Jenicer K. U. Yokoyama-Yasunaka
University of São Paulo
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jenicer K. U. Yokoyama-Yasunaka.
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2008
Danilo C. Miguel; Rogéria C. Zauli-Nascimento; Jenicer K. U. Yokoyama-Yasunaka; Simone Katz; Clara Lúcia Barbiéri; Silvia R. B. Uliana
OBJECTIVES The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of tamoxifen in vivo in experimental models of cutaneous (CL) and visceral leishmaniasis (VL) caused by Leishmania braziliensis and Leishmania chagasi, respectively. METHODS Drug activity was assessed against intracellular amastigotes by treating infected macrophage cultures and evaluating the number of infected cells. In vivo efficacy of tamoxifen was tested in L. braziliensis-infected BALB/c mice and in L. chagasi-infected hamsters. Treatment with 20 mg/kg/day tamoxifen was administered for 15 days by the intraperitoneal route. Efficacy was evaluated through measurements of lesion size, parasite burden at the lesion site or liver and spleen and survival rate. RESULTS Tamoxifen killed L. braziliensis and L. chagasi intracellular amastigotes with 50% inhibitory concentrations (IC(50)) of 1.9 +/- 0.2 and 2.4 +/- 0.3 microM, respectively. Treatment of L. braziliensis-infected mice with tamoxifen resulted in significant reductions in lesion size and 99% decrease in parasite burden, compared with mock-treated controls. L. chagasi-infected hamsters treated with tamoxifen showed significant reductions in liver parasite load expressed as Leishman-Donovan units and 95% to 98% reduction in spleen parasite burden. All animals treated with tamoxifen survived while 100% of the mock-treated animals had died by 11 weeks after the interruption of treatment. CONCLUSIONS Tamoxifen is effective in the treatment of CL and VL in rodent models.
Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy | 2009
Denise Costa Arruda; Danilo C. Miguel; Jenicer K. U. Yokoyama-Yasunaka; Alejandro M. Katzin; Silvia R. B. Uliana
Limonene is a monoterpene that has antitumoral, antibiotic and antiprotozoal activity. In this study we demonstrate the activity of limonene against Leishmania species in vitro and in vivo. Limonene killed Leishmania amazonensis promastigotes and amastigotes with 50% inhibitory concentrations of 252.0+/-49.0 and 147.0+/-46.0 microM, respectively. Limonene was also effective against Leishmania major, Leishmania braziliensis and Leishmania chagasi promastigotes. The treatment of L. amazonensis-infected macrophages with 300 microM limonene resulted in 78% reduction in infection rates. L. amazonensis-infected mice treated topically or intrarectally with limonene had significant reduction of lesion sizes. A significant decrease in the parasite load was shown in the lesions treated topically with limonene by histopathological examination. The intrarectal treatment was highly effective in decreasing the parasite burden, healing established lesions and suppressing the dissemination of ulcers. Limonene presents low toxicity in humans and has been shown to be effective as an agent for enhancing the percutaneous permeation of drugs. Our results suggest that limonene should be tested in different experimental models of infection by Leishmania.
Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2009
Rogéria C. Zauli-Nascimento; Danilo C. Miguel; Jenicer K. U. Yokoyama-Yasunaka; Ledice Inácia de Araújo Pereira; Milton Adriano Pelli de Oliveira; Fátima Ribeiro-Dias; Miriam Leandro Dorta; Silvia R. B. Uliana
Resistance of Leishmania parasites to specific chemotherapy has become a well‐documented problem in the Indian subcontinent in recent years but only a few studies have focused on the susceptibility of American Leishmania isolates. Our susceptibility assays to meglumine antimoniate were performed against intracellular amastigotes after standardizing an in vitro model of macrophage infection appropriate for Leishmania (Viannia) braziliensis isolates. For the determination of promastigote susceptibility to amphotericin B, we developed a simplified MTT‐test. The sensitivity in vitro to meglumine antimoniate and amphotericin B of 13 isolates obtained from Brazilian patients was determined. L. (V.) braziliensis isolates were more susceptible to meglumine antimoniate than Leishmania (Leishmania) amazonensis. EC50, EC90 and activity indexes (calculated over the sensitivity of reference strains), suggested that all isolates tested were susceptible in vitro to meglumine antimoniate, and did not show association with the clinical outcomes. Isolates were also uniformly susceptible in vitro to amphotericin B.
PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2008
Danilo C. Miguel; Jenicer K. U. Yokoyama-Yasunaka; Silvia R. B. Uliana
Background Chemotherapy is still a critical issue in the management of leishmaniasis. Until recently, pentavalent antimonials, amphotericin B or pentamidine compounded the classical arsenal of treatment. All these drugs are toxic and have to be administered by the parenteral route. Tamoxifen has been used as an antiestrogen in the treatment and prevention of breast cancer for many years. Its safety and pharmacological profiles are well established in humans. We have shown that tamoxifen is active as an antileishmanial compound in vitro, and in this paper we analyzed the efficacy of tamoxifen for the treatment of mice infected with Leishmania amazonensis, an etiological agent of localized cutaneous leishmaniasis and the main cause of diffuse cutaneous leishmaniasis in South America. Methodology/Principal Findings BALB/c mice were infected with L. amazonensis promastigotes. Five weeks post-infection, treatment with 15 daily intraperitoneal injections of 20 mg/kg tamoxifen was administered. Lesion and ulcer sizes were recorded and parasite burden quantified by limiting dilution. A significant decrease in lesion size and ulcer development was noted in mice treated with tamoxifen as compared to control untreated animals. Parasite burden in the inoculation site at the end of treatment was reduced from 108.5±0.7 in control untreated animals to 105.0±0.0 in tamoxifen-treated mice. Parasite load was also reduced in the draining lymph nodes. The reduction in parasite number was sustained: 6 weeks after the end of treatment, 1015.5±0.5 parasites were quantified from untreated animals, as opposed to 105.1±0.1 parasites detected in treated mice. Conclusions/Significance Treatment of BALB/c mice infected with L. amazonensis for 15 days with tamoxifen resulted in significant decrease in lesion size and parasite burden. BALB/c mice infected with L. amazonensis represents a model of extreme susceptibility, and the striking and sustained reduction in the number of parasites in treated animals supports the proposal of further testing of this drug in other models of leishmaniasis.
Acta Tropica | 1994
Jenicer K. U. Yokoyama-Yasunaka; Elizabeth M. F. Pral; Silvia C. Alfieri; Anna Maria S. Stolf
Trypanosoma cruzi trypomastigotes were shown to predominantly release high molecular weight components (above 50 kDa) when allowed to shed for 1 hour in protein-free media. Under these conditions, parasites were not damaged or lysed, as was indicated by: (a) their normal mobility; (b) their retaining of some of the labelled proteins; (c) the unchanged pattern of biotinylated surface proteins after shedding. Shed components were shown to display proteinase activities, detected at 97 and 50/60 kDa in gelatin gels. These proteolytic activities were completely inhibited by E-64, indicating that they were due to cysteine proteinases.
European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010
Cedric Stephan Graebin; Maria de Fátima Madeira; Jenicer K. U. Yokoyama-Yasunaka; Danilo C. Miguel; Silvia R. B. Uliana; Diego Benítez; Hugo Cerecetto; Mercedes González; Ricardo Gomes da Rosa; Vera Lucia Eifler-Lima
The synthesis and in vitro activity of R(+)-Limonene derivatives against Leishmania and Trypanosoma cruzi strains are reported. Seven compounds have shown better in vitro activity against Leishmania (V.)braziliensis than the standard drug pentamidine. Additionally, we have identified two promising new anti-T. cruzi limonene derivatives.
Vaccine | 2002
Carlos H. Serezani; Amanda Richards Franco; Mariana Wajc; Jenicer K. U. Yokoyama-Yasunaka; Gerhard Wunderlich; Monamaris Marques Borges; Silvia R. B. Uliana
The meta 1 gene of Leishmania is conserved across the genus and encodes a protein upregulated in metacyclic promastigotes. Meta 1 constitutive overexpressing mutants show increased virulence to mice. In this paper, both meta 1 recombinant protein and plasmids bearing the meta 1 gene were tested for their antigenicity and potential for inducing protective immunity in mice. Vaccination with the recombinant protein induced a predominant Th2-type of response and did not result in protection upon challenge with live parasites. Surprisingly, the expected reversal to a CD4(+) Th1-type of response upon genetic immunisation by the intramuscular route was not observed. Instead, vaccination with either the meta 1 gene alone or in fusion with the monocyte chemotactic protein (MCP)-3 cDNA induced a Th2-type of response that correlated with lack of protection against infection.
Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2013
Juliana Q. Reimão; Cristiana T. Trinconi; Jenicer K. U. Yokoyama-Yasunaka; Danilo C. Miguel; Sandra P. Kalil; Silvia R. B. Uliana
Given the lack of effective and safe alternatives to the drugs already in use, considerable efforts are being applied to the search of new therapeutic options to treat leishmaniasis. A necessary step in the discovery of antileishmanial drugs is the validation of drug candidates in mouse models. The standard methods to quantify the parasite burden in animal models, mainly culture-based, are time consuming and expensive. In recent years, in vivo imaging systems have been proposed as a tool to overcome these problems, allowing parasite detection in living organisms. Here we compared different treatment efficacy evaluation approaches. Recombinant Leishmania (L.) amazonensis lines expressing the luciferase gene (La-LUC) were obtained and characterized for biological properties as compared with the wild type (WT) parental line. Bioluminescence generated by La-LUC was shown to correlate with the number of promastigotes in vitro. La-LUC promastigotes and intracellular amastigotes were equally sensitive to amphotericin B (AmB) as the WT parasites. The clinical pattern of lesion development upon infection with the transgenic lines was similar to lesions observed after infection with the WT strain. The half maximal effective dose (ED50) of AmB was determined in La-LUC infected mice through quantification of bioluminescence in vivo and ex vivo, by limiting dilution and using clinical parameters. There was agreement in the ED50 determined by all methods. Quantification of bioluminescence in vivo and/or ex vivo was elected as the best tool for determining parasite burden to assess drug efficacy in infected mice. Furthermore, the detailed analysis of AmB effectiveness in this model generated useful data to be used in drug combination experiments.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2014
Cristiana T. Trinconi; Juliana Q. Reimão; Jenicer K. U. Yokoyama-Yasunaka; Danilo C. Miguel; Silvia R. B. Uliana
ABSTRACT Leishmaniasis chemotherapy remains very challenging. The high cost of active drugs, along with the severity of their side effects and the increasing failure rate of the current therapeutic schemes, calls for the discovery of new active drugs and schemes of treatment. The use of combination therapy has gained much attention in recent years as a possible strategy for overcoming the various shortcomings in the present arsenal. We recently described the effectiveness of tamoxifen in murine models of leishmaniasis, and here, we investigated the interactions between tamoxifen and amphotericin B, one of the most potent drugs used in leishmaniasis treatment. The in vitro interactions were indifferent for the association of tamoxifen and amphotericin B. The association was also assayed in vivo in Leishmania amazonensis-infected BALB/c mice and was found to yield at least additive effects at low doses of both drugs.
Experimental Parasitology | 2011
Camila S. Ramos; Jenicer K. U. Yokoyama-Yasunaka; Cristina Guerra-Giraldez; Helen P. Price; Renato A. Mortara; Deborah F. Smith; Silvia R. B. Uliana
The META cluster of Leishmania amazonensis contains both META1 and META2 genes, which are upregulated in metacyclic promastigotes and encode proteins containing the META domain. Previous studies defined META2 as a 48.0-kDa protein, which is conserved in other Leishmania species and in Trypanosoma brucei. In this work, we demonstrate that META2 protein expression is regulated during the Leishmania life cycle but constitutive in T. brucei. META2 protein is present in the cytoplasm and flagellum of L. amazonensis promastigotes. Leishmania META2-null replacement mutants are more sensitive to oxidative stress and, upon heat shock, assume rounded morphology with shortened flagella. The increased susceptibility of null parasites to heat shock is reversed by extra-chromosomal expression of the META2 gene. Defective Leishmania promastigotes exhibit decreased ability to survive in macrophages. By contrast, META2 expression is decreased by 80% in RNAi-induced T. brucei bloodstream forms with no measurable effect on survival or resistance to heat shock.