134 results on '"Pereira FB"'
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2. VALIDATION OF LONGER FRESH STORAGE TIME FOR PERIPHERAL BLOOD STEM CELLS INTENDED FOR CLINICAL USE
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Frizzo, A, primary, Aguiari, AG, additional, Andrade, SS, additional, Pereira, FB, additional, Benites, BD, additional, and Alves, SCR, additional
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- 2022
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3. AVALIAÇÃO DO PROCESSO DE DECAIMENTO NÃO CONTROLADO DE TEMPERATURA PARA CRIOPRESERVAÇÃO DE PRODUTOS DE TERAPIA CELULAR EM FREEZER -80°C
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Frizzo, A, Benites, BD, Pereira, FB, Aguiari, AG, Martins, SSA, and Alves, SCR
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- 2024
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4. APLICAÇÃO DA FERRAMENTA ELASTICSEARCH NO MONITORAMENTO DE INDICADORES DO SETOR DE COLETA DE SANGUE DO HEMOCENTRO UNICAMP: GARANTINDO EFICIÊNCIA E SEGURANÇA
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Sales, LNM, Ormenese, ALS, and Pereira, FB
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- 2024
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5. Intraoral lipomas: a study of 26 cases in a Brazilian population.
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de Freitas MA, Freitas VS, de Lima AAS, Pereira FB Jr., and dos Santos JN
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Objective: To analyze the clinical and histopathologic features of all cases diagnosed as lipomas in the oral cavity in a Brazilian population. Method and Materials: From 2002 to 2006, 26 cases of intraoral lipoma were studied. Clinical features obtained from biopsy records and microscopic slides were reviewed according to the World Health Organization and other cases previously described. Results: Mean age was 54.6 years (range, 29 to 91 years) with predilection for women. The buccal mucosa was the most common location (n = 9), followed by the tongue (n = 7), lower lip (n = 4), floor of the mouth (n = 3), retromolar area (n = 2), and buccal sulcus (n = 1). Histologically, the lesions were defined as classic lipomas (n = 15), fibrolipomas (n = 7), intramuscular lipoma (n = 2), spindle-cell lipoma (n = 1), and sialolipoma (n = 1). Follow-up information was available in 20 cases. No case recurred during a 6- to 12-month period. Conclusion: The benign nature of intraoral lipomas is supported by its bland histopathologic appearance and the absence of recurrences following complete local excision. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
6. Caso para diagnóstico
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David Rubem Azulay, Hertz A, Pereira Fb, Bornhausen Demarch E, and Mariana Carvalho Costa
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Hyperkeratosis ,Tecido elástico ,Genodermatosis ,Dermatoses da mão ,Acanthosis ,Dermatology ,medicine.disease ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Palmoplantar keratoderma ,chemistry ,Dermatoses do pé ,RL1-803 ,Ceratodermia palmar e plantar ,Medicine ,business ,Keratoderma ,Orcein - Abstract
A acroceratoelastoidose é um tipo de ceratodermia palmoplantar, originalmente descrita pelo dermatologista mineiro Oswaldo Gonçalves Costa. É uma rara genodermatose autossômica dominante, embora possa ocorrer de forma esporádica. A doença não é congênita, com as primeiras manifestações na infância e adolescência. O quadro clínico é caracterizado por múltiplas pápulas amareladas, por vezes translúcidas e ceratóticas, medindo aproximadamente 2-4 mm de diâmetro, ocasionalmente umbilicadas, localizadas na margem lateral das mãos e pés, simetricamente, o que é sua expressão clínica mais típica. Os achados histopatológicos mais comuns são: hiperceratose, acantose discreta e elastorrexe, que é observada pela coloração com orceína.
- Published
- 2011
7. Heart and liver T2 assessment for iron overload using different software programs.
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Fernandes JL, Sampaio EF, Verissimo M, Pereira FB, da Silva JA, de Figueiredo GS, Kalaf JM, Coelho OR, Fernandes, Juliano L, Sampaio, Erika Fontana, Verissimo, Monica, Pereira, Fabricio B, da Silva, Jose Alvaro, de Figueiredo, Gabriel S, Kalaf, Jose M, and Coelho, Otavio R
- Abstract
Objectives: To assess the level of agreement and interchangeability among different software programs for calculation of T2 values for iron overload.Methods: T2 images were analysed in 60 patients with thalassaemia major using the truncation method in three software programs. Levels of agreement were assessed using Pearson correlation and Bland-Altman plots. Categorical classification for levels of iron concentration by each software program was also compared.Results: For the heart, all correlation coefficients were significant among the software programs (P < 0.001 for all coefficients). The mean differences and 95% limits of agreement were 0.2 (-4.73 to 5.0); 0.1 (-4.0 to 3.9); and -0.1 (-4.3 to 4.8). For the liver all correlations were also significant with P < 0.001. Bland-Altman plots showed differences of -0.02 (-0.7 to 0.6); 0.01 (-0.4 to 0.4); and -0.02 (-0.6 to 0.6). There were no significant differences in clinical classification among the software programs.Conclusions: All tools used in this study provided very good agreement among heart and liver T2 values. The results indicate that interpretation of T2 data is interchangeable with any of the software programs tested.Key Points: Magnetic resonance imaging in iron overload assessment has become an essential tool. Post processing options to establish T2 values have not been compared. No differences were found on T2 of the liver or heart using 3 different techniques. Availability of these methods should allow more widespread interpretation of iron overload by MRI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2011
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8. Ablation of ventricular tachycardia in chronic chagasic cardiomyopathy with giant basal aneurysm: Carto sound, CT, and MRI merge.
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Valdigem BP, Pereira FB, da Silva NJ, Dietrich CO, Sobral R, Nogueira FL, Berber RC, Mallman F, Pinto IM, Szarf G, Cirenza C, de Paola AA, Valdigem, Bruno P, Pereira, Fabio B F C G, da Silva, Nilton J Carneiro, Dietrich, Cristiano O, Sobral, Ricardo, Nogueira, Fernando Lopes, Berber, Roberto C, and Mallman, Fabricio
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- 2011
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9. Graph based crossover - A case study with the busy beaver problem
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Pereira, Fb, Machado, P., Costa, E., and Amilcar Cardoso
10. On the evolution of evolutionary algorithms
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Tavares, J., Machado, P., Cardoso, A., Pereira, Fb, and Costa, E.
11. Too busy to learn
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Pereira, Fb, Machado, P., Costa, E., Cardoso, A., Ochoa-Rodriguez, A., Santana, R., Soto, M., and IEEE
12. First report of a morulated Ascaridoidea (Nematoda) egg in an avian coprolite from the Paleogene of the Paraíba Valley, State of São Paulo, Brazil.
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do Carmo GM, Luiz AHDSG, Passos JF, Lima SS, de Araújo-Júnior HI, and Pereira FB
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- Animals, Brazil, Paleontology, Fossils parasitology, Birds parasitology, Ovum classification, Ovum parasitology, Feces parasitology, Ascaridoidea classification, Ascaridoidea isolation & purification, Ascaridoidea anatomy & histology
- Abstract
Ascaridoidea (Nematoda) is a widespread superfamily of nematodes that comprises gastrointestinal parasites from all major groups of vertebrates. Although this taxon probably emerged in the Carboniferous, its Brazilian fossil record includes mostly eggs, found in ancient remains, collected in paleontological and archeological sites from the Mesozoic and Cenozoic Eras. The Tremembé Formation (Oligocene of the Taubaté Basin) has become an important source for paleoparasitological studies in avian coprolites during the third decade of the 21st century, with reports of eggs only at only a single cell stage, of embryonic development. Here we present the first egg of Ascaridoidea preserved containing morula, from a bird coprolite recovered from the shales of the Tremembé Formation. Three coprolites, from the outcrop of Aligra Comércio de Argila S/A, Taubaté municipality (State of São Paulo), were rehydrated and subjected to spontaneous sedimentation. Based on morphological and morphometric features and diet and zoopaleontological context, the trace fossils were assigned to piscivorous birds. The egg found showed morphological characteristics typical of Ascaridoidea: namely spherical form, ornamented, and somewhat thick shell. Moreover, this superfamily includes several taxa that infect piscivorous birds and fish in heteroxenous life cycles and produce eggs with similar features as the egg found in the present study. The paleoparasitological information associated with the paleofaunistic diversity of birds and fish from the Tremembé Formation, reveal that the ancient Brazilian paleoenvironments provided subsidies for the rise and success of nematodes infecting these animals during the Paleogene.
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- 2024
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13. First genetic characterisation and phylogenetic position of Aplectana hylambatis (Nematoda: Cosmocercidae), infecting Pithecopus azureus (Anura: Hylidae) in the Brazilian Pantanal.
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Dos Santos PS, Silva ICO, Ferreira VL, Tavares LER, Paiva F, and Pereira FB
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- Animals, Brazil, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Female, Phylogeny, Anura parasitology, RNA, Ribosomal, 28S genetics, RNA, Ribosomal, 18S genetics, DNA, Helminth genetics, DNA, Ribosomal genetics
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Aplectana hylambatis (Baylis, 1927) is a widespread nematode in South America that infects different species of anurans from different families. Although the morphology of this species shows intraspecific variations and is well studied, A. hylambatis does not have genetic characterisation. Therefore, the present study aimed to provide the first genetic characterisation of this parasite, based on 18S and 28S rDNA sequences, as well as to evaluate its phylogenetic position in the family Cosmocercidae. The present specimens showed no major morphological variations and were assigned to A. hylambatis mainly based on the shape of spicules and the presence of mamelon-like structures slightly anterior to the vulva. The genetic characterisation confirmed the close relationship between A. hylambatis and other cosmocercids, and the 28S sequences were more informative for phylogenetic reconstruction, especially for those relationships at higher and intermediate levels. Aplectana hylmabatis was in a basal position within a clade formed by other congeners and species of Cosmocerca. The geographic origin may have influence in the divergence process of Aplectana spp. and genus was non-monophyletic and closely related to Cosmocerca , similar to previous findings. The present results will be useful for future studies on the phylogeny of Cosmocercidae, since several genera and species in this family still lack genetic characterisation. Furthermore, the 28S sequences can be useful in genetic studies of A. hylambatis populations, since this species appears to have phenotypic variations.
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- 2024
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14. Redescription of Raphidascaris (Ichthyascaris) vicentei (Nematoda: Raphidascarididae) Parasitizing Lutjanid Fishes (Actinopterygii: Lutjanidae) from the Northeast Coast of Brazil, Including First Observation Using SEM.
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Alves AM, Pereira FB, Tavares LER, Takemoto RM, de Melo CM, Madi RR, and Lourdes Sierpe Jeraldo V
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- Animals, Brazil, Male, Female, Fishes parasitology, Ascaridida Infections veterinary, Ascaridida Infections parasitology, Ascaridida Infections epidemiology, Ascaridoidea isolation & purification, Ascaridoidea classification, Ascaridoidea anatomy & histology, Ascaridoidea ultrastructure, Fish Diseases parasitology, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning veterinary
- Abstract
Purpose: In this study, 143 lutjanid fishes representing four different species from the Northeast coast off Brazil were analyzed for parasites. The aim of the present study is to provide a detailed redescription of R. (I.) vicentei, collected from lutjanid fishes in Brazil, including the first observation of the species using scanning electron microscopy (SEM)., Methods: Nematodes found clarified in a crescent glycerin series, were photographed and measured (in mm), and some specimens destined for SEM. The Illustrations were made using an optical microscope with a drawing tube., Results: Nematodes found were identified as Raphidascaris (Ichthyascaris) vicentei, infecting 6.29% of the examined fish. Detailed morphological analysis revealed the following characteristics observed for the first time in this species: labial papillae, narrow lateral alae and the detailed structure of male spicules. These contributions help filling the gaps in the literature and expand the knowledge of this parasite morphology., Conclusions: The presence of R. (I.) vicentei in four lutjanid species may indicates low host specificity, highlighting its adaptability to different hosts. Furthermore, new host records are given. This research provides the most comprehensive morphological description of R. (I.) vicentei to date, generating crucial insights for a better understanding of the parasitic biodiversity off the Brazilian Northeastern coast of Brazil, as well as establishing foundation for future investigations on the ecology and impacts of these parasites in fish populations from this region., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.)
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- 2024
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15. Gastrointestinal nematodes in Cuniculus paca (Linnaeus, 1766) from hunting fauna in the Western Amazonian region.
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Vasconcelos VS, Lobo FEF, de Souza Neto AG, da Silva MIA, Virgilio LR, Oliveira MN, do Nascimento RL, Correa MJ, Pereira FB, Ramos DGS, and da Silva TL
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- Animals, Brazil epidemiology, Cuniculidae parasitology, Male, Female, Rodent Diseases parasitology, Rodent Diseases epidemiology, Humans, Nematoda isolation & purification, Nematoda classification, Nematode Infections veterinary, Nematode Infections parasitology, Nematode Infections epidemiology
- Abstract
Cuniculus paca, commonly known as the paca, is a rodent of the Cuniculidae family that is widely distributed throughout the Americas, including all Brazilian territories, and is abundant in the Amazon region. It is one of the most hunted species and faces significant predation in the extreme western Amazon region of Brazil because it constitutes a staple in the diet of local communities, for subsistence and commercial purposes. Understanding the helminthic fauna of these animals is of paramount importance, given that some nematodes have zoonotic potential and may pose risks to consumer health. This study aimed to contribute to the records of the nemtodes of this highly consumed species in the Amazon region, highlighting the occurrence of gastrointestinal parasites in free-living pacas intended for human subsistence consumption. The study was conducted in the Paranã da Floresta community, located in the municipality of Guajará, Amazonas from 2022 to 2023. The community members hunted this rodent for consumption and voluntarily provided the viscera for analysis. Nematodes were extracted from each organ. The organs were opened, and the contents were processed using a sieve (0.15 mm) and subsequently evaluated separately. In total, 10,157 nematodes were found in the 14 pacas. Based on morphological analyses, the nematodes were identified as Heligmostrongylus sedecimradiatus (n = 10,068), Trichuris sp. (n = 85), and Physaloptera sp. (n = 4). This study provides insights into the nematodes diversity of free-living pacas in the extreme Western Amazon region, emphasizing the importance of sanitary surveillance and public awareness of the risks associated with bushmeat consumption., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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16. Protozoan parasites of birds from the Tremembé formation (Oligocene of the Taubaté Basin), São Paulo, Brazil.
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Do Carmo GM, Berto BP, Pereira FB, De Souza Lima S, De Araújo-Júnior HI, and Pinheiro RM
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- Brazil, Animals, Fossils, Feces parasitology, Amoebozoa genetics, Phylogeny, Apicomplexa genetics, Oocysts, Paleopathology, Bird Diseases parasitology, Bird Diseases history, Birds
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Objective: To analyze the presence of protozoan parasites in bird coprolites from the Tremembé Formation (Oligocene of the Taubaté Basin)., Materials: Twenty avian coprolites embedded in pyrobituminous shale matrices., Methods: Samples were rehydrated and subjected to spontaneous sedimentation., Results: Paleoparasitological analyses revealed oocysts compatible with the Eimeriidae family (Apicomplexa) and one single Archamoebae (Amoebozoa) cyst., Conclusions: The present work increases the amount of information about the spread of infections throughout the Cenozoic Era and reveals that the Brazilian paleoavifauna played an important role in the Apicomplexa and Amoebozoa life cycles., Significance: This is the first record of protozoans in avian coprolites from the Oligocene of Brazil. These findings can help in the interpretation of phylogenies of coccidian parasites of modern birds, as certain taxonomic characters observed in the Oligocene Protozoa characterize monophyletic groups in current molecular phylogenetic analyses., Limitations: None of the oocysts were sporulated; therefore, it is not possible to identify the morphotypes to genus or species., Suggestions for Further Research: Our results create new perspectives related to biogeographic studies of the parasitic groups described and may improve the understanding of the temporal amplitude of parasitic evolutionary relationships between Protozoans and birds., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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17. Oestradiol and osteoclast differentiation: Effects on p53 and mitochondrial metabolism.
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Marques-Carvalho A, Silva B, Pereira FB, Kim HN, Almeida M, and Sardão VA
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- Animals, Mice, Adenosine Triphosphate metabolism, Apoptosis drug effects, Macrophages metabolism, Oxidative Phosphorylation drug effects, RANK Ligand metabolism, RAW 264.7 Cells, Cell Differentiation drug effects, Estradiol pharmacology, Mitochondria metabolism, Osteoclasts metabolism, Osteoclasts drug effects, Tumor Suppressor Protein p53 metabolism
- Abstract
Background: Oestrogen deficiency increases bone resorption, contributing to osteoporosis development. Yet, the mechanisms mediating the effects of oestrogen on osteoclasts remain unclear. This study aimed to elucidate the early metabolic alteration induced by RANKL, the essential cytokine in osteoclastogenesis and 17-beta-oestradiol (E
2 ) on osteoclast progenitor cells, using RAW 264.7 macrophage cell line and primary bone marrow-derived macrophages as biological models., Results: This research demonstrated that, in osteoclast precursors, RANKL stimulates complex I activity, oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) and mitochondria-derived ATP production as early as 3 h of exposure. This effect on mitochondrial bioenergetics is associated with an increased capacity to oxidize TCA cycle substrates, fatty acids and amino acids. E2 inhibited all effects of RANKL on mitochondria metabolism. In the presence of RANKL, E2 also decreased cell number and stimulated the mitochondrial-mediated apoptotic pathway, detected as early as 3 h. Further, the pro-apoptotic effects of E2 during osteoclast differentiation were associated with an accumulation of p392S-p53 in mitochondria., Conclusions: These findings elucidate the early effects of RANKL on osteoclast progenitor metabolism and suggest novel p53-mediated mechanisms that contribute to postmenopausal osteoporosis., (© 2024 Stichting European Society for Clinical Investigation Journal Foundation. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2024
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18. Redescription of Hatschekia exigua Pearse, 1951 (Copepoda: Hatschekiidae), parasitic on the Squirrelfish Holocentrus adscensionis (Osbeck, 1765) (Actinopterygii: Holocentridae) off Ceará, Northeastern Brazil, with first description of the male.
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Couto JV, Pontes AJ, Feitosa CV, Pereira FB, and Paschoal F
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- Animals, Female, Male, Brazil, Species Specificity, Fishes, Copepoda, Parasites
- Abstract
The original description of Hatschekia exigua Pearse, 1951 neglected innumerous features of taxonomic value as well as morphometric data and illustrations. Posteriorly, other author tried to access the type material, but their poor state of preservation compromised a detailed redescription. Since then, this species is in need for new morphological data, mainly from fresh material. In the present work, three specimens of Holocentrus adscensionis from Mucuripe Bay, Fortaleza, State of Ceará, Northeastern Brazil, were parasitized by copepods on their gills. Parasites were fixed and preserved in 80% ethanol and cleared in 85% lactic acid for morphological observations using light microscopy. The females were identified as Hatschekia exigua by the cephalothorax representing about one-fourth of total body length, with lateral margins expanded into lateral lobes, first exopod with basal segment armed with one outer setae and terminal segment with three setae, first endopod with basal segment unarmed and terminal segment with five setae, leg 3 reduced to two setae and leg 4 reduced to single seta. Comparison with the type series revealed morphological differences in trunk and small appendages, which may be related to alterations in the specimens, caused by the mounting methodology and poor preservation. A detailed morphological analysis of the male revealed for the first time that they differ from their closest congeners by having five setae on the last endopodal segment of leg 1, by smooth intercoxal sclerites on legs 1 and 2 and by a proximolateral process on the third segment of antenna. Moreover, this work represents the first report of H. exigua in Brazil and the first hatschekiid copepod found off the coast of Ceará, highlighting that the diversity of Hatschekiidae in this oceanographic region still needs further investigation., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.)
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- 2024
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19. Oswaldocruzia franciscoensis n. sp. (Nematoda: Molineidae) in Leptodactylus macrosternum Miranda-Ribeiro, 1926 (Anura: Leptodactylidae) from Caatinga morphoclimatic domain, Brazil: morphological and molecular characterisation.
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Vieira FM, Pereira FB, Ribeiro LB, Oliveira JB, Silva DCN, Muniz-Pereira LC, and Felix-Nascimento G
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- Male, Female, Animals, Anura parasitology, Brazil, Molineoidae, Nematoda genetics, Trichostrongyloidea
- Abstract
A new species of Oswaldocruzia Travassos, 1917 (Nematoda, Molineidae), parasite of Leptodactylus macrosternum Miranda-Ribeiro, 1926 (Anura: Leptodactylidae), from Caatinga morphoclimatic domain, Brazil, is described based on morphological and molecular data. Oswaldocruzia franciscoensis n. sp. is characterised by an anterior extremity with a cephalic vesicle divided into two portions, a body covered by cuticular longitudinal ridges, and cervical alae. Males of the new species have caudal bursa of type I with a 2-1-2 pattern, spicules divided into a shoe, bifurcated fork, and blade with two unequal branches, in which the longer branch bifurcates at its distal portion end and the smaller branch with three distal processes, each with distal bifurcations. Females have didelphic and amphidelphic uteri, an ovijector divided into vestibule, anterior and posterior sphincters, and anterior and posterior infundibula. The new species differs from its Neotropical congeners that have caudal bursa of type I, based on the presence of cervical alae and by having a spicular blade distally divided into two unequal branches, with the longer branch bifurcating at its distal portion and smaller branch with three distal processes, each distally bifurcated. The partial 18S rDNA sequence generated for Oswaldocruzia franciscoensis n. sp. is the first of a representative belonging to this genus in the Neotropical region.
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- 2023
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20. Ergasilus lyraephorus n. sp. (Copepoda: Cyclopoida: Ergasilidae) parasitic on the Longtail Knifefish Sternopygus macrurus (Bloch & Schneider, 1801) (Actinopterygii: Sternopygidae) from Northeast Brazil.
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Couto JV, Nunes JLS, Rincon G, Paschoal F, and Pereira FB
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- Animals, Brazil, Species Specificity, Fishes, Copepoda, Fish Diseases parasitology
- Abstract
The cyclopoid family Ergasilidae Burmeister, 1835, is the most common group of parasitic copepods infesting fish in Brazil, and the type-genus Ergasilus von Nordmann, 1832 comprises the highest number of species. During a survey of freshwater fish in Northeast Brazil, a new species of Ergasilus was found on the gills of the Longtail Knifefish Sternopygus macrurus (Bloch & Schneider) (Actinopterygii: Sternopygidae) in the Viana lake system, State of Maranhão. Ergasilus lyraephorus n. sp. can be distinguished from its closest congeners mainly because it has a lyre-shaped ornamentation on the ventral surface of first pedigerous somite, a feature that has never been reported in the family. In addition, the new species differs from closely related congeners by having a maxillule bearing three elements, by the large spinules on the interpodal plates of legs 1, 2 and 3, and by having leg 5 reduced to a single seta of moderate size. The present study is the first report of an ergasilid parasitizing S. macrurus, as well as the first parasitic copepod found on a host belonging to the family Sternopygidae Cope., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.)
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- 2023
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21. SARS-CoV-2 uses CD4 to infect T helper lymphocytes.
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Brunetti NS, Davanzo GG, de Moraes D, Ferrari AJR, Souza GF, Muraro SP, Knittel TL, Boldrini VO, Monteiro LB, Virgílio-da-Silva JV, Profeta GS, Wassano NS, Nunes Santos L, Carregari VC, Dias AHS, Veras FP, Tavares LA, Forato J, Castro IMS, Silva-Costa LC, Palma AC, Mansour E, Ulaf RG, Bernardes AF, Nunes TA, Ribeiro LC, Agrela MV, Moretti ML, Buscaratti LI, Crunfli F, Ludwig RG, Gerhardt JA, Munhoz-Alves N, Marques AM, Sesti-Costa R, Amorim MR, Toledo-Teixeira DA, Parise PL, Martini MC, Bispos-Dos-Santos K, Simeoni CL, Granja F, Silvestrini VC, de Oliveira EB, Faca VM, Carvalho M, Castelucci BG, Pereira AB, Coimbra LD, Dias MMG, Rodrigues PB, Gomes ABSP, Pereira FB, Santos LMB, Bloyet LM, Stumpf S, Pontelli MC, Whelan S, Sposito AC, Carvalho RF, Vieira AS, Vinolo MAR, Damasio A, Velloso L, Figueira ACM, da Silva LLP, Cunha TM, Nakaya HI, Marques-Souza H, Marques RE, Martins-de-Souza D, Skaf MS, Proenca-Modena JL, Moraes-Vieira PMM, Mori MA, and Farias AS
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- Humans, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes, T-Lymphocytes, Helper-Inducer, Lung, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19
- Abstract
The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is the agent of a major global outbreak of respiratory tract disease known as Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19). SARS-CoV-2 infects mainly lungs and may cause several immune-related complications, such as lymphocytopenia and cytokine storm, which are associated with the severity of the disease and predict mortality. The mechanism by which SARS-CoV-2 infection may result in immune system dysfunction is still not fully understood. Here, we show that SARS-CoV-2 infects human CD4
+ T helper cells, but not CD8+ T cells, and is present in blood and bronchoalveolar lavage T helper cells of severe COVID-19 patients. We demonstrated that SARS-CoV-2 spike glycoprotein (S) directly binds to the CD4 molecule, which in turn mediates the entry of SARS- CoV-2 in T helper cells. This leads to impaired CD4 T cell function and may cause cell death. SARS-CoV-2-infected T helper cells express higher levels of IL-10, which is associated with viral persistence and disease severity. Thus, CD4-mediated SARS-CoV-2 infection of T helper cells may contribute to a poor immune response in COVID-19 patients., Competing Interests: NB, GD, Dd, AF, GS, SM, TK, VB, LM, JV, GP, NW, LN, VC, AD, FV, LT, JF, IC, LS, AP, EM, RU, AB, TN, LR, MA, MM, LB, FC, RL, JG, NM, AM, RS, MA, DT, PP, MM, KB, CS, FG, VS, Ed, VF, MC, BC, AP, LC, MD, PR, AG, FP, LS, LB, SS, MP, SW, AS, RC, AV, MV, AD, LV, AF, Ld, TC, HN, HM, RM, DM, MS, JP, PM, MM, AF No competing interests declared, (© 2023, Brunetti, Davanzo, de Moraes et al.)- Published
- 2023
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22. A new species of Colobomatus Hesse, 1873 (Copepoda: Philichthyidae) parasitic in the interorbital canals of the Caitipa mojarra Diapterus rhombeus (Cuvier, 1829) (Actinopterygii: Gerreidae) from Sepetiba Bay, southeastern Brazil.
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Paschoal F, Couto JV, Pereira FB, and Luque JL
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- Animals, Female, Brazil, Bays, Species Specificity, Fishes, Copepoda, Perciformes parasitology
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A new species of parasitic copepod, Colobomatus deborae n. sp., belonging to the cyclopoid family Philichthyidae Vogt, 1877, is proposed based on adult female specimens collected from the interorbital canals of the Caitipa mojarra Diapterus rhombeus (Cuvier) (Gerreidae) from Sepetiba Bay, off the State of Rio de Janeiro, southeastern Brazil. The new species closely resembles six species of Colobomatus Hesse, 1873, but differs from these close congeners based on the combination of the following characters: lateral cephalic processes forked basally with sharp tips, midventral cephalic process representing about one third of the length of the laterals, thoracic processes forked and caudal rami with a pair of unequal processes. Together with the new species described in the present study, the philichthyid fauna of Brazil rises to 10 species reported from 14 Brazilian marine fish species. This is also the third report of Colobomatus in a gerreid fish, but the first species found parasitizing the genus Diapterus., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.)
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- 2023
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23. New host and first description of the male of Colobomatus stelliferi Pombo, Turra, Paschoal & Luque, 2015 (Copepoda: Philichthyidae), parasite of Umbrina canosai Berg, 1895 (Actinopterygii: Sciaenidae) off Brazil: improving the taxonomic knowledge pertaining to Colobomatus spp.
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Couto JV, Lessa FG, Luque JL, Pereira FB, and Paschoal F
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- Male, Animals, Brazil, Species Specificity, Fishes, Copepoda, Parasites, Perciformes parasitology, Fish Diseases parasitology
- Abstract
The present study provides new host and first description of the male of Colobomatus stelliferi Pombo, Turra, Paschoal & Luque, 2015 (Copepoda, Philichthyidae), collected from the mandibular canals of the Argentine croaker Umbrina canosai Berg, off the State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Four out of nine fish analyzed (prevalence 44.4%) were parasitized by C. stelliferi and showed a mean intensity of 2.5 (range 2-3, standard deviation 1.25). Adult males of C. stelliferi can be differentiated from their closest congeners based on the combination of the following characters: maxilliped with naked basal segment and small apical spine, the presence of two elements on the second endopodal segment of the antenna, and the presence of leg 4. This parasitic copepod is seemingly host-specific to fish of the family Sciaenidae and its occurrence is restricted to the Brazilian coast. The present results contribute to our knowledge of the biology of C. stelliferi and of the parasitic copepod fauna from Brazil., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.)
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- 2023
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24. Two new species of Acusicola Cressey, 1970 (Copepoda:Cyclopoida: Ergasilidae) parasitic on the gills of two estuarine actinopterygians off Brazil.
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Couto JV, de Nazaré Pereira A, Luque JL, Paschoal F, and Pereira FB
- Subjects
- Female, Animals, Brazil, Gills parasitology, Species Specificity, Fishes, Copepoda, Parasites, Perciformes parasitology, Fish Diseases parasitology
- Abstract
Two new species of copepods assigned to the genus Acusicola Cressey, 1970 (Cyclopoida: Ergasilidae) are proposed based on post-metamorphic adult females, parasitizing the gills of two actinopterygian fish off Brazil namely, the Tripletail Lobotes surinamensis (Bloch) (Lobotidae), collected in the coastal zone of the State of Pará, near Curuçá Municipallity, and the Swordspine snook Centropomus ensiferus Poey (Centropomidae) collected in Sepetiba Bay, State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Acusicola iamarinoi n. sp. parasite of L. surinamensis, differs from its closet congeners based on the first segment of the antennule armed with 10 setae, the presence of a maxillule armed with four elements and a pair of blunt processes dorsally on the fourth pedigerous somite. Acusicola pasternakae n. sp., collected from C. ensiferus, can be distinguished from its closest congeners based on the membranous sheath of the first endopodal segment of antenna with horizontal marks, the first segment of the antennule armed with 11 setae and a spine on the last exopodal segment of leg 2. This is the first report of representatives of Acusicola parasitizing fish of the families Lobotidae and Centropomidae as well as new geographical records of the genus in the coast of State of Pará and in Sepetiba Bay, Brazil., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.)
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- 2023
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25. Structure of the metazoan parasite communities of haemulid fish (Actinopterygii: Perciformes) in the South Atlantic Ocean: a comparative approach.
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Paschoal F, Cezar AD, Pereira FB, and Luque JL
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- Animals, Brazil, Fishes parasitology, Atlantic Ocean, Parasites, Perciformes parasitology, Fish Diseases
- Abstract
Haemulidae represents one of the most diverse, widespread and conspicuous families of Perciformes, in which most species are marine, some brackish and rarely from freshwater. From April 2009 to July 2012, 120 specimens of Conodon nobilis, 60 Orthopristis rubra and 50 Anisotremus virginicus were collected off the State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and analyzed for metazoan parasites. A total of 16 parasite taxa were found on/in A. virginicus, 19 on/in Co. nobilis and 21 on/in O. rubra, in which ectoparasites were most common on A. virginicus and Co. nobilis and endoparasites in O. rubra. All parasites showed aggregate pattern of distribution (discrepancy index values higher than 0.70). Mean abundance, species richness and Brillouin index (diversity) differed among the host species, i.e., O. rubra showed the highest values, followed by A. virginicus and Co. nobilis with intermediate and lowest values, respectively. At infracommunity level was possible to observe high similarity of parasite composition among the three host species. The digeneans Leurodera decora and Monorchis latus, and the acanthocephalan Koronacantha sp. represent new locality records off Brazil. Moreover, five, four and two taxa are reported, for the first time, parasitizing Co. nobilis, A. virginicus and O. rubra, respectively.
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- 2023
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26. Cucullanus pinnai pinnai and C. pinnai pterodorasi (Nematoda Cucullanidae): what does the integrative taxonomy tell us about these species and subspecies classification?
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Ailán-Choke LG, Davies D, Malta LS, Couto JV, Tavares LER, Luque JL, and Pereira FB
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- Animals, Phylogeny, DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, Catfishes parasitology, Ascaridoidea
- Abstract
Cucullanus pinnai has been divided in two subspecies (C. pinnai pinnai and C. pinnai pterodorasi) based on the morphology of oesophastome. While C. pinnai pinnai apparently shows low host specificity and broad geographic occurrence, with certain morphological variations, C. pinnai pterodorasi was reported once, parasitizing Pterodoras granulosus. We used an integrative taxonomic approach to evaluate whether or not populations of C. pinnai pinnai from Trychomycterus spegazzinii (Escoipe River, Argentina) and Pimelodus fur (Miranda River, Brazil), and of C. pinnai pterodorasi from Pterodoras granulosus (Miranda River, Brazil) are conspecific. Parasites were observed using light microscopy and genetically characterized based on partial sequences of the 18S and 28S rDNA, ITS1-5.8S-ITS2, and COI mtDNA. Phylogenies were reconstructed and the Generalized Mixed Yule Coalescent (GMYC), Poisson Tree Process (bPTP), and Automatic Barcode Gap Discovery (ABGD) were used for species delimitation purposes. The present samples formed well-supported monophyletic assemblages, corroborating in part the results of morphological analyses; however, they grouped according to geographic origin. Species delimitation suggested conspecificity of C. pinnai pinnai with C. pinnai pterodorasi from Brazil; consequently, the morphology of oesophastome may be an intraspecific variation. Results also indicated that C. pinnai may represent a species complex as samples from Argentina were suggestive of an independent specific entity. However, definitive affirmations are premature, since there is no autapomorphy for separating C. pinnai from Brazil and Argentina and sampling was limited to three host species from two river basins. The phylogenetic reconstructions also confirmed the artificiality of some genera within Cucullanidae., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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27. From field to laboratory: isolation, genetic assessment, and parasitological behavior of Schistosoma mansoni obtained from naturally infected wild rodent Holochilus sciureus (Rodentia, Cricetidae), collected in Northeastern Brazil.
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Miranda GS, Rodrigues JGM, Resende SD, Camelo GMA, Silva JKAO, Dos Santos JCR, Silva-Souza N, Pereira FB, Furtado LFV, Rabelo ÉML, and Negrão-Corrêa D
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- Animals, Humans, Mice, Schistosoma mansoni genetics, Arvicolinae, Rodentia parasitology, Brazil, Phylogeny, Sigmodontinae, Cercaria, Schistosomiasis mansoni parasitology, Biomphalaria parasitology, Trematoda
- Abstract
Wild rodent species are naturally infected by Schistosoma mansoni; however, the genetic characterization of the parasite, its parasitological features, and its role in human schistosomiasis are poorly understood. In this study, we isolated and characterized Schistosoma from naturally infected Holochilus sciureus, called HS strain, collected from a schistosomiasis endemic region in Maranhão State, Brazil. To isolate the parasite, miracidia obtained from the livers of H. sciureus were used to infect Biomphalaria glabrata of sympatric (called SB) and allopatric (called BH) strains, and the produced cercariae were subcutaneously inoculated into hamsters and/or BALB/c mice. Parasitological kinetics in experimentally infected hosts were evaluated, and the tRNA
Cys -12S (referred to as 16S herein) and cox 1 regions of mtDNA from isolated worms were amplified and sequenced. Only miracidia obtained from infected mice, but not from hamsters, were capable of infecting B. glabrata, allowing maintenance of the isolated parasite. Cox1 and 16S mtDNA sequences showed 100% similarity with S. mansoni, and phylogenetic analysis showed that the HS strain of S. mansoni forms an assemblage with isolates from America and Kenya, confirming the conspecificity. Experimental infection of B. glabrata SB with S. mansoni HS resulted in two peaks of cercariae shedding at 45 and 70 days post-infection (dpi) and caused higher mortality than in B. glabrata BH. The worm recovery rate in mice was approximately 13%, and the peak of egg elimination occurred at the 10th week post-infection. Therefore, S. mansoni obtained from H. sciureus was successfully isolated, genetically characterized, and maintained in mice, allowing further study of this schistosome strain., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)- Published
- 2023
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28. Morphological description and molecular characterization of Ancyracanthus electrophori n. sp. (Gnathostomatoidea: Gnathostomatidae): a new nematode parasitic in the electric eel Electrophorus varii (Gymnotiformes: Gymnotidae), from the Brazilian Amazon.
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Virgilio LR, Nogueira A, Takemoto RM, Passere MD, de Oliveira AV, Meneguetti DUO, Camargo MA, and Pereira FB
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- Female, Male, Animals, Electrophorus, Phylogeny, Brazil, Gymnotiformes, Parasites, Nematoda, Spirurida
- Abstract
A new species of Ancyracanthus , parasite of the electric eel Electrophorus varii , in the Brazilian Amazon, is described based on morphological and molecular characterization. Ancyracanthus electrophori n. sp. differs from the two congeners namely, Ancyracanthus pinnatifidus and Ancyracanthus schubarti , based on the structure of cephalic appendages, number and arrangement of caudal papillae in males, vulva very close to anus in females, eggs with smoothly mamillated shell, host taxon and geographical origin. Moreover, the new species is the first in the genus to be described with thorny cuticular rings and to be observed with the use of scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The morphology of A . pinnatifidus and A . schubarti is still poorly-known and should be revised in details; however, the separation between them and the new species was clear. Genetic characterization based on 28S rDNA and cytochrome c oxidase subunit I ( cox 1) mtDNA partial sequences, performed for the first time in Acyracanthus , along with phylogenetic reconstructions using both genetic markers, placed Ancyracanthus electrophori n. sp. in a suggestive basal position within Gnathostomatidae. Phylogenetic reconstructions using cox 1 sequences also suggested lack of monophyly in the genera Gnathostoma and Spiroxys and, consequently, in the subfamilies Gnathostominae and Spiroxyinae. However, such results are preliminary. With the first genetic characterization and observations using SEM in Ancyracanthus , resulting in the discovery of a new species and in the expansion of the geographical occurrence of the genus to Amazonian fish, an important step towards a better understanding of these nematodes has been taken.
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- 2023
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29. Review of the parasitic nematodes of marine fishes from off the American continent.
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Pereira FB and González-Solís D
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- Animals, Phylogeny, Fishes parasitology, Life Cycle Stages, Dracunculoidea, Perciformes parasitology, Fish Diseases epidemiology, Fish Diseases parasitology
- Abstract
The ichthyofauna of the Atlantic and Pacific coasts off the American continent is very rich. Consequently, a high biodiversity of nematodes parasitizing these vertebrates is also expected. Currently, data on nematode parasites of marine fish off the Americas are fragmented. A review of all adult nematode species reported parasitizing marine fish from off the American continent is herein presented, as well as comments on their patterns of diversity, life cycles and advances in the taxonomic and phylogenetic knowledge. A total of 209 valid species, 19 species inquirendae and 6 dubious records have been recorded, the majority from the fish taxa Eupercaria and Perciformes. The families Sciaenidae, Serranidae and Lutjanidae, as well as the tropical and temperate Atlantic waters, exhibited the highest records of parasitic nematodes. The Cucullanidae, Philometridae and Cystidicolidae were the most speciose families of nematodes, which may be related to technological advances and relatively recent efforts of taxonomists, resulting in description of new taxa and the resolution of taxonomic problems. Numerous taxonomic questions still need resolution and, even though genetic data have been important for this process, the database is very scarce. This is the first review on all currently known nematode species parasitizing marine fish off the Americas and may serve as an important basis of reference for future approaches on these organisms.
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- 2022
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30. Integrative Profiling of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Lymphoblasts Identifies Unique Metabolic and Mitochondrial Disease Fingerprints.
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Cunha-Oliveira T, Carvalho M, Sardão V, Ferreiro E, Mena D, Pereira FB, Borges F, Oliveira PJ, and Silva FSG
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- Adenosine Triphosphate, Bayes Theorem, Humans, Mutation genetics, Superoxide Dismutase metabolism, Superoxide Dismutase-1 genetics, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis genetics, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis metabolism, Mitochondrial Diseases, Neurodegenerative Diseases
- Abstract
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a devastating neurodegenerative disease with a rapid progression and no effective treatment. Metabolic and mitochondrial alterations in peripheral tissues of ALS patients may present diagnostic and therapeutic interest. We aimed to identify mitochondrial fingerprints in lymphoblast from ALS patients harboring SOD1 mutations (mutSOD1) or with unidentified mutations (undSOD1), compared with age-/sex-matched controls. Three groups of lymphoblasts, from mutSOD1 or undSOD1 ALS patients and age-/sex-matched controls, were obtained from Coriell Biobank and divided into 3 age-/sex-matched cohorts. Mitochondria-associated metabolic pathways were analyzed using Seahorse MitoStress and ATP Rate assays, complemented with metabolic phenotype microarrays, metabolite levels, gene expression, and protein expression and activity. Pooled (all cohorts) and paired (intra-cohort) analyses were performed by using bioinformatic tools, and the features with higher information gain values were selected and used for principal component analysis and Naïve Bayes classification. Considering the group as a target, the features that contributed to better segregation of control, undSOD1, and mutSOD1 were found to be the protein levels of Tfam and glycolytic ATP production rate. Metabolic phenotypic profiles in lymphoblasts from ALS patients with mutSOD1 and undSOD1 revealed unique age-dependent different substrate oxidation profiles. For most parameters, different patterns of variation in experimental endpoints in lymphoblasts were found between cohorts, which may be due to the age or sex of the donor. In the present work, we investigated several metabolic and mitochondrial hallmarks in lymphoblasts from each donor, and although a high heterogeneity of results was found, we identified specific metabolic and mitochondrial fingerprints, especially protein levels of Tfam and glycolytic ATP production rate, that may have a diagnostic and therapeutic interest., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2022
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31. A New Species of Hatschekiid Copepod (Crustacea: Hatschekiidae) Parasitic on the Porkfish Anisotremus virginicus (Linnaeus, 1758) (Actinopterygii: Haemulidae), with Notes on Previously Known Species of Hatschekia Poche, 1902 Collected from Actinopterygians off Brazil.
- Author
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Paschoal F, Couto JV, Pereira FB, and Luque JL
- Subjects
- Animals, Brazil, Ecosystem, Fishes, Copepoda, Fish Diseases parasitology, Parasites, Perciformes parasitology
- Abstract
Introduction: Copepods of the genus Hatschekia Poche, 1902 are parasitic on the gills of marine actinopterygians. Currently, about 151 species of this genus have been reported in marine ecosystems and only few occur in South Atlantic Ocean., Methods: Fifty specimens of A. virginicus from Angra dos Reis, off the State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, were parasitized by copepods on the gills. Parasites were fixed and preserved in 70% ethanol. Morphological observations were based on light and scanning electron microscopy., Results: Hatschekia nagasawai n. sp. can be distinguished from all congeners by the combination of the following characters: (1) presence of two pointed processes on the proximal (first) segment of antennule, (2) cephalothorax octagonal to ovoid, (3) absence of processes on the intercoxal sclerite of legs 1 and 2, (4) trunk without lobes at the postero-lateral margins. Other species of Hatschekia and their hosts previously collected off Brazil were analysed and discussed., Conclusions: This is the first report of a representative of the family Hatschekiidae Kabata, 1979 parasitizing a species of Anisotremus. The number of species of Hatschekia reported in the South Atlantic Ocean was increased to five, including the new species; however, the diversity of hatschekiid copepods in this oceanographic region is still underestimated, most likely being higher than what is currently known., (© 2022. The Author(s) under exclusive licence to Witold Stefański Institute of Parasitology, Polish Academy of Sciences.)
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- 2022
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32. Parasite communities and their ecological implications: comparative approach on three sympatric clupeiform fish populations (Actinopterygii: Clupeiformes), off Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
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da Silva RD, Benicio L, Moreira J, Paschoal F, and Pereira FB
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- Animals, Brazil epidemiology, Fishes parasitology, Host-Parasite Interactions, Phylogeny, Fish Diseases epidemiology, Fish Diseases parasitology, Parasites genetics
- Abstract
Fish parasite communities can be directly influenced by characteristics of host species. However, little is known about the host-parasite relationships in commercially important fish of the southeastern Atlantic. To address this knowledge gap, a comparative analysis of the parasite communities of three sympatric Clupeiformes was conducted. Cetengraulis edentulus (Engraulidae), Opisthonema oglinum (Clupeidae) and Sardinella brasiliensis (Clupeidae) were collected from an estuarine lagoon near Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Prevalence, abundance and aggregation were estimated for infrapopulations; richness, diversity, evenness and dominance for infracommunities. The three component communities were compared using both quantitative and qualitative components. Canonical discriminant analysis was used to determine if a host population could be characterised by the component community of its parasites. Multivariate models revealed that host species, a proxy for diet and phylogenetic relationships, was the main factor influencing the composition of parasite infracommunities. Diet was found to be the main factor shaping the communities of endoparasites, in which digeneans were dominant and best indicator of host population. Ectoparasites (copepods, isopods and monogeneans) displayed strong host-specificity with some species restricted to a single host population. The similarity of the component communities of the two clupeid populations demonstrated the influence of host phylogeny. Parasite infracommunities exhibited low diversity and high dominance, with many taxa restricted to a single host species (specialists) and few occurring in more than one (generalists). Host phylogeny and by extension, diet, morphology and coevolution with parasites appear to be important factors in determining the host-parasite relationships of clupeiform fish in the southeastern Atlantic., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2022
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33. Association of acidosis with coagulopathy and transfusion requirements in liver transplantation.
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de Souza JR, Yokoyama AP, Magnus MM, Boin I, de Ataide EC, Munhoz DC, Pereira FB, Luzo A, and Orsi FA
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- Female, Fibrinogen, Humans, Male, Severity of Illness Index, Acidosis complications, Blood Coagulation Disorders etiology, Blood Coagulation Disorders therapy, End Stage Liver Disease complications, Liver Transplantation adverse effects
- Abstract
The relationship between acidosis and coagulopathy has long been described in vitro and in trauma patients, but not yet in orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT). The association of metabolic acidosis with coagulopathy and with transfusion requirements was evaluated in patients submitted to OLT. Changes in acid-base and coagulation parameters were analyzed by repeated measures. Regression analyses [adjusted for sex, age, model for end stage liver disease (MELD) score, and baseline values of hemoglobin, fibrinogen, international normalized ratio, platelets] determined the association of acid-base parameters with coagulation markers and transfusion requirement. We included 95 patients, 66% were male, 49.5% of the patients had hepatocellular carcinoma and the mean MELD score was 20.4 (SD 8.9). The values of all the coagulation and acid-base parameters significantly changed during OLT, particularly in the reperfusion phase. After adjustments for baseline parameters, the decrease in pH and base excess (BE) values were associated with a decrease in fibrinogen levels (mean decrease of fibrinogen level = 14.88 mg/dL per 0.1 unit reduction of pH values and 3.6 mg/dL per 1 mmol/L reduction of BE levels) and an increase in red blood cells transfusion (2.16 units of RBC per 0.1 unit reduction of pH and 0.38 units of RBC per 1 mmol/L reduction of BE levels). Among multiple factors potentially associated with adverse outcomes, decreasing pH levels were independently associated with the length of hospitalization but not with in-hospital mortality. Metabolic acidosis is independently associated with decreased fibrinogen levels and increased intraoperative transfusion requirement during OLT. Awareness of that association may improve treatment strategies to reduce intraoperative bleeding risk in OLT., (© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2022
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34. Evaluation of 6-Hydroxydopamine and Rotenone In Vitro Neurotoxicity on Differentiated SH-SY5Y Cells Using Applied Computational Statistics.
- Author
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Simões RF, Oliveira PJ, Cunha-Oliveira T, and Pereira FB
- Subjects
- Apoptosis, Cell Death, Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Survival, Humans, Oxidopamine toxicity, Rotenone toxicity, Neuroprotective Agents pharmacology, Neurotoxicity Syndromes etiology
- Abstract
With the increase in life expectancy and consequent aging of the world's population, the prevalence of many neurodegenerative diseases is increasing, without concomitant improvement in diagnostics and therapeutics. These diseases share neuropathological hallmarks, including mitochondrial dysfunction. In fact, as mitochondrial alterations appear prior to neuronal cell death at an early phase of a disease's onset, the study and modulation of mitochondrial alterations have emerged as promising strategies to predict and prevent neurotoxicity and neuronal cell death before the onset of cell viability alterations. In this work, differentiated SH-SY5Y cells were treated with the mitochondrial-targeted neurotoxicants 6-hydroxydopamine and rotenone. These compounds were used at different concentrations and for different time points to understand the similarities and differences in their mechanisms of action. To accomplish this, data on mitochondrial parameters were acquired and analyzed using unsupervised (hierarchical clustering) and supervised (decision tree) machine learning methods. Both biochemical and computational analyses resulted in an evident distinction between the neurotoxic effects of 6-hydroxydopamine and rotenone, specifically for the highest concentrations of both compounds.
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- 2022
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35. Redescription of the two most recorded Physaloptera (Nematoda: Physalopteridae) parasitizing lizards in the Americas: first step towards a robust species identification framework.
- Author
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Alves PV, Couto JV, and Pereira FB
- Subjects
- Americas, Animals, Female, Male, Species Specificity, Lizards parasitology, Spiruroidea anatomy & histology, Spiruroidea classification
- Abstract
Despite being the two most recorded species of Physaloptera from lizards in the Americas, P. retusa and P. lutzi are either incompletely described or have accumulated inaccurate morphological data through the years. Here, we redescribe both species from Tropidurus torquatus in the State of Minas Gerais, Brazil, including evaluation of specimens from the Coleção Helmintológica do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz. In P. retusa, the presence and location of amphids, presence and pattern of porous areas on pseudolabia, detailed pattern of cuticular ornamentations on ventral surface of the caudal bursa, structure of cloacal labia, presence of dome-shaped elevation between the last pair of postcloacal papillae and location of phasmids in males, were revealed for the first time. Additional morphometric data are also provided. In P. lutzi, the detailed morphological analysis revealed for the first time, porous areas on pseudolabia, as well as presence of amphids, phasmids, and the detailed ornamentation and papillae arrangement on the male bursa. Also, the presence of an internal tripartite and an external triangular labial tooth in the specimens were observed to be constant, diverging from the assertions by other authors. Finally, in P. lutzi was possible to observe that deirids are consistently located close to muscular oesophagus base with excretory pore slightly posterior to it, and the vulva is always close to anal aperture. The present observations confirmed the validity of P. lutzi and strengthened its taxonomic diagnosis. An up-to-date list of records of both species is provided, including a brief discussion on their host spectrum and geographic range., (© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.)
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- 2022
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36. Quantitative analysis of neuronal mitochondrial movement reveals patterns resulting from neurotoxicity of rotenone and 6-hydroxydopamine.
- Author
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Simões RF, Pino R, Moreira-Soares M, Kovarova J, Neuzil J, Travasso R, Oliveira PJ, Cunha-Oliveira T, and Pereira FB
- Subjects
- Adrenergic Agents adverse effects, Cell Differentiation, Humans, Mitochondria drug effects, Neuroblastoma chemically induced, Neurons drug effects, Uncoupling Agents adverse effects, Mitochondria pathology, Mitochondrial Dynamics, Neuroblastoma pathology, Neurons pathology, Oxidopamine adverse effects, Rotenone adverse effects
- Abstract
Alterations in mitochondrial dynamics, including their intracellular trafficking, are common early manifestations of neuronal degeneration. However, current methodologies used to study mitochondrial trafficking events rely on parameters that are primarily altered in later stages of neurodegeneration. Our objective was to establish a reliable applied statistical analysis to detect early alterations in neuronal mitochondrial trafficking. We propose a novel quantitative analysis of mitochondria trajectories based on innovative movement descriptors, including straightness, efficiency, anisotropy, and kurtosis. We evaluated time- and dose-dependent alterations in trajectory descriptors using biological data from differentiated SH-SY5Y cells treated with the mitochondrial toxicants 6-hydroxydopamine and rotenone. MitoTracker Red CMXRos-labelled mitochondria movement was analyzed by total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy followed by computational modelling to describe the process. Based on the aforementioned trajectory descriptors, this innovative analysis of mitochondria trajectories provides insights into mitochondrial movement characteristics and can be a consistent and sensitive method to detect alterations in mitochondrial trafficking occurring in the earliest time points of neurodegeneration., (© 2021 Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology.)
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- 2021
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37. RETINAL HEMORRHAGES IN A PATIENT WITH ACUTE ATAXIA.
- Author
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Pereira FB, Soares Dutra Oliveira H, Lima VC, Lima LH, Balaratnasingam C, Pulido JS, and Cunha de Souza E
- Subjects
- Humans, Ataxia diagnosis, Ataxia etiology, Retinal Hemorrhage diagnosis, Retinal Hemorrhage etiology
- Published
- 2021
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38. Deep in the systematics of Camallanidae (Nematoda): using integrative taxonomy to better understand the phylogeny and consistency of diagnostic traits.
- Author
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Ailán-Choke LG and Pereira FB
- Subjects
- Animals, Bayes Theorem, DNA, Mitochondrial chemistry, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, DNA, Ribosomal chemistry, Ecosystem, Electron Transport Complex IV genetics, Female, Genetic Markers, Male, RNA, Ribosomal, 18S genetics, RNA, Ribosomal, 28S genetics, Sequence Alignment, Spirurina anatomy & histology, Spirurina genetics, Phylogeny, Spirurina classification
- Abstract
Due to conflicts between classic and molecular systematics of Camallanidae, different data types were used for the first time, to better understand the evolutionary history and taxa consistency within this family. Genetic [18S and 28S rDNA; cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) mtDNA], morphological and life history traits were used to infer phylogenies using Bayesian inference, reconstructed from separated and concatenated datasets. The consistency of tree and morphological traits was evaluated using the consistency index. Characters were mapped on the trees and the phylogenetic informativeness of genetic markers was estimated. Phylogenetic informativeness of 18S provided better resolution for outer nodes, COI for inners and 28S had an intermediate profile. New sequences for two camallanid species were obtained. Phylogenies of genetic and concatenated data largely agreed, showing more divergence in the COI dataset, due to its higher mutation rate vs stable morphology for diagnosing higher taxa. No genus sustained monophyly. The lack of autapomorphy and phylogenetic proximity supported the partition of Batrachocamallanus as synonym of Procamallanus and Spirocamallanus, which should not be considered as subgenera. Although traits of buccal capsule, male tail, habitat, host and biogeographic were highly consistent, intrinsic patterns varied according to different taxa assemblages. Morphological systematics of Camallanidae, based on buccal capsule, is artificial for certain taxa.
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- 2021
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39. Isolation of 27 polymorphic nuclear microsatellite markers for Roupala montana var. brasiliensis (Proteaceae).
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Pereira FB, Sebbenn AM, Rossini BC, Melchert GF, Marino CL, Ribolla PEM, Alonso DP, Vidal E, and Tambarussi EV
- Subjects
- Genetics, Population, Genotype, Polymorphism, Genetic, Microsatellite Repeats, Proteaceae genetics
- Abstract
Microsatellite primers pairs were developed for the Neotropical tree Roupala montana var. brasiliensis for use in studies on genetic diversity, mating system, and gene flow. Forty-two primer pairs were developed, resulting in 27 polymorphic loci, with two to 27 alleles per locus. The primer pairs were validated against 34 R. montana var. brasiliensis adult trees from four populations. The observed (H o) and expected (H e)heterozygosities ranged among loci from 0.061 to 0.930 (mean of 0.544) and from 0.116 to 0.950 (mean of 0.700), respectively. Null alleles were observed for ten loci. No genotypic linkage disequilibrium was detected in any pair of loci. This set of loci is suitable for population genetic studies of the species.
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- 2021
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40. Exploratory Data Analysis of Cell and Mitochondrial High-Fat, High-Sugar Toxicity on Human HepG2 Cells.
- Author
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Amorim R, Simões ICM, Veloso C, Carvalho A, Simões RF, Pereira FB, Thiel T, Normann A, Morais C, Jurado AS, Wieckowski MR, Teixeira J, and Oliveira PJ
- Subjects
- Carcinoma, Hepatocellular metabolism, Cell Death drug effects, Data Analysis, Fatty Acids metabolism, Fatty Acids, Nonesterified metabolism, Fructose metabolism, Hepatocytes drug effects, Humans, Lipid Metabolism, Liver metabolism, Liver Neoplasms metabolism, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease etiology, Oxidative Stress, Palmitic Acid metabolism, Reactive Oxygen Species metabolism, Sugars metabolism, Diet, High-Fat adverse effects, Dietary Carbohydrates adverse effects, Hep G2 Cells drug effects, Mitochondria drug effects, Mitochondria metabolism
- Abstract
Non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), one of the deleterious stages of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, remains a significant cause of liver-related morbidity and mortality worldwide. In the current work, we used an exploratory data analysis to investigate time-dependent cellular and mitochondrial effects of different supra-physiological fatty acids (FA) overload strategies, in the presence or absence of fructose (F), on human hepatoma-derived HepG2 cells. We measured intracellular neutral lipid content and reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels, mitochondrial respiration and morphology, and caspases activity and cell death. FA-treatments induced a time-dependent increase in neutral lipid content, which was paralleled by an increase in ROS. Fructose, by itself, did not increase intracellular lipid content nor aggravated the effects of palmitic acid (PA) or free fatty acids mixture (FFA), although it led to an up-expression of hepatic fructokinase. Instead, F decreased mitochondrial phospholipid content, as well as OXPHOS subunits levels. Increased lipid accumulation and ROS in FA-treatments preceded mitochondrial dysfunction, comprising altered mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm) and morphology, and decreased oxygen consumption rates, especially with PA. Consequently, supra-physiological PA alone or combined with F prompted the activation of caspase pathways leading to a time-dependent decrease in cell viability. Exploratory data analysis methods support this conclusion by clearly identifying the effects of FA treatments. In fact, unsupervised learning algorithms created homogeneous and cohesive clusters, with a clear separation between PA and FFA treated samples to identify a minimal subset of critical mitochondrial markers in order to attain a feasible model to predict cell death in NAFLD or for high throughput screening of possible therapeutic agents, with particular focus in measuring mitochondrial function.
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- 2021
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41. Co-occurrence of Eutrombicula alfreddugesi and Oswaldofilaria chabaudi in Tropidurus torquatus and first report of microfilariae in the chigger mite: possible evidence of a lifecycle pathway?
- Author
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Alves PV, Gomides SC, and Pereira FB
- Subjects
- Animals, Brazil, Coinfection parasitology, Coinfection veterinary, Female, Host-Parasite Interactions, Lizards parasitology, Microfilariae isolation & purification, Nematoda isolation & purification, Trombiculidae parasitology
- Abstract
While much attention has been paid to vector-borne filariasis, diseases that threaten millions of people in tropical and subtropical countries, the literature on host-parasite associations and transmission strategies of filarial nematodes in wildlife is scarce. Here, we report the co-occurrence of chigger mites (Eutrombicula alfreddugesi) and onchocercid nematodes (Oswaldofilaria chabaudi) parasitizing the lizard Tropidurus torquatus in the State of Minas Gerais, Brazil. Examination of chiggers established, for the first time, the occurrence of microfilariae in trombiculid mites (Trombiculidae). These larvae were morphologically similar to those recovered from adult females of O. chabaudi. The current evidence suggests that chiggers do not play a role in the transmission of filarioid nematodes, but rather act as accidental or dead-end hosts. Nevertheless, considering the polyphagous nature of trombiculid mites, similar to blood-sucking insects involved in the transmission of several infectious diseases, further studies may shed light on the potential role of chiggers as vectors of filarioids.
- Published
- 2021
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42. Dracunculiasis in a domestic dog in Brazil.
- Author
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Paiva F, de Souza Piazzalunga P, Pereira FB, Borghesan TC, Soares P, and Tavares LER
- Subjects
- Animals, Brazil, Dogs, Dracunculiasis parasitology, Dracunculus Nematode anatomy & histology, Dracunculus Nematode classification, Genes, Helminth, Genes, rRNA, Male, Phylogeny, RNA, Helminth genetics, RNA, Mitochondrial genetics, RNA, Ribosomal, 18S genetics, Dog Diseases parasitology, Dracunculiasis veterinary, Dracunculus Nematode genetics
- Abstract
We report and discuss the surprising encounter of a dog naturally infected by Dracunculus sp. in Brazil, a brief clinical history of the animal and a procedure for removing the nematode. We also present details on the morphology of the fragments collected from the nematode and a phylogenetic comparison of the partial sequences of the mitochondrial 18S rRNA and cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) genes, deposited with others in GenBank. The samples were an independent lineage forming a well-supported monophyletic assemblage with D. medinensis. We thus conclude that this species has not yet been sequenced or even described and will only be elucidated by more information because only two species of Dracunculus have been reported in Brazil, D. fuelleborni and D. brasiliensis.
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- 2021
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43. Modeling microsolvation clusters with electronic-structure calculations guided by analytical potentials and predictive machine learning techniques.
- Author
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Jesus WS, Prudente FV, Marques JMC, and Pereira FB
- Abstract
We propose a new methodology to study, at the density functional theory (DFT) level, the clusters resulting from the microsolvation of alkali-metal ions with rare-gas atoms. The workflow begins with a global optimization search to generate a pool of low-energy minimum structures for different cluster sizes. This is achieved by employing an analytical potential energy surface (PES) and an evolutionary algorithm (EA). The next main stage of the methodology is devoted to establish an adequate DFT approach to treat the microsolvation system, through a systematic benchmark study involving several combinations of functionals and basis sets, in order to characterize the global minimum structures of the smaller clusters. In the next stage, we apply machine learning (ML) classification algorithms to predict how the low-energy minima of the analytical PES map to the DFT ones. An early and accurate detection of likely DFT local minima is extremely important to guide the choice of the most promising low-energy minima of large clusters to be re-optimized at the DFT level of theory. In this work, the methodology was applied to the Li+Krn (n = 2-14 and 16) microsolvation clusters for which the most competitive DFT approach was found to be the B3LYP-D3/aug-pcseg-1. Additionally, the ML classifier was able to accurately predict most of the solutions to be re-optimized at the DFT level of theory, thereby greatly enhancing the efficiency of the process and allowing its applicability to larger clusters.
- Published
- 2021
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44. BEHAVIORAL CHARACTERISTICS OF CHILDREN WITH SICKLE CELL DISEASE.
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Pereira FB, Pedroso GC, Resegue RM, Ribeiro MVV, Hokazono M, and Braga JAP
- Subjects
- Child, Child, Preschool, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Parents, Severity of Illness Index, Socioeconomic Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Anemia, Sickle Cell psychology, Child Behavior
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate sociodemographic and clinical aspects of children with sickle cell disease (SCD) and their behavioral characteristics., Methods: Interview with parents of patients with SCD from four to ten years old, addressing socioeconomic aspects and other health conditions, and using the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ). Clinical data were obtained from medical records. Exclusion criteria were the use of hydroxyurea, previous diagnosis of stroke, chronic encephalopathy and/or intellectual disability., Results: 45 patients (19 girls and 26 boys) were assessed. The median age was seven years. Diagnosis of SCD: 26 hemoglobinopathy SC; 19 hemoglobinopathy SS. Socioeconomic class: D: 24.4%; C2: 44.4%; C1: 28.9%; B2: 2.2%. Clinical history: acute chest syndrome: 40%; transfusions: 66.7%; hospitalizations: 82.2%. SDQ findings: 88.9% clinical impact (emotional subscale: 68.9%); total score: impact in 48.9%. It was not possible to establish a relation between the severity of the disease and the results of the SDQ. Regarding socioeconomic class: among individuals of classes B2 and C1, 21.4% had impact at the total score; in classes C2 and D, this percentage was 61.3%. Regarding the schooling of the head of the family, with Elementary School at least, 39.3% of the children had impacts; for fewer education, this percentage was 64.7%., Conclusions: Behavioral impacts are highly prevalent in children with SCD. Individuals in socioeconomic classes C2 and D suffered more behavioral impacts than individuals in classes B2 and C1.
- Published
- 2021
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45. Three new species of Anacanthorus Mizelle & Price, 1965 (Monogenea: Dactylogyridae) from Markiana nigripinnis Perugia (Actinopterygii: Characidae) in Pantanal wetlands, Brazil.
- Author
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Pereira FB, Mota MEBP, Paiva F, and Tavares LER
- Subjects
- Animals, Brazil, Gills parasitology, Species Specificity, Trematoda anatomy & histology, Wetlands, Characidae parasitology, Trematoda classification
- Abstract
Three monogenean species, Anacanthorus luquei n. sp., A. scholzi n. sp. and A. cohenae n. sp. are described from the gills of the tetra fish Markiana nigripinnis (Perugia) (Characidae), collected in the Pantanal wetlands, State of Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil. Among other differences, Anacanthorus luquei n. sp. differs from the most morphologically similar species, based on the structure of the accessory piece as follows: branches with smooth margins (vs with irregular margins in A. cuticulovaginus), without pointed projections at distal end (vs with projections in A. dipelecinus) and with 2 branches (vs 3 in A. quinqueramus). Anacanthorus scholzi n. sp. is most morphologically similar to A. luquei n. sp., differing from it because one of the branches of the accessory piece is bifurcated at the distal portion. Anacanthorus cohenae n. sp. can be differentiated from the congeners based on the combination of the following features: MCO cylindrical and robust with sclerotised flanges on the extremities, accessory piece V-shaped, bearing two branches similar in length and with blunt distal ends, and hooks with a proximal bulb. This is the first parasitological study on M. nigripinnis and, currently, Anacanthorus allocates 88 species infesting characiform fishes in the Neotropical region, including the three new species described here.
- Published
- 2020
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46. An integrative approach assesses the intraspecific variations of Procamallanus ( Spirocamallanus ) inopinatus , a common parasite in Neotropical freshwater fishes, and the phylogenetic patterns of Camallanidae.
- Author
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Ailán-Choke LG, Tavares LER, Luque JL, and Pereira FB
- Subjects
- Animals, Brazil epidemiology, DNA, Helminth analysis, DNA, Mitochondrial analysis, Electron Transport Complex IV analysis, Fish Diseases parasitology, Microscopy veterinary, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning veterinary, Phylogeny, Prevalence, RNA, Helminth analysis, RNA, Ribosomal, 18S analysis, RNA, Ribosomal, 28S analysis, Rivers, Spirurida Infections epidemiology, Spirurida Infections parasitology, Spirurina anatomy & histology, Spirurina classification, Spirurina genetics, Characiformes, Fish Diseases epidemiology, Host-Parasite Interactions, Spirurida Infections veterinary, Spirurina physiology
- Abstract
Integrative taxonomy was used to evaluate two component populations of Procamallanus (Spirocamallanus) inopinatus in Brazil and the phylogeny Camallanidae. Parasite populations were collected in the characiform Anostomoides passionis from River Xingu (Amazon basin) and Megaleporinus elongatus from River Miranda (Paraguay basin). Morphology was analysed using light and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Genetic characterization was based on partial sequences of the 18S and 28S rDNA, and COI mtDNA. Phylogenies were based on 18S and COI due to data availability. Generalized Mixed Yule Coalescent (GMYC), Poisson Tree Process (PTP) and *BEAST were used for species delimitation and validation. SEM revealed for the first time the presence of minute denticles and pore-like structures surrounding the oral opening, phasmids in females and confirmed other important morphological aspects. Statistical comparison between the two-component populations indicated morphometric variations, especially among males. The different component population of P. (S.) inopinatus showed variable morphometry, but uniform morphology and were validated as conspecific by the GMYC, PTP and *BEAST. Some camallanid sequences in GenBank have incorrect taxonomic labelling. Host, environment and geographic aspects seem to be related to some lineages within Camallanidae; however, their real phylogenetic meanings are still unclear.
- Published
- 2020
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47. Elevated Glucose Levels Favor SARS-CoV-2 Infection and Monocyte Response through a HIF-1α/Glycolysis-Dependent Axis.
- Author
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Codo AC, Davanzo GG, Monteiro LB, de Souza GF, Muraro SP, Virgilio-da-Silva JV, Prodonoff JS, Carregari VC, de Biagi Junior CAO, Crunfli F, Jimenez Restrepo JL, Vendramini PH, Reis-de-Oliveira G, Bispo Dos Santos K, Toledo-Teixeira DA, Parise PL, Martini MC, Marques RE, Carmo HR, Borin A, Coimbra LD, Boldrini VO, Brunetti NS, Vieira AS, Mansour E, Ulaf RG, Bernardes AF, Nunes TA, Ribeiro LC, Palma AC, Agrela MV, Moretti ML, Sposito AC, Pereira FB, Velloso LA, Vinolo MAR, Damasio A, Proença-Módena JL, Carvalho RF, Mori MA, Martins-de-Souza D, Nakaya HI, Farias AS, and Moraes-Vieira PM
- Subjects
- Adult, COVID-19, Cell Line, Coronavirus Infections metabolism, Diabetes Complications metabolism, Diabetes Mellitus metabolism, Female, Glycolysis, Humans, Inflammation complications, Inflammation metabolism, Male, Middle Aged, Monocytes virology, Pandemics, Pneumonia, Viral metabolism, Reactive Oxygen Species metabolism, SARS-CoV-2, Signal Transduction, Betacoronavirus physiology, Blood Glucose metabolism, Coronavirus Infections complications, Diabetes Complications complications, Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1, alpha Subunit metabolism, Monocytes metabolism, Pneumonia, Viral complications
- Abstract
COVID-19 can result in severe lung injury. It remained to be determined why diabetic individuals with uncontrolled glucose levels are more prone to develop the severe form of COVID-19. The molecular mechanism underlying SARS-CoV-2 infection and what determines the onset of the cytokine storm found in severe COVID-19 patients are unknown. Monocytes and macrophages are the most enriched immune cell types in the lungs of COVID-19 patients and appear to have a central role in the pathogenicity of the disease. These cells adapt their metabolism upon infection and become highly glycolytic, which facilitates SARS-CoV-2 replication. The infection triggers mitochondrial ROS production, which induces stabilization of hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α) and consequently promotes glycolysis. HIF-1α-induced changes in monocyte metabolism by SARS-CoV-2 infection directly inhibit T cell response and reduce epithelial cell survival. Targeting HIF-1ɑ may have great therapeutic potential for the development of novel drugs to treat COVID-19., Competing Interests: Declaration of Interests Authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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48. Mitochondrial remodeling in human skin fibroblasts from sporadic male Parkinson's disease patients uncovers metabolic and mitochondrial bioenergetic defects.
- Author
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Deus CM, Pereira SP, Cunha-Oliveira T, Pereira FB, Raimundo N, and Oliveira PJ
- Subjects
- Aged, Galactose metabolism, Glucose metabolism, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Oxidative Phosphorylation, Oxygen Consumption physiology, Pyruvic Acid metabolism, Substantia Nigra metabolism, Energy Metabolism physiology, Fibroblasts metabolism, Metabolic Diseases metabolism, Mitochondria metabolism, Mitochondrial Diseases metabolism, Parkinson Disease metabolism, Skin metabolism
- Abstract
Parkinson's Disease (PD) is characterized by dopaminergic neurodegeneration in the substantia nigra. The exact mechanism by which dopaminergic neurodegeneration occurs is still unknown; however, mitochondrial dysfunction has long been implicated in PD pathogenesis. To investigate the sub-cellular events that lead to disease progression and to develop personalized interventions, non-neuronal cells which are collected in a minimally invasive manner can be key to test interventions aimed at improving mitochondrial function. We used human skin fibroblasts from sporadic PD (sPD) patients as a cell proxy to detect metabolic and mitochondrial alterations which would also exist in a non-neuronal cell type. In this model, we used a glucose-free/galactose- glutamine- and pyruvate-containing cell culture medium, which forces cells to be more dependent on oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) for energy production, in order to reveal hidden metabolic and mitochondrial alterations present in fibroblasts from sPD patients. We demonstrated that fibroblasts from sPD patients show hyperpolarized and elongated mitochondrial networks and higher mitochondrial ROS concentration, as well as decreased ATP levels and glycolysis-related ECAR. Our results also showed that abnormalities of fibroblasts from sPD patients became more evident when stimulating OXPHOS. Under these culture conditions, fibroblasts from sPD cells presented decreased basal respiration, ATP-linked OCR and maximal respiration, and increased mitochondria-targeting phosphorylation of DRP1 when compared to control cells. Our work validates the relevance of using fibroblasts from sPD patients to study cellular and molecular changes that are characteristic of dopaminergic neurodegeneration of PD, and shows that forcing mitochondrial OXPHOS uncovers metabolic defects that were otherwise hidden., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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49. Dadaytrema oxycephala (Digenea: Cladorchiidae) in definitive host Pimelodus blochii (Pisces: Pimelodidae), with morphological and geographic distribution data in fishes from the South America.
- Author
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Negreiros LP, Pereira FB, and Tavares-Dias M
- Abstract
The aim of this study was to describe structural and ultrastructural morphological data of Dadaytrema oxycephala (Diesing, 1836) Travassos, 1931 in Pimelodus blochii Valenciennes, 1840 from western Amazon (Brazil), besides geographic distribution in host fishes from South America. Of 160 P. blochii examined in the rivers Acre and Iaco, 15% were infected by D. oxycephala with mean intensity of 6.5 ± 1.9 and mean abundance of 1.0 ± 5.1. All parasites were found in the intestine of the infected hosts. The structural and ultrastructural characteristics of the developmental stages of D. oxycephala are presented and discussed. Dadaytrema oxycephala has a wide geographic distribution in South America, parasitizing fish species of Characiformes and Siluriformes from Brazil, Venezuela, Argentina, Peru and Paraguay. We elucidated part of life cycle of D. oxicephala in P. blochii , which is a definitive host for this digenean., Competing Interests: Conflict of interestAuthors declare that there is no conflict of interest regarding the publication of this paper., (© Indian Society for Parasitology 2019.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Integrative taxonomy of Sprentascaris mahnerti and phylogeny of raphidascaridid nematodes (Nematoda: Ascaridoidea: Raphidascarididae) suggest the monophyly of Sprentascaris.
- Author
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Malta LS, Paiva F, Elisei C, Tavares LER, and Pereira FB
- Subjects
- Animals, Ascaridoidea ultrastructure, Brazil, Electron Transport Complex IV genetics, Female, Fresh Water parasitology, Male, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, RNA, Ribosomal, 18S genetics, RNA, Ribosomal, 28S genetics, Ascaridoidea classification, Ascaridoidea genetics, Fish Diseases parasitology, Phylogeny
- Abstract
Sprentascaris mahnerti (Nematoda: Raphidascarididae) collected from Loricariichthys labialis (Siluriformes: Loricariidae) in the Pantanal wetlands, State of Mato Grosso do Sul (Brazil), was redescribed using light and scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and genetically characterised along with two other raphidascaridids: Raphidascaroides brasiliensis and Ro. moraveci. Due to the systematic discussion regarding Raphidascaris and Sprentascaris, as well as the poor knowledge about the phylogenetic relationships within Raphidascarididae, phylogenies were reconstructed based on partial sequences of the 18S and 28S nuclear rRNA gene, the nuclear ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 and the cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (cox1) mtDNA. Morphological study of S. mahnerti, confirmed some previously described features, revealed new characteristics and permitted to elucidate some inconsistencies noted in the literature. Morphological and genetic characterisation of S. mahnerti supported its validity. Phylogenetic reconstructions supported the monophyly of Sprentascaris, which has three pairs of interlabial conspicuous cuticular projections as a synapomorphy. The relationships among several lineages of raphidascaridids were unsolved, albeit Goezia and Ichthyascaris formed well-supported monophyletic assemblages, in which the first included species with no relations regarding the habitat of hosts and the geographic origin. The present findings represent one more step towards the understanding of the interrelationships of raphidascaridid nematodes. In this sense, Sprentascaris should be considered valid as an independent lineage from Raphidascaris., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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