Érica P. Garcia-Souza
Rio de Janeiro State University
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Featured researches published by Érica P. Garcia-Souza.
American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2008
Érica P. Garcia-Souza; Simone Vargas da Silva; Gisele Barreto Félix; Ananda Lages Rodrigues; Marta Sampaio de Freitas; Anibal Sanchez Moura; Christina Barja-Fidalgo
Epidemiological and experimental studies have demonstrated that early postnatal nutrition has been associated with long-term effects on glucose homeostasis in adulthood. Recently, our group demonstrated that undernutrition during early lactation affects the expression and activation of key proteins of the insulin signaling cascade in rat skeletal muscle during postnatal development. To elucidate the molecular mechanisms by which undernutrition during early life leads to changes in insulin sensitivity in peripheral tissues, we investigated the insulin signaling in adipose tissue. Adipocytes were isolated from epididymal fat pads of adult male rats that were the offspring of dams fed either a normal or a protein-free diet during the first 10 days of lactation. The cells were incubated with 100 nM insulin before the assays for immunoblotting analysis, 2-deoxyglucose uptake, immunocytochemistry for GLUT4, and/or actin filaments. Following insulin stimulation, adipocytes isolated from undernourished rats presented reduced tyrosine phosphorylation of IR and IRS-1 and increased basal phosphorylation of IRS-2, Akt, and mTOR compared with controls. Basal glucose uptake was increased in adipocytes from the undernourished group, and the treatment with LY294002 induced only a partial inhibition both in basal and in insulin-stimulated glucose uptake, suggesting an involvement of phosphoinositide 3-kinase activity. These alterations were accompanied by higher GLUT4 content in the plasma membrane and alterations in the actin cytoskeleton dynamics. These data suggest that early postnatal undernutrition impairs insulin sensitivity in adulthood by promoting changes in critical steps of insulin signaling in adipose tissue, which may contribute to permanent changes in glucose homeostasis.
Inflammation | 2010
Simone Vargas da Silva; Érica P. Garcia-Souza; Anibal Sanchez Moura; Christina Barja-Fidalgo
Maternal nutritional environmental in early life has been often associated with long term effects on the immune response in adulthood. The effects of maternal protein deprivation during early lactation on neutrophil-mediated innate immunity were investigated in adult rats, offspring of dams fed with a protein-free diet during the first days of lactation (PD), and compared to controls (22% protein diet). Inflamed PD animals showed an inhibited neutrophil migration and an impaired recruitment of leukocytes from bone marrow pool to circulation. In resting conditions, blood neutrophils from PD present reduced phagocytic activity, increased production of O2− and NO, basal iNOS expression and constitutive NF-κB activation. Moreover, PD rats also show high circulating levels of TNF-α and increased expression of TNF-α mRNA in the spleen and liver. The data indicate that maternal nutritional stress can interfere on the innate immune response in adulthood, imprinting permanent alterations on cytokine production and neutrophil activation.
Journal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology | 2012
Roberto Soares de Moura; Giselle França da Costa; Annie Seixas Bello Moreira; Emerson Ferreira Queiroz; Daniele Dal Col Moreira; Érica P. Garcia-Souza; Ângela Castro Resende; Anibal Sanchez Moura; Michelle Teixeira Teixeira
Objectives This study examined the effect of Vitis vinifera grape skin extract (ACH09) on hyperglycaemia and the insulin‐signalling cascade in alloxan‐treated mice.
Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry | 2014
Fabiana Alves Neves; Erika Cortez; Amélia F. Bernardo; Ana Barbosa Marcondes de Mattos; Anatalia K.G. Vieira; Tayanne de O. Malafaia; Alessandra Alves Thole; Alessandra Cordeiro de Souza Rodrigues-Cunha; Érica P. Garcia-Souza; Rosely Sichieri; Anibal Sanchez Moura
Nutritional transition has contributed to growing obesity, mainly by changing eating habits of the population. The mechanisms by which diet-induced obesity leads to cardiac injury are not completely understood, but it is known that obesity is associated to impaired cardiac function and energy metabolism, increasing morbidity and mortality. Therefore, our study aimed to investigate the mechanisms underlying cardiac metabolism impairment related to Western diet-induced obesity. After weaning, male Swiss mice were fed a Western diet for 16 weeks in order to induce obesity. After this period, the content of proteins involved in heart energy metabolism GLUT1, cytosolic lysate and plasma membrane GLUT4, AMPK, pAMPK, IRβ, IRS-1, PGC-1α, CPT1 and UCP2 was evaluated. Also, the oxidative phosphorylation of myocardial fibers was measured by high-resolution respirometry. Mice in the Western diet group (WG) presented altered biometric parameters compared to those in control group, including higher body weight, increased myocardial lipid deposition and glucose intolerance, which demonstrate the obesogenic role of Western diet. WG presented increased CPT1 and UCP2 contents and decreased IRS-1, plasma membrane GLUT4 and PGC-1α contents. In addition, WG presented cardiac mitochondrial dysfunction and reduced biogenesis, demonstrating a lower capacity of carbohydrates and fatty acid oxidation and also decreased coupling between oxidative phosphorylation and adenosine triphosphate synthesis. Cardiac metabolism impairment related to Western diet-induced obesity is probably due to damaged myocardial oxidative capacity, reduced mitochondrial biogenesis and mitochondria uncoupling, which compromise the bioenergetic metabolism of heart.
Regulatory Peptides | 2012
Vivian de Melo Soares; Érica P. Garcia-Souza; Glauciane Lacerda-Miranda; Anibal Sanchez Moura
Ghrelin is a hormone synthesized by the stomach that acts in different tissues via a specific receptor (GHS-R1a), including hypothalamus and adipose tissue. For instance, recent reports have shown that ghrelin has a direct action on hypothalamic regulation of food intake mainly inducing an orexigenic effect. On the other hand, ghrelin also modulates energy stores and expenditure in the adipocytes. This dual action has suggested that this hormone may act as a link between the central nervous system and peripheral mechanisms. Furthermore, concerning nutritional disorders, it has been suggested that obesity may be considered an impairment of the above cited link. Therefore, considering that neonatal overfeeding induces obesity in adulthood by unknown mechanisms, in this study we examined the effects of early life overnutrition on the development of obesity and in particular on adipose tissue ghrelin signaling in young mice. Our data demonstrated that overnutrition during early life induces a significant increase in body weight of young mice, starting at 10 days, and this increase in weight persisted until adulthood (90 days of age). In these animals, blood glucose, liver weight and visceral fat weight were found higher at 21 days when compared to the control group. Acylated ghrelin circulating levels were found lower in the young obese pups. In addition, in white adipose tissue ghrelin receptor (GHS-R1a) expression increased and was associated to positive modulation of content and phosphorylation of proteins involved in cell energy store and use as AKT, PI3K, AMPK, GLUT-4, and CPT1. However, PPARγ content decreased in obese group. Basically, we showed that adipose tissue metabolism is altered in early life acquired obesity and probably due to such modification a new pattern of ghrelin signaling pathway takes place.
Peptides | 2012
Glauciane Lacerda-Miranda; Vivian de Melo Soares; Anatalia K.G. Vieira; Juliana Gomes Lessa; Alessandra Cordeiro de Souza Rodrigues-Cunha; Erika Cortez; Érica P. Garcia-Souza; Anibal Sanchez Moura
Ghrelin, an endogenous ligand of the growth hormone secretagogue receptor (GHS-R), has been suggested to be associated to obesity, insulin secretion, cardiovascular growth and homeostasis. GHS-R has been found in most of the tissues, and among the hormone action it is included the regulation of heart energy metabolism. Therefore, hypernutrition during early life leads to obesity, induces cardiac hypertrophy, compromises myocardial function, inducing heart failure in adulthood. We examined ghrelin signaling process in cardiac remodeling in these obese adult mice. The cardiomyocytes (cmy) of left ventricle were analyzed by light microscopy and stereology, content and phosphorilation of cardiac proteins: ghrelin receptor (growth hormone secretagogue receptor 1a, GHSR-1a), protein kinase B (AKT and pAKT), phosphatidil inositol 3 kinase (PI3K), AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK and pAMPK) and actin were achieved by Western blotting. GHSR-1a gene expression was analyzed by Real Time-PCR. We observed hyperglycemia and higher liver and visceral fat weight in obese when compared to control group. Obese mice presented a marked increase in heart weight/tibia length, indicating an enlarged heart size or a remodeling process. Obese mice had increased GHSR-1a content and expression in the heart associated to PI3K content and increased AKT content and phosphorylation. In contrast, AMPK content and phosphorylation in heart was not different between experimental groups. Ghrelin plasma levels in obese group were decreased when compared to control group. Our data suggest that remodeled myocardial in adult obese mice overnourished in early life are associated with higher phosphorylation of GHSR-1a, PI3K and AKT but not with AMPK.
Tissue & Cell | 2012
Alessandra Alves Thole; Alessandra Cordeiro de Souza Rodrigues-Cunha; Simone Nunes de Carvalho; Érica P. Garcia-Souza; Erika Cortez; Ana Carolina Stumbo; Laís de Carvalho; Anibal Sanchez Moura
Overnutrition during pregnancy and lactation lend increasing support to the development of obesity and several chronic diseases in adulthood such as type 2 diabetes mellitus, which leads to beta-cell dysfunction and insulin resistance. In this work, we aimed to study the effects of early life overnutrition on the development of obesity, analyzing the morphological changes, expression of TNF-α, and also the stem cell marker CD133 in the pancreatic islets of young and adult mice. Overnutrition during lactation phase was used as an experimental model to induce obesity. The animals were analyzed at 28 and 150 days of age, when pancreata were collected for histological, ultrastructural and western blotting analysis. The results showed that islet hypertrophy is established in obese groups at day 28 and remained until adulthood. CD133+ cells were observed as small cells within pancreatic islets in both control and obese young mice. However, at day 150, these cells were observed only in the islet peripheries and near ducts of the obese group. Furthermore, TNF-α expression in pancreatic islets was increased in both young and adult obese groups when compared to control groups. This work shows interesting data about CD133 receptor and TNF-α roles in the pancreas during obesity development.
Nutrition Metabolism and Cardiovascular Diseases | 2015
Anatalia K.G. Vieira; Vivian de Melo Soares; Amélia F. Bernardo; Fabiana Alves Neves; Ana Barbosa Marcondes de Mattos; R.M. Guedes; Erika Cortez; Daniela Caldas de Andrade; Glauciane Lacerda-Miranda; Érica P. Garcia-Souza; Anibal Sanchez Moura
AIM In this study, the effects of postnatal overfeeding on heart energy homoeostasis and cardiac haemodynamics in adult male Swiss mice were examined. METHODS AND RESULTS During the suckling period, the mice were divided into four groups of control or overfed pups in combination with baseline or ischaemia/reperfusion treatments (control group baseline, CGBL; overfed group baseline, OGBL; control group ischaemia/reperfusion, CGIR; and overfed group ischaemia/reperfusion, OGIR). End diastolic pressure (EDP), heart contraction speed (Max dP/dt), relaxation speed (Min dP/dt), isovolumetric relaxation time (Tau) and frequency by beats per minute (BPM) were measured. During baseline and ischaemia/reperfusion, key proteins such as AKT1, AKT2, AKT3, pAKT, adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK), pAMPK, insulin receptor beta (IRβ), protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B), insulin receptor substrate 1 (IRS1), fatty acid binding protein (FABP), CD36, phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator 1-alpha (PGC1α) were studied. The expression of atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP), B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP), carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1 (CPT1) and uncoupling protein 3 (UCP3) was studied as a marker of cardiac hypertrophy and energetic metabolism. Cardiac fibrosis was analyzed by quantifying collagen deposition, which is increased in the OGBL and OGIR groups compared with the control groups. CONCLUSIONS The OGBL group showed reduced EDP compared with the CGBL group and high Max dP/dt compared with the OGBL group. Ischaemia/reperfusion increased EDP and Min dP/dt in the intragroup comparison. By contrast, Tau and frequency were not significantly different among groups. The OGIR mice showed significant alterations in heart metabolism proteins, including AKT2, pAKT/AKT1, pAKT/AKT2, AMPK, pAMPK/AMPK, PTP1B, IRS1, FABP and CD36. Furthermore, alterations in ANP, BNP, CPT1 and UCP3 messenger RNA (mRNA) expression indicated hypertrophy and reduction in their efficiency, such that exclusive overnutrition in childhood induces a long-term effect on haemodynamics, metabolism and heart remodelling.
The Scientific World Journal | 2012
Erika Cortez; Fabiana Alves Neves; Amélia F. Bernardo; Ana Carolina Stumbo; Laís de Carvalho; Érica P. Garcia-Souza; Rosely Sichieri; Anibal Sanchez Moura
Mitochondria are central coordinators of energy metabolism, and changes of their physiology have long been associated with metabolic disorders. Thus, observations of energy dynamics in different cell types are of utmost importance. Therefore, tools with quick and easy handling are needed for consistent evaluations of such interventions. In this paper, our main hypothesis is that during different nutritional situations lymphocytes mitochondrial physiology could be associated with the metabolism of other cell types, such as cardiomyocytes, and consequently be used as metabolic biomarker. Blood lymphocytes and heart muscle fibers were obtained from both fed and 24 h-fasted mice, and mitochondrial analysis was assessed by high-resolution respirometry and western blotting. Carbohydrate-linked oxidation and fatty acid oxidation were significantly higher after fasting. Carnitine palmitoil transferase 1 and uncouple protein 2 contents were increased in the fasted group, while the glucose transporters 1 and 4 and the ratio phosphorylated AMP-activated protein kinase/AMPK did not change between groups. In summary, under a nutritional status modification, mitochondria demonstrated earlier adaptive capacity than other metabolic sensors such as glucose transporters and AMPK, suggesting the accuracy of mitochondria physiology of lymphocytes as biomarker for metabolic changes.
Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry | 2016
Amélia F. Bernardo; Erika Cortez; Fabiana Alves Neves; Anatalia K.G. Vieira; Vivian de Melo Soares; Alessandra Cordeiro de Souza Rodrigues-Cunha; Daniela Caldas de Andrade; Alessandra Alves Thole; Daniele Gabriel-Costa; Patricia C. Brum; Anibal Sanchez Moura; Érica P. Garcia-Souza
Several studies have demonstrated that overnutrition during early postnatal period can increase the long-term risk of developing obesity and cardiac disorders, yet the short-term effects of postnatal overfeeding in cardiac metabolism remains unknown. The aim of our study was to investigate the cardiac metabolism of weaned mice submitted to overnutrition during lactation, particularly as to mitochondrial function, substrate preference and insulin signaling. Postnatal overfeeding was induced by litter size reduction in mice at postnatal day 3. At 21 days of age (weaning), mice in the overfed group (OG) presented biometric and biochemical parameters of obesity, including increased body weight, visceral fat, liver weight and increased left ventricle weight/tibia length ratio; indicating cardiac hypertrophy, hyperglycemia, hyperinsulinemia and increased liver glycogen content compared to control group. In the heart, we detected impaired insulin signaling, mainly due to decreased IRβ, pTyr-IRS1, PI3K, GLUT4 and pAkt/Akt and increased PTP1B, GLUT1 and pAMPKα/AMPKα content. Activities of lactate dehydrogenase and citrate synthase were increased, accompanied by enhanced carbohydrate oxidation, as observed by high-resolution respirometry. Moreover, OG hearts had lower CPT1, PPARα and increased UCP2 mRNA expression, associated with increased oxidative stress (4-HNE content), BAX/BCL2 ratio and cardiac fibrosis. Ultrastructural analysis of OG hearts demonstrated mild mitochondrial damage without alterations in OXPHOS complexes. In conclusion, overnutrition during early life induces short-term metabolic disturbances, impairment in heart insulin signaling, up-regulates GLUT-1 and switch cardiac fuel preference in juvenile mice.
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Alessandra Cordeiro de Souza Rodrigues-Cunha
Rio de Janeiro State University
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