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Dive into the research topics where Ana Maria Blanco Martinez is active.

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Featured researches published by Ana Maria Blanco Martinez.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Full-length axon regeneration in the adult mouse optic nerve and partial recovery of simple visual behaviors.

Silmara de Lima; Yoshiki Koriyama; Takuji Kurimoto; Júlia Teixeira Oliveira; Yuqin Yin; Yiqing Li; Hui-ya Gilbert; Michela Fagiolini; Ana Maria Blanco Martinez; Larry I. Benowitz

The mature optic nerve cannot regenerate when injured, leaving victims of traumatic nerve damage or diseases such as glaucoma with irreversible visual losses. Recent studies have identified ways to stimulate retinal ganglion cells to regenerate axons part-way through the optic nerve, but it remains unknown whether mature axons can reenter the brain, navigate to appropriate target areas, or restore vision. We show here that with adequate stimulation, retinal ganglion cells are able to regenerate axons the full length of the visual pathway and on into the lateral geniculate nucleus, superior colliculus, and other visual centers. Regeneration partially restores the optomotor response, depth perception, and circadian photoentrainment, demonstrating the feasibility of reconstructing central circuitry for vision after optic nerve damage in mature mammals.


Experimental Neurology | 2006

Bone marrow stromal cells and resorbable collagen guidance tubes enhance sciatic nerve regeneration in mice

Fátima Rosalina Pereira Lopes; Lenira Camargo de Moura Campos; José Dias Corrêa; Alex Balduino; Silvano Lora; Francesco Langone; Radovan Borojevic; Ana Maria Blanco Martinez

We evaluated peripheral nerve regeneration using a tubular nerve guide of resorbable collagen filled with either bone marrow-derived cells (BMDCs) in Dulbeccos cell culture medium (DMEM) or with DMEM alone (control). The control group received just the culture medium (vehicle). The left sciatic nerves of ten isogenic mice were transected and the tubular nerve guides were sutured to the end of the proximal and distal nerve stumps. Motor function was tested at 2, 4 and 6 weeks after surgery using the walking track test. The pawprints were analyzed and the print lengths (PL) were measured to evaluate functional recovery. After 6 weeks, mice were anesthetized, perfused transcardially with fixative containing aldehydes, and the sciatic nerves and tubes were dissected and processed for scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Scanning electron microscopy of the collagen tube revealed that the tube wall became progressively thinner after surgery, proving that the tube can be resorbed in vivo. Quantitative analysis of the regenerating nerves showed that the number of myelinated fibers and the myelin area were significantly increased in the experimental group. Also, motor function recovery was faster in animals that received the cell grafts. These results indicate that the collagen tube filled with BMDCs provided an adequate and favorable environment for the growth and myelination of regenerating axons compared to the collagen tube alone.


Neuropathology and Applied Neurobiology | 2011

Enhancement of sciatic nerve regeneration after vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) gene therapy

F. R. Pereira Lopes; B. C. G. Lisboa; Flávia Frattini; Francine Maria de Almeida; Marcelo Antonio Tomaz; Pk Matsumoto; Francesco Langone; Silvano Lora; Paulo A. Melo; Radovan Borojevic; Sw Han; Ana Maria Blanco Martinez

F. R. Pereira Lopes, B. C. G. Lisboa, F. Frattini, F. M. Almeida, M. A. Tomaz, P. K. Matsumoto, F. Langone, S. Lora, P. A. Melo, R. Borojevic, S. W. Han and A. M. B. Martinez (2011) Neuropathology and Applied Neurobiology37, 600–612


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2014

Alzheimer's Disease-Like Pathology Induced by Amyloid-β Oligomers in Nonhuman Primates

Leticia Forny-Germano; Natalia M. Lyra e Silva; André F. Batista; Jordano Brito-Moreira; Matthias Gralle; Susan E. Boehnke; Brian C. Coe; Ann Lablans; Suelen A. Marques; Ana Maria Blanco Martinez; William L. Klein; Jean-Christophe Houzel; Sergio T. Ferreira; Douglas P. Munoz; Fernanda G. De Felice

Alzheimers disease (AD) is a devastating neurodegenerative disorder and a major medical problem. Here, we have investigated the impact of amyloid-β (Aβ) oligomers, AD-related neurotoxins, in the brains of rats and adult nonhuman primates (cynomolgus macaques). Soluble Aβ oligomers are known to accumulate in the brains of AD patients and correlate with disease-associated cognitive dysfunction. When injected into the lateral ventricle of rats and macaques, Aβ oligomers diffused into the brain and accumulated in several regions associated with memory and cognitive functions. Cardinal features of AD pathology, including synapse loss, tau hyperphosphorylation, astrocyte and microglial activation, were observed in regions of the macaque brain where Aβ oligomers were abundantly detected. Most importantly, oligomer injections induced AD-type neurofibrillary tangle formation in the macaque brain. These outcomes were specifically associated with Aβ oligomers, as fibrillar amyloid deposits were not detected in oligomer-injected brains. Human and macaque brains share significant similarities in terms of overall architecture and functional networks. Thus, generation of a macaque model of AD that links Aβ oligomers to tau and synaptic pathology has the potential to greatly advance our understanding of mechanisms centrally implicated in AD pathogenesis. Furthermore, development of disease-modifying therapeutics for AD has been hampered by the difficulty in translating therapies that work in rodents to humans. This new approach may be a highly relevant nonhuman primate model for testing therapeutic interventions for AD.


Neuroscience | 2010

Mesenchymal stem cells in a polycaprolactone conduit enhance median-nerve regeneration, prevent decrease of creatine phosphokinase levels in muscle, and improve functional recovery in mice.

Júlia Teixeira Oliveira; Fernanda Martins Almeida; A. Biancalana; Abrahão Fontes Baptista; Marcelo Antonio Tomaz; Paulo A. Melo; Ana Maria Blanco Martinez

Although the majority of peripheral-nerve regeneration studies are carried out on the sciatic nerve, lesions of the upper extremities are more common in humans and usually lead to significant physical disabilities. The present study was driven by the hypothesis that a combination of strategies, namely grafts of mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) and resorbable polycaprolactone (PCL) conduits would improve median-nerve regeneration after transection. Mouse median nerves were transected and sutured to PCL tubes that were filled with either green fluorescent protein (GFP(+)) MSC in DMEM or with DMEM alone. During the post-operative period, animals were tested weekly for flexor digitorum muscle function by means of the grasping test. After 8 weeks, the proximal and middle portions of the PCL tube and the regenerating nerves were harvested and processed for light and electron microscopy. The flexor digitorum muscle was weighed and subjected to biochemical analysis for creatine phosphokinase (CK) levels. Scanning electron microscopy of the PCL tube 8 weeks after implantation showed clear signs of wall disintegration. MSC-treated animals showed significantly larger numbers of myelinated and unmyelinated nerve fibers and blood vessels compared with DMEM-treated animals. The flexor digitorum muscle CK levels were significantly higher in the MSC-treated animals, but muscle weight values did not differ between the groups. Compared with the DMEM-treated group, MSC-treated animals showed, by the grasping test, improved functional performance throughout the period analyzed. Immunofluorescence for S-100 and GFP showed, in a few cases, double-labeled cells, suggesting that transplanted cells may occasionally transdifferentiate into Schwann cells. Our data demonstrate that the polycaprolactone conduit filled with MSC is capable of significantly improving the median-nerve regeneration after a traumatic lesion.


Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2007

A new approach to assess function after sciatic nerve lesion in the mouse-Adaptation of the sciatic static index

Abrahão Fontes Baptista; Joyce Rios de Souza Gomes; Júlia Teixeria Oliveira; Soraia Moreira Garzedim Santos; Marcos A. Vannier-Santos; Ana Maria Blanco Martinez

Among the numerous ways of assessing regeneration after peripheral nerve lesions, the analysis of gait is one of the most important, because it shows the recovery of function, which is the ultimate goal of the repair machinery. The sciatic function index was introduced as a method to assess reinnervation after an experimental sciatic nerve lesion, and was adapted to the mouse model. The sciatic static index (SSI), is more simple and practical to perform, and is not so influenced by gaits velocity, but this method has not yet been adapted to the mouse model of sciatic lesion. We used 63 male Swiss mice (Mus musculus) to develop a formula to the sciatic static index in mice (SSIm). The animals were divided on three groups (control, transection and crush). They were evaluated at the preoperative and 7th, 14th, 21st, 28th, 35th and 42nd days postoperative by the ink track method (SFI), and by the acquisition of photographs of the plantar aspects of the injured and uninjured hind paws. The parameters evaluated were the 1-5 toe spread (TS), the 2-4 toe spread (ITS) and the distance between the tip of the third toe and the most posterior aspect of the paw (PL), on both methods. After verifying the temporal pattern of function, correlation and reproducibility of the measurements, we performed a multiple regression analysis using SFI values as dependent variable, and the TS, ITS and PL measured with the photo method as independent variables, and found the formula of the SSI for mice (SSIm). The three groups (control, transection and crush) had a characteristic pattern of dysfunction. The parameters measured in the ink and photo method had variable but significant correlations between them (P<0.000), but photo method of measurement showed a better reproducibility. The correlation between SFI and SSIm showed a high correlation coefficient (r=0.892, P<0.000), and demonstrates that SSIm can be used as an alternative method to assess the functional status relative of sciatic nerve activity in mice.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Conservation Patterns of HIV-1 RT Connection and RNase H Domains: Identification of New Mutations in NRTI-Treated Patients

André F. Santos; Renan B. Lengruber; Esmeralda A. Soares; Abhay Jere; Eduardo Sprinz; Ana Maria Blanco Martinez; Jussara Silveira; Fernando Samuel Sion; Vinay K. Pathak; Marcelo A. Soares

Background Although extensive HIV drug resistance information is available for the first 400 amino acids of its reverse transcriptase, the impact of antiretroviral treatment in C-terminal domains of Pol (thumb, connection and RNase H) is poorly understood. Methods and Findings We wanted to characterize conserved regions in RT C-terminal domains among HIV-1 group M subtypes and CRF. Additionally, we wished to identify NRTI-related mutations in HIV-1 RT C-terminal domains. We sequenced 118 RNase H domains from clinical viral isolates in Brazil, and analyzed 510 thumb and connection domain and 450 RNase H domain sequences collected from public HIV sequence databases, together with their treatment status and histories. Drug-naïve and NRTI-treated datasets were compared for intra- and inter-group conservation, and differences were determined using Fishers exact tests. One third of RT C-terminal residues were found to be conserved among group M variants. Three mutations were found exclusively in NRTI-treated isolates. Nine mutations in the connection and 6 mutations in the RNase H were associated with NRTI treatment in subtype B. Some of them lay in or close to amino acid residues which contact nucleic acid or near the RNase H active site. Several of the residues pointed out herein have been recently associated to NRTI exposure or increase drug resistance to NRTI. Conclusions This is the first comprehensive genotypic analysis of a large sequence dataset that describes NRTI-related mutations in HIV-1 RT C-terminal domains in vivo. The findings into the conservation of RT C-terminal domains may pave the way to more rational drug design initiatives targeting those regions.


Journal of Neurotrauma | 2011

Human Dental Pulp Cells: A New Source of Cell Therapy in a Mouse Model of Compressive Spinal Cord Injury

Fernanda Martins Almeida; Suelen Adriani Marques; Bruna dos Santos Ramalho; Rafaela Fintelman Rodrigues; Daniel Veloso Cadilhe; Daniel Rodrigues Furtado; Irina Kerkis; Lygia V. Pereira; Stevens K. Rehen; Ana Maria Blanco Martinez

Strategies aimed at improving spinal cord regeneration after trauma are still challenging neurologists and neuroscientists throughout the world. Many cell-based therapies have been tested, with limited success in terms of functional outcome. In this study, we investigated the effects of human dental pulp cells (HDPCs) in a mouse model of compressive spinal cord injury (SCI). These cells present some advantages, such as the ease of the extraction process, and expression of trophic factors and embryonic markers from both ecto-mesenchymal and mesenchymal components. Young adult female C57/BL6 mice were subjected to laminectomy at T9 and compression of the spinal cord with a vascular clip for 1 min. The cells were transplanted 7 days or 28 days after the lesion, in order to compare the recovery when treatment is applied in a subacute or chronic phase. We performed quantitative analyses of white-matter preservation, trophic-factor expression and quantification, and ultrastructural and functional analysis. Our results for the HDPC-transplanted animals showed better white-matter preservation than the DMEM groups, higher levels of trophic-factor expression in the tissue, better tissue organization, and the presence of many axons being myelinated by either Schwann cells or oligodendrocytes, in addition to the presence of some healthy-appearing intact neurons with synapse contacts on their cell bodies. We also demonstrated that HDPCs were able to express some glial markers such as GFAP and S-100. The functional analysis also showed locomotor improvement in these animals. Based on these findings, we propose that HDPCs may be feasible candidates for therapeutic intervention after SCI and central nervous system disorders in humans.


Journal of The Peripheral Nervous System | 2008

High- and low-frequency transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation delay sciatic nerve regeneration after crush lesion in the mouse.

Abrahão Fontes Baptista; Joyce R. S. Gomes; Júlia T. Oliveira; Soraia M. G. Santos; Marcos A. Vannier-Santos; Ana Maria Blanco Martinez

Abstract  The stimulation of peripheral nerve regeneration has been studied in different ways, including the use of electrical fields. The capacity of this modality to enhance nerve regeneration is influenced by the parameters used, including current type, frequency, intensity, and means of administration. Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) is a frequently used form of administering electrical current to the body, but its effects on peripheral nerve regeneration are not known. This study assessed the influence of TENS on sciatic nerve regeneration, using a model of crush lesion in the mouse. Mice were stimulated 30 min a day, 5 days a week, for 5 weeks with both high‐ (100 Hz) and low‐ (4 Hz) frequency TENS. Control animals had the sciatic nerve crushed but were not stimulated. Assessment was performed weekly by functional analysis using the Static Sciatic Index for the mouse and at the end of the experiment by light and electron microscopy. The results showed that although there were no differences between the groups regarding the Static Sciatic Index values, TENS led to nerves with morphological signs of impaired regeneration. At light microscopy level, TENS nerves presented more axons with dark axoplasm, signs of edema, and a less organized cytoarchitecture. Electronmicrographs showed fewer and thinner thick myelinated fibers and increased number of Schwann cell nuclei. Myelinated axon diameters and density and diameter of nonmyelinated fibers were not affected by TENS, leading to the conclusion that this regimen of electrical stimulation leads to a delayed regeneration after a crush lesion of the sciatic nerve in the mouse. All these effects were more pronounced on high‐frequency TENS nerves.


Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2009

A simple, inexpensive and easily reproducible model of spinal cord injury in mice: Morphological and functional assessment

Suelen Adriani Marques; Valéria Ferreira Garcez; Elaine Aparecida Del Bel; Ana Maria Blanco Martinez

Spinal cord injury (SCI) causes motor and sensory deficits that impair functional performance, and significantly impacts life expectancy and quality. Animal models provide a good opportunity to test therapeutic strategies in vivo. C57BL/6 mice were subjected to laminectomy at T9 and compression with a vascular clip (30g force, 1min). Two groups were analyzed: injured group (SCI, n=33) and laminectomy only (Sham, n=15). Locomotor behavior (Basso mouse scale-BMS and global mobility) was assessed weekly. Morphological analyses were performed by LM and EM. The Sham group did not show any morphofunctional alteration. All SCI animals showed flaccid paralysis 24h after injury, with subsequent improvement. The BMS score of the SCI group improved until the intermediate phase (2.037+/-1.198); the Sham animals maintained the highest BMS score (8.981+/-0.056), p<0.001 during the entire time. The locomotor speed was slower in the SCI animals (5.581+/-0.871) than in the Sham animals (15.80+/-1.166), p<0.001. Morphological analysis of the SCI group showed, in the acute phase, edema, hemorrhage, multiple cavities, fiber degeneration, cell death and demyelination. In the chronic phase we observed glial scarring, neuron death, and remyelination of spared axons by oligodendrocytes and Schwann cells. In conclusion, we established a simple, reliable, and inexpensive clip compression model in mice, with functional and morphological reproducibility and good validity. The availability of producing reliable injuries with appropriate outcome measures represents great potential for studies involving cellular mechanisms of primary injury and repair after traumatic SCI.

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Fernanda Martins Almeida

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Júlia Teixeira Oliveira

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Paulo A. Melo

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Suelen Adriani Marques

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Camila Oliveira Goulart

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Sabrina Calil-Elias

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Silvana Allodi

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Sergio T. Ferreira

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Silmara de Lima

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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