Lilian M. G. Bahia-Oliveira
Oswaldo Cruz Foundation
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Featured researches published by Lilian M. G. Bahia-Oliveira.
Genes and Immunity | 2010
Sarra E. Jamieson; Alba Lucinia Peixoto-Rangel; Aubrey C. Hargrave; Lee-Anne de Roubaix; Ernest Mui; Nicola R. Boulter; E. Nancy Miller; Stephen J. Fuller; James S. Wiley; Léa Castellucci; Kenneth M. Boyer; Ricardo Guerra Peixe; Michael J. Kirisits; Liliani de Souza Elias; Jessica J. Coyne; Rodrigo Correa-Oliveira; Mari Sautter; Nicholas Jc Smith; Michael P. Lees; Charles N. Swisher; Peter T. Heydemann; A. Gwendolyn Noble; Dushyant Kumar G. Patel; Dianna M. E. Bardo; Delilah Burrowes; David G. McLone; Nancy Roizen; Shawn Withers; Lilian M. G. Bahia-Oliveira; Rima McLeod
Congenital Toxoplasma gondii infection can result in intracranial calcification, hydrocephalus and retinochoroiditis. Acquired infection is commonly associated with ocular disease. Pathology is characterized by strong proinflammatory responses. Ligation of ATP by purinergic receptor P2X7, encoded by P2RX7, stimulates proinflammatory cytokines and can lead directly to killing of intracellular pathogens. To determine whether P2X7 has a role in susceptibility to congenital toxoplasmosis, we examined polymorphisms at P2RX7 in 149 child/parent trios from North America. We found association (FBAT Z-scores ±2.429; P=0.015) between the derived C(+)G(−) allele (f=0.68; OR=2.06; 95% CI: 1.14–3.75) at single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs1718119 (1068T>C; Thr-348-Ala), and a second synonymous variant rs1621388 in linkage disequilibrium with it, and clinical signs of disease per se. Analysis of clinical subgroups showed no association with hydrocephalus, with effect sizes for associations with retinal disease and brain calcifications enhanced (OR=3.0–4.25; 0.004<P<0.009) when hydrocephalus was removed from the analysis. Association with toxoplasmic retinochoroiditis was replicated (FBAT Z-scores ±3.089; P=0.002) in a small family-based study (60 families; 68 affected offspring) of acquired infection in Brazil, where the ancestral T(+) allele (f=0.296) at SNP rs1718119 was strongly protective (OR=0.27; 95% CI: 0.09–0.80).
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2013
Míriam Santos Dutra; Samantha R. Béla; Alba Lucinia Peixoto-Rangel; Michaela Fakiola; Ariane G. Cruz; Andrea Gazzinelli; Humberto F. Quites; Lilian M. G. Bahia-Oliveira; Ricardo Guerra Peixe; Wesley R. Campos; Anna C. Higino-Rocha; Nancy E. Miller; Jenefer M. Blackwell; Lis Ribeiro do Valle Antonelli; Ricardo T. Gazzinelli
Retinochoroiditis manifests in patients infected with Toxoplasma gondii. Here, we assessed 30 sibships and 89 parent/case trios of presumed ocular toxoplasmosis (POT) to evaluate associations with polymorphisms in the NOD2 gene. Three haplotype-tagging single-nucleotide polymorphisms (tag-SNPs) within the NOD2 gene were genotyped. The family-based association test showed that the tag-SNP rs3135499 is associated with retinochoroiditis (P = .039). We then characterized the cellular immune response of 59 cases of POT and 4 cases of active ocular toxoplasmosis (AOT). We found no differences in levels of interferon γ (IFN-γ) and interleukin 2 produced by T-helper 1 cells when comparing patients with AOT or POT to asymptomatic individuals. Unexpectedly, we found an increased interleukin 17A (IL-17A) production in patients with POT or OAT. In patients with POT or AOT, the main cellular source of IL-17A was CD4(+)CD45RO(+)T-bet(-)IFN-γ(-) T-helper 17 cells. Altogether, our results suggest that NOD2 influences the production of IL-17A by CD4(+) T lymphocytes and might contribute to the development of ocular toxoplasmosis.
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2009
Alba Lucinia Peixoto-Rangel; E. Nancy Miller; Léa Castellucci; Sarra E. Jamieson; Ricardo Guerra Peixe; Liliani de Souza Elias; Rodrigo Correa-Oliveira; Lilian M. G. Bahia-Oliveira; Jenefer M. Blackwell
Toxoplasma gondii infection is an important mediator of ocular disease in Brazil more frequently than reported from elsewhere. Infection and pathology are characterized by a strong proinflammatory response which in mice is triggered by interaction of the parasite with the toll-like receptor (TLR)/MyD88 pathway. A powerful way to identify the role of TLRs in humans is to determine whether polymorphisms at these loci influence susceptibility to T. gondii-mediated pathologies. Here we report on a small family-based study (60 families; 68 affected offspring) undertaken in Brazil which was powered for large effect sizes using single nucleotide polymorphisms with minor alleles frequencies > 0.3. Of markers in TLR2, TLR5 and TLR9 that met these criteria, we found an association Family Based Association Tests [(FBAT) Z score = 4.232; p = 1.5 x 10-5; p corrected = 1.2 x 10-4] between the C allele (frequency = 0.424; odds ratio = 7; 95% confidence interval 1.6-30.8) of rs352140 at TLR9 and toxoplasmic retinochoroiditis in Brazil. This supports the hypothesis that direct interaction between T. gondii and TLR9 may trigger proinflammatory responses that lead to severe pathologies such as the ocular disease that is associated with this infection in Brazil.
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1992
Giovanni Gazzinelli; Iramaya R. C. Viana; Lilian M. G. Bahia-Oliveira; Alda Maria S. Silveira; Claudia Carvalho Queiroz; Omar dos Santos Carvalho; Cristiano Lara Massara; Lucia A. O. Fraga; Daniel G. Colley; Rodrigo Corrêa Oliveira
Crude extracts of eggs (SEA) adult worms (SWAP) or cercariae (Cerc) have been used to stimulate Peripheral Blood Mononuclear cells (PBMC) and have provided rather distinct profiles of responses in different types of patients. In general it is clear that patients with early infections respond strongly to SEA while response to SWAP are develop more slowly. As infection progresses into the more chronic phases, a general pattern is seen which leads to lower anti-SEA proliferative responses in the face of higher responses to SWAP and variable anti-cerc responsiveness. Cured not re-exposed patients express very high levels of anti-SEA proliferation. It has recently been seen that those individuals who live in endemic areas and have continued water contact, but are repeatedly stool-negative (who are presumed to have self-cured or be putatively resistant; endemic normals) are strongly responsive to antigenic extracts, particularly to SEA. Furthermore, our results show that endemic normal individuals have significantly higher IFN gamma production upon PBMC stimulation with schistosome antigens than infected individuals. With the emergence of more studies it is becoming apparent that both the intensity and the prevalence of a given area may influence or shape the general responsiveness of the population under study.
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2009
Lilian M. G. Bahia-Oliveira; Juliana Azevedo da Silva; Alba Lucinia Peixoto-Rangel; Marcela Santana Bastos Boechat; Annelise M. Wilken Abreu Oliveira; Cristiano Lara Massara; Ricardo Guerra Peixe
Toxoplasmosis and ascaridiasis evoke polar Th-1 and Th-2 host immune responses, respectively. A study to investigate the specific cytokine profile production by in vitro cultures of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from individuals living under precarious sanitary conditions in a highly endemic area for the parasites Toxoplasma gondii and Ascaris lumbricoides was conducted. High levels of both IFN-gamma (Th-1) and IL-13 (Th-2) were observed in groups of co-infected individuals presenting toxoplasmic ocular lesions. Significantly lower IL-10 and TGF-beta levels were produced by co-infected individuals in comparison with groups of individuals not infected with A. lumbricoides and either positive or negative for T. gondii living under good sanitary conditions (control groups). The possible influence of co-parasitism on the clinical presentation of ocular toxoplasmosis is discussed.
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2014
Ricardo Guerra Peixe; Marcela Santana Bastos Boechat; Alba Lucínia Peixoto Rangel; Rhônia França Gomes Rosa; Maria Luiza Petzl-Erler; Lilian M. G. Bahia-Oliveira
The association of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the interferon (IFN)-γ gene ( IFNG ) with different types of retinal scar lesions presumably caused by toxoplasmosis were investigated in a cross-sectional population-based genetic study. Ten SNPs were investigated and after Bonferroni correction, only the associations between SNPs rs2069718 and rs3181035 with retinal/retinochoroidal scar lesions type A (most severe scar lesions) and C (least severe scar lesions), respectively, remained significant. The associations of two different IFNG SNPs with two different types of retinal lesions attributable to toxoplasmosis support the hypothesis that different inflammatory mechanisms underlie the development of these lesions. The in vitro analysis of IFN-γ secretion by peripheral blood mononuclear cells stimulated with Toxoplasma gondii antigens was also investigated. The association between SNP rs2069718 and type A scar lesions revealed that differential IFN-γ levels are correlated with distinct genotypes. However, no correlation was observed with IFN-γ secretion levels and the SNP rs3181035 , which was significantly associated with type C scar lesions. Our findings strongly suggest that immunogenetic studies of individuals with congenital or postnatally acquired infection are needed to better understand the role of IFN-γ and its polymorphisms in the pathogenesis of ocular toxoplasmosis.
Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 1996
Nelson J. Alvarenga; Maria José F. Morato; Lilian M. G. Bahia-Oliveira; Juliana Assis Silva Gomes; Alessandra L.A. Botelho; Rodrigo Correa-Oliveira; Elisabeth Bronfen
A m o n g 59 s tu d ie d c h ro n ic c h a g a s ic patients, in four of them it was only possible to is o la te T r y p a n o s o m a c r u z i u s in g haemoculture, but not xenodiagnosis1. This fa ilu re in i s o la t in g T. c r u z i u s in g xenodiagnosis performed with three different triatomine species, represents an opportunity to evaluate the interaction between T. cruzi and its infection within the triatomine vector. Based on observation that a triatomine embryo-cell-line allows the differentiation of the p arasite to m etacic lic form s5 and the i n d u c t i o n o f p a r a s i t e g r o w t h a n d differentiation in cultures, when supplemented with triatomines’ intestinal extracts2 we argue that som e of the questions related to triatomine’s susceptibility and infection could be answered by studding the influence of the vector’s organ extracts on parasite growth in culture media. The present study is being conducted to a n a l y z e t he ro l e of d i f f e r e n t o r ga n homogenates, from embryos to adult stages of triatomines, on the growth and differentiation of two T. cruzi strains (Herm and Fran) isolated only by hem oculture from two chagasic patients and frozen immediately after isolation. The isolates were used after five passages in LIT media. Suspensions of four and three days old embryos, of Dipetalogaster maxim us and Rhodnius prolixus respectively, were obtained from ground eggs in PBS (pH 7.2). The extracts were filtered either with 0.22 or 0.45pm Millipore filters, in order to observe possible differences in the flagellates growrth due to the
Archive | 2012
Lilian M. G. Bahia-Oliveira; Alba Lucínia Peixoto Rangel; Marcela Santana Bastos Boechat; Bianca M. Mangiavacchi; Lívia Mattos Martins; Francielle B. Ferraz; Maycon B. Almeida; Elisa M. Waked Peixoto; Flávia Pereira Vieira; Ricardo Guerra Peixe
© 2012 Bahia-Oliveira et al., licensee InTech. This is an open access chapter distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Immunological and Immunogenetic Parameters on the Diversity of Ocular Toxoplasmosis: Evidence to Support Morphological Criteria to Classify Retinal/Retinochoroidal Scar Lesions in Epidemiologic Surveys
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2009
Lilian M. G. Bahia-Oliveira; Marie-Laure Dardé; Maria Regina Reis Amendoeira
In May 2006, researchers participating in the International Toxoplasma and Food Congress, hosted by the Instituto Zooprofilattico Sperimentale della Sicilia in the city of Palermo, Italy, expressed their support for an international congress to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the discovery of the parasite Toxoplasma gondii in Brazil. The idea rapidly gained the worldwide support of prominent scientists working in the field. The Congress, entitled “Toxoplasma Centennial Congress: From Discovery to Public Health Management” was held in Brazil last year....
Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 1997
Nelson J. Alvarenga; Elisabeth Bronfen; Alessandra L.A. Botelho; Lilian M. G. Bahia-Oliveira; Juliana Assis Silva Gomes; Rodrigo Correa-Oliveira; Maria José F. Morato
Dipetalogaster maximus embryo extracts were used to stimulate peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and in ELISA with sera either from Trypanosoma cruzi infected or non-infected individuals. The results showed that there was significant proliferative response and high antibody, titers in sera of chagasic patients.