10 results on '"Leal-Costa MV"'
Search Results
2. Differential Distribution of Flavonoids and Phenolic Acids in Leaves of Kalanchoe delagoensis Ecklon & Zeyher (Crassulaceae).
- Author
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Casanova JM, Dos Santos Nascimento LB, Casanova LM, Leal-Costa MV, Costa SS, and Tavares ES
- Subjects
- Antioxidants analysis, Antioxidants chemistry, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid methods, Crassulaceae radiation effects, Flavonoids analysis, Kalanchoe cytology, Kalanchoe radiation effects, Microscopy, Fluorescence, Phenols analysis, Plant Extracts analysis, Plant Leaves chemistry, Plant Leaves cytology, Crassulaceae chemistry, Flavonoids chemistry, Hydroxybenzoates chemistry, Kalanchoe chemistry, Plant Extracts chemistry
- Abstract
Kalanchoe delagoensis is adapted to intense solar irradiation, drought, and heat, partially due to the presence of phenols, important photo-protective compounds and antioxidants. This study aimed to evaluate the distribution of flavonoids and phenolic acid derivatives throughout the erect-tubular leaves of K. delagoensis. Specimens grown under sunny conditions were used for histochemical and high-performance liquid chromatography coupled with diode array detection (liquid HPLC-DAD) analysis. The NP (2-aminoethyl diphenylborinate) test suggested the presence of phenolic acids throughout the leaf blade below the epidermis and in chloroplasts, mainly in the leaf base. Flavonoids were detected specifically in chloroplasts, on the adaxial side of the middle third and at the leaf apex, near the meristematic cells. There was a tendency of flavonoid accumulation from the middle third to the apex, especially surrounding the gem, while phenolic acids were observed mainly in the base. This can be explained by the more exposed leaf apex and to the presence of apical buds (high production and regulation sites of ROS). The HPLC-DAD analysis showed different classes of flavonoids and phenolic acid derivatives in the leaf extracts, agreeing with the NP test results. This is the first time that the substitution of phenolic acids by flavonoids from the leaf base to the apex has been described.
- Published
- 2020
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3. Anatomy and ultrastructure of embryonic leaves of the C4 species Setaria viridis.
- Author
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Junqueira NEG, Ortiz-Silva B, Leal-Costa MV, Alves-Ferreira M, Dickinson HG, Langdale JA, and Reinert F
- Subjects
- Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, Microscopy, Electron, Transmission, Phloem ultrastructure, Plant Leaves anatomy & histology, Plant Leaves ultrastructure, Plant Shoots anatomy & histology, Plant Shoots embryology, Plant Shoots ultrastructure, Seeds growth & development, Setaria Plant anatomy & histology, Setaria Plant ultrastructure, Xylem ultrastructure, Plant Leaves embryology, Setaria Plant embryology
- Abstract
Background and Aims: Setaria viridis is being promoted as a model C4 photosynthetic plant because it has a small genome (~515 Mb), a short life cycle (~60 d) and it can be transformed. Unlike other C4 grasses such as maize, however, there is very little information about how C4 leaf anatomy (Kranz anatomy) develops in S. viridis. As a foundation for future developmental genetic studies, we provide an anatomical and ultrastructural framework of early shoot development in S. viridis, focusing on the initiation of Kranz anatomy in seed leaves., Methods: Setaria viridis seeds were germinated and divided into five stages covering development from the dry seed (stage S0) to 36 h after germination (stage S4). Material at each of these stages was examined using conventional light, scanning and transmission electron microscopy., Key Results: Dry seeds contained three embryonic leaf primordia at different developmental stages (plastochron 1-3 primordia). The oldest (P3) leaf primordium possessed several procambial centres whereas P2 displayed only ground meristem. At the tip of P3 primordia at stage S4, C4 leaf anatomy typical of the malate dehydrogenase-dependent nicotinamide dinucleotide phosphate (NADP-ME) subtype was evident in that vascular bundles lacked a mestome layer and were surrounded by a single layer of bundle sheath cells that contained large, centrifugally located chloroplasts. Two to three mesophyll cells separated adjacent vascular bundles and one mesophyll cell layer on each of the abaxial and adaxial sides delimited vascular bundles from the epidermis., Conclusions: The morphological trajectory reported here provides a foundation for studies of gene regulation during early leaf development in S. viridis and a framework for comparative analyses with other C4 grasses.
- Published
- 2018
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4. Optimization of Aqueous Extraction from Kalanchoe pinnata Leaves to Obtain the Highest Content of an Anti-inflammatory Flavonoid using a Response Surface Model.
- Author
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Dos Santos Nascimento LB, de Aguiar PF, Leal-Costa MV, Coutinho MAS, Borsodi MPG, Rossi-Bergmann B, Tavares ES, and Costa SS
- Subjects
- Animals, Anti-Inflammatory Agents pharmacology, Cell Survival drug effects, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Flavonoids pharmacology, Macrophages drug effects, Mice, Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet, Anti-Inflammatory Agents analysis, Flavonoids analysis, Kalanchoe chemistry, Models, Chemical, Plant Leaves chemistry
- Abstract
Introduction: The medicinal plant Kalanchoe pinnata is a phenolic-rich species used worldwide. The reports on its pharmacological uses have increased by 70% in the last 10 years. The leaves of this plant are the main source of an unusual quercetin-diglycosyl flavonoid (QAR, quercetin arabinopyranosyl rhamnopyranoside), which can be easily extracted using water. QAR possess a strong in vivo anti-inflammatory activity., Objective: To optimize the aqueous extraction of QAR from K. pinnata leaves using a three-level full factorial design., Material and Methods: After a previous screening design, time (x
1 ) and temperature (x2 ) were chosen as the two independent variables for optimization. Freeze-dried leaves were extracted with water (20% w/v), at 30°C, 40°C or 50°C for 5, 18 or 30 min. QAR content (determined by HPLC-DAD) and yield of extracts were analyzed. The optimized extracts were also evaluated for cytotoxicity., Results: The optimal heating times for extract yield and QAR content were similar in two-dimensional (2D) surface responses (between 12.8 and 30 min), but their optimal extraction temperatures were ranged between 40°C and 50°C for QAR content and 30°C and 38°C for extract yield. A compromise region for both parameters was at the mean points that were 40°C for the extraction temperature and 18 min for the total time., Conclusion: The optimized process is faster and spends less energy than the previous one (water; 30 min at 55°C); therefore is greener and more attractive for industrial purposes. This is the first report of extraction optimization of this bioactive flavonoid. Copyright © 2018 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., (Copyright © 2018 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)- Published
- 2018
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5. Induction of wound-periderm-like tissue in Kalanchoe pinnata (Lam.) Pers. (Crassulaceae) leaves as a defence response to high UV-B radiation levels.
- Author
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Nascimento LB, Moreira Ndos S, Leal-Costa MV, Costa SS, and Tavares ES
- Subjects
- Kalanchoe growth & development, Plant Leaves growth & development, Plant Leaves immunology, Kalanchoe immunology, Kalanchoe radiation effects, Plant Immunity, Plant Leaves radiation effects, Ultraviolet Rays
- Abstract
Background and Aims: UV-B radiation can be stressful for plants and cause morphological and biochemical changes. Kalanchoe pinnata is a CAM leaf-succulent species distributed in hot and dry regions, and is rich in flavonoids, which are considered to be protective against UV-B radiation. This study aims to verify if K. pinnata has morphological or anatomical responses as a strategy in response to high UV-B levels., Methods: Kalanchoe pinnata plants of the same age were grown under white light (control) or white light plus supplemental UV-B radiation (5 h d(-1)). The plants were treated with the same photoperiod, photosynthetically active radiation, temperature and daily watering system. Fragments of the middle third of the leaf blade and petiole were dehydrated and then embedded in historesin and sectioned in a rotary microtome. Sections were stained with toluidine blue O and mounted in Entellan®. Microchemical analyses by optical microscopy were performed on fresh material with Sudan III, Sudan IV and phloroglucinol, and analysed using fluorescence microscopy., Key Results: Supplemental UV-B radiation caused leaf curling and the formation of brown areas on the leaves. These brown areas developed into a protective tissue on the adaxial side of the leaf, but only in directly exposed regions. Anatomically, this protective tissue was similar to a wound-periderm, with outer layer cell walls impregnated with suberin and lignin., Conclusions: This is the first report of wound-periderm formation in leaves in response to UV-B radiation. This protective tissue could be important for the survival of the species in desert regions under high UV-B stress conditions., (© The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Annals of Botany Company. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2015
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6. Ultraviolet-B radiation effects on phenolic profile and flavonoid content of Kalanchoe pinnata.
- Author
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Nascimento LBDS, Leal-Costa MV, Menezes EA, Lopes VR, Muzitano MF, Costa SS, and Tavares ES
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- Antioxidants analysis, Antioxidants chemistry, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Chromatography, Thin Layer, Flavonoids analysis, Kalanchoe chemistry, Kalanchoe metabolism, Phenols analysis, Plant Extracts chemistry, Plant Leaves chemistry, Plant Leaves metabolism, Plant Leaves radiation effects, Flavonoids chemistry, Kalanchoe radiation effects, Phenols chemistry, Ultraviolet Rays
- Abstract
Ultraviolet-B radiation is an important abiotic factor that can stimulate the production of secondary metabolites, including polyphenolic compounds. Kalanchoe pinnata (Crassulaceae) is a medicinal plant popularly used in Brazil for treating wounds and inflammation. This species is rich in phenolic compounds, which could account for some of its biological activities, including antileishmanial, antihypertensive and antibacterial properties. We investigated the effects of supplemental UV-B radiation on the phenolic profile, antioxidant activity and total flavonoid content of leaves of K. pinnata. Plants were grown under white light (W - control) and supplemental UV-B radiation (W+UVB). Supplemental UV-B radiation enhanced the total flavonoid content of the leaf extracts, without affecting the antioxidant activity or yield of extracts. Analysis by TLC and HPLC of W and W+UVB leaf extracts revealed quantitative and qualitative differences in their phenolic profiles. W+UVB extracts contained a higher diversity of phenolic compounds and a larger amount of quercitrin, an important bioactive flavonoid of this species. This is the first report of the use of ImageJ® program to analyze a TLC visualized by spraying with NP-PEG reagent. UV-B radiation is proposed as a supplemental light source in K. pinnata cultivation in order to improve its flavonoid composition., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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7. Are sun- and shade-type anatomy required for the acclimation of Neoregelia cruenta?
- Author
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Reinert F, Leal-Costa MV, Junqueira NE, and Tavares ES
- Subjects
- Photosynthesis physiology, Acclimatization physiology, Bromelia anatomy & histology, Bromelia physiology, Plant Leaves anatomy & histology, Sunlight
- Abstract
Sun and shade plants are often discriminated by a number of sun- and shade-type anatomies. Nonetheless, we propose that among tank-bromeliads, changes in rosette architecture satisfy the requirements for coping with contrasting light levels. The tank-bromeliad Neoregelia cruenta naturally colonises sub-habitats ranging from full exposure to direct sunlight, to shaded environments in sand ridge plains. We quantified anatomical and morphological traits of leaves and rosettes of N. cruenta grown under sun and shade conditions. Cells with undulated lateral walls within the water parenchyma are for the first time described for the family. Under high light, leaf blades were wider, shorter, and yellowish. The rosette diameter of sun plants was less than half that of shade plants. Sun leaves overlapped with neighbouring leaves for most of their length, forming a cylindrical rosette where water accumulates. Shade leaves only overlapped in the centre of the rosette. Most anatomical traits were similar under both growth conditions. Stomata were absent from the base of sun leaves, which is probably explained by limited gas exchange at the base of the tight sun-type rosette. Data suggest that the ability of N. cruenta to acclimate to sun and shade is better explained by changes in rosette architecture than by leaf anatomy.
- Published
- 2013
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8. Increased antioxidant activity and changes in phenolic profile of Kalanchoe pinnata (Lamarck) Persoon (Crassulaceae) specimens grown under supplemental blue light.
- Author
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Nascimento LB, Leal-Costa MV, Coutinho MA, Moreira Ndos S, Lage CL, Barbi Ndos S, Costa SS, and Tavares ES
- Subjects
- Kalanchoe metabolism, Light, Oxidation-Reduction, Plant Extracts chemistry, Plant Leaves metabolism, Quercetin biosynthesis, Antioxidants metabolism, Kalanchoe radiation effects, Phenols metabolism, Plant Leaves radiation effects, Quercetin analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
Antioxidant compounds protect plants against oxidative stress caused by environmental conditions. Different light qualities, such as UV-A radiation and blue light, have shown positive effects on the production of phenols in plants. Kalanchoe pinnata (Lamarck) Persoon (Crassulaceae) is used for treating wounds and inflammations. Some of these beneficial effects are attributed to the antioxidant activity of plant components. We investigated the effects of blue light and UV-A radiation supplementation on the total phenol content, antioxidant activity and chromatographic profile of aqueous extracts from leaves of K. pinnata. Monoclonal plants were grown under white light, white plus blue light and white plus UV-A radiation. Supplemental blue light improved the antioxidant activity and changed the phenolic profile of the extracts. Analysis by HPLC of supplemental blue-light plant extracts revealed a higher proportion of the major flavonoid quercetin 3-O-α-L-arabinopyranosyl (1→2) α-L-rhamnopyranoside, as well as the presence of a wide variety of other phenolic substances. These findings may explain the higher antioxidant activity observed for this extract. Blue light is proposed as a supplemental light source in the cultivation of K. pinnata, to improve its antioxidant activity., (© 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Photochemistry and Photobiology © 2012 The American Society of Photobiology.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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9. Effects of supplemental UV-A on the development, anatomy and metabolite production of Phyllanthus tenellus cultured in vitro.
- Author
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Victório CP, Leal-Costa MV, Tavares ES, Kuster RM, and Lage CL
- Subjects
- Carotenoids analysis, Chlorophyll analysis, Chlorophyll biosynthesis, Culture Techniques, Ellagic Acid analysis, Ellagic Acid metabolism, Flavonoids analysis, Glucosides analysis, Glucosides biosynthesis, Hydrolyzable Tannins analysis, Light, Mesophyll Cells radiation effects, Phyllanthus anatomy & histology, Phyllanthus growth & development, Phyllanthus metabolism, Plant Epidermis radiation effects, Plant Leaves anatomy & histology, Plant Leaves growth & development, Plant Leaves metabolism, Plant Shoots anatomy & histology, Plant Shoots growth & development, Plant Shoots metabolism, Carotenoids biosynthesis, Flavonoids biosynthesis, Phyllanthus radiation effects, Plant Leaves radiation effects, Plant Shoots radiation effects
- Abstract
Phyllanthus tenellus is widely used for its antiviral, analgesic and hepatoprotective properties. Although the production of several chemical classes of secondary metabolites is influenced by UV radiation, particularly phenolic compounds, we also know that UV radiation can result in anatomical and developmental damage. However, the morphological, anatomical and phytochemical changes in response to UV-A exposure are generally understudied in the Phyllanthaceae. Therefore, we evaluated the effects of UV-A radiation on plant development and leaf anatomy, as well as the production of secondary metabolites and the contents of carotenoids and chlorophylls a and b, in P. tenellus. To accomplish this, in vitro cultures of P. tenellus were maintained for 60 days under white light (WL) and WL plus UV-A radiation. Results showed different phenotypic responses under additional UV-A, such as high phenolic metabolite production, increasing dimensions of abaxial epidermis and thickness of palisade parenchyma. Compared to plants cultured under WL, UV-A radiation caused damage to plant morphogenesis, including a reduced number of branches and shoots, consequently reducing the rate of proliferation. On the other hand, geraniin, ellagic acid and carotenoid contents increased after UV-A exposure, indicating that this light source is an important resource for inducing phenolic compounds., (© 2011 The Authors. Photochemistry and Photobiology © 2011 The American Society of Photobiology.)
- Published
- 2011
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10. Influence of blue light on the leaf morphoanatomy of in vitro Kalanchoe pinnata (Lamarck) Persoon (Crassulaceae).
- Author
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Leal-Costa MV, Nascimento LB, Moreira Ndos S, Reinert F, Costa SS, Lage CL, and Tavares ES
- Subjects
- Kalanchoe anatomy & histology, Kalanchoe cytology, Kalanchoe metabolism, Light, Phenols metabolism, Plant Leaves anatomy & histology, Plant Leaves cytology, Plant Leaves metabolism, Kalanchoe radiation effects, Plant Leaves radiation effects
- Abstract
Kalanchoe pinnata (Lamarck) Persoon (Crassulaceae) (air plant, miracle leaf) is popularly used to treat gastrointestinal disorders and wounds. Recently, the species was tested to treat cutaneous leishmaniasis with successful results. This medicinal activity was associated with the phenolic fraction of the plant. Blue light induces biosynthesis of phenolic compounds and many changes in anatomical characteristics. We studied the effects of supplementary blue light on the leaf morphology of in vitro K. pinnata. Plants cultured under white light (W plants) only and white light plus blue light (WB plants) show petioles with plain-convex section, amphistomatic leaf blades with simple epidermis, homogeneous mesophyll with densely packed cells, and a single collateral vascular bundle in the midrib. W plants have longer branches, a larger number of nodes per branch, and smaller leaves, whereas WB plant leaves have a thicker upper epidermis and mesophyll. Leaf fresh weight and leaf dry weight were similar in both treatments. Phenolic idioblasts were observed in the plants supplemented with blue light, suggesting that blue light plays an important role in the biosynthesis of phenolic compounds in K. pinnata.
- Published
- 2010
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