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Featured researches published by Cláudio Tadeu Daniel-Ribeiro.


Malaria Journal | 2010

Malaria in Brazil: an overview

Joseli Oliveira-Ferreira; Marcus Vg Lacerda; Patrícia Brasil; José Lb Ladislau; Pedro Luiz Tauil; Cláudio Tadeu Daniel-Ribeiro

Malaria is still a major public health problem in Brazil, with approximately 306 000 registered cases in 2009, but it is estimated that in the early 1940s, around six million cases of malaria occurred each year. As a result of the fight against the disease, the number of malaria cases decreased over the years and the smallest numbers of cases to-date were recorded in the 1960s. From the mid-1960s onwards, Brazil underwent a rapid and disorganized settlement process in the Amazon and this migratory movement led to a progressive increase in the number of reported cases. Although the main mosquito vector (Anopheles darlingi) is present in about 80% of the country, currently the incidence of malaria in Brazil is almost exclusively (99,8% of the cases) restricted to the region of the Amazon Basin, where a number of combined factors favors disease transmission and impair the use of standard control procedures. Plasmodium vivax accounts for 83,7% of registered cases, while Plasmodium falciparum is responsible for 16,3% and Plasmodium malariae is seldom observed. Although vivax malaria is thought to cause little mortality, compared to falciparum malaria, it accounts for much of the morbidity and for huge burdens on the prosperity of endemic communities. However, in the last few years a pattern of unusual clinical complications with fatal cases associated with P. vivax have been reported in Brazil and this is a matter of concern for Brazilian malariologists. In addition, the emergence of P. vivax strains resistant to chloroquine in some reports needs to be further investigated. In contrast, asymptomatic infection by P. falciparum and P. vivax has been detected in epidemiological studies in the states of Rondonia and Amazonas, indicating probably a pattern of clinical immunity in both autochthonous and migrant populations. Seropidemiological studies investigating the type of immune responses elicited in naturally-exposed populations to several malaria vaccine candidates in Brazilian populations have also been providing important information on whether immune responses specific to these antigens are generated in natural infections and their immunogenic potential as vaccine candidates. The present difficulties in reducing economic and social risk factors that determine the incidence of malaria in the Amazon Region render impracticable its elimination in the region. As a result, a malaria-integrated control effort - as a joint action on the part of the government and the population - directed towards the elimination or reduction of the risks of death or illness, is the direction adopted by the Brazilian government in the fight against the disease.


Experimental Parasitology | 2008

Plasmodium falciparum: erythrocytic stages die by autophagic-like cell death under drug pressure.

Paulo Renato Rivas Totino; Cláudio Tadeu Daniel-Ribeiro; Suzana Corte-Real; Maria de Fátima Ferreira-da-Cruz

It has been reported that an apoptotic cell death process can occur with protozoans, but no consensus on Plasmodium susceptibility to apoptosis was reached till now. Thus, we evaluated if Plasmodium falciparum blood forms undergo apoptosis after in vitro pressure with chloroquine, S-nitroso-N-acetyl-penicillamine (SNAP) or staurosporine. Inhibition of parasite growth and loss of viability were observed in treated cultures by both light microscopy and flow cytometry. When DNA fragmentation was verified, only a small number of TUNEL-positive parasites was detected in treated cultures and pretreatment of parasite with a general caspase inhibitor was not able to prevent parasite death. Considering the lack of apoptotic characteristics and the observation of parasites with cytoplasmatic vacuolization by electron microscopy, we conclude that P. falciparum parasites under chloroquine, SNAP or staurosporine pressures do not die by apoptosis but by a process similar to autophagy. The autophagic pathway could be explored as an alternative target for the development of new antimalarial drugs.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2014

Malaria in Brazil: what happens outside the Amazonian endemic region

Anielle de Pina-Costa; Patrícia Brasil; Silvia Maria Di Santi; Mariana Pereira de Araujo; Martha Cecilia Suárez-Mutis; Ana Carolina Faria e Silva Santelli; Joseli Oliveira-Ferreira; Ricardo Lourenço-de-Oliveira; Cláudio Tadeu Daniel-Ribeiro

Brazil, a country of continental proportions, presents three profiles of malaria transmission. The first and most important numerically, occurs inside the Amazon. The Amazon accounts for approximately 60% of the nation’s territory and approximately 13% of the Brazilian population. This region hosts 99.5% of the nation’s malaria cases, which are predominantly caused by Plasmodium vivax (i.e., 82% of cases in 2013). The second involves imported malaria, which corresponds to malaria cases acquired outside the region where the individuals live or the diagnosis was made. These cases are imported from endemic regions of Brazil (i.e., the Amazon) or from other countries in South and Central America, Africa and Asia. Imported malaria comprised 89% of the cases found outside the area of active transmission in Brazil in 2013. These cases highlight an important question with respect to both therapeutic and epidemiological issues because patients, especially those with falciparum malaria, arriving in a region where the health professionals may not have experience with the clinical manifestations of malaria and its diagnosis could suffer dramatic consequences associated with a potential delay in treatment. Additionally, because the Anopheles vectors exist in most of the country, even a single case of malaria, if not diagnosed and treated immediately, may result in introduced cases, causing outbreaks and even introducing or reintroducing the disease to a non-endemic, receptive region. Cases introduced outside the Amazon usually occur in areas in which malaria was formerly endemic and are transmitted by competent vectors belonging to the subgenus Nyssorhynchus (i.e., Anopheles darlingi, Anopheles aquasalis and species of the Albitarsis complex). The third type of transmission accounts for only 0.05% of all cases and is caused by autochthonous malaria in the Atlantic Forest, located primarily along the southeastern Atlantic Coast. They are caused by parasites that seem to be (or to be very close to) P. vivax and, in a less extent, by Plasmodium malariae and it is transmitted by the bromeliad mosquito Anopheles (Kerteszia) cruzii. This paper deals mainly with the two profiles of malaria found outside the Amazon: the imported and ensuing introduced cases and the autochthonous cases. We also provide an update regarding the situation in Brazil and the Brazilian endemic Amazon.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2004

Malaria during pregnancy in a reference centre from the Brazilian Amazon: unexpected increase in the frequency of Plasmodium falciparum infections

Flor Ernestina Martínez-Espinosa; Cláudio Tadeu Daniel-Ribeiro; Wilson Duarte Alecrim

Malaria remains globally the most important parasitic disease of man. Data on its deleterious effects during pregnancy have been extensively documented in hyperendemic, holoendemic, and mesoendemic areas from Africa and Asia where Plasmodium falciparum is responsible for almost all infections. However, knowledge about malaria during pregnancy in areas where transmission is unstable and P. vivax is the most prevalent species, such as the Brazilian Amazon, is scarce. Here, we report a preliminary cross sectional descriptive study, carried out at the Fundação de Medicina Tropical do Amazonas, a reference centre for diagnosis and treatment of tropical diseases in the west-Amazon (Manaus, Brazil). A total of 1699 febrile childbearing age women had positive thick blood smears to Plasmodium species, between January and November 1997: 1401 (82.5%) were positive for P. vivax, 286 (16.8%) for P. falciparum and 12 (0.07%) carried mixed infections. From the malarious patients, 195 were pregnant. The ratio of P. falciparum to P. vivax infections in the group of non-pregnant infected women was 1:5.6 while it was 1:2.3 in that of pregnant infected ones. Similar rates or even proportionally more vivax infections during pregnancy were expected to occur, in function of the contraindication of primaquine with the resulting increased P. vivax relapse rates. Such an observation suggests that the mechanism of resistance/susceptibility to infection and/or malaria pathogenesis in pregnant women may differ according to Plasmodium species and that the extensively described increase in the frequencies of malaria infection during pregnancy may be specifically due to P. falciparum infection.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2008

Similar Cytokine Responses and Degrees of Anemia in Patients with Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax Infections in the Brazilian Amazon Region

Andréa Aparecida Morais Fernandes; Leonardo José de Moura Carvalho; Graziela Maria Zanini; Ana Maria Ventura; José Maria de Souza; Paulo Marcelo Cotias; Isaac Lima Silva-Filho; Cláudio Tadeu Daniel-Ribeiro

ABSTRACT The mechanisms of malarial anemia induction are poorly understood, but cytokines and autoantibodies are considered to play important roles. This work aimed at evaluating the degree of anemia and the plasmatic profile of the cytokines tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), gamma interferon (IFN-γ), interleukin-12 (IL-12), migration inhibitory factor (MIF), and IL-10 and the monocyte chemotactic protein-1 (MCP-1) chemokine, as well as evaluating the presence of antibodies directed to components of the normal erythrocyte membrane and to cardiolipin in individuals with malaria from the Brazilian Amazon. No difference was observed in the frequency of anemia between patients infected by Plasmodium vivax and those infected by Plasmodium falciparum, and there was no relationship between the levels of parasitemia and the manifestations of anemia in P. vivax and P. falciparum patients. Significant increases in the concentrations of TNF-α, IFN-γ, MIF, and MCP-1 were observed in patients with P. falciparum and P. vivax malaria, whereas the concentrations of IL-10 was increased only in patients with P. vivax infection. Higher concentrations of IL-12 and IL-10 were observed in the P. falciparum anemic patients, while for TNF-α this profile was observed in the nonanemic ones. P. vivax-infected and P. falciparum-infected patients with positive immunoglobulin M (IgM) or IgM and IgG responses, respectively, against blood-stage forms of the parasites had significantly lower hemoglobin levels than did those with negative responses. There was no correlation between the presence of anti-erythrocyte and anti-cardiolipin antibodies and the presence or intensity of the anemia. Our data suggest that in areas of low endemicity and unstable transmission of malaria, P. vivax and P. falciparum infections present similar characteristics in terms of the induction of anemia and cytokine responses.


Scandinavian Journal of Immunology | 2004

Immunization of Saimiri sciureus Monkeys with Plasmodium falciparum Merozoite Surface Protein‐3 and Glutamate‐Rich Protein Suggests that Protection is Related to Antibody Levels

Leonardo J. M. Carvalho; S. G. Oliveira; M. Theisen; F. A. Alves; M. C. R. Andrade; Graziela Maria Zanini; M. C. O. Brígido; C. Oeuvray; M. M. Póvoa; J. A. P. C. Muniz; Pierre Druilhe; Cláudio Tadeu Daniel-Ribeiro

The immunogenicity and protective efficacy of various antigen‐adjuvant formulations derived either from the merozoite‐surface protein‐3 (MSP‐3) or the glutamate‐rich protein (GLURP) of Plasmodium falciparum were evaluated in Saimiri sciureus monkeys. These proteins were selected for immunogenicity studies based primarily on their capacity of inducing an antibody‐dependent cellular inhibition effect on parasite growth. Some of the S. sciureus monkeys immunized with MSP‐3212−380‐AS02 or GLURP27−500‐alum were able to fully or partially control parasitaemia upon an experimental P. falciparum [Falciparum Uganda Palo Alto (FUP‐SP) strain] blood‐stage infection, and this protection was related to the prechallenge antibody titres induced. The data are indicative that MSP‐3 and GLURP can induce protective immunity against an experimental P. falciparum infection using adjuvants that are acceptable for human use and this should trigger further studies with those new antigens.


Malaria Journal | 2007

Germinal center architecture disturbance during Plasmodium berghei ANKA infection in CBA mice

Leonardo J. M. Carvalho; Maria de Fátima Ferreira-da-Cruz; Cláudio Tadeu Daniel-Ribeiro; Marcelo Pelajo-Machado; Henrique Leonel Lenzi

BackgroundImmune responses to malaria blood stage infection are in general defective, with the need for long-term exposure to the parasite to achieve immunity, and with the development of immunopathology states such as cerebral malaria in many cases. One of the potential reasons for the difficulty in developing protective immunity is the poor development of memory responses. In this paper, the potential association of cellular reactivity in lymphoid organs (spleen, lymph nodes and Peyers patches) with immunity and pathology was evaluated during Plasmodium berghei ANKA infection in CBA mice.MethodsCBA mice were infected with 1 × 106P. berghei ANKA-parasitized erythrocytes and killed on days 3, 6–8 and 10 of infection. The spleen, lymph nodes and Peyers patches were collected, fixed in Carsons formalin, cut in 5 μm sections, mounted in glass slides, stained with Lennerts Giemsa and haematoxylin-eosin and analysed with bright-field microscopy.ResultsEarly (day 3) strong activation of T cells in secondary lymphoid organs was observed and, on days 6–8 of infection, there was overwhelming activation of B cells, with loss of conventional germinal center architecture, intense centroblast activation, proliferation and apoptosis but little differentiation to centrocytes. In the spleen, the marginal zone disappeared and the limits between the disorganized germinal center and the red pulp were blurred. Intense plasmacytogenesis was observed in the T cell zone.ConclusionThe observed alterations, especially the germinal center architecture disturbance (GCAD) with poor centrocyte differentiation, suggest that B cell responses during P. berghei ANKA infection in mice are defective, with potential impact on B cell memory responses.


International Journal of Experimental Pathology | 2009

Characterization of cerebral malaria in the outbred Swiss Webster mouse infected by Plasmodium berghei ANKA

Yuri C. Martins; Mary Jane Smith; Marcelo Pelajo-Machado; Guilherme Loureiro Werneck; Henrique Leonel Lenzi; Cláudio Tadeu Daniel-Ribeiro; Leonardo José de Moura Carvalho

Plasmodium berghei ANKA (PbA) infection in susceptible inbred mouse strains is the most commonly used experimental model to study pathogenesis of cerebral malaria (CM). Indeed, many concepts on mechanisms related to this complication have arisen from works using this model. Although inbred strains present several advantages and are indicated for most studies, the use of outbred models can show unique usefulness in a number of approaches such as fine post‐quantitative trait loci mapping and discovery of genes relevant to CM susceptibility or resistance, as well as pharmacological and vaccine studies. Here we describe the features of PbA infection and CM incidence, and characterize the associated multiorgan pathology in the outbred Swiss Webster mouse. This model showed a sizeable (62.7%) and reproducible incidence of CM demonstrated by clinical signs and histopathological changes in brain (microhaemorrhages, oedema and vessel plugging by mononuclear cells). Major pathological changes were also observed in lungs, liver, thymus and spleen, analogous to those observed in inbred strains. Parasitaemia levels were associated with the risk of CM development, the risk being significantly higher in mice showing higher values of parasitaemia on days 6–7 of infection. This outbred CM model is then suitable for genetic, vaccine and drug studies targeting this malaria complication.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2005

Immunization of Saimiri sciureus Monkeys with a Recombinant Hybrid Protein Derived from the Plasmodium falciparum Antigen Glutamate-Rich Protein and Merozoite Surface Protein 3 Can Induce Partial Protection with Freund and Montanide ISA720 Adjuvants

Leonardo J. M. Carvalho; Francisco A. Alves; Cesare Bianco; Salma G. Oliveira; Graziela Maria Zanini; Soe Soe; Pierre Druilhe; Michael Theisen; José Augusto Pereira Carneiro Muniz; Cláudio Tadeu Daniel-Ribeiro

ABSTRACT The immunogenicity and efficacy of a hybrid recombinant protein derived from the N-terminal end of the glutamate-rich protein (GLURP) and the C-terminal portion of the merozoite surface protein 3 (MSP3) of Plasmodium falciparum was evaluated in Saimiri sciureus monkeys. The GLURP/MSP3 hybrid protein, expressed in Lactococcus lactis, was administered in association with alum, Montanide ISA720, or complete or incomplete Freund adjuvant (CFA/IFA) in groups of five animals each. The three formulations were shown to be immunogenic, but the one with alum was shown to be weak compared to the other two, particularly CFA/IFA, which provided very high antibody titers (enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay titers of >3,000,000 and immunofluorescence antibody test titers of 6,400). After a challenge infection with P. falciparum FUP strain, all five monkeys from the GLURP/MSP3-alum group showed a rapid increase in parasitemia, reaching 10% and were treated early. The two monkeys with the highest antibody titers in group GLURP/MSP3-Montanide ISA720 had a delay in the course of parasitemia and were treated late due to a low hematocrit. In the GLURP/MSP3-CFA/IFA group, parasitemia remained below this threshold in four of the five animals and, after it reached a peak, parasitemia started to decrease and monkeys were treated late. When all animals were grouped according to the outcome, a statistically significant association between high antibody titers and partial protection was observed. The challenge infection boosted the antibody titers, and the importance of this event for vaccine efficacy in areas where this parasite is endemic is discussed. In conclusion, these data suggest that GLURP and MSP3 can induce protection against malaria infection if antibodies are induced at properly high titers.


Malaria Journal | 2010

Apoptosis of non-parasitized red blood cells in malaria: a putative mechanism involved in the pathogenesis of anaemia.

Paulo Rr Totino; Aline das Dores Magalhães; Luciene Aquino Silva; Dalma Maria Banic; Cláudio Tadeu Daniel-Ribeiro; Maria de Fátima Ferreira-da-Cruz

BackgroundSevere anaemia is a common complication of Plasmodium falciparum malaria in hyperendemic regions. Premature elimination of non-parasitized red blood cells (nRBC) has been considered as one mechanism involved in the genesis of severe malaria anaemia. It has been reported that apoptosis can occur in RBC and, consequently, this cell death process could contribute to anaemia. This study was performed to evaluate the susceptibility of nRBC to apoptosis in a malaria anaemia murine model.MethodsBalb/c mice were intraperitonially inoculated with 1 × 106P. yoelii 17XL parasitized RBC (pRBC) and, then, parasitaemia and anaemia were monitored. Apoptosis in both pRBC and nRBC was assessed during early and late phases of infection by flow cytometry using Syto 16 and annexin V-PE double staining and forward scatter measurement.ResultsAs expected, experimental infection of Balb/c mice with Plasmodium yoelii 17XL parasites was characterized by progressive increase of parasitaemia and acute anaemia, leading to death. Flow cytometry analysis showed that a number of pRBC was in the apoptotic process. It was noteworthy that the increase of nRBC apoptosis levels occurred in the late phase of infection, when anaemia degree was notably accentuated, while no significant alteration was observed in the early phase.ConclusionThe increased levels of nRBC apoptosis herein firstly reported, in malaria infection could represent a putative mechanism worsening the severity of malarial anaemia.

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Mariano Gustavo Zalis

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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