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Dive into the research topics where Frederico Moraes Ferreira is active.

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Featured researches published by Frederico Moraes Ferreira.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Anti-Group A Streptococcal Vaccine Epitope STRUCTURE, STABILITY, AND ITS ABILITY TO INTERACT WITH HLA CLASS II MOLECULES

Luiza Guilherme; Martha Patricia Alba; Frederico Moraes Ferreira; Sandra Emiko Oshiro; Fabio Higa; Manuel Patarroyo; Jorge Kalil

Streptococcus pyogenes infections remain a health problem in several countries due to poststreptococcal sequelae. We developed a vaccine epitope (StreptInCor) composed of 55 amino acids residues of the C-terminal portion of the M protein that encompasses both T and B cell protective epitopes. The nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) structure of the StreptInCor peptide showed that the structure was composed of two microdomains linked by an 18-residue α-helix. A chemical stability study of the StreptInCor folding/unfolding process using far-UV circular dichroism showed that the structure was chemically stable with respect to pH and the concentration of urea. The T cell epitope is located in the first microdomain and encompasses 11 out of the 18 α-helix residues, whereas the B cell epitope is in the second microdomain and showed no α-helical structure. The prediction of StreptInCor epitope binding to different HLA class II molecules was evaluated based on an analysis of the 55 residues and the theoretical possibilities for the processed peptides to fit into the P1, P4, P6, and P9 pockets in the groove of several HLA class II molecules. We observed 7 potential sites along the amino acid sequence of StreptInCor that were capable of recognizing HLA class II molecules (DRB1*, DRB3*, DRB4*, and DRB5*). StreptInCor-overlapping peptides induced cellular and humoral immune responses of individuals bearing different HLA class II molecules and could be considered as a universal vaccine epitope.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Serum from dengue virus-infected patients with and without plasma leakage differentially affects endothelial cells barrier function in vitro

Francielle Tramontini Gomes de Sousa Cardozo; Gyulnar Baimukanova; Marion C. Lanteri; Sheila M. Keating; Frederico Moraes Ferreira; John W. Heitman; Cláudio Sérgio Pannuti; Shibani Pati; Camila Malta Romano; Ester C. Sabino

Background Although most of cases of dengue infections are asymptomatic or mild symptomatic some individuals present warning signs progressing to severe dengue in which plasma leakage is a hallmark. Methodology/Principal findings The present study used Electric Cell-substrate Impedance Sensing (ECIS®) which allows for electrical monitoring of cellular barrier function measuring changes in Transendothelial Electric Resistance (TEER) to investigate the parameters associated with dengue induced leakage. Three groups of individuals were tested: dengue-positives with plasma leakage (leakage), dengue-positives without plasma leakage (no leakage), and dengue-negatives (control). Data show that TEER values of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) was significantly lower after incubation with serum from subjects of the leakage group in comparison to the no leakage or control groups. The serum levels of CXCL1, EGF, eotaxin, IFN-γ, sCD40L, and platelets were significantly decreased in the leakage group, while IL-10, IL-6, and IP-10 levels were significantly increased. We also found a strong correlation between TEER values and augmented levels of IP-10, GM-CSF, IL-1α, and IL-8, as well as decreased levels of CXCL1 and platelets. Conclusions/Significance The present work shows that the magnitude of the immune response contributes to the adverse plasma leakage outcomes in patients and that serum components are important mediators of changes in endothelial homeostasis during dengue infections. In particular, the increased levels of IP-10 and the decreased levels of CXCL1 and platelets seem to play a significant role in the disruption of vascular endothelium associated with leakage outcomes after DENV infection. These findings may have important implications for both diagnostic and therapeutic approaches to predict and mitigate vascular permeabilization in those experiencing the most severe clinical disease outcomes after dengue infection.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2016

Myocardial Infarction–Associated Transcript, a Long Noncoding RNA, Is Overexpressed During Dilated Cardiomyopathy Due to Chronic Chagas Disease

Amanda Farage Frade; Laurie Laugier; Ludmila R. P. Ferreira; Monique Andrade Baron; Luiz Alberto Benvenuti; Priscila Camillo Teixeira; Isabela Cunha Navarro; Sandrine Cabantous; Frederico Moraes Ferreira; Darlan da Silva Cândido; Fábio Antônio Gaiotto; Fernando Bacal; Pablo Maria Alberto Pomerantzeff; Ronaldo Honorato Barros Santos; Jorge Kalil; Edecio Cunha-Neto; Christophe Chevillard

Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) modulate gene expression at the epigenetic, transcriptional, and posttranscriptional levels. Dysregulation of the lncRNA known as myocardial infarction-associated transcript (MIAT) has been associated with myocardial infarction. Chagas disease causes a severe inflammatory dilated chronic cardiomyopathy (CCC). We investigated the role of MIAT in CCC. A whole-transcriptome analysis of heart biopsy specimens and formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded samples revealed that MIAT was overexpressed in patients with CCC, compared with subjects with noninflammatory dilated cardiomyopathy and controls. These results were confirmed in a mouse model. Results suggest that MIAT is a specific biomarker of CCC.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2015

MicroRNA Transcriptome Profiling in Heart of Trypanosoma cruzi-Infected Mice: Parasitological and Cardiological Outcomes

Isabela Cunha Navarro; Frederico Moraes Ferreira; Helder I. Nakaya; Monique Andrade Baron; Glaucia Vilar-Pereira; Isabela Resende Pereira; Ana Maria Gonçalves da Silva; Juliana Monte Real; Thales de Brito; Christophe Chevillard; Joseli Lannes-Vieira; Jorge Kalil; Edecio Cunha-Neto; Ludmila Rodrigues Pinto Ferreira

Chagas disease is caused by the parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, and it begins with a short acute phase characterized by high parasitemia followed by a life-long chronic phase with scarce parasitism. Cardiac involvement is the most prominent manifestation, as 30% of infected subjects will develop abnormal ventricular repolarization with myocarditis, fibrosis and cardiomyocyte hypertrophy by undefined mechanisms. Nevertheless, follow-up studies in chagasic patients, as well as studies with murine models, suggest that the intensity of clinical symptoms and pathophysiological events that occur during the acute phase of disease are associated with the severity of cardiac disease observed during the chronic phase. In the present study we investigated the role of microRNAs (miRNAs) in the disease progression in response to T. cruzi infection, as alterations in miRNA levels are known to be associated with many cardiovascular disorders. We screened 641 rodent miRNAs in heart samples of mice during an acute infection with the Colombiana T.cruzi strain and identified multiple miRNAs significantly altered upon infection. Seventeen miRNAs were found significantly deregulated in all three analyzed time points post infection. Among these, six miRNAs had their expression correlated with clinical parameters relevant to the disease, such as parasitemia and maximal heart rate-corrected QT (QTc) interval. Computational analyses identified that the gene targets for these six miRNAs were involved in networks and signaling pathways related to increased ventricular depolarization and repolarization times, important factors for QTc interval prolongation. The data presented here will guide further studies about the contribution of microRNAs to Chagas heart disease pathogenesis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Macromolecular assembly of polycystin-2 intracytosolic C-terminal domain

Frederico Moraes Ferreira; Leandro C. Oliveira; Gregory G. Germino; José N. Onuchic; Luiz F. Onuchic

Mutations in PKD2 are responsible for approximately 15% of the autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease cases. This gene encodes polycystin-2, a calcium-permeable cation channel whose C-terminal intracytosolic tail (PC2t) plays an important role in its interaction with a number of different proteins. In the present study, we have comprehensively evaluated the macromolecular assembly of PC2t homooligomer using a series of biophysical and biochemical analyses. Our studies, based on a new delimitation of PC2t, have revealed that it is capable of assembling as a homotetramer independently of any other portion of the molecule. Our data support this tetrameric arrangement in the presence and absence of calcium. Molecular dynamics simulations performed with a modified all-atoms structure-based model supported the PC2t tetrameric assembly, as well as how different populations are disposed in solution. The simulations demonstrated, indeed, that the best-scored structures are the ones compatible with a fourfold oligomeric state. These findings clarify the structural properties of PC2t domain and strongly support a homotetramer assembly of PC2.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2000

Crystallization and preliminary crystallographic analysis of N-acetylglucosamine 6-phosphate deacetylase from Escherichia coli.

Frederico Moraes Ferreira; Guillermo Mendoza-Hernández; Mario L. Calcagno; F. Minauro; L.F. Delboni; Glaucius Oliva

N-Acetylglucosamine 6-phosphate deacetylase (E.C. 3.5.1.25), an enzyme from Escherichia coli involved in aminosugar catabolism, has been crystallized by the vapour-diffusion technique using phosphate as precipitant. X-ray diffraction experiments show the crystals to belong to the orthorhombic crystal system, with space group P2(1)2(1)2. The unit-cell parameters are a = 82.09 (2), b = 114.50 (1), c = 80.17 (1) A. The crystals diffract to a maximum resolution of 1.8 A and an initial data set was collected to 2.0 A.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2016

Blood Gene Signatures of Chagas disease Cardiomyopathy with or without ventricular dysfunction.

Ludmila Rodrigues Pinto Ferreira; Frederico Moraes Ferreira; Helder I. Nakaya; Xutao Deng; Darlan da Silva Cândido; Lea Campos de Oliveira; Jean-Noel Billaud; Marion C. Lanteri; Vagner Oliveira-Carvalho Rigaud; Mark Seielstad; Jorge Kalil; Fábio Fernandes; Antonio Luiz Pinho Ribeiro; Ester C. Sabino; Edecio Cunha-Neto

Chagas disease, caused by the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, affects 7 million people in Latin American areas of endemicity. About 30% of infected patients will develop chronic Chagas cardiomyopathy (CCC), an inflammatory cardiomyopathy characterized by hypertrophy, fibrosis, and myocarditis. Further studies are necessary to understand the molecular mechanisms of disease progression. Transcriptome analysis has been increasingly used to identify molecular changes associated with disease outcomes. We thus assessed the whole-blood transcriptome of patients with Chagas disease. Microarray analysis was performed on blood samples from 150 subjects, of whom 30 were uninfected control patients and 120 had Chagas disease (1 group had asymptomatic disease, and 2 groups had CCC with either a preserved or reduced left ventricular ejection fraction [LVEF]). Each Chagas disease group displayed distinct gene expression and functional pathway profiles. The most different expression patterns were between CCC groups with a preserved or reduced LVEF. A more stringent analysis indicated that 27 differentially expressed genes, particularly those related to natural killer (NK)/CD8+ T-cell cytotoxicity, separated the 2 groups. NK/CD8+ T-cell cytotoxicity could play a role in determining Chagas disease progression. Understanding genes associated with disease may lead to improved insight into CCC pathogenesis and the identification of prognostic factors for CCC progression.


Clinical Medicine Insights: Cardiology | 2014

Distinct Mitral Valve Proteomic Profiles in Rheumatic Heart Disease and Myxomatous Degeneration

Carlo de Oliveira Martins; Keity Souza Santos; Frederico Moraes Ferreira; P. C. Teixeira; Pablo Maria Alberto Pomerantzeff; Carlos Manuel de Almeida Brandão; Roney Orismar Sampaio; Guilherme Sobreira Spina; Jorge Kalil; Luiza Guilherme; Edecio Cunha-Neto

Rheumatic heart disease (RHD) affects heart-valve tissue and is the most serious consequence of group A Streptococcus infection. Myxomatous degeneration (MXD) is the most frequent valvopathy in the western world. In the present work, key protein expression alterations in the heart-valve tissue of RHD and MXD patients were identified and characterized, with controls from cadaveric organ donors. Proteins were separated by two-dimensional (2D)-electrophoresis and identified by mass spectrometry. We found 17 differentially expressed protein spots, as compared to control samples. We observed an increased expression of ASAP-2 in the RHD patients’ valves, while collagen-VI, haptoglobin-related protein, prolargin, and cartilage oligomeric protein showed reduced expression. Valve tissue of MXD patients, on the other hand, presented lower expression of annexin-Al and A2, septin-2, SOD (Cu/Zn), and transgelin. Tissue samples from both valvopathies displayed higher expression of apolipoprotein-Al. Biglycan was downexpressed in both diseases. Vimentin and lumican showed higher expression in RHD and lower in MXD. These results suggest that key pathogenetic mechanisms are intrinsically distinct in RHD and MXD.


Birth Defects Research Part C-embryo Today-reviews | 2016

Wide spectrum of NR5A1-related phenotypes in 46,XY and 46,XX individuals

Sorahia Domenice; Aline Zamboni Machado; Frederico Moraes Ferreira; Bruno Ferraz-de-Souza; Antonio M. Lerario; Lin Lin; Mirian Y. Nishi; Nathalia Lisboa Gomes; Thatiana Evelin da Silva; Rosana Barbosa Silva; Rafaela Vieira Correa; Luciana R. Montenegro; Amanda Narciso; Elaine Maria Frade Costa; John C. Achermann; Berenice B. Mendonca

Steroidogenic factor 1 (NR5A1, SF‐1, Ad4BP) is a transcriptional regulator of genes involved in adrenal and gonadal development and function. Mutations in NR5A1 have been among the most frequently identified genetic causes of gonadal development disorders and are associated with a wide phenotypic spectrum. In 46,XY individuals, NR5A1‐related phenotypes may range from disorders of sex development (DSD) to oligo/azoospermia, and in 46,XX individuals, from 46,XX ovotesticular and testicular DSD to primary ovarian insufficiency (POI). The most common 46,XY phenotype is atypical or female external genitalia with clitoromegaly, palpable gonads, and absence of Müllerian derivatives. Notably, an undervirilized external genitalia is frequently seen at birth, while spontaneous virilization may occur later, at puberty. In 46,XX individuals, NR5A1 mutations are a rare genetic cause of POI, manifesting as primary or secondary amenorrhea, infertility, hypoestrogenism, and elevated gonadotropin levels. Mothers and sisters of 46,XY DSD patients carrying heterozygous NR5A1 mutations may develop POI, and therefore require appropriate counseling. Moreover, the recurrent heterozygous p.Arg92Trp NR5A1 mutation is associated with variable degrees of testis development in 46,XX patients. A clear genotype‐phenotype correlation is not seen in patients bearing NR5A1 mutations, suggesting that genetic modifiers, such as pathogenic variants in other testis/ovarian‐determining genes, may contribute to the phenotypic expression. Here, we review the published literature on NR5A1‐related disease, and discuss our findings at a single tertiary center in Brazil, including ten novel NR5A1 mutations identified in 46,XY DSD patients. The ever‐expanding phenotypic range associated with NR5A1 variants in XY and XX individuals confirms its pivotal role in reproductive biology, and should alert clinicians to the possibility of NR5A1 defects in a variety of phenotypes presenting with gonadal dysfunction. Birth Defects Research (Part C) 108:309–320, 2016.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2017

IHH Gene Mutations Causing Short Stature With Nonspecific Skeletal Abnormalities and Response to Growth Hormone Therapy

Gabriela A. Vasques; Mariana F. A. Funari; Frederico Moraes Ferreira; Miriam Aza-Carmona; Lucía Sentchordi-Montané; Jimena Barraza-García; Antonio M. Lerario; Guilherme Lopes Yamamoto; Michel Satya Naslavsky; Yeda Aparecida de Oliveira Duarte; Débora Romeo Bertola; Karen E. Heath; Alexander A. L. Jorge

Context Genetic evaluation has been recognized as an important tool to elucidate the causes of growth disorders. Objective To investigate the cause of short stature and to determine the phenotype of patients with IHH mutations, including the response to recombinant human growth hormone (rhGH) therapy. Patients and Methods We studied 17 families with autosomal-dominant short stature by using whole exome sequencing and screened IHH defects in 290 patients with growth disorders. Molecular analyses were performed to evaluate the potential impact of N-terminal IHH variants. Results We identified 10 pathogenic or possibly pathogenic variants in IHH, an important regulator of endochondral ossification. Molecular analyses revealed a smaller potential energy of mutated IHH molecules. The allele frequency of rare, predicted to be deleterious IHH variants found in short-stature samples (1.6%) was higher than that observed in two control cohorts (0.017% and 0.08%; P < 0.001). Identified IHH variants segregate with short stature in a dominant inheritance pattern. Affected individuals typically manifest mild disproportional short stature with a frequent finding of shortening of the middle phalanx of the fifth finger. None of them have classic features of brachydactyly type A1, which was previously associated with IHH mutations. Five patients heterozygous for IHH variants had a good response to rhGH therapy. The mean change in height standard deviation score in 1 year was 0.6. Conclusion Our study demonstrated the association of pathogenic variants in IHH with short stature with nonspecific skeletal abnormalities and established a frequent cause of growth disorder, with a preliminary good response to rhGH.

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Jorge Kalil

University of São Paulo

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