Cintia Maria Monteiro de Araújo
University of São Paulo
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Publication
Featured researches published by Cintia Maria Monteiro de Araújo.
Journal of Dermatological Science | 2015
Bruno Cogliati; Mathieu Vinken; Tereza Cristina da Silva; Cintia Maria Monteiro de Araújo; Thiago Pinheiro Arrais Aloia; Lucas Martins Chaible; Claudia Madalena Cabrera Mori; M.L. Dagli
BACKGROUND Cellular channels composed of connexin 43 are known to act as key players in the life cycle of the skin and consequently to underlie skin repair. OBJECTIVE This study was specifically set up to investigate the suite of molecular mechanisms driven by connexin 43-based channels on wound healing. METHODS To this end, a battery of parameters, including re-epithelialization, neovascularization, collagen deposition and extracellular matrix remodeling, was monitored over time during experimentally induced skin repair in heterozygous connexin 43 knockout mice. RESULTS It was found that connexin 43 deficiency accelerates re-epithelialization and wound closure, increases proliferation and activation of dermal fibroblasts, and enhances the expression of extracellular matrix remodeling mediators. CONCLUSION These data substantiate the notion that connexin 43 may represent an interesting therapeutic target in dermal wound healing.
Food and Chemical Toxicology | 2016
Lucillia Rabelo de Oliveira Torres; Fernanda Carvalho de Santana; Francisco Leonardo Torres-Leal; Illana Louise Pereira de Melo; Luciana Tedesco Yoshime; Emidio M. Matos-Neto; Marília Seelaender; Cintia Maria Monteiro de Araújo; Bruno Cogliati; Jorge Mancini-Filho
Carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) is a potent hepatotoxin, capable of generating free radicals that lead to oxidative stress and the inflammation process. Pequi almond oil (PAO) has been reported to possess unsaturated fatty acid and antioxidant compounds related to beneficial effects on oxidation and inflammatory conditions. The present study was undertaken to evaluate the hepatoprotective effects of handmade and coldpressed PAO on CCl4-induced acute liver injury. The possible mechanisms underlying the effect on liver injury enzymes, histopathological parameters, lipid profile, lipid peroxidation, and antioxidant and detoxification defense systems, as well as inflammatory parameters, were determined. Rats treated with PAO (3 or 6 mL/kg) for 21 days before CCl4 induction (3 mL/kg, 70%) showed significantly decreased levels of alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase, milder hepatic lesions and higher levels of serum high-density lipoprotein compared to CCl4 group. Moreover, PAO enhanced antioxidant capacity by increasing hepatic glutathione peroxidase and glutathione reductase enzyme activities, as well as reducing circulating concentrations of leptin and inflammatory mediators such as interleukin-6, leukotrienes -4 and -5 and the tumor necrosis factor receptor. In summary, PAO, especially cold-pressed oil, attenuated the CCl4-induced alterations in serum and hepatic tissue in rats due to its antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2016
M. Maes; Mitchell R. McGill; Tereza Cristina da Silva; Chloé Abels; Margitta Lebofsky; Cintia Maria Monteiro de Araújo; Taynã Tiburcio; Isabel Veloso Alves Pereira; Joost Willebrords; Sara Crespo Yanguas; Anwar Farhood; Alain Beschin; Jo A. Van Ginderachter; M.L. Dagli; Hartmut Jaeschke; Bruno Cogliati; Mathieu Vinken
BACKGROUND AND AIMS Being goalkeepers of liver homeostasis, gap junctions are also involved in hepatotoxicity. However, their role in this process is ambiguous, as gap junctions can act as both targets and effectors of liver toxicity. This particularly holds true for drug-induced liver insults. In the present study, the involvement of connexin26, connexin32 and connexin43, the building blocks of liver gap junctions, was investigated in acetaminophen-induced hepatotoxicity. METHODS C57BL/6 mice were overdosed with 300mg/kg body weight acetaminophen followed by analysis of the expression and localization of connexins as well as monitoring of hepatic gap junction functionality. Furthermore, acetaminophen-induced liver injury was compared between mice genetically deficient in connexin43 and wild type littermates. Evaluation of the toxicological response was based on a set of clinically relevant parameters, including protein adduct formation, measurement of alanine aminotransferase activity, cytokines and glutathione. RESULTS It was found that gap junction communication deteriorates upon acetaminophen intoxication in wild type mice, which is associated with a switch in mRNA and protein production from connexin32 and connexin26 to connexin43. The upregulation of connexin43 expression is due, at least in part, to de novo production by hepatocytes. Connexin43-deficient animals tended to show increased liver cell death, inflammation and oxidative stress in comparison with wild type counterparts. CONCLUSION These results suggest that hepatic connexin43-based signaling may protect against acetaminophen-induced liver toxicity.
Toxicology Mechanisms and Methods | 2016
M. Maes; Mitchell R. McGill; Tereza Cristina da Silva; Margitta Lebofsky; Cintia Maria Monteiro de Araújo; Taynã Tiburcio; Isabel Veloso Alves Pereira; Joost Willebrords; Sara Crespo Yanguas; Anwar Farhood; M.L. Dagli; Hartmut Jaeschke; Bruno Cogliati; Mathieu Vinken
Abstract Connexin32 is the building block of hepatocellular gap junctions, which control direct intercellular communication and thereby act as goalkeepers of liver homeostasis. This study was set up to investigate whether connexin32 is involved in hepatotoxicity induced by the analgesic and antipyretic drug acetaminophen. To this end, whole body connexin32 knock-out mice were overdosed with acetaminophen followed by sampling at different time points within a 24-h time frame. Evaluation was done based upon a series of clinically and mechanistically relevant read-outs, including protein adduct formation, histopathological examination, measurement of alanine aminotransferase activity, cytokine production, levels of reduced and oxidized glutathione and hepatic protein amounts of proliferating cell nuclear antigen. In essence, it was found that genetic ablation of connexin32 has no influence on several key events in acetaminophen-induced hepatotoxicity, including cell death, inflammation or oxidative stress, yet it does affect production of protein adducts as well as proliferating cell nuclear antigen steady-state protein levels. This outcome is not in line with previous studies, which are contradicting on their own, as both amplification and alleviation of this toxicological process by connexin32 have been described. This could question the suitability of the currently available models and tools to investigate the role of connexin32 in acetaminophen-triggered hepatotoxicity.
Brazilian Journal of Veterinary Research and Animal Science | 2012
Roselaine Ponso; Douglas Emygdio de Faria; Ricardo de Albuquerque; Ibiara Correia de Lima Almeida Paz; Silvana Martinez Baraldi Artoni; Andrea Luciana Dos Santos; Gisele Saviani; Cintia Maria Monteiro de Araújo
Brazilian Journal of Veterinary Research and Animal Science | 2014
Gisele Saviani; Roselaine Ponso; Bruno Cogliati; Cintia Maria Monteiro de Araújo; José Manoel dos Santos; Arani Nanci Bonfim Mariano; Ricardo de Albuquerque
Revista de Educação Continuada em Medicina Veterinária e Zootecnia do CRMV-SP | 2016
Cintia Maria Monteiro de Araújo; Elizangela Anjos; Tereza Cristina da Silva; Taynã Tiburcio; Isabel Veloso; Bruno Cogliati
Revista de Educação Continuada em Medicina Veterinária e Zootecnia do CRMV-SP | 2016
Taynã Tiburcio; Joost Willebrods; Isabel Veloso Alves Pereira; Cintia Maria Monteiro de Araújo; Sara Yanguas Crespo; M. Maes; Tereza da Silva; M.L. Dagli; Mathieu Vinken; Bruno Cogliati
Revista de Educação Continuada em Medicina Veterinária e Zootecnia do CRMV-SP | 2015
Cintia Maria Monteiro de Araújo; Tereza Cristina da Silva; Mathieu Vinken; Bruno Cogliati
Archive | 2013
Gisele Saviani; Bruno Cogliati; Cintia Maria Monteiro de Araújo; Arani Nanci Bonfim