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Dive into the research topics where Dulce Fontoura is active.

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Featured researches published by Dulce Fontoura.


Circulation-heart Failure | 2013

Myocardial Titin Hypophosphorylation Importantly Contributes to Heart Failure With Preserved Ejection Fraction in a Rat Metabolic Risk Model

Nazha Hamdani; Constantijn Franssen; André P. Lourenço; Inês Falcão-Pires; Dulce Fontoura; Sara Leite; Luisa Plettig; Begoña López; C. Ottenheijm; Peter Moritz Becher; Arantxa González; Carsten Tschöpe; Javier Díez; Wolfgang A. Linke; Adelino F. Leite-Moreira; Walter J. Paulus

Background—Obesity and diabetes mellitus are important metabolic risk factors and frequent comorbidities in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. They contribute to myocardial diastolic dysfunction (DD) through collagen deposition or titin modification. The relative importance for myocardial DD of collagen deposition and titin modification was investigated in obese, diabetic ZSF1 rats after heart failure with preserved ejection fraction development at 20 weeks. Methods and Results—Four groups of rats (Wistar-Kyoto, n=11; lean ZSF1, n=11; obese ZSF1, n=11, and obese ZSF1 with high-fat diet, n=11) were followed up for 20 weeks with repeat metabolic, renal, and echocardiographic evaluations and hemodynamically assessed at euthanization. Myocardial collagen, collagen cross-linking, titin isoforms, and phosphorylation were also determined. Resting tension (Fpassive)–sarcomere length relations were obtained in small muscle strips before and after KCl–KI treatment, which unanchors titin and allows contributions of titin and extracellular matrix to Fpassive to be discerned. At 20 weeks, the lean ZSF1 group was hypertensive, whereas both obese ZSF1 groups were hypertensive and diabetic. Only the obese ZSF1 groups had developed heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, which was evident from increased lung weight, preserved left ventricular ejection fraction, and left ventricular DD. The underlying myocardial DD was obvious from high muscle strip stiffness, which was largely (±80%) attributable to titin hypophosphorylation. The latter occurred specifically at the S3991 site of the elastic N2Bus segment and at the S12884 site of the PEVK segment. Conclusions—Obese ZSF1 rats developed heart failure with preserved ejection fraction during a 20-week time span. Titin hypophosphorylation importantly contributed to the underlying myocardial DD.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2012

Current pathophysiological concepts and management of pulmonary hypertension

André P. Lourenço; Dulce Fontoura; Tiago Henriques-Coelho; Adelino F. Leite-Moreira

Pulmonary hypertension (PH), increasingly recognized as a major health burden, remains underdiagnosed due mainly to the unspecific symptoms. Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) has been extensively investigated. Pathophysiological knowledge derives mostly from experimental models. Paradoxically, common non-PAH PH forms remain largely unexplored. Drugs targeting lung vascular tonus became available during the last two decades, notwithstanding the disease progresses in many patients. The aim of this review is to summarize recent advances in epidemiology, pathophysiology and management with particular focus on associated myocardial and systemic compromise and experimental therapeutic possibilities. PAH, currently viewed as a panvasculopathy, is due to a crosstalk between endothelial and smooth muscle cells, inflammatory activation and altered subcellular pathways. Cardiac cachexia and right ventricular compromise are fundamental determinants of PH prognosis. Combined vasodilator therapy is already mainstay for refractory cases, but drugs directed at these new pathophysiological pathways may constitute a significant advance.


Journal of Nutrition | 2011

A Western-Type Diet Attenuates Pulmonary Hypertension with Heart Failure and Cardiac Cachexia in Rats

André P. Lourenço; Francisco Vasques-Nóvoa; Dulce Fontoura; Carmen Brás-Silva; Roberto Roncon-Albuquerque; Adelino F. Leite-Moreira

Western-type diets (WD) constitute risk factors for disease but may have distinct effects in heart failure (HF) with cardiac cachexia (CC). We evaluated hemodynamic, metabolic, and inflammatory effects of short-term WD intake in pulmonary hypertension (PH) with CC. Male Wistar rats randomly received 60 mg · kg(-1) monocrotaline (M) or vehicle (C) and consumed either a 5.4-kcal · g(-1) WD (35% animal fat, 35% simple carbohydrate, 20% protein, 0.4% Na(+)) or a 2.9-kcal · g(-1) (3% vegetable fat, 60% complex carbohydrate, 16% protein, 0.25% Na(+)) normal diet (ND) for 5 wk. Mortality, energy intake, body weight (BW), metabolism, hemodynamics, histology, apoptosis, gene expression, transcription factors, and plasma cytokines were evaluated. Compared with the C-ND group, the M-ND group had PH, HF, and mortality that were significantly attenuated in M-WD. The extent of myocardial remodeling and apoptosis was higher in M-ND than in C-ND but lower in M-WD than in M-ND, while conversely, energy intake, BW, cholesterol, and TG plasma concentrations were lower in M-ND than in C-ND but higher in M-WD than in M-ND. M-ND had increased myocardial NF-κB transcription factor activity, endothelin-1, and cytokine overexpression and higher circulating cytokine concentrations than C-ND, which were lower in M-WD than in M-ND. PPARα activity, however, was lower in M-ND, but not in M-WD, compared with the respective C groups. WD attenuated PH and CC, ameliorating survival, myocardial function, metabolism, and inflammation, through transcription factor modulation, suggesting a beneficial role in CC.


Circulation-heart Failure | 2016

Distinct endothelial cell responses in the heart and kidney microvasculature characterize the progression of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction in the obese ZSF1 rat with cardiorenal metabolic syndrome

Christian G.M. van Dijk; Nynke R. Oosterhuis; Yan Juan Xu; Maarten M. Brandt; Walter J. Paulus; Loek van Heerebeek; Dirk J. Duncker; Marianne C. Verhaar; Dulce Fontoura; André P. Lourenço; Adelino F. Leite-Moreira; Inês Falcão-Pires; Jaap A. Joles; Caroline Cheng

Background—The combination of cardiac and renal disease driven by metabolic risk factors, referred to as cardiorenal metabolic syndrome (CRMS), is increasingly recognized as a critical pathological entity. The contribution of (micro)vascular injury to CRMS is considered to be substantial. However, mechanistic studies are hampered by lack of in vivo models that mimic the natural onset of the disease. Here, we evaluated the coronary and renal microvasculature during CRMS development in obese diabetic Zucker fatty/Spontaneously hypertensive heart failure F1 hybrid (ZSF1) rats. Methods and Results—Echocardiographic, urine, and blood evaluations were conducted in 3 groups (Wistar-Kyoto, lean ZSF1, and obese ZSF1) at 20 and 25 weeks of age. Immunohistological evaluation of renal and cardiac tissues was conducted at both time points. At 20 and 25 weeks, obese ZSF1 rats showed higher body weight, significant left ventricular hypertrophy, and impaired diastolic function compared with all other groups. Indices of systolic function did not differ between groups. Obese ZSF1 rats developed hyperproliferative vascular foci in the subendocardium, which lacked microvascular organization and were predilection sites of inflammation and fibrosis. In the kidney, obese ZSF1 animals showed regression of the peritubular and glomerular microvasculature, accompanied by tubulointerstitial damage, glomerulosclerosis, and proteinuria. Conclusions—The obese ZSF1 rat strain is a suitable in vivo model for CRMS, sharing characteristics with the human syndrome during the earliest onset of disease. In these rats, CRMS induces microvascular fibrotic responses in heart and kidneys, associated with functional impairment of both organs.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2015

Afterload-induced diastolic dysfunction contributes to high filling pressures in experimental heart failure with preserved ejection fraction.

Sara Leite; Sara Rodrigues; Marta Tavares-Silva; José Oliveira-Pinto; Mohamed Alaa; Mahmoud Abdellatif; Dulce Fontoura; Inês Falcão-Pires; Thierry C. Gillebert; Adelino F. Leite-Moreira; André P. Lourenço

Myocardial stiffness and upward-shifted end-diastolic pressure-volume (P-V) relationship (EDPVR) are the key to high filling pressures in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). Nevertheless, many patients may remain asymptomatic unless hemodynamic stress is imposed on the myocardium. Whether delayed relaxation induced by pressure challenge may contribute to high end-diastolic pressure (EDP) remains unsettled. Our aim was to assess the effect of suddenly imposed isovolumic afterload on relaxation and EDP, exploiting a highly controlled P-V experimental evaluation setup in the ZSF1 obese rat (ZSF1 Ob) model of HFpEF. Twenty-week-old ZSF1 Ob (n = 12), healthy Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY, n = 11), and hypertensive ZSF1 lean control rats (ZSF1 Ln, n = 10) underwent open-thorax left ventricular (LV) P-V hemodynamic evaluation under anesthesia with sevoflurane. EDPVR was obtained by inferior vena cava occlusions to assess LV ED chamber stiffness constant β, and single-beat isovolumic afterload acquisitions were obtained by swift occlusions of the ascending aorta. ZSF1 Ob showed increased ED stiffness, delayed relaxation, as assessed by time constant of isovolumic relaxation (τ), and elevated EDP with normal ejection fraction. Isovolumic afterload increased EDP without concomitant changes in ED volume or heart rate. In isovolumic beats, relaxation was delayed to the extent that time for complete relaxation as predicted by 3.5 × monoexponentially derived τ (τexp) exceeded effective filling time. EDP elevation correlated with reduced time available to relax, which was the only independent predictor of EDP rise in multiple linear regression. Our results suggest that delayed relaxation during pressure challenge is an important contributor to lung congestion and effort intolerance in HFpEF.


Revista Portuguesa De Pneumologia | 2014

Myocardial and anti‐inflammatory effects of chronic bosentan therapy in monocrotaline‐induced pulmonary hypertension

Dulce Fontoura; José Oliveira-Pinto; Marta Tavares-Silva; Sara Leite; Francisco Vasques-Nóvoa; P. Mendes-Ferreira; André P. Lourenço; Adelino F. Leite-Moreira

INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES Endothelin-1 antagonists are increasingly used in the treatment of pulmonary hypertension despite the lack of knowledge of their myocardial and systemic effects. We assessed the right ventricular myocardial and systemic effects of endothelin-1 antagonists in monocrotaline-induced pulmonary hypertension. METHODS Male Wistar rats (180-200 g, n=57) randomly received 60 mg/kg monocrotaline or vehicle subcutaneously. Two days later, bosentan was randomly started (300 mg/kg/day) by oral route in a subgroup of monocrotaline-injected rats, while the other monocrotaline-injected and control rats received vehicle. At 25-30 days, invasive hemodynamic assessment was performed under anesthesia, arterial blood samples were collected for gas analysis and plasma was extracted for quantification of endothelin-1, cytokines, nitrates and 6-keto-prostaglandin F1α. Right ventricular myocardium was collected for assessment of cyclooxygenase and nitric oxide synthase activity and gene expression. RESULTS The monocrotaline group developed pulmonary hypertension, low cardiac output, right ventricular hypertrophy and dilation, changes in gene expression and inflammatory activation that were attenuated in the group treated with bosentan. From a functional point of view, this group had improved right ventricular function and preserved ventriculo-vascular coupling, without deterioration in arterial gas parameters or systemic hypotension. In molecular terms, they showed reduced endothelin-1 and cytokine levels, decreased right ventricular inducible nitric oxide synthase and cyclooxygenase-2 activity and increased nitrate plasma levels compared with the non-treated group. CONCLUSIONS In this study we demonstrate that besides attenuating pulmonary hypertension, bosentan has beneficial hemodynamic, myocardial and anti-inflammatory effects.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2016

Spectral transfer function analysis of respiratory hemodynamic fluctuations predicts end-diastolic stiffness in preserved ejection fraction heart failure

Mahmoud Abdellatif; Sara Leite; Mohamed Alaa; José Oliveira-Pinto; Marta Tavares-Silva; Dulce Fontoura; Inês Falcão-Pires; Adelino F. Leite-Moreira; André P. Lourenço

Preserved ejection fraction heart failure (HFpEF) diagnosis remains controversial, and invasive left ventricular (LV) hemodynamic evaluation and/or exercise testing is advocated by many. The stiffer HFpEF myocardium may show impaired stroke volume (SV) variation induced by fluctuating LV filling pressure during ventilation. Our aim was to investigate spectral transfer function (STF) gain from end-diastolic pressure (EDP) to indexed SV (SVi) in experimental HFpEF. Eighteen-week-old Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) and ZSF1 lean (ZSF1 Ln) and obese rats (ZSF1 Ob) randomly underwent LV open-chest (OC, n = 8 each group) or closed-chest hemodynamic evaluation (CC, n = 6 each group) under halogenate anesthesia and positive-pressure ventilation at constant inspiratory pressure. Beat-to-beat fluctuations in hemodynamic parameters during ventilation were assessed by STF. End-diastolic stiffness (βi) and end-systolic elastance (Eesi) for indexed volumes were obtained by inferior vena cava occlusion in OC (multibeat) or single-beat method estimates in CC. ZSF1 Ob showed higher EDP spectrum (P < 0.001), higher STF gain between end-diastolic volume and EDP, and impaired STF gain between EDP and SVi compared with both hypertensive ZSF1 Ln and normotensive WKY controls (P < 0.001). Likewise βi was only higher in ZSF1 Ob while Eesi was raised in both ZSF1 groups. On multivariate analysis βi and not Eesi correlated with impaired STF gain from EDP to SVi (P < 0.001), and receiver-operating characteristics analysis showed an area under curve of 0.89 for higher βi prediction (P < 0.001). Results support further clinical testing of STF analysis from right heart catheterization-derived EDP surrogates to noninvasively determined SV as screening/diagnostic tool to assess myocardial stiffness in HFpEF.


The Journal of Physiology | 2017

In vitro model to study the effects of matrix stiffening on Ca2+ handling and myofilament function in isolated adult rat cardiomyocytes

Elza D. van Deel; Aref Najafi; Dulce Fontoura; Erik T. Valent; Max Goebel; Kim Kardux; Inês Falcão-Pires; Jolanda van der Velden

This paper describes a novel model that allows exploration of matrix‐induced cardiomyocyte adaptations independent of the passive effect of matrix rigidity on cardiomyocyte function. Detachment of adult cardiomyocytes from the matrix enables the study of matrix effects on cell shortening, Ca2+ handling and myofilament function. Cell shortening and Ca2+ handling are altered in cardiomyocytes cultured for 24 h on a stiff matrix. Matrix stiffness‐impaired cardiomyocyte contractility is reversed upon normalization of extracellular stiffness. Matrix stiffness‐induced reduction in unloaded shortening is more pronounced in cardiomyocytes isolated from obese ZSF1 rats with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction compared to lean ZSF1 rats.


Revista Espanola De Enfermedades Digestivas | 2017

Characterization of liver changes in ZSF1 rats, an animal model of metabolic syndrome

Marta Borges-Canha; José Pedro Portela-Cidade; Glória Conceição; Cláudia Sousa-Mendes; Sara Leite; Dulce Fontoura; Daniel Moreira-Gonçalves; Inês Falcão-Pires; André P. Lourenço; Adelino F. Leite-Moreira; Pedro Pimentel-Nunes

BACKGROUND The non-alcoholic fatty liver disease is the hepatic counterpart of the metabolic syndrome. ZSF1 rats are a metabolic syndrome animal model in which liver changes have not been described yet. AIM The characterization of liver histological and innate immunity changes in ZSF1 rats. METHODS Five groups of rats were included (n = 7 each group): healthy Wistar-Kyoto control rats (Ctrl), hypertensive ZSF1 lean (Ln), ZSF1 obese rats with a normal diet (Ob), ZSF1 obese rates with a high-fat diet (Ob-HFD), and ZSF1 obese rats with low-intensity exercise training (Ob-Ex). The animals were sacrificed at 20 weeks of age, their livers were collected for: a) measurements of the area of steatosis, fibrosis and inflammation (histomorphological analysis); and b) innate immunity (toll-like receptor [TLR] 2, TLR4, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ [PPARγ], toll interacting protein [TOLLIP]) and inflammatory marker (tumor necrosis factor-alpha [TNFα], interleukin 1 [IL-1]) expression analysis by real-time PCR. RESULTS Ob, Ob-HFD and Ob-Ex were significantly heavier than Ln and Ctrl animals. Ob, Ob-HFD and Ob-Ex animals had impaired glucose tolerance and insulin resistance. ZSF1 Ob, Ob-HFD and Ob-Ex presented a higher degree of steatosis (3,5x; p < 0.05) than Ctrl or ZSF1 Ln rats. Steatohepatitis and fibrosis were not observed in any of the groups. No differences in expression were observed between Ctrl, Ln and Ob animals (except for the significantly higher expression of TOLLIP observed in the Ob vs Ln comparison). Ob-HFD and Ob-Ex rats showed increased expression of PPARγ and TOLLIP as compared to other groups. However, both groups also showed increased expression of TLR2 and TLR4. Nevertheless, this did not translate into a differential expression of TNFα or IL-1 in any of the groups. CONCLUSION The ZSF1 model is associated with liver steatosis but not with steatohepatitis or a significantly increased expression of innate immunity or inflammation markers.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2015

Echocardiography and invasive hemodynamics during stress testing for diagnosis of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction: an experimental study.

Sara Leite; José Oliveira-Pinto; Marta Tavares-Silva; Mahmoud Abdellatif; Dulce Fontoura; X Inês Falcão-Pires; Adelino F. Leite-Moreira; André P. Lourenço

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