Karin Maia Monteiro
State University of Campinas
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Publication
Featured researches published by Karin Maia Monteiro.
Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2008
Juliana L. Sacoman; Karin Maia Monteiro; Ana Possenti; Glyn Mara Figueira; Mary Ann Foglio; João Ernesto de Carvalho
The cytotoxicity of the dichloromethane crude extract (DCE), obtained from the aerial parts of Pothomorphe umbellata (L.) Miq (Piperaceae), was evaluated against nine human cancer cell lines (MCF-7, NCI-ADR/RES, OVCAR-3, PC-3, HT-29, NCI-H460, 786-O, UACC-62, K-562). The DCE presented antiproliferative activity with good potency against all cell lines at low concentrations (between 4.0 and 9.5 microg/mL) and with selectivity (1.55 microg/mL) for the leukemia cell line (K-652). DCE (100, 200, 300 and 400 mg/kg, ip) was also evaluated in the Ehrlich ascites tumor model. Both the survival number and the life span of the animals that died increased by at least 45 and 50%, respectively (8 animals per group), demonstrating P. umbellata extract potential anticancer activity. The results of the in vivo antitumor activity prompted the fractionation of the crude extract. The crude extract was submitted to dry column chromatography with dichloromethane-methanol (99:1). The column effluent fractions were extracted with methanol, dried under vacuum yielding fractions FR1 (less polar), FR2 (medium polarity), and FR3 (polar), which were analyzed for their growth inhibition or cytotoxic properties by a 48-h sulforhodamine B cell viability assay by measuring the total protein content. FR1 demonstrated high potency and cytotoxicity, a result compatible with the high toxicity of oxalic acid; FR2, containing 4-nerolidylcathecol, presented the lowest cytotoxic activity compared to the other two fractions but with selectivity for prostate cancer cell line; FR3, containing a mixture of steroids described in the literature as possessing various biological activities, also presented potent anticancer in vitro activity. These results suggest that P. umbellata DCE in vivo antitumor activity may be a consequence of the activity of different active principles.
International Journal of Nanomedicine | 2015
Leila Servat-Medina; Álvaro González-Gómez; Felisa Reyes-Ortega; Ilza Maria de Oliveira Sousa; Nubia Cassia Queiroz; Patricia Maria Wiziack Zago; Michelle Pedrosa Jorge; Karin Maia Monteiro; João Ernesto de Carvalho; Julio San Román; Mary Ann Foglio
Natural products using plants have received considerable attention because of their potential to treat various diseases. Arrabidaea chica (Humb. & Bonpl.) B. Verlot is a native tropical American vine with healing properties employed in folk medicine for wound healing, inflammation, and gastrointestinal colic. Applying nanotechnology to plant extracts has revealed an advantageous strategy for herbal drugs considering the numerous features that nanostructured systems offer, including solubility, bioavailability, and pharmacological activity enhancement. The present study reports the preparation and characterization of chitosan–sodium tripolyphosphate nanoparticles (NPs) charged with A. chica standardized extract (AcE). Particle size and zeta potential were measured using a Zetasizer Nano ZS. The NP morphological characteristics were observed using scanning electron microscopy. Our studies indicated that the chitosan/sodium tripolyphosphate mass ratio of 5 and volume ratio of 10 were found to be the best condition to achieve the lowest NP sizes, with an average hydrodynamic diameter of 150±13 nm and a zeta potential of +45±2 mV. Particle size decreased with AcE addition (60±10.2 nm), suggesting an interaction between the extract’s composition and polymers. The NP biocompatibility was evaluated using human skin fibroblasts. AcE-NP demonstrated capability of maintaining cell viability at the lowest concentrations tested, stimulating cell proliferation at higher concentrations. Antiulcerogenic activity of AcE-NP was also evaluated with an acute gastric ulcer experimental model induced by ethanol and indomethacin. NPs loaded with A. chica extract reduced the ulcerative lesion index using lower doses compared with the free extract, suggesting that extract encapsulation in chitosan NPs allowed for a dose reduction for a gastroprotective effect. The AcE encapsulation offers an approach for further application of the A. chica extract that could be considered a potential candidate for ulcer-healing pharmaceutical systems.
Chemico-Biological Interactions | 2014
Débora Barbosa Vendramini-Costa; Karin Maia Monteiro; Leilane Hespporte Iwamoto; Michelle Pedroza Jorge; Sirlene Valério Tinti; Ronaldo Aloise Pilli; João Ernesto de Carvalho
Goniothalamin (GTN), a styryl-lactone, is a secondary metabolite naturally found in its enantiomeric form (R) in plants of the genus Goniothalamus (Annonaceae). The antiproliferative activity against human tumor cell lines reported in several studies suggest that the α,β-unsaturated δ-lactone moiety emerges as a key Michael acceptor for cysteine residues or other nucleophilic biological molecules. Our group reported on the in vivo activity of (R)- and (S)-GTN as well as its racemic form (rac-GTN) in both Ehrlich solid tumor and carrageenan-induced paw edema in mice, without side effects in the effective doses. Despite the rich body of data on the in vitro GTN biological activity, much less is known about its in vivo pharmacological action. Herein we describe the gastroprotective activity of rac-GTN on chemical-induced gastric ulcers models in rats. GTN has a potent gastroprotective effect on ethanol-induced ulcers (effective dose50=18mg/kg) and this activity is dependent on sulfhydryl compounds and prostaglandins generation, but independent of nitric oxide (NO), gastric secretion and mucus production. We hypothesize that goniothalamin may act as a mild irritant, inducing the production of sulfhydryl compounds and prostaglandins, in a process known as adaptive cytoprotection. This hypothesis is supported by the fact that Michael acceptors are the most potent inducers of antioxidant response (as activation of Nrf2 pathway) through generation of mild oxidative stress and that gastroprotective activity of goniothalamin is inhibited after pre-treatment with NEM (N-ethylmaleimide) and NSAID (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs), highlighting the importance of sulfhydryl compounds and prostaglandins on GTN activity.
Food Chemistry | 2016
Pilar Castro-Gómez; Luis Miguel Rodríguez-Alcalá; Karin Maia Monteiro; João Ernesto de Carvalho; Javier Fontecha
Buttermilk is a dairy by-product with a high content of milk fat globule membranes (MFGMs), whose protein constituents are reported to be antiproliferative. Lipids represent about half of the composition of MFGM. The aim of this study was to isolate buttermilk lipid fractions and evaluate their potential antiproliferative effect. Selective extraction with food grade or non-food grade solvents was performed. Antiproliferative effectiveness of lipid extracts and their neutral and polar fractions was evaluated on nine human cancer cell lines. Fractions obtained using food grade ethanol gave a higher yield than those obtained using non-food grade solvents, and they effectively inhibited cell viability of the cancer cell lines investigated. These fractions, rich in phospho- and sphingolipids, were strongly antiproliferative against human ovary and colon cancer cells. This observation allowed us to hypothesize further analyses aimed at promoting the use of buttermilk polar lipid fractions as functional food additives.
Journal of Pharmacological and Toxicological Methods | 2013
Karin Maia Monteiro; Humberto M. Spindola; Ana Possenti; Sirlene Valério Tinti; Giovanna Barbarini Longato; Giovanna F. Fiorito; Gabriela M. Marchetti; Larissa Shiozawa; Bárbara U. Piloni; Ana Caroline de Oliveira; Livia M. Miyagawa; João Ernesto de Carvalho
INTRODUCTION The pharmacological assessment of the factors for gastric protection of a test substance should involve experimental models that can determine the involvement of cytoprotective factors, as well as their influence on the secretion of hydrochloric acid. The original protocol of pylorus ligation in rats proposed by Shay et al. in 1945, still in use today, provides a latency time of 240 min without considering the effect of postoperative pain in the mechanisms of peptic ulcer. This paper proposes a modification of this experimental protocol by eliminating the pain throughout the postoperative period, as a refinement of the test with consequent improvement of the pharmacological response. METHODS Adult male Wistar/Uni rats underwent surgical ligation of the pylorus and were kept anesthetized throughout the experimental period (4h) in contrast to the other experimental groups that followed the original protocol proposed by Shay et al., 1945. RESULTS We were able to determine effective doses for a positive control, as well as of a variety of secretagogues in the new experimental protocol proposed. DISCUSSION The suppression of post-surgical pain, through the use of anesthesia throughout the experimental period, brought several benefits for the study of gastric acid secretion, rendering a more homogeneous pharmacologic response in non-inbred animals, thus being an effective experimental procedure.
Planta Medica | 2018
Verônica Santana de Freitas-Blanco; Karin Maia Monteiro; Patrícia Rosa de Oliveira; Ellen C.S. de Oliveira; Lucia Elaine de Oliveira Braga; João Ernesto de Carvalho; Rodney Alexandre Ferreira Rodrigues
Mucositis is one of the commonest side effects in cancer patients undergoing treatment with radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy, and it currently lacks appropriate and effective treatment. Acmella oleracea, a species of flowering herb from South America, contains spilanthol, an alkylamide that has several pharmacological properties, including anesthetic, analgesic, and anti-inflammatory activities. Therefore, the purpose of this work was to evaluate the effect of spilanthol in intestinal mucositis in Swiss mice induced by 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), an antineoplastic agent administered systemically for the treatment of many different cancers. The repeated administration of 5-FU resulted in intestinal mucositis and consequent decreased food intake, together with weight loss, in all the animals. Daily administration of spilanthol significantly lowered the severity of intestinal mucositis, reducing histopathological changes and increasing the villus height in the animals treated with spilanthol at a dosage of 30 mg/kg (p < 0.0044) compared to a group exposed only to 5-FU. A decrease of myeloperoxidase activity was also observed in the animals treated with 30 mg/kg of spilanthol (p < 0.05), although several pro-inflammatory cytokines were not quantifiable in any group. In conclusion, the data demonstrated that spilanthol effectively reduced inflammation in a mouse model of intestinal mucositis induced by 5-FU, and that the compound might be a promising therapeutic candidate for the prevention and treatment of this condition.
Journal of the Brazilian Chemical Society | 2016
Rogério Grando; Vanessa H. S. Souza; Karin Maia Monteiro; Ilza Maria de Oliveira Sousa; Nubia Cassia Queiroz; João Ernesto de Carvalho; Humberto M. Spindola; Mary Ann Foglio
Pterodon pubescens Benth., popularly known as “sucupira”, is traditionally used as pain healing agent for many inflammatory diseases. The present study evaluated the in vivo antinociceptive and anti-inflammatory properties of sucupira’s fruit dicloromethane extract (Pp) compared to the aqueous extract (Ppa) traditionally used in folk medicine. Extracts’ chemical characterization was performed by gas chromatography coupled to mass spectra (GC-MS) detection. The standardized extracts were evaluated using antinociceptive and anti-inflammatory experimental models with mice. The results reported herein allowed establishing a relationship between the popular use of Pterodon pubescens fruit for pain relief and the activity of two major compounds isolated from this species which demonstrated antinociceptive activity. The experimental models corroborate activity of aqueous extract antinociceptive and anti-inflammatory activity, with lower potency compared to dichloromethane extract. Nevertheless the resulting data corroborates sucupira’s folk use for pain relief.
International Dairy Journal | 2006
L.F.H. Mezzaroba; João Ernesto de Carvalho; A.N. Ponezi; Márcia Aparecida Antônio; Karin Maia Monteiro; Ana Possenti; V.C. Sgarbieri
International Dairy Journal | 2011
Tânia G. Tavares; Karin Maia Monteiro; A. Possenti; Manuela Pintado; João Ernesto de Carvalho; F.X. Malcata
Natural Products and Bioprospecting | 2016
Caroline Alves Breda; Alessandra Marcon Gasperini; Vera Lúcia Garcia; Karin Maia Monteiro; Giovana A. Bataglion; Marcos N. Eberlin; Marta Cristina Teixeira Duarte