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Featured researches published by Cíntia Silva Santos.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2012

Pangenomic Study of Corynebacterium diphtheriae That Provides Insights into the Genomic Diversity of Pathogenic Isolates from Cases of Classical Diphtheria, Endocarditis, and Pneumonia

Eva Trost; Jochen Blom; Siomar de Castro Soares; I-Hsiu Huang; Arwa Al-Dilaimi; Jasmin Schröder; Sebastian Jaenicke; Fernanda Alves Dorella; Flávia Souza Rocha; Anderson Miyoshi; Vasco Azevedo; Maria Paula Cruz Schneider; Artur Silva; Thereza Cristina Ferreira Camello; Priscila Soares Sabbadini; Cíntia Silva Santos; Louisy Sanches dos Santos; Raphael Hirata; Ana Luiza Mattos-Guaraldi; Androulla Efstratiou; Michael P. Schmitt; Hung Ton-That; Andreas Tauch

Corynebacterium diphtheriae is one of the most prominent human pathogens and the causative agent of the communicable disease diphtheria. The genomes of 12 strains isolated from patients with classical diphtheria, endocarditis, and pneumonia were completely sequenced and annotated. Including the genome of C. diphtheriae NCTC 13129, we herewith present a comprehensive comparative analysis of 13 strains and the first characterization of the pangenome of the species C. diphtheriae. Comparative genomics showed extensive synteny and revealed a core genome consisting of 1,632 conserved genes. The pangenome currently comprises 4,786 protein-coding regions and increases at an average of 65 unique genes per newly sequenced strain. Analysis of prophages carrying the diphtheria toxin gene tox revealed that the toxoid vaccine producer C. diphtheriae Park-Williams no. 8 has been lysogenized by two copies of the ω(tox)(+) phage, whereas C. diphtheriae 31A harbors a hitherto-unknown tox(+) corynephage. DNA binding sites of the tox-controlling regulator DtxR were detected by genome-wide motif searches. Comparative content analysis showed that the DtxR regulons exhibit marked differences due to gene gain, gene loss, partial gene deletion, and DtxR binding site depletion. Most predicted pathogenicity islands of C. diphtheriae revealed characteristics of horizontal gene transfer. The majority of these islands encode subunits of adhesive pili, which can play important roles in adhesion of C. diphtheriae to different host tissues. All sequenced isolates contain at least two pilus gene clusters. It appears that variation in the distributed genome is a common strategy of C. diphtheriae to establish differences in host-pathogen interactions.


BMC Genomics | 2011

Comparative analysis of two complete Corynebacterium ulcerans genomes and detection of candidate virulence factors.

Eva Trost; Arwa Al-Dilaimi; Panagiotis Papavasiliou; Jessica Schneider; Andreas Burkovski; Siomar de Castro Soares; Sintia Almeida; Fernanda Alves Dorella; Anderson Miyoshi; Vasco Azevedo; Maria Paula Cruz Schneider; Artur Silva; Cíntia Silva Santos; Louisy Sanches dos Santos; Priscila Soares Sabbadini; Alexandre A.S.O. Dias; Raphael Hirata; Ana Luiza Mattos-Guaraldi; Andreas Tauch

BackgroundCorynebacterium ulcerans has been detected as a commensal in domestic and wild animals that may serve as reservoirs for zoonotic infections. During the last decade, the frequency and severity of human infections associated with C. ulcerans appear to be increasing in various countries. As the knowledge of genes contributing to the virulence of this bacterium was very limited, the complete genome sequences of two C. ulcerans strains detected in the metropolitan area of Rio de Janeiro were determined and characterized by comparative genomics: C. ulcerans 809 was initially isolated from an elderly woman with fatal pulmonary infection and C. ulcerans BR-AD22 was recovered from a nasal sample of an asymptomatic dog.ResultsThe circular chromosome of C. ulcerans 809 has a total size of 2,502,095 bp and encodes 2,182 predicted proteins, whereas the genome of C. ulcerans BR-AD22 is 104,279 bp larger and comprises 2,338 protein-coding regions. The minor difference in size of the two genomes is mainly caused by additional prophage-like elements in the C. ulcerans BR-AD22 chromosome. Both genomes show a highly similar order of orthologous coding regions; and both strains share a common set of 2,076 genes, demonstrating their very close relationship. A screening for prominent virulence factors revealed the presence of phospholipase D (Pld), neuraminidase H (NanH), endoglycosidase E (EndoE), and subunits of adhesive pili of the SpaDEF type that are encoded in both C. ulcerans genomes. The rbp gene coding for a putative ribosome-binding protein with striking structural similarity to Shiga-like toxins was additionally detected in the genome of the human isolate C. ulcerans 809.ConclusionsThe molecular data deduced from the complete genome sequences provides considerable knowledge of virulence factors in C. ulcerans that is increasingly recognized as an emerging pathogen. This bacterium is apparently equipped with a broad and varying set of virulence factors, including a novel type of a ribosome-binding protein. Whether the respective protein contributes to the severity of human infections (and a fatal outcome) remains to be elucidated by genetic experiments with defined bacterial mutants and host model systems.


Journal of Medical Microbiology | 2009

Corynebacterium diphtheriae as an emerging pathogen in nephrostomy catheter-related infection: evaluation of traits associated with bacterial virulence

Débora Leandro Rama Gomes; Carlos Alberto S Martins; Lúcia Maria Dias de Faria; Louisy Sanches dos Santos; Cíntia Silva Santos; Priscila Soares Sabbadini; Monica Cristina Souza; Gabriela B. Alves; Ana Cláudia de Paula Rosa; Prescilla Emy Nagao; Gabriela Andrade Pereira; Raphael Hirata; Ana Luiza Mattos-Guaraldi

Corynebacterium diphtheriae still represents a global medical challenge, particularly due to the significant number of individuals susceptible to diphtheria and the emergence of non-toxigenic strains as the causative agents of invasive infections. In this study, we characterized the clinical and microbiological features of what we believe to be the first case of C. diphtheriae infection of a percutaneous nephrostomy catheter insertion site in an elderly patient with a fatal bladder cancer. Moreover, we demonstrated the potential role of adherence, biofilm formation and fibrin deposition traits in C. diphtheriae from the catheter-related infection. Non-toxigenic C. diphtheriae isolated from the purulent discharge (named strain BR-CAT5003748) was identified by the API Coryne system (code 1 010 324) and a multiplex PCR for detection of dtxR and tox genes. Strain BR-CAT5003748 showed resistance to oxacillin, ceftazidime and ciprofloxacin. In experiments performed in vitro, the catheter isolate was classified as moderately hydrophobic and as moderately adherent to polystyrene surfaces. Glass provided a more effective surface for biofilm formation than polystyrene. Micro-organisms adhered to (>1.5 x 10(6) c.f.u.) and multiplied on surfaces of polyurethane catheters. Microcolony formation (a hallmark of biofilm formation) and amorphous accretions were observed by scanning electron microscopy on both external and luminal catheter surfaces. Micro-organisms yielded simultaneous expression of localized adherence-like and aggregative-like (LAL/AAL) adherence patterns to HEp-2 cells. Interestingly, the coagulase tube test resulted in the formation of a thin layer of fibrin embedded in rabbit plasma by the non-toxigenic BR-CAT5003748 strain. In conclusion, C. diphtheriae should be recognized as a potential cause of catheter-related infections in at-risk populations such as elderly and cancer patients. LAL/AAL strains may be associated with virulence traits that enable C. diphtheriae to effectively produce biofilms on catheter surfaces. Biofilm formation and fibrin deposition could have contributed to the persistence of C. diphtheriae at the infected insertion site and the obstruction of the nephrostomy catheter.


Revista De Saude Publica | 2011

Corynebacterium ulcerans diphtheria: an emerging zoonosis in Brazil and worldwide

Alexandre Alves de Souza de Oliveira Dias; Louisy Sanchez Santos; Priscila Soares Sabbadini; Cíntia Silva Santos; Feliciano Correa Silva Junior; Fátima Napoleão; Prescilla Emy Nagao; Maria Helena Simões Villas-Bôas; Raphael Hirata Junior; Ana Luiza de Mattos Guaraldi

The article is a literature review on the emergence of human infections caused by Corynebacterium ulcerans in many countries including Brazil. Articles in Medline/PubMed and SciELO databases published between 1926 and 2011 were reviewed, as well as articles and reports of the Brazilian Ministry of Health. It is presented a fast, cost-effective and easy to perform screening test for the presumptive diagnosis of C. ulcerans and C. diphtheriae infections in most Brazilian public and private laboratories. C. ulcerans spread in many countries and recent isolation of this pathogen in Rio de Janeiro, southeastern Brazil, is a warning to clinicians, veterinarians, and microbiologists on the occurrence of zoonotic diphtheria and C. ulcerans dissemination in urban and rural areas of Brazil and/or Latin America.O artigo revisa a literatura sobre a emergencia de infeccoes humanas causadas por Corynebacterium ulcerans em diversos paises, incluindo o Brasil. Foi realizada analise de artigos publicados entre 1926 e 2011 nas bases Medline/PubMed e SciELO, bem como artigos e informes do Ministerio da Saude. Apresenta-se um esquema de triagem, rapido, economico e de facil execucao, capaz de permitir a realizacao do diagnostico presuntivo de C. ulcerans e C. diphtheriae na maioria dos laboratorios brasileiros publicos e privados. A circulacao de C. ulcerans em varios paises, aliada aos recentes casos de isolamento do patogeno no Rio de Janeiro, e um alerta a clinicos, veterinarios e microbiologistas sobre a ocorrencia de difteria zoonotica e a circulacao do C. ulcerans em regioes urbanas e rurais do territorio nacional e/ou da America Latina.


Revista De Saude Publica | 2011

Difteria pelo Corynebacterium ulcerans: uma zoonose emergente no Brasil e no mundo

Alexandre Alves de Souza de Oliveira Dias; Louisy Sanchez Santos; Priscila Soares Sabbadini; Cíntia Silva Santos; Feliciano Correa Silva Junior; Fátima Napoleão; Prescilla Emy Nagao; Maria Helena Simões Villas-Bôas; Raphael Hirata Junior; Ana Luiza de Mattos Guaraldi

The article is a literature review on the emergence of human infections caused by Corynebacterium ulcerans in many countries including Brazil. Articles in Medline/PubMed and SciELO databases published between 1926 and 2011 were reviewed, as well as articles and reports of the Brazilian Ministry of Health. It is presented a fast, cost-effective and easy to perform screening test for the presumptive diagnosis of C. ulcerans and C. diphtheriae infections in most Brazilian public and private laboratories. C. ulcerans spread in many countries and recent isolation of this pathogen in Rio de Janeiro, southeastern Brazil, is a warning to clinicians, veterinarians, and microbiologists on the occurrence of zoonotic diphtheria and C. ulcerans dissemination in urban and rural areas of Brazil and/or Latin America.O artigo revisa a literatura sobre a emergencia de infeccoes humanas causadas por Corynebacterium ulcerans em diversos paises, incluindo o Brasil. Foi realizada analise de artigos publicados entre 1926 e 2011 nas bases Medline/PubMed e SciELO, bem como artigos e informes do Ministerio da Saude. Apresenta-se um esquema de triagem, rapido, economico e de facil execucao, capaz de permitir a realizacao do diagnostico presuntivo de C. ulcerans e C. diphtheriae na maioria dos laboratorios brasileiros publicos e privados. A circulacao de C. ulcerans em varios paises, aliada aos recentes casos de isolamento do patogeno no Rio de Janeiro, e um alerta a clinicos, veterinarios e microbiologistas sobre a ocorrencia de difteria zoonotica e a circulacao do C. ulcerans em regioes urbanas e rurais do territorio nacional e/ou da America Latina.


Veterinary Microbiology | 2011

Strain-dependent arthritogenic potential of the zoonotic pathogen Corynebacterium ulcerans.

Alexandre Alves de Souza de Oliveira Dias; F.C. Silva; Louisy Sanches dos Santos; M.M. Ribeiro-Carvalho; Priscila Soares Sabbadini; Cíntia Silva Santos; A.A. Filardy; A. Myioshi; Vasco Azevedo; Raphael Hirata; M.H.S. Villas-Bôas; Ana Luiza Mattos-Guaraldi

During the last decade the majority of diphtheria cases in Europe had Corynebacterium ulcerans as the etiologic agent with dogs and cats as the reservoir hosts. However, little has been documented about the virulence factors of this zoonotic pathogen. To set up an in vivo experimental C. ulcerans infection model, conventional Swiss Webster mice were intravenously infected with different doses (from 1 × 10(7) to 5 × 10(9) bacteria per mouse) of C. ulcerans strains, namely 809 (from human lower respiratory tract), BR-AD22 (from asymptomatic dog nares) and CDC-KC279. Mortality rates were demonstrated by LD(50) values ranging from 1.9 × 10(8) to 1.3 × 10(9). Viable bacteria were recovered from blood, kidneys, liver, spleen and joints. For CDC-KC279 and 809 strains (2 × 10(8)mL(-1)) approximately 85% and 72% of animals with articular lesions were observed, respectively; BR-AD22-infected mice showed no signs of arthritis. CDC-KC279 and 809 strains exhibited higher arthritogenic potential when compared to the homologous toxigenic (ATCC27012) and non-toxigenic (ATCC27010) strains of Corynebacterium diphtheriae. A high number of affected joints and arthritis index in addition to the histopathological features, including subcutaneous edema, inflammatory infiltrate, damage to bone tissue and synoviocyte hypertrophy, indicated a strain-dependent ability of C. ulcerans strains to cause severe polyarthritis. A correlation between the arthritis index and systemic levels of IL-6 and TNF-α was observed for C. ulcerans strains, with the exception of the non-arthritogenic BR-AD22 strain. In conclusion, C. ulcerans revealed a strain-dependent arthritogenic potential independent of DNAse, PLD and diphtheria toxin production.


Epidemiology and Infection | 2015

Diphtheria outbreak in Maranhão, Brazil: microbiological, clinical and epidemiological aspects

Louisy Sanches dos Santos; L. O. Sant'anna; Juliana Nunes Ramos; Elisa Martins Ladeira; R. Stavracakis-Peixoto; L. L. G. Borges; Cíntia Silva Santos; F. Napoleão; Thereza Cristina Ferreira Camello; G. A. Pereira; Raphael Hirata; Verônica Viana Vieira; L. M. S. S. Cosme; Priscila Soares Sabbadini; Ana Luiza Mattos-Guaraldi

We describe microbiological, clinical and epidemiological aspects of a diphtheria outbreak that occurred in Maranhão, Brazil. The majority of the 27 confirmed cases occurred in partially (n = 16) or completely (n = 10) immunized children (n = 26). Clinical signs and characteristic symptoms of diphtheria such as cervical lymphadenopathy and pseudomembrane formation were absent in 48% and 7% of the cases, respectively. Complications such as paralysis of lower limbs were observed. Three cases resulted in death, two of them in completely immunized children. Microbiological analysis identified the isolates as Corynebacterium diphtheriae biovar intermedius with a predominant PFGE type. Most of them were toxigenic and some showed a decrease in penicillin G susceptibility. In conclusion, diphtheria remains endemic in Brazil. Health professionals need to be aware of the possibility of atypical cases of C. diphtheriae infection, including pharyngitis without pseudomembrane formation.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2010

Fibrinogen binds to nontoxigenic and toxigenic Corynebacterium diphtheriae strains

Priscila Soares Sabbadini; Marcia Rocha Novais Genovez; Cecília Ferreira da Silva; Thelma Lúcia Novaes Adelino; Cíntia Silva Santos; Gabriela Andrade Pereira; Prescilla Emy Nagao; Alexandre Alves de Souza de Oliveira Dias; Ana Luiza Mattos-Guaraldi; Raphael Hirata Junior

The production of fibrinous exudates may play an important role in determining the outcome of bacterial infection. Although pseudomembrane formation is a characteristic feature of diphtheria, little is known about the fibrinogen (Fbn)-binding properties of Corynebacterium diphtheriae strains and the influence of the gene that codes for diphtheria toxin (tox gene) in this process. In this study we demonstrated the ability of C. diphtheriae strains to bind to Fbn and to convert Fbn to fibrin. Bacterial interaction with rabbit plasma was evaluated by both slide and tube tests. Interaction of microorganisms with human Fbn was evaluated by both enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated (FITC) Fbn binding assays. Nontoxigenic and toxigenic strains formed bacterial aggregates in the presence of plasma in the slide tests. The ability to convert Fbn to a loose web of fibrin in the plasma solution in the tube tests appeared to be a common characteristic of the species, including strains that do not carry the tox gene. Fbn binding to C. diphtheriae strains occurred at varying intensities, as demonstrated by the FITC-Fbn and ELISA binding assays. Our data suggest that the capacity to bind to Fbn and to convert Fbn to fibrin may play a role in pseudomembrane formation and act as virulence determinants of both nontoxigenic and toxigenic strains.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2013

Multiplex polymerase chain reaction to identify and determine the toxigenicity of Corynebacterium spp with zoonotic potential and an overview of human and animal infections

Luciene de Fátima Costa Torres; Dayana Ribeiro; Raphael Hirata; Luis G. C. Pacheco; Monica Cristina Souza; Louisy Sanches dos Santos; Cíntia Silva Santos; Mohammad Salah; Mateus Matiuzzi da Costa; Márcio Garcia Ribeiro; Salah A. Selim; Vasco Azevedo; Ana Luiza Mattos-Guaraldi

Corynebacterium diphtheriae, Corynebacterium ulcerans and Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis constitute a group of potentially toxigenic microorganisms that are related to different infectious processes in animal and human hosts. Currently, there is a lack of information on the prevalence of disease caused by these pathogens, which is partially due to a reduction in the frequency of routine laboratory testing. In this study, a multiplex polymerase chain reaction (mPCR) assay that can simultaneously identify and determine the toxigenicity of these corynebacterial species with zoonotic potential was developed. This assay uses five primer pairs targeting the following genes: rpoB (Corynebacterium spp), 16S rRNA (C. ulcerans and C. pseudotuberculosis), pld (C. pseudotuberculosis), dtxR (C. diphtheriae) and tox [diphtheria toxin (DT) ]. In addition to describing this assay, we review the literature regarding the diseases caused by these pathogens. Of the 213 coryneform strains tested, the mPCR results for all toxigenic and non-toxigenic strains of C . diphtheriae, C. ulcerans and C. pseudotuberculosis were in 100% agreement with the results of standard biochemical tests and PCR-DT. As an alternative to conventional methods, due to its advantages of specificity and speed, the mPCR assay used in this study may successfully be applied for the diagnosis of human and/or animal diseases caused by potentially toxigenic corynebacterial species.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2015

Corynebacterium diphtheriae putative tellurite-resistance protein (CDCE8392_0813) contributes to the intracellular survival in human epithelial cells and lethality of Caenorhabditis elegans

Louisy Sanches dos Santos; Camila Azevedo Antunes; Cíntia Silva Santos; José Augusto Adler Pereira; Priscila Soares Sabbadini; Maria das Graças de Luna; Vasco Azevedo; Raphael Hirata Junior; Andreas Burkovski; L.M.B.O Asad; Ana Luiza Mattos-Guaraldi

Corynebacterium diphtheriae, the aetiologic agent of diphtheria, also represents a global medical challenge because of the existence of invasive strains as causative agents of systemic infections. Although tellurite (TeO32-) is toxic to most microorganisms, TeO32--resistant bacteria, including C. diphtheriae, exist in nature. The presence of TeO32--resistance (TeR) determinants in pathogenic bacteria might provide selective advantages in the natural environment. In the present study, we investigated the role of the putative TeR determinant (CDCE8392_813gene) in the virulence attributes of diphtheria bacilli. The disruption of CDCE8392_0813 gene expression in the LDCIC-L1 mutant increased susceptibility to TeO32- and reactive oxygen species (hydrogen peroxide), but not to other antimicrobial agents. The LDCIC-L1 mutant also showed a decrease in both the lethality of Caenorhabditis elegans and the survival inside of human epithelial cells compared to wild-type strain. Conversely, the haemagglutinating activity and adherence to and formation of biofilms on different abiotic surfaces were not regulated through the CDCE8392_0813 gene. In conclusion, the CDCE8392_813 gene contributes to the TeR and pathogenic potential of C. diphtheriae.

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Raphael Hirata

Rio de Janeiro State University

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Vasco Azevedo

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Prescilla Emy Nagao

Rio de Janeiro State University

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Raphael Hirata Junior

Rio de Janeiro State University

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Fátima Napoleão

Rio de Janeiro State University

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