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Dive into the research topics where Carlos Roberto Carvalho is active.

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Featured researches published by Carlos Roberto Carvalho.


Arquivos Brasileiros De Cardiologia | 2006

Índice de massa corporal e circunferência abdominal: associação com fatores de risco cardiovascular

Fabiane Aparecida Canaan Rezende; Lina Enriqueta Frandsen Paez de Lima Rosado; Rita de Cássia Lanes Ribeiro; Fernanda de Carvalho Vidigal; Ana Carolina Junqueira Vasques; Ivana Sales Bonard; Carlos Roberto Carvalho

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the association between cardiovascular risk factors and the anthropometric values--body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference (WC). METHODS It was studied 231 employees of Federal University of Viçosa, Brazil, 54.1% of them were men (21-76 years old). Glycemia, total cholesterol, LDL, HDL, triglycerides, blood pressure, BMI, WC, waist-to-hip ratio and body fatness were measured. It was also investigated smoking, alcohol consumption and physical activity. RESULTS The prevalence of overweight/obesity in this population was high mainly in women. The abdominal obesity was observed in 74% of the women and 46.1% of the men. The average of BMI, body fatness, total cholesterol, HDL and triglycerides were significantly higher in men than in women. (p < 0,05). The sedentary lifestyle was a risk factor for obesity. Smoking and alcohol consumption were more common among men and normal weight volunteers. Most of the correlations between anthropometric indices and risk factors for cardiovascular diseases were significant, but weak and the WC was the index that had the strongest correlation and that associated with the largest number of variables. It was observed that with an increase of the BMI and the abdominal fat, there was also an increase of the glycemia, triglycerides and blood pressure and a decrease of HDL. The metabolic syndrome was more common among men and overweight and obese volunteers. CONCLUSION In this study, the frequency of cardiovascular risk factors increased along with BMI and WC.


Heredity | 1993

A new heterochromatin banding pattern revealed by modified HKG banding technique in maize chromosomes

Carlos Roberto Carvalho; Luiz Sérgio Saraiva

A new heterochromatin banding pattern for maize root tip chromosomes was revealed by a modified HKG- (HC1-KOH-Giemsa) banding technique. Comparison of this pattern with that obtained by the C-banding technique showed that the two techniques stain different types of heterochromatin. The HKG-banding technique stains both centromeric and intercalary heterochromatin, whereas the C-banding technique reveals only knob heterochromatin. The presence of an HKG intercalary band adjacent to the knob suggests a more complex constitution for the heterochromatic block of the knob.


Planta | 2016

The polyploidy and its key role in plant breeding

Mariana Cansian Sattler; Carlos Roberto Carvalho; Wellington Ronildo Clarindo

AbstractMain conclusionThis article provides an up-to-date review concerning from basic issues of polyploidy to aspects regarding the relevance and role of both natural and artificial polyploids in plant breeding programs. Polyploidy is a major force in the evolution of both wild and cultivated plants. Polyploid organisms often exhibit increased vigor and, in some cases, outperform their diploid relatives in several aspects. This remarkable superiority of polyploids has been the target of many plant breeders in the last century, who have induced polyploidy and/or used natural polyploids in many ways to obtain increasingly improved plant cultivars. Some of the most important consequences of polyploidy for plant breeding are the increment in plant organs (“gigas” effect), buffering of deleterious mutations, increased heterozygosity, and heterosis (hybrid vigor). Regarding such features as tools, cultivars have been generated with higher yield levels, improving the product quality and increasing the tolerance to both biotic and abiotic stresses. In some cases, when the crossing between two species is not possible because of differences in ploidy level, polyploids can be used as a bridge for gene transferring between them. In addition, polyploidy often results in reduced fertility due to meiotic errors, allowing the production of seedless varieties. On the other hand, the genome doubling in a newly formed sterile hybrid allows the restoration of its fertility. Based on these aspects, the present review initially concerns the origin, frequency and classification of the polyploids, progressing to show the revolution promoted by the discovery of natural polyploids and polyploidization induction in the breeding program status of distinct crops.


Plant Science | 2001

Hyperhydricity in in vitro eggplant regenerated plants: structural characteristics and involvement of BiP (Binding Protein)

Edgard Augusto de Toledo Picoli; Wagner Campos Otoni; Maı́ra L. Figueira; Sônia M.B. Carolino; Raul S. Almeida; Eldo Antônio Monteiro da Silva; Carlos Roberto Carvalho; Elizabeth P.B. Fontes

The hyperhydricity in eggplant (Solanum melongena L.) plants was monitored by the induction of the ER-luminal resident protein BiP. Although tissue culture conditions may induce BiP synthesis, the accumulation of BiP in hyperhydric shoots was consistently higher than in non-hyperhydric shoots. The leaf and stem anatomy in non-hyperhydric and hyperhydric eggplant was investigated aiming to identify structural changes associated with this phenomenon. In non-hyperhydric organs there were smaller and more organized cells, besides a more differentiated vascular system when compared with its hyperhydric counterpart. Scanning electron microscopy of leaves showed that leaf surface and stomata differentiation were also affected in hyperhydric plants.


Journal of Plant Research | 1997

High-resolution HKG-banding in maize mitotic chromosomes

Carlos Roberto Carvalho; Luiz Sérgio Saraiva

Root-tip maize chromosomes (2n=20) were prepared by high-resolution procedures after ethidium bromide/colchicine synchronization. Using HKG-banding (HCl−KOH-Giemsa), that shows both centromeric and intercalary heterochromatin, the banding pattern of the elongated-chromosomes showed one to nine well-resolved dark bands. Differences of HKG-banding pattern of elongated and compacted chromosomes were performed by image analysis.


Plant Cell Reports | 2011

Revisiting the DNA C-values of the genome size-standards used in plant flow cytometry to choose the "best primary standards".

Milene Miranda Praça-Fontes; Carlos Roberto Carvalho; Wellington Ronildo Clarindo; Cosme Damião Cruz

Flow cytometry (FCM) techniques have enabled characterization of the genome size for various plant species. In order to measure the nuclear genome size of a species, reference standards with well-established DNA content are necessary. However, different 2C-values have been described for the same species used as reference standard. This fact has brought about inaccurate genome measurements, making relevant the establishment of optimal DNA reference standards for plant cytometric analyses. Our work revisited the genome size of Arabidopsis thaliana and other seven plant standards, which were denominated “Doležel’s standard set” and have been widely used in plant DNA measurements. These eight plant standards were reassessed for a comparative measurement of their DNA content values, using each plant species as primary standard in a cascade-like manner, from A. thaliana to Allium cepa. The genome size values obtained here were compared to those reported in the literature by statistical analyses. As a result, Raphanus sativus and Drosophila melanogaster were considered the most inadequate primary standards, whereas A. thaliana, Solanum lycopersicum and Pisum sativum were found to be the most suitable.


Biotechnic & Histochemistry | 1993

An Air Drying Technique for Maize Chromosomes without Enzymatic Maceration

Carlos Roberto Carvalho; Luiz Sérgio Saraiva

The air drying technique, widely used in animal cytogenetics, was adapted for use with Zea mays L. chromosomes. Using a simple protocol without enzymatic maceration and avoiding the inconvenience of the squashing technique, good staining and C-banding were obtained from maize chromosome preparations.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Cryptosexuality and the Genetic Diversity Paradox in Coffee Rust, Hemileia vastatrix

Carlos Roberto Carvalho; Ronaldo de Castro Fernandes; Guilherme Mendes Almeida Carvalho; Robert W. Barreto; Harry C. Evans

Background Despite the fact that coffee rust was first investigated scientifically more than a century ago, and that the disease is one of the major constraints to coffee production - constantly changing the socio-economic and historical landscape of the crop - critical aspects of the life cycle of the pathogen, Hemileia vastatrix, remain unclear. The asexual urediniospores are regarded as the only functional propagule: theoretically, making H. vastatrix a clonal species. However, the well-documented emergence of new rust pathotypes and the breakdown in genetic resistance of coffee cultivars, present a paradox. Methods and Results Here, using computer-assisted DNA image cytometry, following a modified nuclear stoichiometric staining technique with Feulgen, we show that meiosis occurs within the urediniospores. Stages of spore development were categorised based on morphology, from the spore-mother cell through to the germinating spore, and the relative nuclear DNA content was quantified statistically at each stage. Conclusions Hidden sexual reproduction disguised within the asexual spore (cryptosexuality) could explain why new physiological races have arisen so often and so quickly in Hemileia vastatrix. This could have considerable implications for coffee breeding strategies and may be a common event in rust fungi, especially in related genera occupying the same basal phylogenetic lineages.


Plant Cell Reports | 2011

C-value reassessment of plant standards: an image cytometry approach

Milene Miranda Praça-Fontes; Carlos Roberto Carvalho; Wellington Ronildo Clarindo

Image cytometry (ICM) has been used to measure DNA 2C-values by evaluating the optical density of Feulgen-stained nuclei. This optical measurement is carried out using three basic tools: microscopy, digital video camera, and image analysis software. Because ICM has been applied to plants, some authors have remarked that studies should be performed before this technique can be accepted as an accurate method for determination of plant genome size. Based on this, the 2C-value of eight plants, which are widely used as standards in DNA quantifications, was reassessed in a cascade-like manner, from A. thaliana through R. sativus, S. lycopersicum, Glycine max, Z. mays, P. sativum, V. faba, to A. cepa. The mean 2C-values of all plants were statistically compared to the values reported by other authors using flow cytometry and/or ICM. These analyses demonstrated that ICM is an accurate and reliable method for 2C-value measurement, representing an attractive alternative to flow cytometry. Statistical comparison of the results also indicated Glycine max ‘Polanka’ as the most adequate primary standard. However, distinct authors have been advised that 2C DNA content of the reference standard should be close to that of the sample. As three further approaches also revisited the 2C-value of these eight plants, we have thus proposed a mean 2C-value for each eight species.


Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 2010

DNA Content Differences Between Male and Female Chicken (Gallus gallus domesticus) Nuclei and Z and W Chromosomes Resolved by Image Cytometry

Maria Andréia Corrěa Mendonça; Carlos Roberto Carvalho; Wellington Ronildo Clarindo

Chicken red blood cells (CRBCs) are widely used as standards for DNA content determination. Cytogenetic data have shown that the Z sex chromosome is approximately twice as large as the W, so that the DNA content differs to some extent between male (ZZ) and female (ZW) chickens. Despite this fact, male and female CRBCs have been indiscriminately used in absolute genome size determination. Our work was conducted to verify whether the DNA content differences between male and female Gallus gallus domesticus “Leghorn” nuclei and ZZ/ZW chromosomes can be resolved by image cytometry (ICM). Air-dried smears stained by Feulgen reaction were used for nuclei analysis. Chicken metaphase spreads upon Feulgen staining were analyzed for obtaining quantitative information on the Z and W chromosomes. Before each capture session, we conducted quality control of the ICM instrumentation. Our results from nuclear measurements showed that the 2C value is 0.09 pg higher in males than in females. In chromosomes, we found that the Z chromosome shows 200% more DNA content than does the W chromosome. ICM demonstrated resolution power to discriminate low DNA content differences in genomes. We suggest prudence in the general use of CRBC 2C values as standards in comparative cytometric analysis.

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Wagner Campos Otoni

Universidade Federal de Viçosa

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Isabella Santiago Abreu

Universidade Federal de Viçosa

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Mariana Cansian Sattler

Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo

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Eveline Teixeira Caixeta

Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária

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Mara Garcia Tavares

Universidade Federal de Viçosa

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Paulo Marcos Amaral-Silva

Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo

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Stéfanie Cristina de Oliveira

Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo

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