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Featured researches published by Andrezza Justino Gozzo.


Peptides | 2006

Bradykinin release and inactivation in brain of rats submitted to an experimental model of Alzheimer's disease☆

Lígia M. Iores-Marçal; Tânia A. Viel; Hudson Sousa Buck; Viviane Abreu Nunes; Andrezza Justino Gozzo; Ilana Cruz-Silva; Antonio Miranda; Kazuaki Shimamoto; Nobuyuki Ura; Mariana S. Araujo

The kallikrein-kinin system is involved in a variety of physiological and pathological processes. Components of this system, identified in rat and human brains, can be altered in neurodegenerative processes such as Alzheimers disease. Here, we studied kinin release and its inactivation in rats submitted to chronic cerebroventricular infusion of beta-amyloid (Abeta) peptide. Neurodegeneration was confirmed by histological analysis of brain samples. In cerebrospinal fluid of animals infused with Abeta, bradykinin concentration was increased, as determined by radioimmunoassay. However, in the brain of Abeta group, we only detected the tripeptide Arg-Pro-Pro, purified by reversed-phase chromatography and characterized by liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. This fragment of bradykinin indicated the possible participation of kinin-processing enzymes in the brain such as a prolyl oligopeptidase.


Biological Chemistry | 2006

Heparin modulation of human plasma kallikrein on different substrates and inhibitors.

Andrezza Justino Gozzo; Viviane Abreu Nunes; Ilana Cruz-Silva; Adriana K. Carmona; Helena B. Nader; Adelaide Faljoni-Alario; Misako U. Sampaio; Mariana S. Araujo

Abstract The interplay of different proteases and glycosaminoglycans is able to modulate the activity of the enzymes and to affect their structures. Human plasma kallikrein (huPK) is a proteolytic enzyme involved in intrinsic blood clotting, the kallikrein-kinin system and fibrinolysis. We investigated the effect of heparin on the action, inhibition and secondary structure of huPK. The catalytic efficiency for the hydrolysis of substrates by huPK was determined by Michaelis-Menten kinetic plots: 5.12×104 M-1 s-1 for acetyl-Phe-Arg-p-nitroanilide, 1.40×105 M-1 s-1 for H-D-Pro-Phe-Arg-p-nitroanilide, 2.25×104 M-1 s-1 for Abz-Gly-Phe-Ser-Pro-Phe-Arg-Ser-Ser-Arg-Gln-EDDnp, 4.24×102M-1 s-1 for factor XII and 5.58×102 M-1 s-1 for plasminogen. Heparin reduced the hydrolysis of synthetic substrates (by 2.0-fold), but enhanced factor XII and plasminogen hydrolysis (7.7- and 1.4-fold, respectively). The second-order rate constants for inhibition of huPK by antithrombin and C1-inhibitor were 2.40×102 M-1 s-1 and 1.70×104 M-1 s-1, respectively. Heparin improved the inhibition of huPK by these inhibitors (3.4- and 1.4-fold). Despite the fact that huPK was able to bind to a heparin-Sepharose matrix, its secondary structure was not modified by heparin, as monitored by circular dichroism. These actions may have a function in the control or maintenance of some pathophysiological processes in which huPK participates.


Biological Chemistry | 2004

A proteinase inhibitor from Caesalpinia echinata (pau-brasil) seeds for plasma kallikrein, plasmin and factor XIIa.

Ilana Cruz-Silva; Andrezza Justino Gozzo; Viviane Abreu Nunes; Adriana K. Carmona; Adelaide Faljoni-Alario; Maria Luiza Vilela Oliva; Misako U. Sampaio; Claudio A. M. Sampaio; Mariana S. Araujo

Abstract Caesalpinia echinata is a tree belonging to the Leguminosae family. The red color of the trunk, looking like burning wood (‘brasa’ in Portuguese), is the origin of the name Brazil. Seeds of leguminous plants contain high amounts of serine proteinase inhibitors that can affect different biological processes. Here we show that a protein isolated from seeds of C. echinata is able to inhibit enzymes that participate in blood coagulation and fibrinolysis. This inhibitor (CeKI) was purified to homogeneity by ion exchange and reversed-phase chromatography. SDS-PAGE indicated a single polypeptide chain with a molecular mass of 20 kDa. CeKI inhibits human plasma kallikrein (K i=3.1 nM), plasmin (K i=0.18 nM), factor XIIa (K i=0.18 nM), trypsin (K i=21.5 nM) and factor Xa (K i=0.49 mM). CeKI inhibited kinin release from highmolecular- mass kininogen by kallikrein in vitro. The N-terminal sequence, determined by automatic Edman degradation, identified the inhibitor as a member of the Kunitz family. The secondary structure, determined by circular dichroism, is mainly a random coil followed by β-sheet structure. The action of CeKI on enzymes of the blood-clotting intrinsic pathway was confirmed by prolongation of the activated partial thromboplastin time.


Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2003

Antioxidant dietary deficiency induces caspase activation in chick skeletal muscle cells

Viviane Abreu Nunes; Andrezza Justino Gozzo; Maria A. Juliano; M Cerqueira César; Misako U. Sampaio; Claudio A. M. Sampaio; Mariana S. Araujo

Apoptosis and necrosis are two distinct forms of cell death that can occur in response to different agents and stress conditions. In order to verify if the oxidative stress induced by dietary selenium and vitamin E deficiencies can lead muscle cells to apoptosis, one-day-old chicks were reared using diets differing in their vitamin E (0 or 10 IU/kg) and selenium (0 or 0.15 ppm) supplementation. Chick skeletal muscle tissue was obtained from 28-day-old animals and used to verify apoptosis occurrence based on caspase activity detection and DNA fragmentation. Antioxidant deficiency significantly increased caspase-like activity assessed by the hydrolysis of fluorogenic peptide substrates (Abz-peptidyl-EDDnp) at lambda exc = 320 nm and lambda em = 420 nm. Proteolytic activation was not accompanied by typical internucleosomal DNA fragmentation detected by field inversion gel electrophoresis. Although the general caspase inhibitor N-benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp(O-Me) fluoromethyl ketone (Z-VAD-fmk) (0 to 80 muM) did not block caspase-like activity when preincubated for 30 min with muscle homogenates, the hydrolyzed substrates presented the same cleavage profile in HPLC (at the aspartic acid residue) when incubated with the purified recombinant enzyme caspase-3. These data indicate that oxidative stress causes caspase-like activation in muscle cells and suggest that cell death associated with exudative diathesis (dietary deficiency of selenium and vitamin E) can follow the apoptotic pathway.


Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2003

Glycosaminoglycans affect the interaction of human plasma kallikrein with plasminogen, factor XII and inhibitors

Andrezza Justino Gozzo; Viviane Abreu Nunes; Helena B. Nader; Carl P. Dietrich; Adriana K. Carmona; Misako U. Sampaio; Claudio A. M. Sampaio; Mariana S. Araujo

Human plasma kallikrein, a serine proteinase, plays a key role in intrinsic blood clotting, in the kallikrein-kinin system, and in fibrinolysis. The proteolytic enzymes involved in these processes are usually controlled by specific inhibitors and may be influenced by several factors including glycosaminoglycans, as recently demonstrated by our group. The aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of glycosaminoglycans (30 to 250 micro/ml) on kallikrein activity on plasminogen and factor XII and on the inhibition of kallikrein by the plasma proteins C1-inhibitor and antithrombin. Almost all available glycosaminoglycans (heparin, heparan sulfate, bovine and tuna dermatan sulfate, chondroitin 4- and 6-sulfates) reduced (1.2 to 3.0 times) the catalytic efficiency of kallikrein (in a nanomolar range) on the hydrolysis of plasminogen (0.3 to 1.8 microM) and increased (1.9 to 7.7 times) the enzyme efficiency in factor XII (0.1 to 10 microM) activation. On the other hand, heparin, heparan sulfate, and bovine and tuna dermatan sulfate improved (1.2 to 3.4 times) kallikrein inhibition by antithrombin (1.4 microM), while chondroitin 4- and 6-sulfates reduced it (1.3 times). Heparin and heparan sulfate increased (1.4 times) the enzyme inhibition by the C1-inhibitor (150 nM).


Revista Brasileira De Farmacognosia-brazilian Journal of Pharmacognosy | 2002

Inibidores de proteases encontrados em sementes de Caesalpinia echinata (paubrasil): isolamento e caracterização do inibidor de tripsina

Lúcio Garcia de Oliveira; Andrezza Justino Gozzo; Viviane Abreu Nunes; Ilana Cruz Silva; Misako U. Sampaio; Claudio Augusto Machado Sampaio; Mariana S. Araujo

Caesalpinia echinata, o pau-brasil, e uma arvore pertencente a familia das Leguminosas, sub-familia Caesalpinoidae. Como ja foram encontrados inibidores de proteases em sementes de outras Leguminosas, o objetivo do trabalho e purificar e caracterizar o inibidor de tripsina extraido das sementes de C. echinata. Apos extracao salina e precipitacao por acetona, os inibidores foram purificados por cromatografia de troca ionica e filtracao em gel, apresentando massas moleculares de 19,5 e 10 kDa e constante de inibicao da ordem de nM.


Pulmonary Medicine | 2016

Protease Inhibitors Extracted from Caesalpinia echinata Lam. Affect Kinin Release during Lung Inflammation

Ilana Cruz-Silva; Viviane Abreu Nunes; Andrezza Justino Gozzo; Priscila Praxedes-Garcia; Aparecida S. Tanaka; Kazuaki Shimamoto; Mariana S. Araujo

Inflammation is an essential process in many pulmonary diseases in which kinins are generated by protease action on kininogen, a phenomenon that is blocked by protease inhibitors. We evaluated kinin release in an in vivo lung inflammation model in rats, in the presence or absence of CeKI (C. echinata kallikrein inhibitor), a plasma kallikrein, cathepsin G, and proteinase-3 inhibitor, and rCeEI (recombinant C. echinata elastase inhibitor), which inhibits these proteases and also neutrophil elastase. Wistar rats were intravenously treated with buffer (negative control) or inhibitors and, subsequently, lipopolysaccharide was injected into their lungs. Blood, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF), and lung tissue were collected. In plasma, kinin release was higher in the LPS-treated animals in comparison to CeKI or rCeEI groups. rCeEI-treated animals presented less kinin than CeKI-treated group. Our data suggest that kinins play a pivotal role in lung inflammation and may be generated by different enzymes; however, neutrophil elastase seems to be the most important in the lung tissue context. These results open perspectives for a better understanding of biological process where neutrophil enzymes participate and indicate these plant inhibitors and their recombinant correlates for therapeutic trials involving pulmonary diseases.


Phytochemistry | 2013

Using a Caesalpinia echinata Lam. protease inhibitor as a tool for studying the roles of neutrophil elastase, cathepsin G and proteinase 3 in pulmonary edema

Ilana Cruz-Silva; Christiane Neuhof; Andrezza Justino Gozzo; Viviane Abreu Nunes; Izaura Y. Hirata; Misako U. Sampaio; Rita de Cássia Figueiredo-Ribeiro; H. Neuhof; Mariana S. Araujo

Acute lung injury (ALI) is characterized by neutrophil infiltration and the release of proteases, mainly elastase (NE), cathepsin G (Cat G) and proteinase 3 (PR3), which can be controlled by specific endogenous inhibitors. However, inhibitors of these proteases have been isolated from different sources, including plants. For this study, CeEI, or Caesalpinia echinata elastase inhibitor, was purified from C. echinata (Brazil-wood) seeds after acetone fractionation, followed by ion exchange and reversed phase chromatographic steps. Characterization with SDS-PAGE, stability assays, amino acid sequencing and alignment with other protein sequences confirmed that CeEI is a member of the soybean Kunitz trypsin inhibitor family. Like other members of this family, CeEI is a 20 kDa monomeric protein; it is stable within a large pH and temperature range, with four cysteine residues forming two disulfide bridges, conserved amino acid residues and leucine-isoleucine residues in the reactive site. CeEI was able to inhibit NE and Cat G at a nanomolar range (with K(i)s of 1.9 and 3.6 nM, respectively) and inhibited PR3 within a micromolar range (K(i) 3.7 μM), leading to hydrolysis of specific synthetic substrates. In a lung edema model, CeEI reduced the lung weight and pulmonary artery pressure until 180 min after the injection of zymosan-activated polymorphonuclear neutrophils. In experiments performed in the presence of a Cat G and PR3, but not an NE inhibitor, lung edema was reduced only until 150 min and pulmonary artery pressure was similar to that of the control. These results confirm that NE action is crucial to edema establishment and progression. Additionally, CeEI appears to be a useful tool for studying the physiology of pulmonary edema and provides a template for molecular engineering and drug design for ALI therapy.


The Scientific World Journal | 2012

Biochemical Aspects of a Serine Protease from Caesalpinia echinata Lam. (Brazilwood) Seeds: A Potential Tool to Access the Mobilization of Seed Storage Proteins

Priscila Praxedes-Garcia; Ilana Cruz-Silva; Andrezza Justino Gozzo; Viviane Abreu Nunes; Ricardo J.S. Torquato; Aparecida S. Tanaka; Rita de Cássia Figueiredo-Ribeiro; Yamile González; Mariana S. Araujo

Several proteins have been isolated from seeds of leguminous, but this is the first report that a protease was obtained from seeds of Caesalpinia echinata Lam., a tree belonging to the Fabaceae family. This enzyme was purified to homogeneity by hydrophobic interaction and anion exchange chromatographies and gel filtration. This 61-kDa serine protease (CeSP) hydrolyses H-D-prolyl-L-phenylalanyl-L-arginine-p-nitroanilide (K m 55.7 μM) in an optimum pH of 7.1, and this activity is effectively retained until 50°C. CeSP remained stable in the presence of kosmotropic anions (PO4  3−, SO4  2−, and CH3COO−) or chaotropic cations (K+ and Na+). It is strongly inhibited by TLCK, a serine protease inhibitor, but not by E-64, EDTA or pepstatin A. The characteristics of the purified enzyme allowed us to classify it as a serine protease. The role of CeSP in the seeds cannot be assigned yet but is possible to infer that it is involved in the mobilization of seed storage proteins.


Biochimie | 2011

Heparin affects the interaction of kininogen on endothelial cells

Andrezza Justino Gozzo; Guacyara Motta; Ilana Cruz-Silva; Viviane Abreu Nunes; Nilana M.T. Barros; Adriana K. Carmona; Misako U. Sampaio; Yara M. Michelacci; Kazuaki Shimamoto; Helena B. Nader; Mariana S. Araujo

In the plasma kallikrein-kinin system, it has been shown that when plasma prekallikrein (PK) and high molecular weight kininogen (HK) assemble on endothelial cells, plasma kallikrein (huPK) becomes available to cleave HK, releasing bradykinin, a potent mediator of the inflammatory response. Because the formation of soluble glycosaminoglycans occurs concomitantly during the inflammatory processes, the effect of these polysaccharides on the interaction of HK on the cell surface or extracellular matrix (ECM) of two endothelial cell lines (ECV304 and RAEC) was investigated. In the presence of Zn(+2), HK binding to the surface or ECM of RAEC was abolished by heparin; reduced by heparan sulfate, keratan sulfate, chondroitin 4-sulfate or dermatan sulfate; and not affected by chondroitin 6-sulfate. By contrast, only heparin reduced HK binding to the ECV304 cell surface or ECM. Using heparin-correlated molecules such as low molecular weight dextran sulfate, low molecular weight heparin and N-desulfated heparin, we suggest that these effects were mainly dependent on the charge density and on the N-sulfated glucosamine present in heparin. Surprisingly, PK binding to cell- or ECM-bound-HK and PK activation was not modified by heparin. However, the hydrolysis of HK by huPK, releasing BK in the fluid phase, was augmented by this glycosaminoglycan in the presence of Zn(2+). Thus, a functional dichotomy exists in which soluble glycosaminoglycans may possibly either increase or decrease the formation of BK. In conclusion, glycosaminoglycans that accumulated in inflammatory fluids or used as a therapeutic drug (e.g., heparin) could act as pro- or anti-inflammatory mediators depending on different factors within the cell environment.

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Mariana S. Araujo

Federal University of São Paulo

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Viviane Abreu Nunes

Federal University of São Paulo

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Misako U. Sampaio

Federal University of São Paulo

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Ilana Cruz-Silva

Federal University of São Paulo

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Claudio A. M. Sampaio

Federal University of São Paulo

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Adriana K. Carmona

Federal University of São Paulo

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Helena B. Nader

Federal University of São Paulo

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Kazuaki Shimamoto

Sapporo Medical University

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Priscila Praxedes-Garcia

Federal University of São Paulo

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Nobuyuki Ura

Sapporo Medical University

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