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Dive into the research topics where Gabriela Silva Monteiro Paula is active.

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Featured researches published by Gabriela Silva Monteiro Paula.


The Journal of Physiology | 2010

Female mice target deleted for the neuromedin B receptor have partial resistance to diet‐induced obesity

Gabriela Silva Monteiro Paula; Luana Lopes Souza; Adriana Cabanelas; Flavia Fonseca Bloise; Valeria de Mello-Coelho; Etsuko Wada; Tania M. Ortiga-Carvalho; Karen Jesus Oliveira; Carmen C. Pazos-Moura

Previous studies have proposed a role for neuromedin B (NB), a bombesin‐like peptide, in the control of body weight homeostasis. However, the nature of this role is unclear. The actions of NB are mediated preferentially by NB‐preferring receptors (NBRs). Here we examined the consequences of targeted deletion of NBRs in female mice on body weight homeostasis in mice fed a normolipid diet (ND) or a high‐fat diet (HFD) for 13 weeks. Body weight and food ingestion of neuromedin B receptor knockout (NBR‐KO) mice fed a normolipid diet showed no difference in relation to wild‐type (WT). However, the high‐fat diet induced an 8.9‐ and 4.8‐fold increase in body weight of WT and NBR‐KO, respectively, compared to their controls maintained with a normolipid diet, even though the mice ingested the same amount of calories, regardless of genotype. Comparing mice fed the high‐fat diet, NBR‐KO mice accumulated approximately 45% less fat depot mass than WT, exhibited a lower percentage of fat in their carcasses (19.2 vs. 31.3%), and their adipocytes were less hypertrophied. Serum leptin and leptin mRNA in inguinal and perigonadal fat were lower in HFD NBR‐KO than HFD WT, and serum adiponectin was similar among HFD groups and unaltered in comparison to ND‐fed mice. HFD‐fed WT mice developed glucose intolerance but not the HFD‐fed NBR‐KO mice, although they had similar glycaemia and insulinaemia. NBR‐KO and WT mice on the normolipid diet showed no differences in any parameters, except for a trend to lower insulin levels. Therefore, disruption of the neuromedin B receptor pathway did not change body weight homeostasis in female mice fed a normolipid diet; however, it did result in partial resistance to diet‐induced obesity.


Journal of Endocrinology | 2011

Thyroid hormone contributes to the hypolipidemic effect of polyunsaturated fatty acids from fish oil: in vivo evidence for cross talking mechanisms

Luana Lopes Souza; Aline Cordeiro; Lorraine Soares Oliveira; Gabriela Silva Monteiro Paula; Larissa Costa Faustino; Tania M. Ortiga-Carvalho; Karen Jesus Oliveira; Carmen Cabanelas Pazos-Moura

n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (n-3 PUFA) from fish oil (FO) exert important lipid-lowering effects, an effect also ascribed to thyroid hormones (TH) and TH receptor β1 (TRβ1)-specific agonists. n-3 PUFA effects are mediated by nuclear receptors, such as peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPAR) and others. In this study, we investigated a role for TH signaling in n-3 PUFA effects. Euthyroid and hypothyroid adult rats (methimazole-treated for 5 weeks) received FO or soybean oil (control) by oral administration for 3 weeks. In euthyroid rats, FO treatment reduced serum triglycerides and cholesterol, diminished body fat, and increased protein content of the animals. In addition, FO-treated rats exhibited higher liver expression of TRβ1 and mitochondrial α-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase (mGPD), at protein and mRNA levels, but no alteration of glutathione S-transferase or type 1 deiodinase. In hypothyroid condition, FO induced reduction in serum cholesterol and increase in body protein content, but lost the ability to reduce triglycerides and body fat, and to induce TRβ1 and mGDP expression. FO did not change PPARα liver abundance regardless of thyroid state; however, hypothyroidism led to a marked increase in PPARα liver content but did not alter TRβ1 or TRα expression. The data suggest that part of the effect of n-3 PUFA from FO on lipid metabolism is dependent on TH signaling in specific steps and together with the marked upregulation of PPARα in liver of hypothyroid rats suggest important in vivo consequences of the cross-talking between those fatty acids and TH pathways in liver metabolism.


Regulatory Peptides | 2008

Impaired serum thyrotropin response to hypothyroidism in mice with disruption of neuromedin B receptor.

Karen Jesus Oliveira; Adriana Cabanelas; Marco Aurélio Liberato Costa da Veiga; Gabriela Silva Monteiro Paula; Tania M. Ortiga-Carvalho; Etsuko Wada; Keiji Wada; Carmen C. Pazos-Moura

Neuromedin B (NB), a neuropeptide highly concentrated in pituitary, has been proposed to be an inhibitor of thyrotropin (TSH) secretion. Previous study showed that mice with disruption of neuromedin B receptor (NBR-KO) have higher TSH release in response to thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH), although TSH seems to have decreased bioactivity. Here we examined in NBR-KO mice the response of TSH to thyroid hormone (TH) deprivation, obtained by methimazole treatment, or excess, obtained by acute and chronic TH administration. In response to hypothyroidism NBR-KO mice exhibited a lower magnitude increase in serum TSH compared to wild-type (WT) mice (1.7 vs. 3.3-times increase compared to euthyroid values, respectively, P<0.001). One hour after a single T4 injection (0.4 microg/100 g BW), WT and NBR-KO hypothyroid mice presented similar degree of serum TSH reduction (54%, P<0.05). However, 3 h after T4 administration, WT mice presented serum TSH similar to hypothyroid baseline, while NBR-KO mice still had decreased serum TSH (30% reduced in comparison to hypothyroid baseline P<0.05). T3 treatment of euthyroid mice for 21 days, with progressively increasing doses, significantly reduced serum TSH similarly in WT and NBR-KO mice. Also, serum T4 exhibited the same degree of suppression in WT and NBR-KO. In conclusion, disruption of neuromedin B receptor did not interfere with the sensitivity of thyroid hormone-mediated suppression of TSH release, but impaired the ability of thyrotroph to increase serum TSH in hypothyroidism, which highlights the importance of NB in modulating the set point of the hypothalamus-pituitary-thyroid axis at hypothyroidism.


Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture | 2016

Cinnamon intake reduces serum T3 level and modulates tissue‐specific expression of thyroid hormone receptor and target genes in rats

Thaiane Gadioli Gaique; Bruna Pereira Lopes; Luana Lopes Souza; Gabriela Silva Monteiro Paula; Carmen C. Pazos-Moura; Karen Jesus Oliveira

BACKGROUND Cinnamon has several effects on energy metabolism. However, no data exist on the impact of cinnamon intake on thyroid hormone serum concentrations and action, since thyroid hormones (THs) play a major role in metabolism. RESULTS Male rats were treated with cinnamon water extract (400 mg kg(-1) body weight, 25 days). Cinnamon supplementation resulted in a lower serum total T3 level accompanied by normal serum T4 and TSH levels. The cinnamon-treated rats did not exhibit significant differences in TSHβ subunit, TRβ or deiodinase type 2 mRNA expression in the pituitary. In the liver, cinnamon did not change the TRβ protein expression or the deiodinase type 1 mRNA expression, suggesting that there were no changes in T3 signaling or metabolism in this organ. However, mitochondrial GPDH, a target gene for T3 in the liver, exhibited no changes in mRNA expression, although its activity level was reduced by cinnamon. In the cardiac ventricle, T3 action was markedly reduced by cinnamon, as demonstrated by the lower TRα mRNA and protein levels, reduced SERCA2a and RyR2 and increased phospholamban mRNA expression. CONCLUSION This study has revealed that TH action is a novel target of cinnamon, demonstrating impairment of T3 signaling in the cardiac ventricles.


Regulatory Peptides | 2014

Hypothalamic–pituitary thyroid axis alterations in female mice with deletion of the neuromedin B receptor gene

Karen Jesus Oliveira; Gabriela Silva Monteiro Paula; Guinever Eustaquio Imperio; Nina O. Bressane; Carolina Magalhães; Leandro Miranda-Alves; Tania M. Ortiga-Carvalho; Carmen C. Pazos-Moura

Neuromedin B, a peptide highly expressed at the pituitary, has been shown to act as autocrine/paracrine inhibitor of thyrotropin (TSH) release. Here we studied the thyroid axis of adult female mice lacking neuromedin B receptor (NBR-KO), compared to wild type (WT) littermates. They exhibited slight increase in serum TSH (18%), with normal pituitary expression of mRNA coding for α-glycoprotein subunit (Cga), but reduced TSH β-subunit mRNA (Tshb, 41%), lower intra-pituitary TSH content (24%) and increased thyroid hormone transporter MCT-8 (Slc16a2, 44%) and thyroid hormone receptor β mRNA expression (Thrb, 39%). NBR-KO mice exhibited normal thyroxine (T4) and reduced triiodothyronine (T3) (30%), with no alterations in the intra-thyroidal content of T4 and T3 or thyroid morphological changes. Hypothalamic thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) mRNA (Trh) was increased (68%), concomitant with a reduction in type 2 deiodinase mRNA (Dio2, 30%) and no changes in MCT-8 and thyroid hormone receptor mRNA expression. NBR-KO mice exhibited a 56% higher increase in serum TSH in response to an acute single intraperitoneal injection of TRH concomitant with a non-significant increase in pituitary TRH receptor (Trhr) mRNA at basal state. The phenotype of female NBR-KO mice at the hypothalamus-pituitary axis revealed alterations in pituitary and hypothalamic gene expression, associated with reduced serum T3, and higher TSH response to TRH, with apparently normal thyroid morphology and hormonal production. Thus, results confirm that neuromedin B pathways are importantly involved in secretory pathways of TSH and revealed its participation in the in vivo regulation of gene expression of TSH β-subunit and pituitary MCT8 and Thrb and hypothalamic TRH and type 2 deiodinase.


Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry | 2010

Effects of dietary fish oil on thyroid hormone signaling in the liver

Luana Lopes Souza; Marcio O. Nunes; Gabriela Silva Monteiro Paula; Aline Cordeiro; Vânia Penha-Pinto; José Firmino Nogueira Neto; Karen Jesus Oliveira; Maria das Graças Tavares do Carmo; Carmen C. Pazos-Moura


Journal of Endocrinology | 2006

Peptide YY (PYY)3–36 modulates thyrotropin secretion in rats

Karen Jesus Oliveira; Gabriela Silva Monteiro Paula; Ricardo Henrique Costa-e-Sousa; Luana Lopes Souza; Débora Cristina de Moraes; F H Curty; Carmen C. Pazos-Moura


Food & Function | 2015

Cinnamon extract improves the body composition and attenuates lipogenic processes in the liver and adipose tissue of rats

Bruna Pereira Lopes; Thaiane Gadioli Gaique; Luana Lopes Souza; Gabriela Silva Monteiro Paula; George Eduardo Gabriel Kluck; Georgia C. Atella; Anne Caroline Candido Gomes; Naomi Kato Simas; Ricardo Machado Kuster; Tania M. Ortiga-Carvalho; Carmen C. Pazos-Moura; Karen Jesus Oliveira


Hormone and Metabolic Research | 2016

Mice with Deletion of Neuromedin B Receptor Exhibit Decreased Oral Glucose-Stimulated Insulin Release

Gabriela Silva Monteiro Paula; Luana Lopes Souza; Nina O. Bressane; R. Maravalhas; M. Wilieman; T. Bento-Bernardes; K. R. Silva; L. S. Mendonca; Karen Jesus Oliveira; Carmen C. Pazos-Moura


Journal of Functional Foods | 2018

Beneficial effects of Cinnamon on hepatic lipid metabolism are impaired in hypothyroid rats

Bruna Pereira Lopes; Thaiane Gadioli Gaique; Luana Lopes Souza; Gabriela Silva Monteiro Paula; George Eduardo Gabriel Kluck; Georgia C. Atella; Carmen Cabanelas Pazos-Moura; Karen Jesus Oliveira

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Karen Jesus Oliveira

Federal Fluminense University

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Luana Lopes Souza

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Carmen C. Pazos-Moura

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Tania M. Ortiga-Carvalho

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Bruna Pereira Lopes

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Nina O. Bressane

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Adriana Cabanelas

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Aline Cordeiro

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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