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Featured researches published by Célia Lopes.


BMC Veterinary Research | 2013

Identification of prognostic factors in canine mammary malignant tumours: a multivariable survival study

Andreia Santos; Célia Lopes; Jorge Ribeiro; Liliana R Martins; Joana Santos; Irina Amorim; Fátima Gärtner; A.J.F. Matos

BackgroundAlthough several histopathological and clinical features of canine mammary gland tumours have been widely studied from a prognostic standpoint, considerable variations in tumour individual biologic behaviour difficult the definition of accurate prognostic factors. It has been suggested that the malignant behaviour of tumours is the end result of several alterations in cellular physiology that culminate in tumour growth and spread. Accordingly, the aim of this study was to determine, using a multivariable model, the independent prognostic value of several immunohistochemically detected tumour-associated molecules, such as MMP-9 and uPA in stromal cells and Ki-67, TIMP-2 and VEGF in cancer cells.ResultsEighty-five female dogs affected by spontaneous malignant mammary neoplasias were followed up for a 2-year post-operative period. In univariate analysis, tumour characteristics such as size, mode of growth, regional lymph node metastases, tumour cell MIB-1 LI and MMP-9 and uPA expressions in tumour-adjacent fibroblasts, were associated with both survival and disease-free intervals. Histological type and grade were related with overall survival while VEGF and TIMP-2 were not significantly associated with none of the outcome parameters. In multivariable analysis, only a MIB-1 labelling index higher than 40% and a stromal expression of MMP-9 higher than 50% retained significant relationships with poor overall and disease-free survival.ConclusionsThe results of this study indicate that MMP-9 and Ki-67 are independent prognostic markers of canine malignant mammary tumours. Furthermore, the high stromal expressions of uPA and MMP-9 in aggressive tumours suggest that these molecules are potential therapeutic targets in the post-operative treatment of canine mammary cancer.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2009

Role of E-cadherin N-glycosylation profile in a mammary tumor model.

Salomé S. Pinho; Hugo Osório; Mihai Nita-Lazar; Joana Gomes; Célia Lopes; Fátima Gärtner; Celso A. Reis

Modifications in cell surface glycosylation affecting cell adhesion are common characteristics of transformed cells. This study characterizes the N-glycosylation profile of E-cadherin in models of canine mammary gland adenoma and carcinoma evaluating the importance of these glycosylation modifications in the malignant phenotype. Our results show that the pattern of E-cadherin N-glycosylation in mammary carcinoma is characterized by highly branched N-glycans, increase in sialylation and an expression of few high mannose structures. Detailed mass spectrometry analysis demonstrated a new N-glycosylation site containing a potential complex type N-glycan in E-cadherin from a mammary carcinoma cell line. Our study demonstrates the importance of E-cadherin N-glycans in the process of tumor development and in the transformation to the malignant phenotype.


BMC Veterinary Research | 2007

CD117 immunoexpression in canine mast cell tumours: correlations with pathological variables and proliferation markers

Rui M. Gil da Costa; Eduarda Matos; Alexandra Rêma; Célia Lopes; M.A. Pires; Fátima Gärtner

BackgroundCutaneous mast cell tumours are one of the most common neoplasms in dogs and show a highly variable biologic behaviour. Several prognosis tools have been proposed for canine mast cell tumours, including histological grading and cell proliferation markers. CD117 is a receptor tyrosine kinase thought to play a key role in human and canine mast cell neoplasms. Normal (membrane-associated) and aberrant (cytoplasmic, focal or diffuse) CD117 immunoexpression patterns have been identified in canine mast cell tumours. Cytoplasmic CD117 expression has been found to correlate with higher histological grade and with a worsened post-surgical prognosis. This study addresses the role of CD117 in canine mast cell tumours by studying the correlations between CD117 immunoexpression patterns, two proliferation markers (Ki67 and AgNORs) histological grade, and several other pathological variables.ResultsHighly significant (p < 0,001) correlations were found between CD117 immunostaining patterns and histological grade, cell proliferation markers (Ki67, AgNORs) and tumoral necrosis. Highly significant (p < 0,001) correlations were also established between the two cellular proliferation markers and histological grade, tumour necrosis and epidermal ulceration. A significant correlation (p = 0.035) was observed between CD117 expression patterns and epidermal ulceration. No differences were observed between focal and diffuse cytoplasmic CD117 staining patterns concerning any of the variables studied.ConclusionThese findings highlight the key role of CD117 in the biopathology of canine MCTs and confirm the relationship between aberrant CD117 expression and increased cell proliferation and higher histological grade. Further studies are needed to unravel the cellular mechanisms underlying focal and diffuse cytoplasmic CD117 staining patterns, and their respective biopathologic relevance.


Apmis | 2007

E‐cadherin, β‐catenin, invasion and lymph node metastases in canine malignant mammary tumours

A.J.F. Matos; Célia Lopes; Augusto Faustino; Júlio Carvalheira; Gerard R. Rutteman; Maria F. Gärtner

Recent studies of canine malignant mammary tumours suggest that reduction of E‐cadherin and/or β‐catenin correlates with invasive behaviour and lymph node metastasis. The aims of this study were to examine the interrelationships between the expression of E‐cadherin and β‐catenin, and the relationship between the expression of E‐cadherin and/or β‐catenin and the mode of growth and metastatic capacity of canine malignant mammary tumours. 90 spontaneous malignant tumours and local and regional lymph nodes were studied. A significant relationship was evidenced between membranous expression of E‐cadherin and β‐catenin (p=0.0027), but not between E‐cadherin and cytoplasmic β‐catenin. Only E‐cadherin as a separate factor was significantly related to tumour invasion (p=0.0072) and lymph node metastasis (p=0.0001). Neither membranous nor cytoplasmic β‐catenin expression was significantly related to either of these phenomena.


Journal of Comparative Pathology | 2009

COX-2 expression in canine normal and neoplastic mammary gland.

P. Dias Pereira; Célia Lopes; A.J.F. Matos; Marlene Santos; Fátima Gärtner; Rui Medeiros; Carlos Lopes

COX-2 expression was examined immunohistochemically in samples of normal canine mammary tissue (n=22) and benign (n=36) and malignant (n=45) mammary tumours including metastases (n=12). COX-2 was constitutively expressed in normal mammary tissue with membranous apical labelling of glandular epithelium, suggesting a role for this molecule in normal mammary physiology. By contrast, in neoplastic lesions and in adjacent non-neoplastic mammary tissue COX-2 was expressed in the cytoplasm of epithelial cells, suggesting that internalization of the molecule is associated with oncogenesis. Marked expression of COX-2 was observed in 8.3% of benign neoplasms and in 42.2% of malignant neoplasms, mainly in poorly differentiated areas. The majority of metastatic lesions (58.3%) exhibited strong COX-2 labelling and in almost all cases (83.3%) the labelling intensity was similar or stronger to that of the primary neoplasm. This finding is consistent with the hypothesis that COX-2 metabolites are important promoters of angiogenesis and invasiveness and therefore contribute to metastatic spread.


BMC Cancer | 2007

Sialyl Lewis x expression in canine malignant mammary tumours: correlation with clinicopathological features and E-Cadherin expression

Salomé S. Pinho; Augusto J. de Matos; Célia Lopes; Nuno T. Marcos; Júlio Carvalheira; Celso A. Reis; Fátima Gärtner

BackgroundSialyl Lewis x (sLex) antigen is a carbohydrate antigen that is considered not only a marker for cancer but also implicated functionally in the malignant behaviour of cancer cells. Overexpression of sLex is associated with enhanced progression and metastases of many types of cancer including those of the mammary gland. Canine mammary tumours can invade and give rise to metastases via either lymphatic or blood vessels.E-Cadherin is specifically involved in epithelial cell-to-cell adhesion. In cancer, E-Cadherin underexpression is one of the alterations that characterizes the invasive phenotype and is considered an invasion/tumour suppressor gene. Partial or complete loss of E-Cadherin expression correlates with poor prognosis in canine malignant mammary cancer.The aim of this study was to analyse the sLex expression in canine malignant mammary tumours and to evaluate if the presence of sLex correlates with the expression of E-Cadherin and with clinicopathological features.MethodsFifty-three cases of canine mammary carcinomas were analysed immunohistochemically using monoclonal antibodies against sLex (IgM) and E-Cadherin (IgG). The clinicopathological data were then assessed to determine whether there was a correlation with sLex tumour expression. Double labelled immunofluorescence staining was performed to analyse the combined expression of sLex and E-Cadherin.ResultssLex expression was consistently demonstrated in all cases of canine mammary carcinomas with different levels of expression. We found a significant relationship between the levels of sLex expression and the presence of lymph node metastases. We also demonstrated that when E-Cadherin expression was increased sLex was reduced and vice-versa. The combined analysis of both adhesion molecules revealed an inverse relationship.ConclusionIn the present study we demonstrate the importance of sLex in the malignant phenotype of canine malignant mammary tumours. Our results support the use of sLex as a prognostic tumour marker in canine mammary carcinomas. Furthermore, we showed that sLex and E-Cadherin expression were inversely correlated. Future studies are warranted to clarify the molecular mechanism underlying the relation between sLex and E-Cadherin in canine mammary carcinoma cells which represents an important comparative model to woman breast cancer.


Journal of Comparative Pathology | 2010

Immunohistochemical expression of vascular endothelial growth factor in canine mammary tumours.

Andreia Santos; Joana Oliveira; Célia Lopes; Irina Amorim; Corália Vicente; Fátima Gärtner; A.J.F. Matos

The histopathological and clinical aspects of canine mammary tumours (CMTs) have been widely studied, but the variation in the biological behaviour of these neoplasms hampers the identification of prognostic factors. Sustained angiogenesis has been suggested to be one of the most important factors underlying tumour growth and invasion. This process involves the action of several growth factors including vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). The present study characterizes the relationship between immunohistochemical expression of VEGF and gross (e.g. size and tissue fixation) and microscopical (e.g. type, growth, necrosis, lymphoid infiltration, lymph node metastasis, histological grade and proliferation index) features of CMTs. Forty-eight benign and 64 malignant CMTs were evaluated. Statistical analysis failed to show a significant relationship between VEGF expression and the pathological features, suggesting that VEGF expression occurs in both benign and malignant tumours and is independent of histological type, proliferation, tissue invasion or local metastatic capacity.


Veterinary Pathology | 2007

Mammary Invasive Micropapillary Carcinoma in Cats: Clinicopathologic Features and Nuclear DNA Content

F. Seixas; Carlos M. Palmeira; M.A. Pires; Célia Lopes

Invasive micropapillary carcinoma (IMC) is a variant of infiltrating ductal carcinoma of the breast associated with poor outcome. In this study, we report 16 carcinomas of the feline mammary gland displaying histologic features that correspond to IMC of the breast in women. The clinicopathologic findings, overall survival time, disease-free survival time, and nuclear DNA content of these cats were compared with 65 more common invasive mammary carcinomas (other feline mammary carcinoma [FMC]) of nonspecified type. IMC was associated with larger tumor size, higher histologic grade (P < .0001), deeper muscle invasion (P = .004), and more frequent lymphovascular invasion and nodal metastases (P = .009 and P = .001, respectively) than other FMCs. The aneuploid pattern was more frequent in IMC lesions. IMCs were also associated with lower survival rates. In summary, all cases of feline IMC were associated with clinicopathologic features of high biologic aggressiveness and should be classified as independent histologic types of FMC.


Toxicon | 2011

Ptaquiloside-induced, B-cell lymphoproliferative and early-stage urothelial lesions in mice

Rui M. Gil da Costa; Paula A. Oliveira; Manuel Vilanova; Margarida Bastos; Célia Lopes; Carlos Lopes

Bracken (Pteridium aquilinum) has long been known to cause cancer in farm and laboratory animals. Ptaquiloside, a norsesquiterpene glycoside found in bracken, is considered its main carcinogenic toxin and is capable of inducing tumours in a variety of organ systems, but especially in the urinary bladder, depending on the animal species, the administration route employed and the duration of exposure. In the present study, 12 male CD-1 mice were intraperitoneally administered with 0.5 mg ptaquiloside weekly for 15 weeks, followed by 15 weeks without any treatment. Twelve animals used as controls were administered the vehicle solution (phosphate buffered saline). Two exposed animals died during the experimental work. On necropsy, blood and tissue samples (brain, eyes, thymus, heart, lungs, liver, digestive system, spleen, bladder, kidney, adrenal gland, urinary bladder, sexual accessory glands, testes, muscle, skin and femur) were collected for histological analysis. Leukograms were prepared from blood smears and total WBC counts obtained with a Neubauer chamber. Flow cytometry was used to assess blood T-(CD3(+)) and B-(CD19(+))-lymphocytes, medullary granulocytic (CD11b(+)/Ly-6G(-), CD11b(+)/Ly-6G(+)) and lymphocytic (CD19(+)/IgM(-), CD19+/IgM(+)) populations and thymic lymphoid (CD4(+), CD8(+), CD4(+)/CD8(+)) populations. Lymphoproliferative lesions were analysed immunohistochemically using antibodies against CD45R and CD3. All of the 10 surviving mice developed a lymphoproliferative malignancy. Lymphoproliferative disease was characterized by multifocal B-(CD45(+)/CD3(-))-lymphocytic renal (10/10 animals) and hepatic (2/10 animals) invasion, splenic white pulp hyperplasia (10/10) together with a significant increase in circulating B-(CD19(+))-lymphocytes and the appearance of circulating dysplastic lymphoid cells. Eight out of 10 ptaquiloside-exposed animals developed urothelial dysplasia (six low-grade dysplasia and two high-grade dysplasia). No lesions were detected in control mice. These results show that ptaquiloside is capable of inducing malignant transformation in mice and provide an in-depth characterisation of lymphoproliferative lesions. Furthermore, the urinary bladder is shown to be a target organ for this toxin in mice as well as in other animal species.


Environmental Toxicology | 2014

Ptaquiloside-induced early-stage urothelial lesions show increased cell proliferation and intact β-catenin and E-cadherin expression.

Rui M. Gil da Costa; Paula A. Oliveira; Margarida Bastos; Célia Lopes; Carlos Lopes

Bracken (Pteridium aquilinum) is a carcinogenic plant whose main toxin, ptaquiloside, causes cancer in farm and laboratory animals. Ptaquiloside contaminates underground waters as well as meat and milk from bracken‐grazing animals and is a suspected human carcinogen. A better understanding of the underlying mechanisms of carcinogenesis can be achieved by studying the early stages of this process. Unfortunately, most research on ptaquiloside has focused on the late, malignant, lesions, so the early changes of ptaquiloside‐induced carcinogenesis remain largely unknown. This study aims to characterize early‐stage ptaquiloside‐induced urinary bladder lesions both morphologically and immunohistochemically. 12 male CD‐1 mice were administered 0.5 mg ptaquiloside intraperitoneally, weekly, for 15 weeks, followed by 15 weeks without treatment. 12 control animals were administered saline. Bladders were tested immunohistochemically for antibodies against a cell proliferation marker (Ki‐67), and two cell adhesion markers (E‐cadherin and β‐catenin). Two exposed animals died during the work. Six ptaquiloside‐exposed mice developed low‐grade and two developed high grade urothelial dysplasia. No lesions were detected on control animals. Significantly, increased (p < 0.05) Ki‐67 labeling indices were found on dysplastic urothelium from ptaquiloside‐exposed mice, compared with controls. No differences were found concerning E‐cadherin and β‐catenin expression. Early‐stage ptaquiloside‐induced urothelial lesions show increased cell proliferation but there is no evidence for reduced intercellular adhesiveness, though this may be a later event in tumor progression.

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