Fabio S. A. Fortes
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
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Publication
Featured researches published by Fabio S. A. Fortes.
British Journal of Pharmacology | 2012
Daniele Andrade; Rafaela Rangel Serra; Erik Svensjö; Ana Paula C. A. Lima; Erivan S Ramos Junior; Fabio S. A. Fortes; Ana Carolina Morandini; Verônica Morandi; Maria de Nazaré Soeiro; Herbert B. Tanowitz; Julio Scharfstein
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Independent studies in experimental models of Trypanosoma cruzi appointed different roles for endothelin‐1 (ET‐1) and bradykinin (BK) in the immunopathogenesis of Chagas disease. Here, we addressed the hypothesis that pathogenic outcome is influenced by functional interplay between endothelin receptors (ETAR and ETBR) and bradykinin B2 receptors (B2R).
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2008
Regina Coeli dos Santos Goldenberg; Linda A. Jelicks; Fabio S. A. Fortes; Louis M. Weiss; Leonardo L. Rocha; Dazhi Zhao; Antonio Carlos Campos de Carvalho; David C. Spray; Herbert B. Tanowitz
Chronic chagasic cardiomyopathy, which is caused by the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi, is a major cause of heart failure in Latin America. It is a disease for which effective treatment in its advanced clinical forms is lacking. We have previously shown that bone marrow mononuclear cell (BMC) transplantation is effective in reducing inflammation and fibrosis in the mouse model of Chagas disease. The present study used magnetic resonance imaging to assess changes in the cardiac morphology of infected mice after therapy with BMCs. Serial imaging of the BMC-treated mice revealed regression of the right ventricular dilatation typically observed in the chagasic mouse model.
Journal of Cell Science | 2004
Fabio S. A. Fortes; Iracy L. Pecora; Pedro M. Persechini; Sandra P. Hurtado; Vandir Costa; Robson Coutinho-Silva; Mariane B. Melo Braga; Fernando C. Silva-Filho; Rodrigo C. Bisaggio; Fernando Pires de Farias; Eliana Scemes; Antonio Carlos Campos de Carvalho; Regina Coeli dos Santos Goldenberg
Gap junctions are connexin-formed channels that play an important role in intercellular communication in most cell types. In the immune system, specifically in macrophages, the expression of connexins and the establishment of functional gap junctions are still controversial issues. Macrophages express P2X7 receptors that, once activated by the binding of extracellular ATP, lead to the opening of transmembrane pores permeable to molecules of up to 900 Da. There is evidence suggesting an interplay between gap junctions and P2 receptors in different cell systems. Thus, we used ATP-sensitive and -insensitive J774.G8 macrophage cell lines to investigate this interplay. To study junctional communication in J774-macrophage-like cells, we assessed cell-to-cell communication by microinjecting Lucifer Yellow. Confluent cultures of ATP-sensitive J774 cells (ATP-s cells) are coupled, whereas ATP-insensitive J774 cells (ATP-i cells), derived by overexposing J774 cells to extracellular ATP until they do not display the phenomenon of ATP-induced permeabilization, are essentially uncoupled. Western-blot and reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction assays revealed that ATP-s and ATP-i cells express connexin43 (Cx43), whereas only ATP-s cells express the P2X7 receptor. Accordingly, ATP-i cells did not display any detectable ATP-induced current under whole-cell patch-clamp recordings. Using immunofluorescence microscopy, Cx43 reactivity was found at the cell surface and in regions of cell-cell contact of ATP-s cells, whereas, in ATP-i cells, Cx43 immunoreactivity was only present in cytosolic compartments. Using confocal microscopy, it is shown here that, in ATP-s cells as well as in peritoneal macrophages, Cx43 and P2X7 receptors are co-localized to the membrane of ATP-s cells and peritoneal macrophages.
Developmental Neurobiology | 2009
Mônica Marins; Anna L.R. Xavier; Nathan B. Viana; Fabio S. A. Fortes; Maira M. Fróes; João R. L. Menezes
The massive migration of neuroblasts and young neurons through the anterior extension of the postnatal subventricular zone (SVZ), known as the rostral migratory stream (RMS) is still poorly understood on its molecular basis. In this work, we investigated the involvement of gap junctional communication (GJC) in the robust centrifugal migration from SVZ/RMS explants obtained from early postnatal (P4) rats. Cells were dye‐coupled in homocellular and heterocellular pairings and expressed at least two connexins, Cx 43 and 45. Treatment with the uncoupler agent carbenoxolone (CBX, 10–100 μM) reversibly reduced outgrowth from SVZ explants, while its inactive analog, glycyrhizinic acid (GZA), had no effect. Consistent with a direct effect on cell migration, time‐lapse video microscopy show that different pharmacological uncouplers cause an abrupt and reversible arrest of cell movement in explants. Our results indicate that GJC is positively involved in the migration of neuroblasts within the SVZ/RMS.
Microbes and Infection | 2009
Regina dos Santos Goldenberg; Dumitru A. Iacobas; Sanda Iacobas; Leonardo L. Rocha; Fabio S. A. Fortes; Leandro Vairo; Fnu Nagajyothi; Antonio Carlos Campos de Carvalho; Herbert B. Tanowitz; David C. Spray
Trypanosoma cruzi infection is a major cause of cardiomyopathy. Previous gene profiling studies of infected mouse hearts have revealed prominent changes in gene expression within many functional pathways. This variety of transcriptomic changes in infected mice raises the question of whether gene expression alterations in whole hearts are due to changes in infected cardiac myocytes or other cells or even to systemic effects of the infection on the heart. We employed microarrays to examine infected cardiac myocyte cultures 48 h post-infection. Statistical comparison of gene expression levels of 7624 well annotated unigenes in four independent cultures of infected and uninfected myocytes detected substantial (>or=1.5 absolute fold changes) in 420 (5.5%) of the sampled genes. Major categories of affected genes included those involved in immune response, extracellular matrix and cell adhesion. These findings on infected cardiac myocytes in culture reveal that alterations in cardiac gene expression described in Chagas disease are the consequence of both direct infection of the myocytes themselves as well as resulting from the presence of other cell types in the myocardium and systemic effects of infection.
Advances in Parasitology | 2011
Daniel Adesse; Regina Coeli dos Santos Goldenberg; Fabio S. A. Fortes; Jasmin; Dumitru A. Iacobas; Sanda Iacobas; Antonio Carlos Campos de Carvalho; Maria de Narareth Meirelles; Huan Huang; Milena Botelho Pereira Soares; Herbert B. Tanowitz; Luciana Ribeiro Garzoni; David C. Spray
Gap junction channels provide intercellular communication between cells. In the heart, these channels coordinate impulse propagation along the conduction system and through the contractile musculature, thereby providing synchronous and optimal cardiac output. As in other arrhythmogenic cardiac diseases, chagasic cardiomyopathy is associated with decreased expression of the gap junction protein connexin43 (Cx43) and its gene. Our studies of cardiac myocytes infected with Trypanosoma cruzi have revealed that synchronous contraction is greatly impaired and gap junction immunoreactivity is lost in infected cells. Such changes are not seen for molecules forming tight junctions, another component of the intercalated disc in cardiac myocytes. Transcriptomic studies of hearts from mouse models of Chagas disease and from acutely infected cardiac myocytes in vitro indicate profound remodelling of gene expression patterns involving heart rhythm determinant genes, suggesting underlying mechanisms of the functional pathology. One curious feature of the altered expression of Cx43 and its gene expression is that it is limited in both extent and location, suggesting that the more global deterioration in cardiac function may result in part from spread of damage signals from more seriously compromised cells to healthier ones.
Fems Yeast Research | 2008
Layla F. Martins; Mónica Montero-Lomelí; Claudio A. Masuda; Fabio S. A. Fortes; José O. Previato; Lucia Mendonça-Previato
Hyphal development in Candida albicans contributes to virulence, and inhibition of filamentation is a target for the development of antifungal agents. Lithium is known to impair Saccharomyces cerevisiae growth in galactose-containing media by inhibition of phosphoglucomutase, which is essential for galactose metabolism. Lithium-mediated phosphoglucomutase inhibition is reverted by Mg(2+). In this study we have assessed the effect of lithium upon C. albicans and found that growth is inhibited preferentially in galactose-containing media. No accumulation of glucose-1-phosphate or galactose-1-phosphate was detected when yeasts were grown in the presence of galactose and 15 mM LiCl, though we observed that in vitro lithium-mediated phosphoglucomutase inhibition takes place with an IC(50) of 2 mM. Furthermore, growth inhibition by lithium was not reverted by Mg(2+). These results show that lithium-mediated inhibition of growth in a galactose-containing medium is not due to inhibition of galactose conversion to glucose-6-phosphate but is probably due to inhibition of a signaling pathway. Deletion of the Ser-Thr protein phosphatase SIT4 and treatment with rapamycin have been shown to inhibit filamentous differentiation. We observed that C. albicans filamentation was inhibited by lithium in solid medium containing either galactose as the sole carbon source or 10% fetal bovine serum. These results suggest that suppression of hyphal outgrowth by lithium could be related to inhibition of the target of rapamycin (TOR) pathway.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Bruno Moulin de Andrade; Marcelo R. Baldanza; Karla Consort Ribeiro; Anderson Porto; Ramon Peçanha; Fabio S. A. Fortes; Gisele Zapata-Sudo; Antonio C. Campos-de-Carvalho; Regina Coeli dos Santos Goldenberg; João Pedro Saar Werneck-de-Castro
Skeletal muscle injury is the most common problem in orthopedic and sports medicine, and severe injury leads to fibrosis and muscle dysfunction. Conventional treatment for successive muscle injury is currently controversial, although new therapies, like cell therapy, seem to be promise. We developed a model of successive injuries in rat to evaluate the therapeutic potential of bone marrow mesenchymal cells (BMMC) injected directly into the injured muscle. Functional and histological assays were performed 14 and 28 days after the injury protocol by isometric tension recording and picrosirius/Hematoxilin & Eosin staining, respectively. We also evaluated the presence and the fate of BMMC on treated muscles; and muscle fiber regeneration. BMMC treatment increased maximal skeletal muscle contraction 14 and 28 days after muscle injury compared to non-treated group (4.5 ± 1.7 vs 2.5 ± 0.98 N/cm2, p<0.05 and 8.4 ± 2.3 vs. 5.7 ± 1.3 N/cm2, p<0.05 respectively). Furthermore, BMMC treatment increased muscle fiber cross-sectional area and the presence of mature muscle fiber 28 days after muscle injury. However, there was no difference in collagen deposition between groups. Immunoassays for cytoskeleton markers of skeletal and smooth muscle cells revealed an apparent integration of the BMMC within the muscle. These data suggest that BMMC transplantation accelerates and improves muscle function recovery in our extensive muscle re-injury model.
Journal of Endocrinology | 2003
R.C.S. Goldenberg; Fabio S. A. Fortes; J.M. Cristancho; Marcelo M. Morales; C. R. Franci; Wamberto Antonio Varanda; A. C. Campos De Carvalho
Archives of Insect Biochemistry and Physiology | 2004
Sabrina V. Martini; Regina Coeli dos Santos Goldenberg; Fabio S. A. Fortes; Antonio C. Campos-de-Carvalho; Dóris Falkenstein; Marcelo M. Morales
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Regina Coeli dos Santos Goldenberg
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
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