Henrique Leonel Lenzi
Oswaldo Cruz Foundation
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Featured researches published by Henrique Leonel Lenzi.
Journal of Immunology | 2000
Christianne Bandeira-Melo; Magda F. Serra; Bruno L. Diaz; Renato S.B. Cordeiro; Patrícia M.R. e Silva; Henrique Leonel Lenzi; Y. S. Bakhle; Charles N. Serhan; Marco A. Martins
In noninfected rats, challenge with allergen following local IgE sensitization induced a pleurisy marked by intense protein exudation that plateaued from 30 min to 4 h after challenge, reducing thereafter. Infection of rats with Angiostrongylus costaricensis induced a 5-fold increase in blood eosinophil numbers by 25 days postinfection, whereas the numbers of eosinophils in the pleural cavity ranged from normal to a weak increase. In infected rats, identically sensitized, challenge with Ag induced a much shorter duration of pleural edema with complete resolution by 4 h, but no change in the early edema response. In parallel, infection increased the number of eosinophils recovered from the pleural cavity at 4 h, but not at 30 min, following allergen challenge. Pretreatment with IL-5 (100 IU/kg, i.v.) also increased eosinophil numbers in blood and, after allergen challenge, shortened the duration of the pleural edema and increased pleural eosinophil numbers. There were increases in the levels of both PGE2 and lipoxin A4 (LXA4) in pleural exudate. Selective cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 inhibitors, NS-398, meloxicam, and SC-236, did not alter pleural eosinophilia, but reversed the curtailment of the edema in either infected or IL-5-pretreated rats. Pretreatment of noninfected animals with the PGE analogue, misoprostol, or two stable LXA4 analogues did not alter the magnitude of pleural exudation response, but clearly shortened its duration. These results indicate that the early resolution of allergic pleural edema observed during A. costaricensis infection coincided with a selective local eosinophilia and seemed to be mediated by COX-2-derived PGE2 and LXA4.
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1984
Maria P. Deane; Henrique Leonel Lenzi; Ana Maria Jansen
Epimastigotes multiplying extracellularly and metacyclic trypomastigotes, stages that correspond to the cycle of Trypanosoma cruzi in the intestinal lumen of its insect vector, were consistently found in the lumen of the anal glands of opossums Didelphis marsupialis inoculated subcutaneously with infective feces of triatomid bugs.
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2002
Allen W. Cheever; J. A. Lenzi; Henrique Leonel Lenzi; Zilton A. Andrade
Experimental models of Schistosoma mansoni infections in mammals have contributed greatly to our understanding of the pathology and pathogenesis of infection. We consider here hepatic and extrahepatic disease in models of acute and chronic infection. Experimental schistosome infections have also contributed more broadly to our understanding of granulomatous inflammation and our understanding of Th1 versus Th2 related inflammation and particularly to Th2-mediated fibrosis of the liver.
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2007
Roberta Lima Caldeira; Cristiane Lafetá Furtado Mendonça; Christiane Oliveira Goveia; Henrique Leonel Lenzi; Carlos Graeff-Teixeira; Walter dos Santos Lima; Ester Maria Mota; Iracy Lea Pecora; Aline Maria Zigiotto de Medeiros; Omar dos Santos Carvalho
Seeking the identification of Angiostrongylus cantonensis as a potential etiological agent of three clinical cases of eosinophilic meningitis, mollusc specimens were collected in the state of Espírito Santo, Brazil. The snails were identified as Sarasinula marginata (45 specimens), Subulina octona (157), Achatina fulica (45) and Bradybaena similaris (23). Larvae obtained were submitted to polymerase chain reaction and restriction fragment length polymorphism diagnosis. Their genetic profile were corresponded to A. cantonensis. Rattus norvegicus experimentally infected with third-stage larvae, developed menigoencephalitis, and parasites became sexually mature in the lungs. Additionally, larvae obtained from A. fulica snails, from São Vicente, state of São Paulo, also showed genetic profiles of this nematode. This is the first record of Brazilian molluscs infected with this nematode species.
Parasitology Research | 2005
Renata Heisler Neves; Carla de Lamare Biolchini; José Roberto Machado-Silva; Jorge José de Carvalho; Thiago Braga Branquinho; Henrique Leonel Lenzi; Maarten Hulstijn; Delir Corrêa Gomes
Classical schemes of the adult Schistosoma mansoni reproductive system have been described. In our study, whole adult worms derived from unisexual or mixed infections and stained with carmine chlorine were virtually and tomographically analyzed under confocal laser scanning microscopy. We found that: (1) there were morphological differences in the ovary, vitteline glands and testicular lobes between specimens derived from unisexual or mixed infections; (2) there was always a single lobed ovary (three or four lobes), presenting differentiation from the anterior to the posterior lobes, where the most mature oocytes were located; (3) the proximal segment of oviduct was connected to an ampullary dilatation, full of tailed spermatozoa, characterizing a seminal receptacle; (4) there was no long vitelline duct, but a short one that begins at the end of the proximal region of the vitelline gland; (5) long cells of Mehlis’ gland placed radially around the ootype were not observed. Otherwise, the ootype was only lined by thick cuboidal epithelial cells with plaited bases and nuclei with flabby chromatin, making a clear distinction from the uterine epithelium. This morphological feature suggests that each cell represents a gland. (6) In coupled males, the specimens located inside the gynaecophoric canal had smaller testicular lobes, suckers, and body length and width when compared to their partners. Our results show that the reproductive system does not follow a unique pattern within flatworms. Due to its better resolution, confocal laser scanning microscopy, using a reflected mode with tomographic sections, allows new interpretations, modifying the adopted and current descriptions of the internal morphological structures of S. mansoni adult worms.
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2005
Iran Mendonça da Silva; Roberto Thiengo; Maria José Conceição; Luis Rey; Henrique Leonel Lenzi; Edson Pereira Filho; Paulo César Ribeiro
Several cases of therapeutic failure of praziquantel used for the treatment of urinary schistosomiasis have been reported. Alternative drugs, like niridazol and metrifonate, have shown a lower therapeutic effect and more side effects than praziquantel. Twenty-six Brazilian military men (median age of 29 years) with a positive urine parasitological exam who were part of a United Nation peace mission in Mozambique in 1994 were treated with 40 mg/kg body weight praziquantel, single dose. They swam in Licungo river (Mocuba city, Mozambique) during the weekends. After this, they presented haematuria, dysuria, polakiuria, and lumbar pain. Control cystoscopy examinations carried out between 6 and 24 months after each treatment (including two additional treatments at a minimum interval of 6 months) revealed the presence of viable eggs. Granulomas in the vesical submucosa were observed in 46.2% (12/26) of the individuals. A vesical biopsy confirmed the presence of granulomas in all of these patients and the presence of viable eggs in 34.3% (9/26) of individuals who no longer excreted eggs in urine. The eggs filled with miracidia showed characteristics of viability. Histopathological examination using different strains demonstrated therapeutic failure and the need for repeated treatment. In this study, we demonstrated a low efficacy of praziquantel in the treatment of schistosomiasis haematobia, and the necessity of the urinary bladder biopsy as criterion of cure.
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2003
Roberta Lima Caldeira; Omar dos Santos Carvalho; Cristiane Lafetá Furtado Gomes de Mendonça; Carlos Graeff-Teixeira; Márcia Cristina Fernandes da Silva; Renata Ben; Rafael Lucyk Maurer; Walter dos Santos Lima; Henrique Leonel Lenzi
Angiostrongylus cantonensis, A. costaricensis, and A. vasorum are etiologic agents of human parasitic diseases. Their identification, at present, is only possible by examining the adult worm after a 40-day period following infection of vertebrate hosts with the third-stage larvae. In order to obtain a diagnostic tool to differentiate larvae and adult worm from the three referred species, polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism was carried out. The rDNA second internal transcribed spacer (ITS2) and mtDNA cytochrome oxidase I regions were amplified, followed by digestion of fragments with the restriction enzymes RsaI, HapII, AluI, HaeIII, DdeI and ClaI. The enzymes RsaI and ClaI exhibited the most discriminating profiles for the differentiation of the regions COI of mtDNA and ITS2 of rDNA respectively. The methodology using such regions proved to be efficient for the specific differentiation of the three species of Angiostrongylus under study.
Laboratory Investigation | 2009
Marciano Viana Paes; Henrique Leonel Lenzi; Ana Cristina Martins de Almeida Nogueira; Gerard J. Nuovo; Angela Teixeira Pinhão; Ester Maria Mota; Carlos Alberto Basílio-de-Oliveira; Hermann G. Schatzmayr; Ortrud Monika Barth; Ada M. B. Alves
One difficulty in studying dengue virus (DENV) is the lack of an experimental model that reproduces the human disease. In a previous work, we have shown that BALB/c mice intraperitoneally inoculated with a DENV-2 isolate presented viremia and mild focal areas of liver injuries. In this study, mice were inoculated by the intravenous route and presented extensive damage areas in the liver tissue, which were evaluated by histopathological and ultrastructural analysis. Hepatic injury was noted mainly around the central vein and portal tracts. Damages consist of hepatocyte injury, including steatosis, swelling and necrosis. Further, erythrophagocytosis, intercellular edema and vascular damages were evident, including hemorrhage, which is characteristic of the dengue-induced hepatitis in human liver. Hepatic lesions were already noted 2 days post infection (p.i.), although effects were more extensive after the seventh day p.i. An increase in alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase serum levels was detected 7 and 14 days p.i., respectively, and had correlation to hepatic lesions. Alterations caused by the DENV infection were self-limiting, with a remarkable reduction of all liver damages 49 days p.i. Virus antigens were detected in hepatocytes, Kupffer cells and vascular endothelium, suggesting virus replication in these cells. In situ hybridization, using a probe that anneals in the virus negative RNA strand, showed positive reaction in hepatocytes and vascular endothelium cells of infected mice, thus confirming virus replication in such cells. In general, results revealed that this mouse model reproduces some histopathological effects observed in humans and supports previous findings indicating virus replication in the hepatic tissue.
Cellular Immunology | 1985
Henrique Leonel Lenzi; Alma Mednis; Alain Dessein
We and others have previously reported that human blood mononuclear cells release in culture certain substances that enhance the capacity of purified human blood eosinophils to kill the antibody-coated larvae of Schistosoma mansoni. The present study shows that this eosinophil cytotoxicity-enhancing activity (ECEA) is released by monocytes and T lymphocytes. Monocytes produce ECEA in resting and in LPS-stimulated cultures; T lymphocytes release such activity when stimulated by mitogens such as concanavalin A. Furthermore, the human monocytic line U-937 also releases ECEA-like activity when stimulated by LPS. The enhancing activity produced by monocytes has been partially characterized: it is sensitive to proteolysis by trypsin, relatively heat stable, and associated with molecules that have an apparent molecular weight of 14,000 to 65,000 daltons and isoelectric points of 3.8-3.9, 4.2, 4.5, 4.8-4.9. This shows that while ECEA produced by monocytes is heterogeneous in size and charge, it is probably different from interleukin 1.
Malaria Journal | 2007
Leonardo J. M. Carvalho; Maria de Fátima Ferreira-da-Cruz; Cláudio Tadeu Daniel-Ribeiro; Marcelo Pelajo-Machado; Henrique Leonel Lenzi
BackgroundImmune responses to malaria blood stage infection are in general defective, with the need for long-term exposure to the parasite to achieve immunity, and with the development of immunopathology states such as cerebral malaria in many cases. One of the potential reasons for the difficulty in developing protective immunity is the poor development of memory responses. In this paper, the potential association of cellular reactivity in lymphoid organs (spleen, lymph nodes and Peyers patches) with immunity and pathology was evaluated during Plasmodium berghei ANKA infection in CBA mice.MethodsCBA mice were infected with 1 × 106P. berghei ANKA-parasitized erythrocytes and killed on days 3, 6–8 and 10 of infection. The spleen, lymph nodes and Peyers patches were collected, fixed in Carsons formalin, cut in 5 μm sections, mounted in glass slides, stained with Lennerts Giemsa and haematoxylin-eosin and analysed with bright-field microscopy.ResultsEarly (day 3) strong activation of T cells in secondary lymphoid organs was observed and, on days 6–8 of infection, there was overwhelming activation of B cells, with loss of conventional germinal center architecture, intense centroblast activation, proliferation and apoptosis but little differentiation to centrocytes. In the spleen, the marginal zone disappeared and the limits between the disorganized germinal center and the red pulp were blurred. Intense plasmacytogenesis was observed in the T cell zone.ConclusionThe observed alterations, especially the germinal center architecture disturbance (GCAD) with poor centrocyte differentiation, suggest that B cell responses during P. berghei ANKA infection in mice are defective, with potential impact on B cell memory responses.