,biology ,Acid phosphatase ,Fibrillogenesis ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Cell biology ,Microscopy, Electron ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Cytoplasm ,biology.protein ,Female ,Collagen ,Anatomy - Abstract
Collagen fibrils were present within membrane-bound vacuoles in the cytoplasm of mouse decidual cells on the 7th day of pregnancy. The space between the vacuole membranes and the fibrils was narrow and frequently filled with a granular electron-dense material. The loss of banding of the collagen fibrils, their association with lysosomelike bodies, and the demonstration of acid phosphatase activity in the vacuoles indicate that the fibrils were internalized by the decidual cells and were being digested. It is suggested that phagocytosis of collagen is a mechanism of remodeling of the mouse decidua.
- Published
- 1989
38. Chronic Infection in Mice With Trypanosoma Cruzi
- Author
-
Bijovsky, A. Tania, Elizar, Marcelo V., Muller, Leticia A., Katzin, Victor J., and Cappa, Stella M. Gonzale Z.
- Published
- 1983
39. The influence of lymphatic drainage in experimental 'Trypanosoma cruzi' infection
- Author
-
Bijovsky, A. Tania, Milder, Regina V., and Abrahamsohn, Ises A.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Chronic infection in mice with Trypanosoma cruzi
- Author
-
A T, Bijovsky, M V, Elizari, L A, Muller, V J, Katzin, and S M, González Cappa
- Subjects
Chagas Cardiomyopathy ,Myositis ,Muscles ,Myocardium ,Trypanosoma cruzi ,Mice, Inbred Strains ,Disease Models, Animal ,Electrocardiography ,Mice ,Immunoglobulin M ,Antibody Formation ,Chronic Disease ,Animals ,Chagas Disease - Published
- 1983
41. The influence of lymphatic drainage in experimental Trypanosoma cruzi infection
- Author
-
A T, Bijovsky, R V, Milder, I A, Abrahamsohn, I L, Sinhorini, and M, Mariano
- Subjects
Lymphatic System ,Male ,Disease Models, Animal ,Cheek ,Mesocricetus ,Foot ,Cricetinae ,Trypanosoma cruzi ,Animals ,Chagas Disease ,Female - Abstract
The rapid disappearance of infective forms of Trypanosoma cruzi from the site of inoculation as well as the initial phase of infection produced by the parasite are not yet fully understood. To investigate this problem we used the hamster as an animal model considering the existence of the cheek pouch--a peculiar region devoid of lymphatic vessels. T. cruzi trypomastigotes were inoculated into the cheek pouch or into the footpad of animals previously infected or not with the same parasite. The results were followed from 3 up to 21 days postinoculation, by histological examination. In the cheek pouch of normal animals a large number of parasites could be seen up to 15 days post-inoculation and the inflammatory infiltrate had a focal distribution. Conversely, in the footpad the infiltrate was diffuse and no parasites could be detected. These observations indicate that the lymphatic system is the main route of T. cruzi dissemination from the site or inoculation. When hamsters were first inoculated in the footpad and 7 days later in the pouch, the inflammatory infiltrate at this point was less aggressive and no parasites could be detected.
- Published
- 1984
42. New archaeological and numismatic evidence for the Persian destruction of Jerusalem in 614 CE
- Author
-
Ben-Ami, D., Yana Tchekhanovets, and Bijovsky, G.
43. Catepsinas B vitelolíticas de Culex quinquefasciatus
- Author
-
Alexandre Santos de Moura, Alcira Tania Bijovsky de Katzin, Andréa Cristina Fogaça, and Ednildo de Alcântara Machado
- Subjects
Veterinary medicine ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Culex quinquefasciatus - Abstract
Apesar de Culex quinquefasciatus ser um eficiente vetor de doenças tais como a filariose linfática, febre do Nilo Ocidental e outras várias neuroviroses, poucas pesquisas sobre sua fisiologia têm sido conduzidas. Como em todos os animais ovíparos, o desenvolvimento embrionário dos mosquitos depende da degradação dos nutrientes armazenados no ovo, sendo a catepsina B uma protease que tem sido identificada e caracterizada em vários insetos como envolvida nesta função. Neste trabalho identificamos, por espectrometria de massas, duas catepsinas B de Culex quinquefasciatus, parcialmente purificadas por autoproteólise de extrato total de ovos. Segundo a anotação de suas sequências no banco de dados específico para vetores, o VectorBase, elas são enzimas parálogas e suas sequências apresentam 77% de homologia. Denominadas neste trabalho como CatB1 e CatB2, ambas são expressas simultaneamente no corpo gorduroso de todas as fêmeas vitelogênicas de nossa colônia e sua atividade pode ser detectada nos ovários vitelogênicos, sugerindo sua origem materna. A transcrição de ambas as enzimas se inicia após o repasto sanguíneo (ARS), alcançando o pico de expressão às 36 h ARS, de forma bastante semelhante à da vitelogenina. Despite Culex quinquefasciatus be an efficient vector of diseases such as lymphatic filariasis, West Nile fever and other various neurotrophic viruses, little research on its physiology have been conducted. As in all oviparous animals, embryonic development of mosquitoes depends on the degradation of the nutrients stored in the egg. Cathepsin B is a protease that has been identified and characterized in a number of insects as involved in this function. In this work we have identified, by mass spectrometry, two cathepsins B of Culex quinquefasciatus, partially purified by self-proteolysis of total egg extract. According to the annotation of their sequences in the specific vector database, the VectorBase, they are paralogue enzymes and their sequences have 77% homology. Named in this work as CatB1 and CatB2, both are expressed simultaneously in the fat body of all vitellogenic females of our colony and its activity can be detected in vitellogenic ovaries, suggesting a maternal origin. The transcription of both enzymes starts post blood meal (PBM), reaching their peak of expression at 36 h PBM, quite similar to vitellogenin.
- Published
- 2015
44. Culex quinquefasciatus vitellogenesis
- Author
-
André F. Cardoso, Alcira Tania Bijovsky de Katzin, Margareth de Lara Capurro Guimaraes, Ednildo de Alcântara Machado, Hatisaburo Masuda, and Carlos Eduardo Winter
- Subjects
Veterinary medicine ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Culex quinquefasciatus - Abstract
Como em outros mosquitos, os trofócitos do corpo gorduroso de Cx. quinquefasciatus sintetizam vitelogenina (Vg), principal proteína armazenada pelo ovócito, formada por duas subunidades de 200 e 86 kDa. A ultraestrutura dos trofócitos revela o rápido desenvolvimento da maquinaria biossintética após a alimentação com sangue (aa) e a consecutiva degradação após as 48 h aa. Antes do repasto (AR), um conjunto de células indiferenciadas, limitado pelo epitélio folicular, conforma os folículos ovarianos. Após AR, o ovócito se destaca pelo acúmulo de lipídeos e Vg. O receptor de vitelogenina é encontrado somente nos ovários e análise por PCR em tempos mostrou aumento dos transcritos nos primeiros cinco dias após emersão e nas primeiras 48 h aa, durante a vitelogênese. O perfil transcricional de Vg mostrou um pico no terceiro dia de vida adulta e ao final do processo ovogênico As in other mosquitoes, fat body trophocytes of Cx. quinquefasciatus synthesize vitellogenin (Vg), the major yolk protein stored by the oocyte, formed by two subunits of 200 and 86 kDa. The trophocytes ultrastructure reveals the rapid development of the biosynthetic machinery and the consecutive degradation around 48 h post blood meal (PBM). Before blood meal, a set of undifferentiated cells limited by follicular epithelium, conform the ovarian follicles. After blood meal, the oocyte is remarkable by accumulation of lipid inclusions and yolk granules. Vitellogenin receptors (rVitCx), are localized exclusively in the ovaries and real time PCR showed transcripts increase at the first five days after emergence (AE), and at the first 48 h PBM, during oogenesis. Vg transcripts profile showed a peak on the third day AE and at the end of the vitellogenic process
- Published
- 2010
45. Histological survey of protocerebral areas and retrocerebral complex of Melipona quadrifasciata anthidioides workers (Hymenoptera, Apidae, Meliponini)
- Author
-
Cintia Etsuko Yamashita, Mirian David Marques, Maria Cristina Arias, and Alcira Tania Bijovsky de Katzin
- Subjects
Biology - Abstract
Uma colônia de abelhas sem ferrão é composta pela rainha, operárias de diferentes idades, que desempenham diferentes tarefas e por machos, presentes apenas na época anterior à fecundação da rainha. Dentre as operárias, somente as mais velhas forrageiras - mantém contato direto com o ciclo claro/escuro ambiental. Ritmos biológicos estão presentes e são gerados pelo sistema circadiano localizado no sistema nervoso central e no complexo retrocerebral. Este sistema é composto por uma rede de múltiplos osciladores integrados com vias aferentes, provenientes do sistema sensorial, e eferentes. As vias eferentes se expressam através de componentes nervosos, neurohormonais e hormonais. Neste trabalho, o sistema nervoso central e o complexo retrocerebral de forrageiras de Melipona quadrifasciata anthidioides foi mapeado, usando procedimentos histológicos clássicos, complementados por ensaios de imunocitoquímica. Anticorpos gerados contra Fasciclina II, PDF e Corazonina foram utilizados e a marcação obtida foi específica. Neurópilas estão presentes, tanto nos lobos ópticos como no cérebro e são áreas de referência para identificação das diferentes estruturas. As neurópilas do lobo óptico: lâmina, medula e lóbula, são regiões bem delimitadas e evidentes. O protocérebro é o gânglio cerebral mais dorsal e com o maior volume. Nele encontram-se dois conjuntos neuropilares: os corpora pedunculata, de forma cogumelar, que ocupam grande parte do protocérebro; e o complexo central, na linha média. Duas regiões protocerebrais concentram células neurossecretoras: pars intercerebralis e pars lateralis. O complexo retrocerebral é composto por duas glândulas pares: corpora cardiaca e corpora allata. A localização espacial destas estruturas foi reconstruída em imagens tridimensionais. Reconhece-se no sistema nervoso central e no complexo retrocerebral de M. quadrifasciata estruturas com características morfológicas e localização espacial específicas da espécie. Os resultados encontrados neste trabalho são as informações anatômicas básicas imprescindíveis para estudos posteriores que visam identificar os componentes e a organização do sistema circadiano em abelhas sem ferrão. The stingless bees colony comprises a queen, workers of diferent ages that perform different tasks and males only present before the queen´s fecundation. Among the workers, only the oldest ones foragers keep a direct contact with the light/dark environmental cycle. Biological rhythms are present and are generated by the circadian system located in the central nervous system and in the retrocerebral complex. This system is composed by a web of multiple oscillators coupled to input pathways from the sensorial system and output pathways. The output pathways consist in nervous, neurohormones and hormones components. In this study, the central nervous system and the retrocerebral complex of Melipona quadrifasciata foragers were analyzed by classical histological procedures complemented by immunocitochemical essays. Specific reactive antibodies against Fasciclin II, PDF and Corazonin have been used. The optic lobes neuropils: lamina, medulla and lobula are distinct and evident. The protocerebrum is the dorsal most and largest ganglia. In this structure two neuropilar groups are present: corpora pedunculata, the bilateral mushroom bodies that occupy a large portion of the protocerebrum; and the central complex in the median line. Neurosecretory cells cluster together in two protocerebral regions: pars intercerebralis and pars lateralis. The retrocerebral complex is composed by two pairs of glands: corpora cardiaca and corpora allata. In this work, tridimensional images show their specific localization in the nervous system. In both, central nervous system and retrocerebral complex of M. quadrifasciata, species specific traces can be recognized in morphological characteristics and spatial localization of certain structures. The results on the anatomy of stingless bees nervous system shown here are indispensable to proceed with studies that aim to identify the components and the organization of the circadian system of stingless bees.
- Published
- 2009
46. Standardization and application of immunoenzimatic test for detection of IgG antibodies against Toxoplasma gondii in saliva of school
- Author
-
Miriam de Souza Macre, Heitor Franco de Andrade Junior, Edna Maria de Albuquerque Diniz, Antônio Carlos Frias, Alcira Tania Bijovsky de Katzin, and Dalva Cruz Lagana
- Subjects
business.industry ,Medicine ,business - Abstract
As zoonoses urbanas, doenças que afetam muitos indivíduos em países tropicais, especialmente crianças, são infecções que podem ser adquiridas pelo homem através do contato com animais de estimação, pela ingestão de carne ou água contaminada. Para sua prevenção, é fundamental a educação para medidas de higiene e profilaxia com relação ao manuseio dos alimentos, animais de estimação e higiene pessoal. Isto poderia ser feito através de ensino intensivo, ministrado por profissionais treinados durante o primeiro ciclo do Ensino Fundamental. No presente trabalho, estudamos este tipo de ensino e a prevalência destas doenças, usando a toxoplasmose como modelo, em 164 alunos do primeiro ciclo do ensino fundamental da Escola Estadual Antonio de Pádua Vieira, com coleta de saliva. Foi desenvolvido ELISA de alta sensibilidade em saliva concentrada por etanol. Após 12 (doze) meses, a fixação do conteúdo foi avaliada por questionário. Havia uma prevalência de 50% de contato com Toxoplasma gondii nessa população, mostrando a relevância do problema. As crianças sob intervenção mostraram fixação do conhecimento, para ambas as fontes principais de contaminação mostrando a importância da intervenção, em comparação com crianças sem intervenção. As crianças sem toxoplasmose mostraram uma melhor eficiência na fixação da informação. Nossos dados sugerem que intervenções curtas têm um grande efeito de fixação de informações em escolares e que a saliva pode ser um material para a detecção de contato com a toxoplasmose. Urban zoonoses affect large proportion of the population in tropical countries, specially school children. Those infections could be acquired by contact with pets, or ingestion of water or meat contaminated by agents. Education in preventive hygiene measures, as adequate cleaning and cooking are essential in this age group. Intensive teaching during short interventions by trained personal could be effective. Here, we study this type of educational intervention, using toxoplasmosis as a model, in 164 school children in the first years of elementary grades in a public São Paulo school, E.E.P.G. Antonio de Pádua Vieira, with saliva sampling. We had standardize a specific anti T. gondii IgG assay in etanol concentrade saliva. After 12 months, the knowledge of this population was tested by questionnaire. There are a 50% prevalence of contact with T.gondii during the intervention, showing the importance of zoonosis in this group. After one year, most children who assisted the intervention recalled correctly the main transmission ways of the zoonosis, showing fixation by short intervention, as compared to non-intervened shoolchildren of the same age group. Children who had no contact with T.gondii show higher recall proportion. Our data suggest that shorts interventions are effective in the knowledge fixation in schoolchildren and that saliva, a non invasive sampling, could be an alternative material for detection of contact with toxoplasmosis.
- Published
- 2008
47. Comparative analysis of Culex quinquefasciatus infected and non-infected by Wolbachia pipientis
- Author
-
Fabio Almeida, Alcira Tania Bijovsky de Katzin, Delsio Natal, and Paulo Eduardo Martins Ribolla
- Subjects
biology ,Culex ,Wolbachia ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology - Abstract
Wolbachia é uma bactéria intracelular obrigatória, de transmissão vertical, encontrada em tecidos reprodutivos de muitos artrópodes e nematóides. Ela manipula o ciclo reprodutivo de seus hospedeiros, induzindo partenogênese, feminização, morte de machos e incompatibilidade citoplasmática. No intuito de verificar a existência de alterações reprodutivas em mosquitos Culex quinquefasciatus infectados por Wolbachia (cepa B), tratamos com antibiótico uma colônia infectada e obtivemos uma colônia livre da infecção. Os mosquitos de nossas colônias apresentam o fenômeno de incompatibilidade citoplasmática. Paralelamente, a infecção causa redução do número de ovos e diminui a mortalidade de larvas e pupas, fazendo com que o número de adultos emergidos seja estatisticamente igual entre os animais infectados e não infectados. Além disso, observamos que mosquitos coletados na natureza, na cidade de São Paulo, Brasil, estão infectados pela mesma cepa da bactéria. Wolbachia is an obligatory intracellular bacterium, maternally inherited, found in reproductive tissues of many arthropods and nematodes. It manipulates the reproductive behavior of their hosts, inducing parthenogenesis, feminization, male-killing and cytoplasmic incompatibility. In order to verify the existence of reproductive manipulation in Culex quinquefasciatus mosquitoes infected with Wolbachia (B strain), an infected population was treated with antibiotic to obtain a Wolbachia free colony. The mosquitoes of our colonies present the cytoplasmic incompatibility phenomenon. In parallel, infection causes reduction in the number of eggs and decreases the mortality of larvae and pupae, making the number of emerged adults statistically equal between the infected and uninfected animals. Furthermore, we observed that wild mosquitoes collected in Sao Paulo city, Brazil, are infected by the same strain of bacteria.
- Published
- 2008
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.