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Dive into the research topics where Adelina M. Reis is active.

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Featured researches published by Adelina M. Reis.


Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology | 2006

Effects of 3-beta-diol, an androgen metabolite with intrinsic estrogen-like effects, in modulating the aquaporin-9 expression in the rat efferent ductules

Patrícia Picciarelli-Lima; André G. Oliveira; Adelina M. Reis; Evanguedes Kalapothakis; Germán A.B. Mahecha; Rex A. Hess; Cleida A. Oliveira

BackgroundFluid homeostasis is critical for normal function of the male reproductive tract and aquaporins (AQP) play an important role in maintenance of this water and ion balance. Several AQPs have been identified in the male, but their regulation is not fully comprehended. Hormonal regulation of AQPs appears to be dependent on the steroid in the reproductive tract region. AQP9 displays unique hormonal regulation in the efferent ductules and epididymis, as it is regulated by both estrogen and dihydrotestosterone (DHT) in the efferent ductules, but only by DHT in the initial segment epididymis. Recent data have shown that a metabolite of DHT, 5-alpha-androstane-3-beta-17-beta-diol (3-beta-diol), once considered inactive, is also present in high concentrations in the male and indeed has biological activity. 3-beta-diol does not bind to the androgen receptor, but rather to estrogen receptors ER-alpha and ER-beta, with higher affinity for ER-beta. The existence of this estrogenic DHT metabolite has raised the possibility that estradiol may not be the only estrogen to play a major role in the male reproductive system. Considering that both ER-alpha and ER-beta are highly expressed in efferent ductules, we hypothesized that the DHT regulation of AQP9 could be due to the 3-beta-diol metabolite.MethodsTo test this hypothesis, adult male rats were submitted to surgical castration followed by estradiol, DHT or 3-beta-diol replacement. Changes in AQP9 expression in the efferent ductules were investigated by using immunohistochemistry and Western blotting assay.ResultsData show that, after castration, AQP9 expression was significantly reduced in the efferent ductules. 3-beta-diol injections restored AQP9 expression, similar to DHT and estradiol. The results were confirmed by Western blotting assay.ConclusionThis is the first evidence that 3-beta-diol has biological activity in the male reproductive tract and that this androgen metabolite has estrogen-like activity in the efferent ductules, whose major function is the reabsorption of luminal fluid.


Journal of Endocrinology | 2010

Nicotine exposure affects mother's and pup's nutritional, biochemical, and hormonal profiles during lactation in rats

Eliany Nazaré Oliveira; C R Pinheiro; A P Santos-Silva; I H Trevenzoli; Y Abreu-Villaça; J F Nogueira Neto; Adelina M. Reis; Magna Cottini Fonseca Passos; Egberto Gaspar de Moura; Patricia Cristina Lisboa

We have shown that maternal nicotine exposure during lactation has long-lasting effects on body adiposity and hormonal status of rat offspring. Here, we studied the nutritional and hormonal profiles in this experimental model. Two days after birth, osmotic minipumps were implanted in lactating rats divided into two groups: NIC - continuous s.c. infusions of nicotine (6 mg/kg per day) for 14 days and C - saline. Dams and pups were killed at 15 and 21 days of lactation. Body weight and food intake were evaluated. Milk, blood, visceral fat, carcass, and adrenal gland were collected. All the significant data were P<0.05. At the end of nicotine exposure (15 days), dams presented higher milk production, hyperprolactinemia, and higher serum high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C). Milk from NIC dams had higher lactose concentration and energy content. After nicotine withdrawal (21 days), dams showed lower food intake and hyperleptinemia. The 15-day-old NIC pups presented higher total body fat, higher HDL-C, serum leptin, serum corticosterone, and adrenal catecholamine content, but lower tyrosine hydroxylase protein levels. The 21-day-old NIC pups had higher body protein content and serum globulin. Thus, maternal nicotine exposure during lactation results in important changes in nutritional, biochemical, and hormonal parameters in dams and offspring. The pattern of these effects is clearly distinct when comparing the nicotine-exposed group to the withdrawal group, which could be important for the programming effects observed previously.


Endocrinology | 2014

Prolactin regulates kisspeptin neurons in the arcuate nucleus to suppress LH secretion in female rats.

Roberta Araujo-Lopes; Jessica R. Crampton; Nayara Soares Sena Aquino; Roberta M. Miranda; Ilona C. Kokay; Adelina M. Reis; Celso Rodrigues Franci; David R. Grattan; Raphael E. Szawka

Prolactin (PRL) is known to suppress LH secretion. Kisspeptin neurons regulate LH secretion and express PRL receptors. We investigated whether PRL acts on kisspeptin neurons to suppress LH secretion in lactating (Lac) and virgin rats. Lac rats displayed high PRL secretion and reduced plasma LH and kisspeptin immunoreactivity in the arcuate nucleus (ARC). Bromocriptine-induced PRL blockade significantly increased ARC kisspeptin and plasma LH levels in Lac rats but did not restore them to the levels of non-Lac rats. Bromocriptine effects were prevented by the coadministration of ovine PRL (oPRL). Virgin ovariectomized (OVX) rats treated with either systemic or intracerebroventricular oPRL displayed reduction of kisspeptin expression in the ARC and plasma LH levels, and these effects were comparable with those of estradiol treatment in OVX rats. Conversely, estradiol-treated OVX rats displayed increased kisspeptin immunoreactivity in the anteroventral periventricular nucleus, whereas oPRL had no effect in this brain area. The expression of phosphorylated signal transducer and activator of transcription 5 was used to determine whether kisspeptin neurons in the ARC were responsive to PRL. Accordingly, intracerebroventricular oPRL induced expression of phosphorylated signal transducer and activator of transcription 5 in the great majority of ARC kisspeptin neurons in virgin and Lac rats. We provide here evidence that PRL acts on ARC neurons to inhibit kisspeptin expression in female rats. During lactation, PRL contributes to the inhibition of ARC kisspeptin. In OVX rats, high PRL levels suppress kisspeptin expression and reduce LH release. These findings suggest a pathway through which hyperprolactinemia may inhibit LH secretion and thereby cause infertility.


Journal of Endocrinology | 2008

Prolactin inhibition at the end of lactation programs for a central hypothyroidism in adult rat

Isabela Teixeira Bonomo; Patricia Cristina Lisboa; Magna Cottini Fonseca Passos; Adelina M. Reis; Egberto Gaspar de Moura

Malnutrition during lactation is associated with hypoprolactinemia and failure in milk production. Adult rats whose mothers were malnourished presented higher body weight and serum tri-iodothyronine (T(3)). Maternal hypoprolactinemia at the end of lactation caused higher body weight in adult life, suggesting an association between maternal prolactin (PRL) level and programming of the offsprings adult body weight. Here, we studied the consequences of the maternal PRL inhibition at the end of lactation by bromocriptine (BRO) injection, a dopaminergic agonist, upon serum TSH and thyroid hormones, thyroid iodide uptake, liver mitochondrial alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase (mGPD), liver and pituitary de-iodinase activities (D1 and/or D2), and in vitro post-TRH TSH release in the adult offspring. Wistar lactating rats were divided into BRO - injected with 1 mg/twice a day, daily for the last 3 days of lactation, and C - control, saline-injected with the same frequency. At 180 days of age, the offspring were injected with (125)I i.p. and after 2 h, they were killed. Adult animals whose mothers were treated with BRO at the end of lactation presented lower serum TSH (-51%), T(3) (-23%), and thyroxine (-21%), lower thyroid (125)I uptake (-41%), liver mGPD (-55%), and pituitary D2 (-51%) activities, without changes in the in vitro post-TRH TSH release. We show that maternal PRL suppression at the end of lactation programs a hypometabolic state in adulthood, in part due to a thyroid hypofunction, caused by a central hypothyroidism, probably due to decreased TRH secretion. We suggest that PRL during lactation can regulate the hypothalamus-pituitary-thyroid axis and programs its function.


Annals of Noninvasive Electrocardiology | 2006

Chronotropic incompetence and abnormal autonomic modulation in ambulatory Chagas disease patients.

Ana Luiza Lunardi Rocha; Federico Lombardi; Manoel Otávio da Costa Rocha; Márcio Vinícius Lins Barros; Vladimir da Costa Val Barros; Adelina M. Reis; Antonio Luiz Pinho Ribeiro

Background: Chagas disease (ChD) patients might present chronotropic incompetence during exercise, although its physiopathology remains uncertain. We evaluated the heart rate (HR) response to exercise testing in ChD patients in order to determine the role of autonomic modulation and left ventricular dysfunction in the physiopathology of chronotropic incompetence.


British Journal of Nutrition | 2011

Early weaning causes undernutrition for a short period and programmes some metabolic syndrome components and leptin resistance in adult rat offspring

Natália da Silva Lima; Egberto Gaspar de Moura; Magna Cottini Fonseca Passos; José Firmino Nogueira Neto; Adelina M. Reis; Elaine de Oliveira; Patricia Cristina Lisboa

Maternal malnutrition during lactation programmes for overweight and central leptin resistance in adulthood. The inhibition of lactation by maternal treatment with bromocriptine (a prolactin inhibitor) programmes for obesity, hyperleptinaemia and leptin resistance. Here, we evaluated the short- and long-term effects of early weaning (EW) on body-weight regulation, leptin signalling, and hormone and lipid profiles in rats offspring. Lactating rats were separated into two groups: EW--dams were wrapped with a bandage to interrupt the lactation in the last 3 d of lactation; control--dams whose pups had free access to milk during all lactation (21 d). Data were significant at P < 0·05. At weaning, EW pups presented lower body weight (-10%), length (-4%), visceral fat (-40%), total fat (-30%), serum leptin (-73%), glycaemia (-10%), serum insulin (-20%) and insulin resistance index (IRI; -30 %), but higher total body protein content (+40%). At 180 d, EW offspring showed hyperphagia, higher length (+3%), body weight (+8%), visceral and total fat (+36 and 84%), serum TAG (+96%), glycaemia (+15%), leptinaemia (+185%) and IRI (+29%); however, they showed lower total protein content (-23%), leptin:body fat ratio (41%), prolactinaemia (-38%) and adiponectinaemia (-59%). Despite unchanged leptin receptor (OB-R) and signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3), they displayed lower hypothalamic janus tyrosine kinase 2, phosphorylated STAT3 and a higher suppressor of cytokine signalling 3 levels, suggesting a central leptin resistance. Adult rats that were early weaned displayed higher adiposity, insulin resistance and dyslipidaemia, which are related to metabolic syndrome development. Our model reinforces the idea that neonatal malnutrition caused by shortening of the lactation period is important for metabolic programming of future diseases.


The Journal of Physiology | 2009

Maternal prolactin inhibition during lactation programs for metabolic syndrome in adult progeny.

Egberto Gaspar de Moura; Isabela Teixeira Bonomo; José Firmino Nogueira-Neto; Elaine de Oliveira; Isis Hara Trevenzoli; Adelina M. Reis; Magna Cottini Fonseca Passos; Patricia Cristina Lisboa

Neonatal malnutrition is associated with metabolic syndrome in adulthood. Maternal hypoprolactinaemia at the end of lactation (a precocious weaning model) caused obesity, leptin resistance and hypothyroidism in adult offspring, suggesting an association of prolactin (PRL) and programming of metabolic dysfunctions. Metabolic syndrome pathogenesis is still unclear, but abdominal obesity, higher triglycerides, lower high‐density lipoprotein (HDL‐c) and insulin resistance have been proposed to be important factors involved. We studied the consequences of maternal hypoprolactinaemia during lactation on parameters associated with metabolic syndrome. Lactating Wistar rats were treated with bromocriptine (BRO, 1 mg twice a day) or saline on days 19, 20 and 21 of lactation and their offspring were followed from weaning until 180 days old. Adult BRO offspring had higher body weight (+10%, P < 0.05), total body fat (+41%, P < 0.05), visceral fat (+20%, P < 0.05), subcutaneous fat (+3 times, P < 0.05) and total body protein (+24%, P < 0.05). BRO group presented hyperglycaemia (+16%, P < 0.05), lower muscle glycogen (−51%, P < 0.05), higher cholesterol (+30%, P < 0.05), higher low‐density lipoprotein (LDL‐c) (+1.5 times, P < 0.05), higher triglycerides (+49%, P < 0.05), lower HDL‐c (−28%, P < 0.05), hyperleptinaemia (+2.9 times, P < 0.05), hypoadiponectinaemia (−16%, P < 0.05) and hypoprolactinaemia (−54%, P < 0.05) as well as higher insulin resistance index (+24%, P < 0.05). Regarding adrenal function, BRO rats showed hypercorticosteronaemia (+46%, P < 0.05) and higher total catecholamine (+37%, P < 0.05). In the hypothalamus, no change was observed in protein expression of the leptin signalling pathway. Thus, neonatal malnutrition induced by maternal PRL inhibition during late lactation programs for obesity, dyslipidaemia and insulin resistance in adult offspring increasing the risk for metabolic syndrome development.


Reproductive Sciences | 2009

Gonadotropin Stimulation Increases the Expression of Angiotensin-(1—7) and Mas Receptor in the Rat Ovary

Virginia M. Pereira; Fernando M. Reis; Robson A.S. Santos; Geovanni Dantas Cassali; Sérgio Henrique Sousa Santos; Kinulpe Honorato-Sampaio; Adelina M. Reis

We have previously shown the presence of immunoreactive angiotensin-(1—7) [Ang-(1—7)] in rat ovary homogenate and its stimulatory effect on estradiol and progesterone production in vitro. In the current study, we investigated the presence and cellular distribution of Ang-(1—7) and the Mas receptor, the expression of Mas and angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) messenger RNA (mRNA), and the enzymatic activity in the rat ovary following gonadotropin stimulation in vivo. Immature female Wistar rats (25 days old) were injected subcutaneously (SC) with equine chorionic gonadotropin (eCG, 20 IU in 0.2 mL) or vehicle 48 hours before euthanasia. Tissue distributions of Ang-(1—7), Mas receptor, and ACE2 were evaluated by immunohistochemistry, along with angiotensin II (Ang II) localization, while the mRNA expression levels of Mas receptor and ACE2 were evaluated by real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR). In addition, we determined the activity of neutral endopeptidase (NEP), prolyl endopeptidase (PEP), and ACE by fluorometric assays. After eCG treatment, we found strong immunoreactivity for Ang-(1—7) and Mas primarily in the theca-interstitial cells, while Ang II appeared in the granulosa but not in the thecal layer. Equine chorionic gonadotropin treatment increased Mas and ACE2 mRNA expression compared with control animals (3.3- and 2.1-fold increase, respectively; P < .05). Angiotensin-converting enzyme and NEP activities were lower, while PEP activity was higher in the eCG-treated rats (P < .05). These data show gonadotropin-induced changes in the ovarian expression of Ang-(1—7), Mas receptor, and ACE2. These findings suggest that the renin-angiotensin system (RAS) branch formed by ACE2/Ang-(1—7)/Mas, fully expressed in the rat ovary and regulated by gonadotropic hormones, could play a role in the ovarian physiology.


Journal of the Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone System | 2012

Molecular characterization and regulation of the angiotensin-converting enzyme type 2/Angiotensin-(1-7)/MAS receptor axis during the ovulation process in cattle:

Joabel Tonellotto dos Santos; Rogério Ferreira; Bernardo Garziera Gasperin; Lucas Carvalho Siqueira; João Francisco Coelho de Oliveira; Robson As Santos; Adelina M. Reis; Paulo Bayard Dias Gonçalves

The objective of this study was to characterize the profiles of Ang-(1-7), MAS receptor, ACE2, NEP and PEP during the ovulatory process in cattle. For this study, 40 synchronized cows with follicular diameter ≥ 12 mm were ovariectomized at different time-points (0, 3, 6, 12 and 24 h) after i.m. application of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) to induce a luteinizing hormone surge. Follicular fluid was collected for measuring Ang-(1-7) by radioimmunoassay. Theca and granulosa cells were isolated from the preovulatory follicles to evaluate the gene expression of MAS receptor, ACE2, NEP and PEP by qRT-PCR assay. Cross-contamination between theca and granulosa cells was tested by RT-PCR to detect cytochrome P450 aromatase (CYP19A1) and 17α-hydroxylase (CYP17A1) mRNA. Ang-(1-7) levels were constant until 12 h and then increased (p < 0.05) at 24 h after GnRH. Messenger RNA expression of MAS, ACE2, NEP and PEP was detected in theca and granulosa cells at all time-points after GnRH. In granulosa cells, ACE2, NEP and PEP were differentially expressed after GnRH treatment (p < 0.05). In conclusion, the Ang-(1-7), MAS receptor, ACE2, NEP and PEP profiles in preovulatory follicles indicate that Ang-(1-7) plays a role in the regulation of the ovulatory process in cattle.


Fertility and Sterility | 2011

Angiotensin-(1-7), its receptor Mas, and the angiotensin-converting enzyme type 2 are expressed in the human ovary

Fernando M. Reis; Daniela R. Bouissou; Virginia M. Pereira; Aroldo F. Camargos; Adelina M. Reis; Robson A.S. Santos

OBJECTIVE To investigate whether angiotensin (Ang)-(1-7), its receptor Mas, and angiotensin-converting enzyme type 2 (ACE2) are present in human ovary. DESIGN Cross-sectional study. SETTING Academic hospital. PATIENT(S) Twelve reproductive-age women and five postmenopausal women undergoing oophorectomy for nonovarian diseases and seven women having controlled ovarian hyperstimulation for IVF. INTERVENTION(S) Ovarian tissue was obtained from the reproductive-age women and postmenopausal women undergoing oophorectomy for nonovarian diseases. Follicular fluid (FF) samples were obtained from the women having controlled ovarian hyperstimulation for IVF. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S) Localization of Ang-(1-7) and Mas by immunohistochemistry; measurement of Ang-(1-7) in ovarian FF by RIA; detection of messenger RNAs encoding Mas and ACE2 with use of real-time polymerase chain reaction; assessment of 125I-labeled Ang-(1-7) binding to ovarian sections with use of autoradiographic binding assay. RESULT(S) Angiotensin-(1-7) and the receptor Mas were localized to primordial, primary, secondary, and antral follicles, stroma, and corpora lutea of reproductive-age ovaries. Postmenopausal women expressed both the peptide and its receptor in the ovarian stroma. Angiotensin-(1-7) was detectable in FF (mean±SE: 191±54 pg/mL). Both Mas and ACE2 messenger RNAs were expressed in ovarian tissue, as revealed by real-time polymerase chain reaction, and ovarian binding sites for 125I-labeled Ang-(1-7) were identified by autoradiography. CONCLUSION(S) Angiotensin-(1-7), its receptor Mas, and ACE2 are expressed in the human ovary. The peptide is present in several ovarian compartments and can be quantified in FF.

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Fernando M. Reis

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Robson A.S. Santos

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Cândido Celso Coimbra

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Virginia M. Pereira

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Umeko Marubayashi

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Antonio Luiz Pinho Ribeiro

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Kinulpe Honorato-Sampaio

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Manoel Otávio da Costa Rocha

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Egberto Gaspar de Moura

Rio de Janeiro State University

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Patricia Cristina Lisboa

Rio de Janeiro State University

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