9 results on '"Monteiro, M"'
Search Results
2. Author Correction: Genetic and morphological identification of filarial worm from Iberian hare in Portugal
- Author
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dos Santos, F. A. Abade, Duarte, M. D., Carvalho, C. L., Monteiro, M., Carvalho, P., Mendonça, P., Valente, P. C. L. G., Sheikhnejad, H., Waap, H., and Gomes, J.
- Published
- 2022
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3. DNA methylation map in circulating leukocytes mirrors subcutaneous adipose tissue methylation pattern: a genome-wide analysis from non-obese and obese patients
- Author
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Crujeiras, A. B., primary, Diaz-Lagares, A., additional, Sandoval, J., additional, Milagro, F. I., additional, Navas-Carretero, S., additional, Carreira, M. C., additional, Gomez, A., additional, Hervas, D., additional, Monteiro, M. P., additional, Casanueva, F. F., additional, Esteller, M., additional, and Martinez, J. A., additional
- Published
- 2017
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4. Transcranial electrical stimulation modulates emotional experience and metabolites in the prefrontal cortex in a donation task.
- Author
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Mugnol-Ugarte L, Bortolini T, Yao B, Mikkelsen M, Carneiro Monteiro M, Andorinho de Freitas Ferreira AC, Bramatti I, Melo B, Hoefle S, Meireles F, Moll J, and Pobric G
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Glutamic Acid metabolism, Altruism, Glutamine metabolism, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy methods, Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex metabolism, Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex physiology, Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation, Prefrontal Cortex metabolism, Prefrontal Cortex physiology, Emotions physiology, gamma-Aminobutyric Acid metabolism
- Abstract
Understanding the neural, metabolic, and psychological mechanisms underlying human altruism and decision-making is a complex and important topic both for science and society. Here, we investigated whether transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) applied to two prefrontal cortex regions, the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC, anode) and the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC, cathode) can induce changes in self-reported emotions and to modulate local metabolite concentrations. We employed in vivo quantitative MR Spectroscopy in healthy adult participants and quantified changes in GABA and Glx (glutamate + glutamine) before and after five sessions of tDCS delivered at 2 mA for 20 min (active group) and 1 min (sham group) while participants were engaged in a charitable donation task. In the active group, we observed increased levels of GABA in vmPFC. Glx levels decreased in both prefrontal regions and self-reported happiness increased significantly over time in the active group. Self-reported guiltiness in both active and sham groups tended to decrease. The results indicate that self-reported happiness can be modulated, possibly due to changes in Glx concentrations following repeated stimulation. Therefore, local changes may induce remote changes in the reward network through interactions with other metabolites, previously thought to be unreachable with noninvasive stimulation techniques., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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5. Cortical folding correlates to aging and Alzheimer's Disease's cognitive and CSF biomarkers.
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de Moraes FHP, Sudo F, Carneiro Monteiro M, de Melo BRP, Mattos P, Mota B, and Tovar-Moll F
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- Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Male, Biomarkers cerebrospinal fluid, Cognition, Aging, Amyloid beta-Peptides cerebrospinal fluid, tau Proteins cerebrospinal fluid, Alzheimer Disease pathology, Cognitive Dysfunction pathology
- Abstract
This manuscript presents the quantification and correlation of three aspects of Alzheimer's Disease evolution, including structural, biochemical, and cognitive assessments. We aimed to test a novel structural biomarker for neurodegeneration based on a cortical folding model for mammals. Our central hypothesis is that the cortical folding variable, representative of axonal tension in white matter, is an optimal discriminator of pathological aging and correlates with altered loadings in Cerebrospinal Fluid samples and a decline in cognition and memory. We extracted morphological features from T1w 3T MRI acquisitions using FreeSurfer from 77 Healthy Controls (age = 66 ± 8.4, 69% females), 31 Mild Cognitive Impairment (age = 72 ± 4.8, 61% females), and 13 Alzheimer's Disease patients (age = 77 ± 6.1, 62% females) of recruited volunteers in Brazil to test its discriminative power using optimal cut-point analysis. Cortical folding distinguishes the groups with reasonable accuracy (Healthy Control-Alzheimer's Disease, accuracy = 0.82; Healthy Control-Mild Cognitive Impairment, accuracy = 0.56). Moreover, Cerebrospinal Fluid biomarkers (total Tau, A[Formula: see text]1-40, A[Formula: see text]1-42, and Lipoxin) and cognitive scores (Cognitive Index, Rey's Auditory Verbal Learning Test, Trail Making Test, Digit Span Backward) were correlated with the global neurodegeneration in MRI aiming to describe health, disease, and the transition between the two states using morphology., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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6. Polyphenol-rich açaí seed extract exhibits reno-protective and anti-fibrotic activities in renal tubular cells and mice with kidney failure.
- Author
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Monteiro EB, Borges NA, Monteiro M, de Castro Resende Â, Daleprane JB, and Soulage CO
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- Humans, Male, Mice, Animals, Transforming Growth Factor beta1 genetics, Kidney, Antioxidants pharmacology, Adenine, Fibrosis, Plant Extracts pharmacology, Polyphenols pharmacology, Renal Insufficiency
- Abstract
The main goal of this study was to evaluate the reno-protective effects of a phenolic-rich Açaí seed extract (ASE) in mice with kidney failure. Kidney failure was induced chemically with an adenine-rich diet (0.25% w/w for 4 weeks) in male CD1 Swiss mice. Mice were then provided daily with ASE (at a dose of ~ 350 mg/kg/day) in drinking water for 4 weeks. Adenine mice exhibited renal dysfunction evidenced by increased proteinuria, increased uremia, extensive tubular atrophy and kidney fibrosis associated with overexpression of pro-fibrotic genes (collagen 1a1, transforming growth factor β1, TGF-β1) and markers of tubular injury (such as Kidney injury molecule-1, KIM-1). ASE was able to beneficially counteract all these effects. ASE improved oxidative damage and fibrosis by decreasing carbonylated protein and MDA concentrations, as well as collagen deposition in renal tissue. ASE decreased the expression of TGF-β1 gene and the abundance of protein TGF-β1 in kidneys. It further decreased both expression and urinary excretion of tubular injury biomarkers, e.g., KIM-1 and Neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin. CKD ASE-treated mice exhibited higher polyphenol content and total antioxidant capacity compared to control mice. ASE further prevented the expression of profibrotic genes in HK2 human tubular cells exposed to uremic toxins. Taken together, these findings suggest that ASE exerted potent reno-protective and anti-fibrotic effects through its antioxidant activity and the modulation of the TGF-β1 pathway., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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7. Characterization of the Portuguese population diagnosed with retinoblastoma.
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Castela G, Providência J, Monteiro M, Silva S, Brito M, Sá J, Oliveiros B, Murta JN, Correa Z, and Branco MC
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- Child, Preschool, Genes, Retinoblastoma, Humans, Infant, Portugal epidemiology, Retrospective Studies, Retinal Neoplasms diagnosis, Retinal Neoplasms epidemiology, Retinal Neoplasms genetics, Retinoblastoma diagnosis, Retinoblastoma epidemiology, Retinoblastoma genetics
- Abstract
The purpose of this study is to characterize demographically and genetically the Portuguese population with retinoblastoma; to report the clinical stage at presentation and its impact on survival and ocular preservation rate and, finally, to assess the incidence of retinoblastoma in Portugal. Retrospective observational study including children consecutively diagnosed with retinoblastoma at the Portuguese National Referral Center of Intraocular Tumors, between October 2015 and October 2020. Twenty-eight children were diagnosed with retinoblastoma at our center, 15 hereditary from which 12 presented with bilateral retinoblastoma and 3 were unilateral. The overall mean age at diagnosis was 13.6 ± 11.1 months with hereditary retinoblastomas diagnosed slightly earlier at 9.6 ± 6.3 months. A familial history of retinoblastoma was found in only 4 (14.3%) of the cases. A pathogenic mutation in the RB1 gene was found in 13 (46.4%) of the children. The most frequent sign at referral was leukocoria in 71.4% of patients. Considering the ICRB classification of the tumors, 84.6% of non-hereditable hereditary retinoblastomas were referred to our center in advanced stages. In the group of hereditable retinoblastomas 86.7% presented with one of the eyes with advanced intraocular retinoblastoma. Fourteen children had one eye enucleated due to retinoblastoma. No deaths were registered during the study period. Considering the incidence analysis, we registered a year-of-birth controlled incidence analysis of 4.04 per 100.000 living births (IC 95% 1.59-6.49). This is the first characterization of the Portuguese Population diagnosed with Retinoblastoma in the National Reference Center., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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8. Integron gene cassettes harboring novel variants of D-alanine-D-alanine ligase confer high-level resistance to D-cycloserine.
- Author
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Rahman MA, Kaiser F, Jamshidi S, Freitas Monteiro M, Rahman KM, Mullany P, and Roberts AP
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- Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Escherichia coli drug effects, Humans, Molecular Docking Simulation, Treponema denticola drug effects, Cycloserine pharmacology, Drug Resistance, Bacterial genetics, Integrons genetics, Peptide Synthases genetics
- Abstract
Antibiotic resistance poses an increasing threat to global health. To tackle this problem, the identification of principal reservoirs of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) plus an understanding of drivers for their evolutionary selection are important. During a PCR-based screen of ARGs associated with integrons in saliva-derived metagenomic DNA of healthy human volunteers, two novel variants of genes encoding a D-alanine-D-alanine ligase (ddl6 and ddl7) located within gene cassettes in the first position of a reverse integron were identified. Treponema denticola was identified as the likely host of the ddl cassettes. Both ddl6 and ddl7 conferred high level resistance to D-cycloserine when expressed in Escherichia coli with ddl7 conferring four-fold higher resistance to D-cycloserine compared to ddl6. A SNP was found to be responsible for this difference in resistance phenotype between the two ddl variants. Molecular dynamics simulations were used to explain the mechanism of this phenotypic change at the atomic scale. A hypothesis for the evolutionary selection of ddl containing integron gene cassettes is proposed, based on molecular docking of plant metabolites within the ATP and D-cycloserine binding pockets of Ddl.
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- 2020
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9. MMP proteolytic activity regulates cancer invasiveness by modulating integrins.
- Author
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Das A, Monteiro M, Barai A, Kumar S, and Sen S
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- Biomechanical Phenomena, Cell Adhesion, Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Membrane metabolism, Cell Movement, Extracellular Matrix metabolism, Humans, Integrin beta1 metabolism, Neoplasm Invasiveness, Protein Transport, Integrins metabolism, Matrix Metalloproteinases metabolism, Proteolysis
- Abstract
Cancer invasion through dense extracellular matrices (ECMs) is mediated by matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) which degrade the ECM thereby creating paths for migration. However, how this degradation influences the phenotype of cancer cells is not fully clear. Here we address this question by probing the function of MMPs in regulating biophysical properties of cancer cells relevant to invasion. We show that MMP catalytic activity regulates cell spreading, motility, contractility and cortical stiffness by stabilizing integrins at the membrane and activating focal adhesion kinase. Interestingly, cell rounding and cell softening on stiff gels induced by MMP inhibition is attenuated on MMP pre-conditioned surfaces. Together, our results suggest that MMP catalytic activity regulates invasiveness of cancer cells by modulating integrins.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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