Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Carla Cardoso is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Carla Cardoso.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2001

Comparative study of the two more frequent HFE mutations (C282Y and H63D): significant different allelic frequencies between the North and South of Portugal.

Carla Cardoso; Pedro Oliveira; Graça Porto; Christian Oberkanins; Mónica Mascarenhas; Pedro Rodrigues; Fritz Kury; Maria de Sousa

An earlier study of reference values of iron parameters in Portugal showed significant differences between populations from northern and southern villages. This study addresses the question of the geographical distribution in Portugal of the two main mutations (C282Y and H63D) of the hereditary hemochromatosis gene, HFE. For that purpose, a stratified sample of 640 anonymous dried blood spot samples was randomly selected from the major regions of Portugal: North, Center, Lisbon and the Tagus Valley, Alentejo and Algarve. Differences in the geographical distribution of these two mutations were observed thus confirming the presumed differences between the age of the two mutations which is compatible with the postulated Celtic/Nordic origin of the C282Y mutation. The finding of a significantly higher allelic frequency of the C282Y mutation in the North (0.058) than in the South (0.009) could also point to an effect of differential selective forces acting in the different geographical areas of the country. Data on archaeological, ethnographic and linguistic records and on the North/South distribution of Portuguese cattle breeds of European or African origin have also been reported. In addition to their interest for population genetics, the results represent a reminder of the need to take into account regional differences in the design of strategies for population screening of hereditary hemochromatosis.


BMC Medical Genetics | 2006

A study of 82 extended HLA haplotypes in HFE -C282Y homozygous hemochromatosis subjects: relationship to the genetic control of CD8+ T-lymphocyte numbers and severity of iron overload

Eugénia Cruz; Jorge Vieira; Susana Almeida; Rosa Lacerda; Andrea Gartner; Carla Cardoso; Helena Alves; Graça Porto

BackgroundIt has been recently demonstrated that CD8+ T-lymphocyte numbers are genetically transmitted in association with the MHC class I region. The present study was designed with the objective of narrowing the region associated with the setting of CD8+ T-lymphocyte numbers in a population of C282Y homozygous hemochromatosis subjects, in whom a high prevalence of abnormally low CD8+ T-lymphocyte counts has been described.MethodsThe study includes 43 C282Y homozygous subjects fully characterized both phenotypically and genotypically. Clinical characterization includes measurements of iron parameters at diagnosis (transferrin saturation and serum ferritin), total body iron stores and T-cell immunophenotyping determined by flow cytometry. Genetic characterization includes HLA class I alleles (A, B and C) and four additional microsatellite markers (D6S265, D6S2222, D6S105 and D6S2239) spanning 5 Megabases in the 6p21.3 region.ResultsEighty-two extended C282Y carrying haplotypes were defined. Single-locus analysis revealed that the HLA-A region was associated with CD8+ T-cell numbers. Multivariate analysis showed that the combinations of the most common HLA-A alleles (HLA-A*03, -A*02 and -A*01) were associated with significantly lower numbers of CD8+ T-lymphocytes (0.30 ± 0.14 × 106/ml), in comparison with subjects carrying only one copy of those alleles (0.46 ± 0.19 × 106/ml) and subjects without any copy of those alleles (0.79 ± 0.15 × 106/ml;p = 0.0001). No differences were observed in CD8+ T-cell counts among control subjects carrying the same combinations of HLA-A alleles (0.47 ± 0.14; 0.45 ± 0.21 and 0.41 ± 0.17 × 106/ml, respectively), therefore not supporting a direct effect of HLA specificity but rather an indirect association with a locus close to HLA-A. Multivariate analysis showed that the combination of the most common HLA-A alleles also have an impact on the clinical expression of HH in terms of iron stores, in males(p = 0.0009).ConclusionThe present study provides evidence supporting an inextricable link between extended HLA haplotypes, CD8+ T-lymphocyte numbers and severity of iron overload in hereditary hemochromatosis(HH). It gives additional information to better define a candidate region involved in the regulation of CD8+ T-lymphocyte numbers. A new evolutionary hypothesis concerning the inheritance of the phenotype of low CD8+ T-lymphocyte numbers associated with particular ancestral HLA haplotypes carrying the C282Y mutation and its implication on the clinical heterogeneity of HH is discussed.


Human Immunology | 2001

T-cell receptor repertoire in hereditary hemochromatosis: a study of 32 hemochromatosis patients and 274 healthy subjects.

Carla Cardoso; Graça Porto; Rosa Lacerda; Dolores Resende; Pedro Rodrigues; Fernanda Bravo; José Carlos Oliveira; Benvindo Justiça; Maria de Sousa

Low CD8(+) T lymphocyte numbers have contributed to deciphering the genotype/phenotype discrepancies found in hereditary hemochromatosis (HH) patients genotyped for the Hfe mutations, C282Y and H63D. In this study, we extend the analysis of T lymphocytes in HH to the T cell receptor (TcR) repertoire. Thirty-two HH patients (C282Y homozygous) and 274 Hfe genotyped healthy subjects were studied. The following TcR chains were analyzed: Valpha2.3, Vbeta5.1, Vbeta5.2, Vbeta5.3, Vbeta6.7, Vbeta8, and Vbeta12 among the CD4(+) and CD8(+) populations. Lymphopenias and absence of expansions of the Vbeta5.2 and Vbeta12 chains in the CD8(+) pool were seen in controls heterozygous for the C282Y mutation. Expansions in the control group were seen within the CD8(+) pool and were rare/absent within the CD4(+) pool. TcR expansions were found more frequent in patients with iron overload related pathology than in patients without pathology. 9/16 of the patients with pathology have at least one expansion among the CD8(+) pool a number significantly higher compared with patients without pathology (1/16). These findings suggest that Hfe has an effect in the shaping of T-cell populations either directly, as indicated by the lymphopenia seen in the two chains in C282Y heterozygous without iron overload, or indirectly by contributing to iron overload pathology.


European Journal of Haematology | 2001

Clinical and genetic heterogeneity in hereditary haemochromatosis: association between lymphocyte counts and expression of iron overload.

Graça Porto; Carla Cardoso; Victor R. Gordeuk; Eugénia Cruz; José Fraga; Jorge Areias; José Carlos Oliveira; Fernanda Bravo; Innocent T. Gangaidzo; Macphail Ap; Zvenyika A. R. Gomo; Victor M. Moyo; Graça Melo; Cidália Silva; Benvindo Justiça; Maria de Sousa

Abstract: To identify a new marker of expression of disease, independent of HFE genotype in patients with hereditary haemochromatosis (HHC), the total peripheral blood lymphocyte counts were analysed according to iron status in two groups of subjects with HFE mutations. The groups consisted of 38 homozygotes for C282Y, and 107 heterozygotes for the C282Y or compound heterozygotes for C282Y and H63D. For control purposes, total lymphocyte counts and iron status were also examined in 20 index patients with African dietary iron overload, a condition not associated with HFE mutations, and in 144 members of their families and communities. Mean lymphocyte numbers were lower in C282Y homozygous HHC index subjects with cirrhosis and higher iron stores than in those without cirrhosis and with lower iron burdens [(1.65 ± 0.43) × 106/mL vs. (2.27 ± 0.49) × 106/mL; p = 0.008]. Similarly, mean lymphocyte counts were significantly lower in C282Y heterozygotes and C282Y/H63D compound heterozygotes with iron overload and increased serum ferritin concentrations compared to those with normal serum ferritin concentrations (p < 0.05). Statistically significant negative correlations were found, in males, between lymphocyte counts and the total body iron stores, either in C282Y homozygous HHC patients (p = 0.031 in a multiple regression model dependent on age) and in C282Y heterozygotes or C282Y/H63D compound heterozygotes with iron overload (p = 0.029 in a simple linear model). In contrast, lymphocyte counts increased with increasing serum ferritin concentrations among the index subjects with African iron overload (r = 0.324, not statistically significant) and among the members of their families and communities (r = 0.170, p = 0.042). These results suggest that a lower peripheral blood lymphocyte count is associated with a greater degree of iron loading in HFE haemochromatosis but not in African iron overload, and they support the notion that the lymphocyte count may serve as a marker of a non‐HFE gene that influences the clinical expression of HFE haemochromatosis.


Immunogenetics | 2002

Co-selection of the H63D mutation and the HLA-A29 allele: a new paradigm of linkage disequilibrium?

Carla Cardoso; Helena Alves; Mónica Mascarenhas; Ricardo Gonçalves; Pedro Oliveira; Pedro Rodrigues; Eugénia Cruz; Maria de Sousa; Graça Porto

The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) shows a remarkable conservation of particular HLA antigens and haplotypes in linkage disequilibrium in most human populations, suggesting the existence of a convergent evolution. A recent example of such conservation is the association of particular HLA haplotypes with the HFE mutations. With the objective of exploring the significance of that association, the present paper offers an analysis of the linkage disequilibrium between HLA alleles or haplotypes and the HFE mutations in a Portuguese population. Allele and haplotype associations between HLA and HFE mutations were first reviewed in a population of 43 hemochromatosis families. The results confirmed the linkage disequilibrium of the HLA haplotype HLA-A3-B7 and the HLA-A29 allele, respectively, with the HFE mutations C282Y and H63D. In order to extend the study of the linkage disequilibrium between H63D and the HLA-A29-containing haplotypes in a normal, random population, an additional sample of 398 haplotypes was analyzed. The results reveal significant linkage disequilibrium between the H63D mutation and all HLA-A29-containing haplotypes, favoring the hypothesis of a co-selection of H63D and the HLA-A29 allele itself. An insight into the biological significance of this association is given by the finding of significantly higher CD8+ T-lymphocyte counts in subjects simultaneously carrying the H63D mutation and the HLA-A29 allele.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2009

Cytokines and Anxiety in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) Patients Not Receiving Antidepressant Medication A Little-explored Frontier and Some of Its Brief History

Margarida Figueiredo-Braga; Fernando Mota‐Garcia; José-Enrique O’Connor; Juan Rafael Garcia; Rui Mota-Cardoso; Carla Cardoso; Maria de Sousa

Autoimmunity travelled from the theoretical roots planted by Burnet with the clonal selection theory and the early finding of a mouse providing a test for the role of the thymus as a source of forbidden clones. This chapter briefly reviews early work with the NZB mouse and presents results of an analysis of associations between cytokines and physical and psychometric parameters in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients not medicated with antidepressants. Some cytokines, particularly IFN‐γ, relate significantly to physical symptoms and anxiety. We conclude with the speculation that anxiety is linked to innate immunity and more severe neuropsychiatric disease in SLE to adaptive immunity.


International Journal of Immunogenetics | 2007

A putative gene located at the MHC class I region around the D6S105 marker contributes to the setting of CD8+ T-lymphocyte numbers in humans

Jorge Vieira; Carla Cardoso; J.P. Pinto; Kaustubh Patil; Pavel Brazdil; Eugénia Cruz; Cláudia Mascarenhas; Rosa Lacerda; A. Gartner; Susana Almeida; Helena Alves; Graça Porto

Significant associations between human leucocyte antigen (HLA)‐A and ‐B alleles and CD8+ T‐lymphocyte numbers have been reported in the literature in both healthy populations and in HFE‐haemochromatosis patients. In order to address whether HLA alleles themselves or alleles at linked genes are responsible for these associations, several genetic markers at the MHC class I region were typed on a population of 147 apparently healthy unrelated subjects phenotypically characterized for their CD8+ and CD4+ T‐lymphocyte numbers. By using a machine learning approach, a set of rules was generated that predict the number of CD8+ T‐lymphocyte numbers on the basis of the information of the D6S105 microsatellite alleles only. We demonstrate that the previously reported associations with HLA‐A and ‐B alleles are due to the presence of common long (up to 4 megabases long) haplotypes that increased in frequency recently due to positive selection and that encompass a region where a putative gene contributing to the setting of CD8+ T lymphocytes is located, in the neighbourhood of microsatellite locus D6S105, in the 6p21.3 region.


European Journal of Criminology | 2013

Urban security in southern Europe

Amadeu Recasens; Carla Cardoso; Josefina Maria Castro; Gian Guido Nobili

This article examines comparative developments in the politics, policies and practices in public safety and crime prevention across Italy, Portugal and Spain. The article begins by plotting the relatively recent history of what may be termed ‘the preventive turn’ in this region of Europe. It is argued that systematic thinking and coordinated policy and practice regarding crime prevention and public safety remain limited and fragile, with notable exceptions in some cities (such as Barcelona) and regions (such as Emilia-Romagna) across the three countries. Overall, the progress of local safety and security programmes in southern Europe is uneven and fragmented when compared with much of northern Europe. In turn, the current pressures on these countries’ governmental capacities and resources in the light of the profound economic crisis they are undergoing are discussed and their implications for progressive as against repressive urban security management assessed. The article then compares the major areas of convergence and divergence across the three countries.


European Journal of Criminology | 2015

Citizen confidence in private security guards in Portugal

Samuel Moreira; Carla Cardoso; Mahesh K. Nalla

Although private security guards are a visible presence and come into contact with the general public, very little is known about citizens’ trust in and satisfaction with private security agents who act not only in the capacity of service providers but as agents of crime prevention. Given the rapid increase in the employment of security guards in Portugal in recent years, the goal of this study is to assess citizens’ level of trust in and satisfaction with private security agents in Portugal and whether factors such as citizens’ contact experience and their perceptions about the professionalism, imagery, civility and accountability of private security guards influence their confidence in them. Findings from a sample of 163 respondents from the city of Porto suggest that professionalism and accountability appear to be good predictors of citizens’ confidence as measured by trust in and satisfaction with private security guards.


European Journal of Criminology | 2018

Fear of crime, personality and trait emotions: An empirical study:

Inês Guedes; Sofia Patrícia Almeida Domingos; Carla Cardoso

In recent years, scientific research has neglected the importance of personality and trait emotions in explaining fear of crime. Through a survey administered to 205 individuals, this study explored the relationship between individual variables and abstract fear of crime, perception of victimization risk (cognitive dimension), and behavioral expressions. A positive correlation between neuroticism (a personality dimension) and the abstract fear of crime was observed but not with the cognitive and behavioral dimensions. It was also found that trait fear emotion correlated only with the abstract fear of crime. Contrary to what was hypothesized, social desirability was positively correlated with abstract fear of crime, cognitive dimensions and behavioral dimensions in both men and women. Lastly, regression models revealed that distinct variables explaining each of the fear of crime dimensions exist. The implications of the findings are discussed herein.

Collaboration


Dive into the Carla Cardoso's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge