Carmen Lúcia Antão Paiva
Universidade Federal do Estado do Rio de Janeiro
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Featured researches published by Carmen Lúcia Antão Paiva.
Biotechnology Annual Review | 1996
Carmen Lúcia Antão Paiva; Anita D. Panek
Trehalose is a disaccharide present in a variety of anhydrobiotic organisms which have the ability to promptly resume their metabolism after addition of water. It has been successfully used as a nontoxic cryoprotectant of enzymes, membranes, vaccines, animal and plant cells and organs for surgical transplants. It has been predicted that trehalose can also be used as an ingredient for dried and processed food. Therefore, the recent biotechnological applications of trehalose have imposed the standardization of methods for its production, as well as for its specific quantification.
Genetics and Molecular Research | 2013
Luciana de Andrade Agostinho; S.R. dos Santos; Regina Mp Alvarenga; Carmen Lúcia Antão Paiva
Huntingtons disease (HD) is a rare progressive and fatal neurogenetic degenerative disease, characterized by movement and personality disorders and by progressive dementia. Its prevalence varies by ethnic origin and different genetic profiles predisposing individuals to HD in each population. The prevalence of HD is 5-10 per 100,000 individuals in Caucasian populations of North America and Western Europe. It is an autosomal dominant disease associated with the expansion of CAG-type repetitive DNA sequences in the HTT gene. This gene, located on the short arm of chromosome 4, encodes the protein huntingtin. In this study, we reviewed 17 articles about HD that report data from 2400 affected individuals from various countries around the world, including Venezuela, China, Croatia, Turkey, Germany, Italy, Brazil, Spain, Taiwan, India, the Netherlands, Russia, and the USA, with a focus on genetic profiles and intergenerational expansions or contractions of expanded alleles responsible for causing HD. We discuss the genetic characteristics of HD in different populations and any atypical cases reported in these studies.
Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2015
Regina Maria Papais-Alvarenga; Fernanda Ferreira Chaves da Costa Pereira; Melina S. Bernardes; Marcos Papais-Alvarenga; Elizabeth Batista; Carmen Lúcia Antão Paiva; Claudia Miranda Santos; Claudia Cristina Ferreira Vasconcelos
OBJECTIVE To describe familial forms of demyelinating diseases from an MS referral center in Río de Janeiro State, Brazil. METHODS A descriptive, cross-sectional study was done to identify familial IIDD cases in Hospital da Lagoa, a public hospital where 75% of patients with IIDD who live in Rio de Janeiro state, located in the Southeast region of Brazil, are referred. The diagnoses of all consecutive patients followed in 2011 were reviewed to apply new diagnostic criteria (Wingerchuk et al., 2008). The diagnosis of IIDD was confirmed based on clinical history, neurological examination, MRI of the skull and spinal cord, CSF analysis and investigation of IgG NMO antibodies. The cases that had at least one other relative with IIDD were selected for the study. RESULTS Familial forms were found only in the multiple sclerosis (MS) and neuromyelitis optica syndrome (NMOSD) categories. 23 MS families were identified, 60.86% with first degree kinship. It has a Caucasian preponderance, 90% of whom were white. The frequency of early onset was 15% and 20% of the MSf cases have progressive primary course. CONCLUSION The frequency of familial cases of IIDD was 6.12% among MS patients and 2.8% in NMO spectrum syndromes.
Journal of Human Genetics | 2012
Luciana de Andrade Agostinho; Catielly F Rocha; Enrique Medina-Acosta; Hazel N Barboza; Antônio Francisco Alves da Silva; Simão Pedro Pereira; Iane dos Santos da Silva; Eduardo R Paradela; André Luis dos Santos Figueiredo; Eduardo de M Nogueira; Regina Mp Alvarenga; Pedro Hernan Cabello; Suely Rodrigues dos Santos; Carmen Lúcia Antão Paiva
We studied the allelic profile of CAG and CCG repeats in 61 Brazilian individuals in 21 independent families affected by Huntington’s disease (HD). Thirteen individuals had two normal alleles for HD, two had one mutable normal allele and no HD phenotype, and forty-six patients carried at least one expanded CAG repeat allele. Forty-five of these individuals had one expanded allele and one individual had one mutable normal allele (27 CAG repeats) and one expanded allele (48 CAG repeats). Eleven of these forty-five subjects had a mutant allele with reduced penetrance, and thirty-four patients had a mutant allele with complete penetrance. Inter- and intragenerational investigations of CAG repeats were also performed. We found a negative correlation between the number of CAG repeats and the age of disease onset (r=−0.84; P<0.001) and no correlation between the number of CCG repeats and the age of disease onset (r=0.06). We found 40 different haplotypes and the analysis showed that (CCG)10 was linked to a CAG normal allele in 19 haplotypes and to expanded alleles in two haplotypes. We found that (CCG)7 was linked to expanded CAG repeats in 40 haplotypes (95.24%) and (CCG)10 was linked to expanded CAG repeats in only two haplotypes (4.76%). Therefore, (CCG)7 was the most common allele in HD chromosomes in this Brazilian sample. It was also observed that there was a significant association of (CCG)7 with the expanded CAG alleles (χ2=6.97, P=0.0084). Worldwide, the most common CCG alleles have 7 or 10 repeats. In Western Europe, (CCG)7 is the most frequent allele, similarly to our findings.
Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 1997
Nilza Bachinski; Adriana S. Martins; Vânia M. Flosi Paschoalin; Anita D. Panek; Carmen Lúcia Antão Paiva
Trehalase is the enzyme which hydrolyzes the disaccharide trehalose into two alpha-D-glucose molecules. In this article, we present the immobilization of trehalase on aminopropyl glass particles. The enzyme was extracted from Escherichia coli Mph2, a strain harboring the pTRE11 plasmid, which contains the trehalase gene. The partially purified enzyme had a specific activity of 356 U/mg and could be used for quantifying trehalose in the presence of sucrose, maltose, lactose, starch, and glycogen. Partially purified trehalase was immobilized by covalent coupling with retention of its catalytic activity. The support chosen for the majority of the experiments reported was aminopropyl glass, although spherisorb-5NH(2) and chitin were also tested. The immobilized enzyme was assayed continuously for 40 h, at pH 6.0 and 30 degrees C, and no release of enzyme molecules was detected during this procedure. The best condition found for storing the enzyme-support complex was at 4 degrees C in the presence of 25 mM sodium maleate, containing 7 mM beta-mercaptoethanol, 1 mM ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA), and 50% glycerol. The enzyme under these conditions was stable, retaining approximately 100% of its initial activity for at least 28 days. The immobilized enzyme can be employed to detect trehalose molecules in micromolar concentration. The optimum pH value found was 4.5 and the K(m) app. 4.9 x 10(-3) M trehalose at pH 4.6 and 30 degrees C, with V(max) of 5.88 micromol glucose x min x(-1), as calculated by a Lineweaver-Burk plot.
Genetics and Molecular Research | 2017
T.A. Apolinário; Carmen Lúcia Antão Paiva; Luciana de Andrade Agostinho
Huntingtons disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant progressive neurodegenerative disorder caused by a dynamic mutation due to the expansion of CAG repeats in the HTT gene (4p16.3). The considered normal alleles have less than 27 CAG repeats. Intermediate alleles (IAs) show 27 to 35 CAG repeats and expanded alleles have more than 35 repeats. The IAs apparently have shown a normal phenotype. However, there are some reported associations between individuals that bear an IA and clinical HD signs, such as behavioral disturbs. The association of IAs with the presence of clinical signs gives clinical relevance to these patients. We emphasized the importance of determining the frequency of IA alleles in the general population as well as in HD families. Therefore, the aim of this study was to conduct a systematic review, in order to investigate the frequency of IAs in the overall chromosomes of different ethnic groups and of families with HD history worldwide as well as the frequency of individuals who bear the intermediate alleles. We searched indexed articles from the following electronic databases: U.S. National Library of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health (PubMed), Pubmed Central (PMC) and Virtual Health Library (VHL). Therefore, 488 articles were obtained and, of these, 33 had been published in more than one database. We accepted the article of only one database and ended up with 455 articles for this review. The frequency of IAs within the chromosomes of the general population ranged from 0.45 to 8.7% and of individuals with family history of HD ranged from 0.05 to 5.1%. The higher frequency of IAs in the general population (8.7%) was found in one Brazilian cohort.
European Neurology | 2015
Luciana de Andrade Agostinho; Iane dos Santos da Silva; Lorena Agostini Maia; Mariana de Almeida Azevedo; Távia Muniz Ribeiro de Oliveira Faria; Thays Andrade Apolinário; Simão Pedro Pereira; Rafael de Lima Reis; Suely Rodrigues dos Santos; Carmen Lúcia Antão Paiva
Background/Aims: Our aim was to investigate a geographical cluster of Huntingtons disease (HD) in Ervalia, a Brazilian town of Minas Gerais state (MG). Therefore, we calculated the minimum prevalence of HD in Ervalia, known to have many HD affected families. We also determined the genetic profile of the polymorphic CAG region of the HTT gene in 32 subjects of these affected families. Methods: A descriptive cross-sectional study was performed, starting in January 2011 until June 2013. Individuals who participated in the survey were all from Ervalia town, MG. Results: The minimum prevalence rate found was 7.2/10,000 people, higher than the worldwide prevalence. Conclusion: The minimum prevalence of HD in Ervalia was at least 10.3- to 14.4-fold greater than that of the world population, although it does not represent the overall prevalence of the disease in Brazil. Certainly an expanded survey in the country will lead to a lower prevalence estimate than Ervalias.
Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 2015
Eduardo Ribeiro Paradela; Soniza Vieira Alves-Leon; André Luis dos Santos Figueiredo; Valéria Coelho Santa Rita Pereira; Fabíola Rachid Malfetano; Letícia Fezer Mansur; Simone Scherpenhuijzen; Luciana de Andrade Agostinho; Catielly F Rocha; Fernanda Rueda-Lopes; Emerson Leandro Gasparetto; Carmen Lúcia Antão Paiva
The objective of this study was to investigate the association between the HLA alleles at the DQA1, DQB1 and DRB1 loci, the CIITA genetic polymorphisms -168A/G and +1614G/C, and susceptibility to multiple sclerosis (MS) in a sample from Rio de Janeiro State, Brazil. Furthermore, we wished to determine whether any of these associations might be more significant in women compared with men. DNA samples from 52 relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS) patients and 126 healthy controls matched for sex and age were analyzed. We identified a significant HLA-DRB1*15:01-MS association that was female-specific (Odds Ratio (OR) = 4.78; p = 0.001). Furthermore, we observed that the +1614G/C mutation in combination with the HLA-DRB1*15:01 allele increased susceptibility to MS in females (OR = 4.55; p = 0.01). Together, these findings highlight the polygenic nature of MS.
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education | 2008
Marcelle Gomes de Souza; André Luiz Grossi; Elisângela Lima Bastos Pereira; Carolina Oliveira da Cruz; Fernanda Machado Mendes; Luiz Claudio Cameron; Carmen Lúcia Antão Paiva
This article presents our experience on teaching biochemical sciences through an innovative approach that integrates concepts of molecular cell biology and protein chemistry. This original laboratory exercise is based on the preparation of an affinity chromatography column containing F‐actin molecules immobilized on chitin particles for purifying skeletal myosin II. It favors the active learning of protein extraction and purification, the learning of concepts such as muscle contraction, cytoskeleton structure, and its importance for the living cell. This laboratory exercise also promotes learning biotechnological applications of chitin and the applications of protein immobilization in different industrial fields. Furthermore, the activities target the development of laboratorial abilities, problem‐solving skills, and the ability to write a scientific report, following the model of a scientific article. The trials are mainly proposed for either an undergraduate project for advanced students in the life sciences or a postgraduate practical training course. In both the cases, the students must have had biochemistry as part of their regular curriculum. Alternatively, the affinity chromatography method can fit in any regular biochemistry course if active chitin, F‐actin, and a myosin II extract are provided. It is very important to mention that this laboratory exercise can be used even in places where a facility such as ultracentrifugation is lacking. For that, the steps of actin purification are skipped, and actin is commercially obtained. Therefore, it is an adequate approach for the active learning of biochemical and molecular cell biology principles and techniques even in poor countries.
Iniciação Científica Cesumar | 2013
Iane dos Santos da Silva; Luciana de Andrade Agostinho; Carmen Lúcia Antão Paiva
Sensitiveness profile of microorganisms in the curimba Prochilodus lineatus (Valenciennes, 1847) was isolated, characterized and evaluated. Fragments of the fish body underwent microbiological analysis whereas microorganisms were isolated to investigate isolation, characteriszation and evaluation of the sensitiveness profile. Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Enterobacter cloacae were the organisms found, featuring resistance to three out of the eight antibiotics tested.
Collaboration
Dive into the Carmen Lúcia Antão Paiva's collaboration.
André Luis dos Santos Figueiredo
Universidade Federal do Estado do Rio de Janeiro
View shared research outputsClaudia Cristina Ferreira Vasconcelos
Universidade Federal do Estado do Rio de Janeiro
View shared research outputs