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Dive into the research topics where Katia C. Gondim is active.

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Featured researches published by Katia C. Gondim.


Journal of Insect Physiology | 1986

Uptake of yolk proteins in Rhodnius prolixus

Pedro L. Oliveira; Katia C. Gondim; Damião M. Guedes; Hatisaburo Masuda

The uptake of yolk protein in Rhodnius prolixus was studied in vivo and in vitro using a metabolically labelled [32P]yolk protein purified on a potassium bromide gradient. The [32P]vitellin is readily removed from haemolymph and specifically accumulates in the ovary. The ability of oocytes to take up yolk protein at different stages of development increases with their size up to the time of chorion formation. This increase in uptake capacity of oocytes correlates with the opening of intercellular space in the follicular epithelium. The rate of uptake is dependent on the external concentration of yolk protein and temperature, and can be saturated. Separate analysis of binding shows a similar dependence on yolk protein concentration. Soon after a meal, the vitellogenin concentration increases in the haemolymph until it reaches a steady-state concentration at which the rate of vitellogenin uptake matches the rate of vitellogenin synthesis. Most ovarian growth occurs while the concentration of vitellogenin in the haemolymph is at this steady-state level, which is in turn very close to its ovarian binding constant of 12 mg/ml determined in vitro. Thus it is suggested that the uptake system normally works undersaturated and below its maximal rate of uptake.


Journal of Insect Physiology | 1989

Lipophorin and oögenesis in Rhodnius prolixus: Transfer of phospholipids

Katia C. Gondim; Pedro L. Oliveira; Hatisaburo Masuda

The lipophorin of Rhodnius prolixus was metabolically labelled with 32P exclusively in the phospholipid moiety and purified on a potassium bromide gradient. After injection into a vitellogenic female the radioactivity from [32P]lipophorin was readily removed from the haemolymph and accumulated in several organs, including the ovary. The rate at which ovaries incorporated radioactivity from injected [32P]lipophorin varied during the days following the meal. The ability of oocytes to take up radioactivity also varied, increasing with their sizes up to the time of chorion formation. The incorporation of radioactivity from [32P]lipophorin was several times higher than the sequestration of [14C]inulin, indicating that the process may be specific. The kinetics of incorporation were linear and the process was impaired at low temperature. Lipophorin delivered phospholipids to the growing oocytes but its apoproteins were not accumulated.


Anais Da Academia Brasileira De Ciencias | 2005

Oogenesis and egg development in triatomines: a biochemical approach

Georgia C. Atella; Katia C. Gondim; Ednildo A. Machado; Marcelo N. Medeiros; Mário A.C. Silva-Neto; Hatisaburo Masuda

In triatomines, as well as in other insects, accumulation of yolk is a process in which an extra-ovarian tissue, the fat body, produces yolk proteins that are packed in the egg. The main protein, synthesized by the fat body, which is accumulated inside the oocyte, is vitellogenin. This process is also known as vitellogenesis. There are growing evidences in triatomines that besides fat body the ovary also produces yolk proteins. The way these yolk proteins enter the oocyte will be discussed. Yolk is a complex material composed of proteins, lipids, carbohydrates and other minor components which are packed inside the oocyte in an organized manner. Fertilization triggers embryogenesis, a process where an embryo will develop. During embryogenesis the yolk will be used for the construction of a new individual, the first instar nymph. The challenge for the next decade is to understand how and where these egg proteins are used up together with their non-protein components, in pace with the genetic program of the embryo, which enables cell differentiation (early phase of embryogenesis) and embryo differentiation (late phase) inside the egg.


Insect Biochemistry | 1989

Lipophorin from Rhodnius prolixus: Purification and partial characterization

Katia C. Gondim; Pedro L. Oliveira; Heloisa S.L. Coelho; Hatisaburo Masuda

The lipophorin of adult females of Rhodnius prolixus was radioactively labelled with 32P exclusively in the phospholipid moiety and purified on a KBr ultracentrifugation gradient. The density of purified [32P]phospholipid labelled lipophorin on the fifth day after a blood meal was 1.1211 ± 0.0017 g/ml. By weight it contained 51.7% protein, 0.7% sugar and 47.6% lipid. The protein moiety was composed of three apoproteins of 226 ± 11, 86 ± 2 and 16 ± 1 kDa. Mannose and N-acetylglucosamine were the only sugars detected. Among the lipids, 66.3% were neutral lipids and 33.8% were phospholipids. Analysis by thin-layer chromatography showed that in the total phospholipids fraction 32P was distributed as follows: phosphatidylethanolamine (54.4%), phosphatidylcholine (44.7%), cardiolipin (2.1%), phosphatidylserine (0.7%), phosphatidylinositol (0.4%), sphingomyelin (0.3%) and phosphatidic acid (0.2%). The total phosphate content was 0.53 ± 0.03 nmol/μg of protein.


Archives of Insect Biochemistry and Physiology | 1997

Lipophorin Density Variation During Oogenesis in Rhodnius prolixus

Heloisa S.L. Coelho; Georgia C. Atella; Monica F. Moreira; Katia C. Gondim; Hatisaburo Masuda

The density of lipophorin was determined in adult females of Rhodnius prolixus on different days after a meal. Several populations od lipoproteins, differing in density but always in the range of HDL, were found in the hemolymph. The density of the major population was analyzed and a complex profile of density variation was found associated with the principal metabolic events in these insects digestion and oogenesis. During the initial three days after the blood meal, with the onset of the digestive process, the density of lipophorin decreased from 1.1185 g/l to 1.1095 g/l, associated with the transfer of lipids from midgut to the lipophorin particles. During the period of intense vitellogenesis and lipid uptake by the ovary, the lipophorin density started to increase and reached the value, 1.1322 g/l, and remained stable up to the end of oogenesis. As soon as the requirement of lipids to build up the oocytes ceased, the density of lipophorin decreased to its initial value associated with the transfer of lipids from fat body to lipophorin. Soon after the blood meal the midgut was the main source of lipids capable of replenishing the lipophorin particles, while the fat body assumed this function during the succeeding days and reached its maximum capacity around day 10, as estimated by the rate of lipid transfer. The principal lipids transferred were phospholipids and diacylglycerols. Except in the protein/lipid ratio no major changes were observed among different lipids isolated from lipophorin of different densities.


Archives of Insect Biochemistry and Physiology | 2000

Fatty acid incorporation by Rhodnius prolixus midgut.

Georgia C. Atella; Maria Augusta Arruda; Hatisaburo Masuda; Katia C. Gondim

[(14)C]Oleic acid injected into the hemocoel of Rhodnius prolixus females was shown to rapidly associate with lipophorin particles. Half of the lipophorin-associated [(14)C]oleic acid was transferred in about 5 min to different organs, but the midgut was the main organ to take it up on day 10 after a blood meal. The rate of [(14)C]oleic acid incorporation by the midgut was high up to 15 min after injection and then declined. The [(14)C]oleic acid incorporated by the midgut was found in phospholipids (58.6%) and neutral lipids (37.4%). The midgut capacity to incorporate [(14)C]oleic acid varied on different days after a meal: it increased up to day 10 and then decreased. The fate of the [(14)C]lipids synthesized by the midgut was followed and it was observed that 10 days after feeding diacylglycerol was the main lipid released to hemolymph and that most of phospholipids and triacylglycerols remained associated with the midgut. The metabolism of free fatty acids in Rhodnius prolixus females is discussed in the context of major biological events that follow a blood meal such as digestion and oogenesis.


Journal of Insect Physiology | 2008

Dynamics of lipid accumulation by the fat body of Rhodnius prolixus: The involvement of lipophorin binding sites

Emerson Guedes Pontes; Paula Leite; David Majerowicz; Georgia C. Atella; Katia C. Gondim

In insects, lipids are stored in the fat body, mainly as triacylglycerol (TAG). In Rhodnius prolixus, a hematophagous hemipteran, lipids are accumulated after blood meal to be used later on. In adult females, at the second day after feeding, the amount of TAG was 57+/-17 microg/fat body, it increased almost five times and at fourth day it was 244+/-35 microg/fat body. TAG content remained constant until day 13, but it then decreased and, at day 20th it was very low (31+/-4.9 microg/fat body). Radiolabeled free fatty acid was used to follow lipid accumulation by the fat body, as it was previously shown that, in R. prolixus, injected free fatty acids associate with lipophorin, a major hemolymphatic lipoprotein. (3)H-palmitic acid was injected into the hemocoel of R. prolixus females. It disappeared from the hemolymph very rapidly, and radioactivity was incorporated by the fat body. Sixty minutes after injection, radioactivity in the fat body was found mainly in TAGs. The capacity of the fat body to incorporate fatty acids from the hemolymph varied according to the days after blood meal, and it was maximal around the fourth day. Lipophorin binding to specific sites in fat body membrane preparations also showed variation at different days. When membranes obtained from insects at the second, fifth and tenth days were compared, binding was highest at fifth day after feeding.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016

Epithelial Mesenchymal Transition Induces Aberrant Glycosylation through Hexosamine Biosynthetic Pathway Activation

Miguel C. Lucena; Patricia Carvalho-cruz; Joana L. Donadio; Isadora A. Oliveira; Rafaela Muniz de Queiroz; Monica M. Marinho-Carvalho; Mauro Sola-Penna; Iron F. De Paula; Katia C. Gondim; Mark E. McComb; Catherine E. Costello; Stephen A. Whelan; Adriane R. Todeschini; Wagner B. Dias

Deregulated cellular metabolism is a hallmark of tumors. Cancer cells increase glucose and glutamine flux to provide energy needs and macromolecular synthesis demands. Several studies have been focused on the importance of glycolysis and pentose phosphate pathway. However, a neglected but very important branch of glucose metabolism is the hexosamine biosynthesis pathway (HBP). The HBP is a branch of the glucose metabolic pathway that consumes ∼2–5% of the total glucose, generating UDP-GlcNAc as the end product. UDP-GlcNAc is the donor substrate used in multiple glycosylation reactions. Thus, HBP links the altered metabolism with aberrant glycosylation providing a mechanism for cancer cells to sense and respond to microenvironment changes. Here, we investigate the changes of glucose metabolism during epithelial mesenchymal transition (EMT) and the role of O-GlcNAcylation in this process. We show that A549 cells increase glucose uptake during EMT, but instead of increasing the glycolysis and pentose phosphate pathway, the glucose is shunted through the HBP. The activation of HBP induces an aberrant cell surface glycosylation and O-GlcNAcylation. The cell surface glycans display an increase of sialylation α2–6, poly-LacNAc, and fucosylation, all known epitopes found in different tumor models. In addition, modulation of O-GlcNAc levels was demonstrated to be important during the EMT process. Taken together, our results indicate that EMT is an applicable model to study metabolic and glycophenotype changes during carcinogenesis, suggesting that cell glycosylation senses metabolic changes and modulates cell plasticity.


Experimental Parasitology | 2012

LDL uptake by Leishmania amazonensis: Involvement of membrane lipid microdomains

Nuccia N.T. De Cicco; Miria G. Pereira; José R. Corrêa; Valter Viana Andrade-Neto; Felipe B. Saraiva; Alessandra C. Chagas-Lima; Katia C. Gondim; Eduardo Caio Torres-Santos; Evelize Folly; Elvira M. Saraiva; Narcisa L. Cunha-e-Silva; Maurilio J. Soares; Georgia C. Atella

Leishmania amazonensis lacks a de novo mechanism for cholesterol synthesis and therefore must scavenge this lipid from the host environment. In this study we show that the L. amazonensis takes up and metabolizes human LDL(1) particles in both a time and dose-dependent manner. This mechanism implies the presence of a true LDL receptor because the uptake is blocked by both low temperature and by the excess of non-labelled LDL. This receptor is probably associated with specific microdomains in the membrane of the parasite, such as rafts, because this process is blocked by methyl-β-cyclodextrin (MCBD). Cholesteryl ester fluorescently-labeled LDL (BODIPY-cholesteryl-LDL) was used to follow the intracellular distribution of this lipid. After uptake it was localized in large compartments along the parasite body. The accumulation of LDL was analyzed by flow cytometry using FITC-labeled LDL particles. Together these data show for the first time that L. amazonensis is able to compensate for its lack of lipid synthesis through the use of a lipid importing machinery largely based on the uptake of LDL particles from the host. Understanding the details of the molecular events involved in this mechanism may lead to the identification of novel targets to block Leishmania infection in human hosts.


Archives of Insect Biochemistry and Physiology | 2011

Lipid accumulation and utilization by oocytes and eggs of Rhodnius prolixus

Rachel Santos; Rafael Rosas-Oliveira; Felipe B. Saraiva; David Majerowicz; Katia C. Gondim

Insect eggs must contain the necessary nutrients for embryonic growth. In this article, we investigated the accumulation of triacylglycerol (TAG) in growing oocytes and its utilization during embryonic development. TAG makes up about 60% of the neutral lipids in oocytes and accumulates as oocytes grow, from 2.2 ± 0.1 µg in follicles containing 1.0 mm length oocytes to 10.2 ± 0.8 µg in 2.0 mm length oocytes. Lipophorin (Lp), the hemolymphatic lipoprotein, radioactively labeled in free fatty acid (FFA) or diacylglycerol (DAG), was used to follow the transport of these lipids to the ovary. Radioactivity from both lipid classes accumulated in the oocytes, which was abolished at 4°C. The capacity of the ovary to receive FFA or DAG from Lp varied according to time after a blood meal and reached a maximum around the second day. (3) H-DAG supplied by Lp to the ovaries was used in the synthesis of TAG as, 48 hr after injection, most of the radioactivity was found in TAG (85.7% of labeling in neutral lipids). During embryogenesis, lipid stores were mobilized, and the TAG content decreased from 16.4 ± 2.1 µg/egg on the first day to 10.0 ± 1.3 µg on day 15, just before hatching. Of these, 7.4 ± 0.9 µg were found in the newly emerged nymphs. In unfertilized eggs, the TAG content did not change. Although the TAG content decreased during embryogenesis, the relative lipid composition of the egg did not change. The amount of TAG in the nymph slowly decreased during the days after hatching.

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David Majerowicz

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Michele Alves-Bezerra

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Georgia C. Atella

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Hatisaburo Masuda

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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José Roberto Meyer-Fernandes

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Luciano A.M. Grillo

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Emerson Guedes Pontes

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Iron F. De Paula

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Pedro L. Oliveira

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Ednildo A. Machado

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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