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Featured researches published by Ana de Cássia Rosa.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Inheritance of DNA transferred from American trypanosomes to human hosts.

Mariana M. Hecht; Nadjar Nitz; Perla F Araujo; Alessandro Sousa; Ana de Cássia Rosa; Dawidson Assis Gomes; Eduardo Leonardecz; Antonio R. L. Teixeira

Interspecies DNA transfer is a major biological process leading to the accumulation of mutations inherited by sexual reproduction among eukaryotes. Lateral DNA transfer events and their inheritance has been challenging to document. In this study we modified a thermal asymmetric interlaced PCR by using additional targeted primers, along with Southern blots, fluorescence techniques, and bioinformatics, to identify lateral DNA transfer events from parasite to host. Instances of naturally occurring human infections by Trypanosoma cruzi are documented, where mitochondrial minicircles integrated mainly into retrotransposable LINE-1 of various chromosomes. The founders of five families show minicircle integrations that were transferred vertically to their progeny. Microhomology end-joining of 6 to 22 AC-rich nucleotide repeats in the minicircles and host DNA mediates foreign DNA integration. Heterogeneous minicircle sequences were distributed randomly among families, with diversity increasing due to subsequent rearrangement of inserted fragments. Mosaic recombination and hitchhiking on retrotransposition events to different loci were more prevalent in germ line as compared to somatic cells. Potential new genes, pseudogenes, and knockouts were identified. A pathway of minicircle integration and maintenance in the host genome is suggested. Thus, infection by T. cruzi has the unexpected consequence of increasing human genetic diversity, and Chagas disease may be a fortuitous share of negative selection. This demonstration of contemporary transfer of eukaryotic DNA to the human genome and its subsequent inheritance by descendants introduces a significant change in the scientific concept of evolutionary biology and medicine.


Cell | 2004

Heritable Integration of kDNA Minicircle Sequences from Trypanosoma cruzi into the Avian Genome: Insights into Human Chagas Disease

Nadjar Nitz; Clever Gomes; Ana de Cássia Rosa; Marian D'Souza-Ault; Francisco Moreno; Liana Lauria-Pires; Rubens J. Nascimento; Antonio R. L. Teixeira

We demonstrate the genetic transfer of DNA between eukaryotes from different kingdoms. The mitochondrial kinetoplast DNA (kDNA) of the intracellular parasite Trypanosoma cruzi is transferred to human patients with Chagas disease. This transfer was reproduced experimentally in rabbits and chickens. The kDNA is integrated into the host genome. In the human chromosomes, five loci were identified as integration sites, and the beta-globin locus and LINE-1 retrotransposons were frequently targeted. Short repeated sequences in the parasite and the target host DNAs favor kDNA integration by homologous recombination. Introduced kDNA was present in offspring of chronically infected rabbits and in chickens hatched from T. cruzi-inoculated eggs. kDNA incorporated into the chicken germline was inherited through the F2 generation in the absence of persistent infection. kDNA integration represents a potential cause for the autoimmune response that develops in a percentage of chronic Chagas patients, which can now be approached experimentally.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1986

Infecção experimental de Lutzomyia whitmani em cães infectados com Leishmania braziliensis braziliensis

Julio A. Vexenat; Air C. Barretto; Ana de Cássia Rosa

Lutzomyia (N.) whitmani was infected on leishmaniotic lesions of three out of nine dogs infected with Leishmania braziliensis braziliensis. The infectivity rates in these sandflies were 8.3% (1/12), 7,1% (1/14) and 1.8% (3/160), respectively. In addition, 180 Lu. whitmani fed on non-ulcerated regions of one of the infected dogs and none became infected. We emphasize the vector potentiality of Lu., whitmani L.b. braziliensis in the endemic region of Tres Bracos, Bahia, Brazil.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2011

Trypanosoma cruzi in the Chicken Model: Chagas-Like Heart Disease in the Absence of Parasitism

Antonio R. L. Teixeira; Clever Gomes; Nadjar Nitz; Alessandro Sousa; Rozeneide M. Alves; Maria C. Guimaro; Ciro Cordeiro; Francisco Ernesto Moreno Bernal; Ana de Cássia Rosa; Jiri Hejnar; Eduardo Leonardecz; Mariana M. Hecht

Background The administration of anti-trypanosome nitroderivatives curtails Trypanosoma cruzi infection in Chagas disease patients, but does not prevent destructive lesions in the heart. This observation suggests that an effective treatment for the disease requires understanding its pathogenesis. Methodology/Principal Findings To understand the origin of clinical manifestations of the heart disease we used a chicken model system in which infection can be initiated in the egg, but parasite persistence is precluded. T. cruzi inoculation into the air chamber of embryonated chicken eggs generated chicks that retained only the parasite mitochondrial kinetoplast DNA minicircle in their genome after eight days of gestation. Crossbreeding showed that minicircles were transferred vertically via the germ line to chicken progeny. Minicircle integration in coding regions was shown by targeted-primer thermal asymmetric interlaced PCR, and detected by direct genomic analysis. The kDNA-mutated chickens died with arrhythmias, shortness of breath, cyanosis and heart failure. These chickens with cardiomyopathy had rupture of the dystrophin and other genes that regulate cell growth and differentiation. Tissue pathology revealed inflammatory dilated cardiomegaly whereby immune system mononuclear cells lyse parasite-free target heart fibers. The heart cell destruction implicated a thymus-dependent, autoimmune; self-tissue rejection carried out by CD45+, CD8γδ+, and CD8α lymphocytes. Conclusions/Significance These results suggest that genetic alterations resulting from kDNA integration in the host genome lead to autoimmune-mediated destruction of heart tissue in the absence of T. cruzi parasites.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 1984

Características epidemiológicas da leishmaniose tegumentar americana em uma região endêmica do Estado da Bahia: II leishmaniose canina

Air C. Barretto; César Augusto Cuba Cuba; Julio A. Vexenat; Ana de Cássia Rosa; Philip Davis Marsden; Albino Verçosa de Magalhães

During a survey of domestic and hunting dogs conducted in the Tres Bracos region, State of Bahia, 3,0% of 98 dogs had amastigotes in skin lesions. Parasites were not found in normal ear skin. In a nonrandomly selected sample of 13 dogs with active cutaneous lesions, infection was confirmed in nine (69,2%). Tissue biopsies from seven dog lesions produced infection in hamsters. The biological behaviour of the parasite (rate of growth in culture media, evolution of lesions in hamsters and development in the gut of Lutzomyia longipalpis,) identified it to the Leishmania braziliensis complex. Characterization by biochemical means (eletrophoretic mobility of enzymes in cellulose acetate plates) and immunotaxonomic studies (monoclonal antibodies) defined the strains as L. braziliensis braziliensis. The role of dogs as a possible reservoir host of L. b. braziliensis in Tres Bracos region is discussed.


Cadernos De Saude Publica | 2009

Environment, interactions between Trypanosoma cruzi and its host, and health

Antonio R. L. Teixeira; Clever Gomes; Silene P. Lozzi; Mariana M. Hecht; Ana de Cássia Rosa; Pedro Sadi Monteiro; Ana Carolina Bussacos; Nadjar Nitz; Concepta McManus

An epidemiological chain involving Trypanosoma cruzi is discussed at the environmental level, and in terms of fine molecular interactions in invertebrate and vertebrate hosts dwelling in different ecosystems. This protozoan has a complex, genetically controlled plasticity, which confers adaptation to approximately 40 blood-sucking triatomine species and to over 1,000 mammalian species, fulfilling diverse metabolic requirements in its complex life-cycle. The Tr. cruzi infections are deeply embedded in countless ecotypes, where they are difficult to defeat using the control methods that are currently available. Many more field and laboratory studies are required to obtain data and information that may be used for the control and prevention of Tr. cruzi infections and their various disease manifestations. Emphasis should be placed on those sensitive interactions at cellular and environmental levels that could become selected targets for disease prevention. In the short term, new technologies for social mobilization should be used by people and organizations working for justice and equality through health information and promotion. A mass media directed program could deliver education, information and communication to protect the inhabitants at risk of contracting Tr. cruzi infections.


Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2007

Exposure to mixed asymptomatic infections with Trypanosoma cruzi, Leishmania braziliensis and Leishmania chagasi in the human population of the greater Amazon

Daniella G. Mendes; Liana Lauria-Pires; Nadjar Nitz; Silene P. Lozzi; Rubens J. Nascimento; Pedro Sadi Monteiro; Manuel M. Rebelo; Ana de Cássia Rosa; Jaime M. Santana; Antonio R. L. Teixeira

Lack of conservation of the Amazon tropical rainforest has imposed severe threats to its human population living in newly settled villages, resulting in outbreaks of some infectious diseases. We conducted a seroepidemiological survey of 1100 inhabitants of 15 villages of Paço do Lumiar County, Brazil. Thirty‐five (3%) individuals had been exposed to Trypanosoma cruzi (Tc), 41 (4%) to Leishmania braziliensis (Lb) and 50 (4.5%) to Leishmania chagasi (Lc) infections. Also, 35 cases had antibodies that were cross‐reactive against the heterologous kinetoplastid antigens. Amongst these, the Western blot assays revealed that 11 (1%) had Tc and Lb, that seven (0.6%) had Lc and Tc, and that 17 (1.6%) had Lb and Lc infections. All of these cases of exposures to mixed infections with Leishmania sp, and eight of 11 cases of Tc and Lb were confirmed by specific PCR assays and Southern hybridizations. Two cases had triple infections. We consider these asymptomatic cases showing phenotype and genotype markers consistent with mixed infections by two or more kinetoplastid flagellates a high risk factor for association with Psychodidae and Triatominae vectors blood feeding and transmitting these protozoa infections. This is the first publication showing human exposure to mixed asymptomatic kinetoplastid infections in the Amazon.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2006

Hitchhiking Trypanosoma cruzi minicircle DNA affects gene expression in human host cells via LINE-1 retrotransposon

Auguste Simoes-Barbosa; Enrique Roberto Argañaraz; Ana Maria Barros; Ana de Cássia Rosa; Nivaldo P. Alves; Patricia Louvandini; Marian D'Souza-Ault; Nadjar Nitz; Nancy R. Sturm; Rubens J. Nascimento; Antonio R. L. Teixeira

The horizontal transfer of Trypanosoma cruzi mitochondrial minicircle DNA to the genomes of naturally infected humans may play an important role in the pathogenesis of Chagas disease. Minicircle integrations within LINE-1 elements create the potential for foreign DNA mobility within the host genome via the machinery associated with this retrotransposon. Here we document integration of minicircle DNA fragments in clonal human macrophage cell lines and their mobilization over time. The movement of an integration event in a clonal transfected cell line was tracked at three months and three years post-infection. The minicircle sequence integrated into a LINE-1 retrotransposon; one such foreign fragment subsequently relocated to another genomic location in association with associated LINE-1 elements. The p15 locus was altered at three years as a direct effect of minicircle/LINE-1 acquisition, resulting in elimination of p15 mRNA. Here we show for the first time a molecular pathology stemming from mobilization of a kDNA/LINE-1 mutation. These genomic changes and detected transcript variations are consistent with our hypothesis that minicircle integration is a causal component of parasite-independent, autoimmune-driven lesions seen in the heart and other target tissues associated with Chagas disease.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1986

Infecção natural de Equus asinus por Leishmania braziliensis braziliensis - Bahia, Brasil

Julio A. Vexenat; Air C. Barretto; Ana de Cássia Rosa; Christiane C Sales; Albino Verçosa de Magalhães

In Corte de Pedra, Valença, state of Bahia, a donkey, Equus asinus, was found naturally infected with Leishmania braziliensis braziliensis. The parasite was isolated from a lesion located on a castration scar, and identified by means of monoclonal antibodies.


Proceedings of the 1997 Particle Accelerator Conference (Cat. No.97CH36167) | 1997

Commissioning and operation of the Brazilian Synchrotron Light Source

Ariane Rodrigues; Ruy Farias; Monteiro Ferreira; G.S. Franco; L.C. Jahnel; Liu Lin; A.C. Lira; Regis Neuenschwander; Claudio Pardine; F. Rafael; Ana de Cássia Rosa; C. Scorzato; C. E. T. Goncalves da Silva; A. Romeu da Silva; Patricia Tavares; Daniel Wisnivesky; A. F. Craievich

The Brazilian National Synchrotron Light Laboratory, LNLS, operates a 1.37 GeV electron storage ring with a 120 MeV injector linac. Commissioning of the storage ring at low energy started on May 1996 and now, an year later, we can store 120 mA at 120 MeV and ramp more than 75 mA to 1.37 GeV. A summary of the latest commissioning results and a description of the present operational performance of the LNLS Synchrotron Light Source facility is presented.

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Nadjar Nitz

University of Brasília

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Clever Gomes

University of Brasília

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