9 results on '"Santos-Costa P. C."'
Search Results
2. CLINICO-PATHOLOGIC FINDINGS AND PATHOGEN SCREENING IN FUR SEALS (ARCTOCEPHALUS AUSTRALIS AND ARCTOCEPHALUS TROPICALIS) STRANDED IN SOUTHEASTERN BRAZIL, 2018.
- Author
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Duarte-Benvenuto, Aricia, Sacristán, Carlos, Reisfeld, Laura, Santos-Costa, Priscilla C., Fernandes, Natalia C. C. dA., Ressio, Rodrigo A., Mello, Daniela M. D., Favero, Cíntia, Groch, Katia R., Diaz-Delgado, Josué, and Catão-Dias, José L.
- Abstract
Among pinnipeds, four Otariidae species (eared seals) have been reported as occasional or frequent vagrants along the coast of Brazil, mainly in the southern region. These animals usually arrive debilitated during winter and are directed to rehabilitation. Nevertheless, available information on sanitary aspects of stranded pinnipeds in Brazil is limited. Increased fur seal strandings (n=23) were recorded during the 2018 winter season in southeast Brazil (Iguape, Ilha Comprida, and Ilha do Cardoso, Sao Paulo State) compared to 2017 (n=2). Of these 23 fur seals, two were found dead and were in a good postmortem condition, and four died during rehabilitation and were subsequently necropsied. The remaining fur seals were not analyzed due to advanced decomposition (9/23) or successful rehabilitation (8/23). Herein, we report the antemortem hematology (n=4) and postmortem pathologic, parasitologic, and molecular analysis results as well as the most likely cause of stranding and/ or death (CSD) in five free-ranging juvenile South American fur seals (Arctocephalus australis) and one free-ranging juvenile subantarctic fur seal (Arctocephalus tropicalis). All animals were males, and all but one had poor body condition. Pathologic examinations revealed a variety of lesions, predominantly hemodynamic disturbances, endoparasitism, and inflammatory disease processes of suspected infectious nature. Molecular analyses detected gammaherpesvirus infections in two South American seals and one subantarctic fur seal, Sarcocystis sp. in one subantarctic fur seal, and Neospora spp. in two South American fur seals. All seals were PCR-negative for morbillivirus, flavivirus, and Toxoplasma gondii. The most likely CSDs were: starvation (2), aspiration pneumonia (1), asphyxia (1), predator attack (1), and presumed systemic infectious disease (1). These findings expand the geographic range of various pathogens of pinnipeds and may be of value to first responders, clinicians, and diagnosticians. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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3. The first Neotropical Capbrya Barra, 1999 (Collembola: Orchesellidae: Nothobryinae) and the reinterpretation of Nothobryinae systematics.
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Nunes, Rudy C., Santos-Costa, Renata C., and Bellini, Bruno C.
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COLLEMBOLA ,GIANT perch ,CHAETOTAXY ,TRIBES ,MORPHOLOGY - Abstract
A new species of Capbrya from Brazilian Caatinga is described and illustrated in detail. Capbrya brasiliensis sp. n. is the first record of the genus outside South Africa. We provide the first complete and labelled dorsal chaetotaxy description of the genus including the S-chaetotaxy of tergal segments, and the complete trunk dorsal chaetotaxy of the first instar, described for the first time for the whole Nothobryinae. C. brasiliensis sp. n. differs from Capbrya marshalli and Capbrya themeda by ventral head and dorsal trunk chaetotaxy, postantennal organ size, metatrochanteral organ, empodial complex and manubrial plate morphology. We redrew and interpreted the published chaetotaxies of C. marshalli and Hispanobrya barrancoi and analysed specimens of Nothobrya sertaneja , Nothobrya sp.1 and Nothobrya sp.2. After the morphological comparison, we propose the subdivision of Nothobryinae in two tribes and their inclusion in the family Orchesellidae: the tribe Nothobryini for Nothobrya and the tribe Capbryini for Capbrya and Hispanobrya. We also provide an update to the identification key of Capbrya , Hispanobrya and Nothobrya species, now including C. brasiliensis sp. n.; and an update to Nothobrya diagnosis, including now its S-chaetotaxy formula and labial chaetae. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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4. Composition and ecological patterns of snake assemblages in an Amazon-Cerrado Transition Zone in Brazil.
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Pinheiro, Leandra C., Abe, Pedro S., Bitar, Youszef O. C., Albarelli, Luiz P. P., and Santos-Costa, Maria C.
- Abstract
Copyright of Iheringia. Série Zoologia is the property of Fundacao Zoobotanica do Rio Grande do Sul and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2015
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5. Presence of antibodies against the third intracellular loop of the m2 muscarinic receptor in the sera of chronic chagasic patients
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Retondaro, Fernanda Coutinho, Santos Costa, Patricia C., Pedrosa, Roberto Coury, and Kurtenbach, Eleonora
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Patients in the chronic phase of Chagas' disease suffer from a slowly evolving inflammatory cardiomyopathy that can lead to severe cardiac dilatation, congestive heart failure, and death. This process appears to be caused by autoimmune recognition of heart tissue by a mononuclear cell infiltrate decades after infection with the parasite Trypanosoma cruzi. Recent evidence suggests that there are circulating antibodies in chronic chagasic patients that alter the physiological behavior of the heart on binding to G‐protein‐coupled cardiovascular receptors, including βl‐adrenergic and m2 muscarinic receptors. A 42 kDa fusion protein was constructed that contains the central part of the third intracellular loop (i3; Arg267‐Arg381) of the human m2 muscarinic receptor, linked to glutathione S‐transferase. This fusion protein was overexpressed in Escherichia coliand subsequently purified by affinity chromatography. Based on Western blots, the i3 loop is specifically recognized by the sera of chronic chagasic patients who have reached advanced stages of cardiac failure (according to the Los Andes classification). Analysis of the prevalence and distribution of these antibodies shows a strong association between seropositive patients and moderate (group II) to severe (group III) heart dysfunction.—Retondaro, F. C., dos Santos Costa, P. C., Pedrosa, R. C., Kurtenbach, E. Presence of antibodies against the third intracellular loop of the m2 muscarinic receptor in the sera of chronic chagasic patients. FASEB J. 13, 2015–2020 (1999)
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- 1999
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6. Functionally active cardiac antibodies in chronic Chagas' disease are specifically blocked by Trypanosoma cruziantigens
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Oya Masuda, Masako, Levin, Mariano, Farias De Oliveira, Selma, Dos Santos Costa, Patricia C., Lopez Bergami, Pablo, Dos Santos Almeida, Norma A., Pedrosa, Roberto Coury, Ferrari, Ines, Hoebeke, Johan, and Campos De Carvalho, Antonio Carlos
- Abstract
Antibodies of chronic chagasic patients have been shown to interfere with electric and mechanical activities of cardiac embryonic myocytes in culture and with whole mammalian hearts. A mechanism proposed for this effect involves interaction of the antibodies with G‐protein‐linked membrane receptors, thus leading to activation of beta adrenergic and muscarinic receptors; more specifically, IgG of chagasic patients would interact with the negatively charged regions of the second extracellular loop of these receptors. We performed competition experiments to test this hypothesis. We evaluated the effect of sera/IgG from patients previously known to depress electrogenesis and/or atrioventricular conduction in isolated rabbit hearts after incubation with live and lysed parasites, the peptide corresponding to the second extracellular loop (O2) of the M2 receptor, and different peptides derived from two ribosomal proteins of T. cruzi:P0 and P2β. Our results indicate that 1)the antigenic factor inducing the functionally active IgGs in the chagasic patients is probably an intracellular T. cruziantigen; 2)IgG/serum is interacting with the O2 region of the M2 receptor in the rabbit heart; and 3)the negative charges present in the ribosomal proteins of T. cruziare important in mediating the interaction between the patients' serum/IgG and the receptor—Masuda, M. O., Levin, M., Farias de Oliveira, S., dos Santos Costa, P. C., Bergami, P. L., dos Santos Almeida, N. A., Pedrosa, R. C., Ferrari, I., Hoebeke, J., Campos de Carvalho, A. C. Functionally active cardiac antibodies in chronic Chagas’ disease are specifically blocked by Trypanosoma cruziantigens. FASEB J.12, 1551–1558 (1998)
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- 1998
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7. Road-Kills of Snakes in a Tropical Rainforest in the Central Amazon Basin, Brazil
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Maschio, Gleomar F., Santos-Costa, Maria C., and Prudente, Ana L.C.
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- 2016
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8. Pathological Findings in Leatherback Sea Turtles (Dermochelys coriacea) During an Unusual Mortality Event in São Paulo, Brazil, in 2016.
- Author
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Santos-Costa PC, Duarte-Benvenuto A, Groch KR, Catão-Dias JL, and Díaz-Delgado J
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- Adrenal Glands parasitology, Adrenal Glands pathology, Animals, Animals, Wild, Aquatic Organisms, Asphyxia, Bacterial Infections pathology, Bacterial Infections veterinary, Brazil, Coccidiosis pathology, Coccidiosis veterinary, Conservation of Natural Resources, Crustacea, Ectoparasitic Infestations veterinary, Endangered Species, Female, Liver pathology, Lung pathology, Male, Mortality, Neck pathology, Skin parasitology, Skin pathology, Turtles abnormalities, Turtles microbiology, Turtles parasitology
- Abstract
The leatherback sea turtle (LST; Dermochelys coriacea) is highly migratory and is primarily distributed throughout tropical and subtropical regions. The LST populations found in Brazil are critically endangered. An unusual mortality event occurred between August and November 2016 with 23 LSTs stranded along a 100 km coastal segment in Iguape, Ilha Comprida and Ilha do Cardoso in southern São Paulo state. This study investigated the pathological findings and most likely causes of death of 10 LSTs. Male (n = 9) and adult (n = 9) animals predominated. All but one animal was in good body condition and all were found dead. The most prevalent gross findings were suggestive of bycatch, namely cutaneous erosions, abrasions and/or lacerations around the neck and flippers (n = 9), generalized congestion (n = 8) and pulmonary oedema (n = 6). Other prevalent gross findings were: cutaneous epibiosis by Stomatolepas elegans (n = 7); ileocecal diverticulitis (n = 7); distal oesophagitis (n = 5); and fibrinous coelomitis (n = 5). Microscopically, the most prevalent findings were: hepatic melanomacrophage centre hypertrophy or hyperplasia (n = 9); interstitial pneumonia (n = 8); multisystemic congestion (n = 6); pulmonary oedema with or without aspirated material (n = 5); adrenal coccidiosis (n = 5) with variable multiorgan involvement; and multiorgan bacterial disease (n = 5). Five animals had food ingesta (cnidarians, crustaceans) in the oesophagus or stomach; only one had evident plastic foreign bodies. Asphyxia due to entanglement in nets was the most frequently identified cause of death (n = 8); a cause of death was not identified in two animals. Our findings provide evidence of the severe negative impact of entanglement in fishing nets in LSTs, raising concerns for conservation. These findings also contribute to knowledge of the pathology of LSTs in South American populations., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest Statement The authors declare no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship or publication of this article., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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9. Functionally active cardiac antibodies in chronic Chagas' disease are specifically blocked by Trypanosoma cruzi antigens.
- Author
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Masuda MO, Levin M, De Oliveira SF, Dos Santos Costa PC, Bergami PL, Dos Santos Almeida NA, Pedrosa RC, Ferrari I, Hoebeke J, and Campos de Carvalho AC
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Autoantibodies blood, Cross Reactions, Electrocardiography, Heart physiopathology, In Vitro Techniques, Molecular Sequence Data, Rabbits, Receptors, Muscarinic chemistry, Receptors, Muscarinic immunology, Ribosomal Proteins immunology, Antigens, Protozoan immunology, Autoantibodies immunology, Chagas Disease immunology, Myocardium immunology, Trypanosoma cruzi immunology
- Abstract
Antibodies of chronic chagasic patients have been shown to interfere with electric and mechanical activities of cardiac embryonic myocytes in culture and with whole mammalian hearts. A mechanism proposed for this effect involves interaction of the antibodies with G-protein-linked membrane receptors, thus leading to activation of beta adrenergic and muscarinic receptors; more specifically, IgG of chagasic patients would interact with the negatively charged regions of the second extracellular loop of these receptors. We performed competition experiments to test this hypothesis. We evaluated the effect of sera/IgG from patients previously known to depress electrogenesis and/or atrioventricular conduction in isolated rabbit hearts after incubation with live and lysed parasites, the peptide corresponding to the second extracellular loop (O2) of the M2 receptor, and different peptides derived from two ribosomal proteins of T. cruzi: P0 and P2beta. Our results indicate that 1) the antigenic factor inducing the functionally active IgGs in the chagasic patients is probably an intracellular T. cruzi antigen; 2) IgG/serum is interacting with the O2 region of the M2 receptor in the rabbit heart; and 3) the negative charges present in the ribosomal proteins of T. cruzi are important in mediating the interaction between the patients' serum/IgG and the receptor.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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