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Dive into the research topics where Luciana Silva Rodrigues is active.

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Featured researches published by Luciana Silva Rodrigues.


Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 2010

Lipid droplet formation in leprosy: Toll-like receptor-regulated organelles involved in eicosanoid formation and Mycobacterium leprae pathogenesis

Katherine Antunes de Mattos; Heloisa D'Avila; Luciana Silva Rodrigues; Viviane G. C. Oliveira; Euzenir Nunes Sarno; Georgia C. Atella; Geraldo M. B. Pereira; Patricia T. Bozza; Maria Cristina Vidal Pessolani

A hallmark of LL is the accumulation of Virchows foamy macrophages. However, the origin and nature of these lipids, as well as their function and contribution to leprosy disease, remain unclear. We herein show that macrophages present in LL dermal lesions are highly positive for ADRP, suggesting that their foamy aspect is at least in part derived from LD (also known as lipid bodies) accumulation induced during ML infection. Indeed, the capacity of ML to induce LD formation was confirmed in vivo via an experimental model of mouse pleurisy and in in vitro studies with human peripheral monocytes and murine peritoneal macrophages. Furthermore, infected cells were shown to propagate LD induction to uninfected, neighboring cells by generating a paracrine signal, for which TLR2 and TLR6 were demonstrated to be essential. However, TLR2 and TLR6 deletions affected LD formation in bacterium‐bearing cells only partially, suggesting the involvement of alternative receptors of the innate immune response besides TLR2/6 for ML recognition by macrophages. Finally, a direct correlation between LD formation and PGE2 production was observed, indicating that ML‐induced LDs constitute intracellular sites for eicosanoid synthesis and that foamy cells may be critical regulators in subverting the immune response in leprosy.


Cellular Microbiology | 2011

Modulation of lipid droplets by Mycobacterium leprae in Schwann cells: a putative mechanism for host lipid acquisition and bacterial survival in phagosomes

Katherine Antunes de Mattos; Flávio Alves Lara; Viviane G. C. Oliveira; Luciana Silva Rodrigues; Heloisa D'Avila; Rossana C. N. Melo; Pedro P.A. Manso; Euzenir Nunes Sarno; Patricia T. Bozza; Maria Cristina Vidal Pessolani

The predilection of Mycobacterium leprae (ML) for Schwann cells (SCs) leads to peripheral neuropathy, a major concern in leprosy. Highly infected SCs in lepromatous leprosy nerves show a foamy, lipid‐laden appearance; but the origin and nature of these lipids, as well as their role in leprosy, have remained unclear. The data presented show that ML has a pronounced effect on host‐cell lipid homeostasis through regulation of lipid droplet (lipid bodies, LD) biogenesis and intracellular distribution. Electron microscopy and immunohistochemical analysis of lepromatous leprosy nerves for adipose differentiation‐related protein expression, a classical LD marker, revealed accumulating LDs in close association to ML in infected SCs. The capacity of ML to induce LD formation was confirmed in in vitro studies with human SCs. Moreover, via confocal and live‐cell analysis, it was found that LDs are promptly recruited to bacterial phagosomes and that this process depends on cytoskeletal reorganization and PI3K signalling. ML‐induced LD biogenesis and recruitment were found to be independent of TLR2 bacterial sensing. Notably, LD recruitment impairment by cytoskeleton drugs decreased intracellular bacterial survival. Altogether, our data revealed SC lipid accumulation in ML‐containing phagosomes, which may represent a fundamental aspect of bacterial pathogenesis in the nerve.


Journal of Immunology | 2011

TLR6-Driven Lipid Droplets in Mycobacterium leprae-Infected Schwann Cells: Immunoinflammatory Platforms Associated with Bacterial Persistence

Katherine Antunes de Mattos; Viviane G. C. Oliveira; Heloisa D’Avila; Luciana Silva Rodrigues; Roberta Olmo Pinheiro; Euzenir Nunes Sarno; Maria Cristina Vidal Pessolani; Patricia T. Bozza

The mechanisms responsible for nerve injury in leprosy need further elucidation. We recently demonstrated that the foamy phenotype of Mycobacterium leprae-infected Schwann cells (SCs) observed in nerves of multibacillary patients results from the capacity of M. leprae to induce and recruit lipid droplets (LDs; also known as lipid bodies) to bacterial-containing phagosomes. In this study, we analyzed the parameters that govern LD biogenesis by M. leprae in SCs and how this contributes to the innate immune response elicited by M. leprae. Our observations indicated that LD formation requires the uptake of live bacteria and depends on host cell cytoskeleton rearrangement and vesicular trafficking. TLR6 deletion, but not TLR2, completely abolished the induction of LDs by M. leprae, as well as inhibited the bacterial uptake in SCs. M. leprae-induced LD biogenesis correlated with increased PGE2 and IL-10 secretion, as well as reduced IL-12 and NO production in M. leprae-infected SCs. Analysis of nerves from lepromatous leprosy patients showed colocalization of M. leprae, LDs, and cyclooxygenase-2 in SCs, indicating that LDs are sites for PGE2 synthesis in vivo. LD biogenesis Inhibition by the fatty acid synthase inhibitor C-75 abolished the effect of M. leprae on SC production of immunoinflammatory mediators and enhanced the mycobacterial-killing ability of SCs. Altogether, our data indicated a critical role for TLR6-dependent signaling in M. leprae–SC interactions, favoring phagocytosis and subsequent signaling for induction of LD biogenesis in infected cells. Moreover, our observations reinforced the role of LDs favoring mycobacterial survival and persistence in the nerve. These findings give further support to a critical role for LDs in M. leprae pathogenesis in the nerve.


Infection and Immunity | 2013

Interaction of Mycobacterium leprae with human airway epithelial cells: adherence, entry, survival, and identification of potential adhesins by surface proteome analysis.

Carlos A. M. Silva; Lia Danelishvili; Michael McNamara; Marcia Berrêdo-Pinho; Robert J. Bildfell; Franck Biet; Luciana Silva Rodrigues; Albanita Viana de Oliveira; Luiz E. Bermudez; Maria Cristina Vidal Pessolani

ABSTRACT This study examined the in vitro interaction between Mycobacterium leprae, the causative agent of leprosy, and human alveolar and nasal epithelial cells, demonstrating that M. leprae can enter both cell types and that both are capable of sustaining bacterial survival. Moreover, delivery of M. leprae to the nasal septum of mice resulted in macrophage and epithelial cell infection in the lung tissue, sustaining the idea that the airways constitute an important M. leprae entry route into the human body. Since critical aspects in understanding the mechanisms of infection are the identification and characterization of the adhesins involved in pathogen-host cell interaction, the nude mouse-derived M. leprae cell surface-exposed proteome was studied to uncover potentially relevant adhesin candidates. A total of 279 cell surface-exposed proteins were identified based on selective biotinylation, streptavidin-affinity purification, and shotgun mass spectrometry; 11 of those proteins have been previously described as potential adhesins. In vitro assays with the recombinant forms of the histone-like protein (Hlp) and the heparin-binding hemagglutinin (HBHA), considered to be major mycobacterial adhesins, confirmed their capacity to promote bacterial attachment to epithelial cells. Taking our data together, they suggest that the airway epithelium may act as a reservoir and/or portal of entry for M. leprae in humans. Moreover, our report sheds light on the potentially critical adhesins involved in M. leprae-epithelial cell interaction that may be useful in designing more effective tools for leprosy control.


Cellular Microbiology | 2010

Mycobacterium leprae induces insulin-like growth factor and promotes survival of Schwann cells upon serum withdrawal.

Luciana Silva Rodrigues; Elisa da Silva Maeda; Maria Elisabete Costa Moreira; Antonio J. Tempone; Lívia Silva Lobato; Victor Túlio Ribeiro-Resende; Lucineia Alves; Shaila C. Rössle; Ulisses G. Lopes; Maria Cristina Vidal Pessolani

Peripheral nerve lesions are considered the most relevant symptoms of leprosy, a chronic infectious disease caused by Mycobacterium leprae. The strategies employed by M. leprae to infect and multiply inside Schwann cells (SCs), however, remain poorly understood. In this study, it is shown that treatment of SCs with M. leprae significantly decreased cell death induced by serum deprivation. Not displayed by Mycobacterium smegmatis or Mycobacterium bovis BCG, the M. leprae survival effect was both dose dependent and specific. The conditioned medium (CM) of M. leprae‐treated cultures was seen to mimic the protective effect of the bacteria, suggesting that soluble factors secreted by SCs in response to M. leprae were involved in cell survival. Indeed, by quantitative RT‐PCR and dot blot/ELISA, it was demonstrated that M. leprae induced the expression and secretion of the SC survival factor insulin‐like growth factor‐I. Finally, the involvement of this hormone in M. leprae‐induced SC survival was confirmed in experiments with neutralizing antibodies. Taken together, the results of this study delineate an important strategy for the successful colonization of M. leprae in the nerve based on the survival maintenance of the host cell through induction of IGF‐I production.


BMC Infectious Diseases | 2011

Circulating levels of insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) correlate with disease status in leprosy

Luciana Silva Rodrigues; Mariana A. Hacker; Ximena Illarramendi; Maria Fernanda Miguens Castelar Pinheiro; José Augusto da Costa Nery; Euzenir Nunes Sarno; Maria Cristina Vidal Pessolani

BackgroundCaused by Mycobacterium leprae (ML), leprosy presents a strong immune-inflammatory component, whose status dictates both the clinical form of the disease and the occurrence of reactional episodes. Evidence has shown that, during the immune-inflammatory response to infection, the growth hormone/insulin-like growth factor-I (GH/IGF-I) plays a prominent regulatory role. However, in leprosy, little, if anything, is known about the interaction between the immune and neuroendocrine systems.MethodsIn the present retrospective study, we measured the serum levels of IGF-I and IGBP-3, its major binding protein. These measurements were taken at diagnosis in nonreactional borderline tuberculoid (NR BT), borderline lepromatous (NR BL), and lepromatous (NR LL) leprosy patients in addition to healthy controls (HC). LL and BL patients who developed reaction during the course of the disease were also included in the study. The serum levels of IGF-I, IGFBP-3 and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) were evaluated at diagnosis and during development of reversal (RR) or erythema nodosum leprosum (ENL) reaction by the solid phase, enzyme-labeled, chemiluminescent-immunometric method.ResultsThe circulating IGF-I/IGFBP-3 levels showed significant differences according to disease status and occurrence of reactional episodes. At the time of leprosy diagnosis, significantly lower levels of circulating IGF-I/IGFBP-3 were found in NR BL and NR LL patients in contrast to NR BT patients and HCs. However, after treatment, serum IGF-I levels in BL/LL patients returned to normal. Notably, the levels of circulating IGF-I at diagnosis were low in 75% of patients who did not undergo ENL during treatment (NR LL patients) in opposition to the normal levels observed in those who suffered ENL during treatment (R LL patients). Nonetheless, during ENL episodes, the levels observed in RLL sera tended to decrease, attaining similar levels to those found in NR LL patients. Interestingly, IGF-I behaved contrary to what was observed during RR episodes in R BL patients.ConclusionsOur data revealed important alterations in the IGF system in relation to the status of the host immune-inflammatory response to ML while at the same time pointing to the circulating IGF-I/IGFBP-3 levels as possible predictive biomarkers for ENL in LL patients at diagnosis.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Mycobacterium leprae-induced Insulin-like Growth Factor I attenuates antimicrobial mechanisms, promoting bacterial survival in macrophages

Leonardo Ribeiro Batista-Silva; Luciana Silva Rodrigues; Áislan de Carvalho Vivarini; Fabrício da Mota Ramalho Costa; Katherine Antunes de Mattos; Maria Renata Sales Nogueira Costa; Patricia Rosa; Thiago Gomes de Toledo-Pinto; André Alves Dias; Danielle F. Moura; Euzenir Nunes Sarno; Ulisses Gazos Lopes; Maria Cristina Vidal Pessolani

Mycobacterium leprae (ML), the etiologic agent of leprosy, can subvert macrophage antimicrobial activity by mechanisms that remain only partially understood. In the present study, the participation of hormone insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) in this phenomenum was investigated. Macrophages from the dermal lesions of the disseminated multibacillary lepromatous form (LL) of leprosy expressed higher levels of IGF-I than those from the self-limited paucibacillary tuberculoid form (BT). Higher levels of IGF-I secretion by ML-infected macrophages were confirmed in ex vivo and in vitro studies. Of note, the dampening of IGF-I signaling reverted the capacity of ML-infected human and murine macrophages to produce antimicrobial molecules and promoted bacterial killing. Moreover, IGF-I was shown to inhibit the JAK/STAT1-dependent signaling pathways triggered by both mycobacteria and IFN-γ most probably through its capacity to induce the suppressor of cytokine signaling-3 (SOCS3). Finally, these in vitro findings were corroborated by in vivo observations in which higher SOCS3 expression and lower phosphorylation of STAT1 levels were found in LL versus BT dermal lesions. Altogether, our data strongly suggest that IGF-I contributes to the maintenance of a functional program in infected macrophages that suits ML persistence in the host, reinforcing a key role for IGF-I in leprosy pathogenesis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016

Subversion of Schwann Cell Glucose Metabolism by Mycobacterium leprae

Rychelle Clayde Affonso Medeiros; Karina do Carmo de Vasconcelos Girardi; Fernanda Cardoso; Bruno de Siqueira Mietto; Thiago Gomes Toledo Pinto; Lilian S. Gomez; Luciana Silva Rodrigues; Mariana Gandini; Julio Jablonski Amaral; Sérgio Luiz Gomes Antunes; Suzana Corte-Real; Patrícia Sammarco Rosa; Maria Cristina Vidal Pessolani; José Augusto da Costa Nery; Euzenir Nunes Sarno; Leonardo Ribeiro Batista-Silva; Mauro Sola-Penna; Marcus F. Oliveira; Milton Ozório Moraes; Flávio Alves Lara

Mycobacterium leprae, the intracellular etiological agent of leprosy, infects Schwann promoting irreversible physical disabilities and deformities. These cells are responsible for myelination and maintenance of axonal energy metabolism through export of metabolites, such as lactate and pyruvate. In the present work, we observed that infected Schwann cells increase glucose uptake with a concomitant increase in glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH) activity, the key enzyme of the oxidative pentose pathway. We also observed a mitochondria shutdown in infected cells and mitochondrial swelling in pure neural leprosy nerves. The classic Warburg effect described in macrophages infected by Mycobacterium avium was not observed in our model, which presented a drastic reduction in lactate generation and release by infected Schwann cells. This effect was followed by a decrease in lactate dehydrogenase isoform M (LDH-M) activity and an increase in cellular protection against hydrogen peroxide insult in a pentose phosphate pathway and GSH-dependent manner. M. leprae infection success was also dependent of the glutathione antioxidant system and its main reducing power source, the pentose pathway, as demonstrated by a 50 and 70% drop in intracellular viability after treatment with the GSH synthesis inhibitor buthionine sulfoximine, and aminonicotinamide (6-ANAM), an inhibitor of G6PDH 6-ANAM, respectively. We concluded that M. leprae could modulate host cell glucose metabolism to increase the cellular reducing power generation, facilitating glutathione regeneration and consequently free-radical control. The impact of this regulation in leprosy neuropathy is discussed.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2016

Expression of CD64 on Circulating Neutrophils Favoring Systemic Inflammatory Status in Erythema Nodosum Leprosum

Veronica Schmitz; Rhana Berto da Silva Prata; Mayara Garcia de Mattos Barbosa; Mayara Abud Mendes; Sheila Santos Brandão; Thaís P. Amadeu; Luciana Silva Rodrigues; Helen Ferreira; Fabrício da Mota Ramalho Costa; Jessica Brandão dos Santos; Fabiana dos Santos Pacheco; Alice de Miranda Machado; José Augusto da Costa Nery; Mariana A. Hacker; Anna Maria Sales; Roberta Olmo Pinheiro; Euzenir Nunes Sarno

Erythema Nodosum Leprosum (ENL) is an immune reaction in leprosy that aggravates the patient´s clinical condition. ENL presents systemic symptoms of an acute infectious syndrome with high leukocytosis and intense malaise clinically similar to sepsis. The treatment of ENL patients requires immunosuppression and thus needs to be early and efficient to prevent both disabilities and permanent nerve damage. Some patients experience multiple episodes of ENL and prolonged use of immunosuppressive drugs may lead to serious adverse effects. Thalidomide treatment is extremely effective at ameliorating ENL symptoms. Several mechanisms have been proposed to explain the efficacy of thalidomide in ENL, including the inhibition of TNF production. Given its teratogenicity, thalidomide is prohibitive for women of childbearing age. A rational search for molecular targets during ENL episodes is essential to better understand the disease mechanisms involved, which may also lead to the discovery of new drugs and diagnostic tests. Previous studies have demonstrated that IFN-γ and GM-CSF, involved in the induction of CD64 expression, increase during ENL. The aim of the present study was to investigate CD64 expression during ENL and whether thalidomide treatment modulated its expression. Leprosy patients were allocated to one of five groups: (1) Lepromatous leprosy, (2) Borderline leprosy, (3) Reversal reaction, (4) ENL, and (5) ENL 7 days after thalidomide treatment. The present study demonstrated that CD64 mRNA and protein were expressed in ENL lesions and that thalidomide treatment reduced CD64 expression and neutrophil infiltrates—a hallmark of ENL. We also showed that ENL blood neutrophils exclusively expressed CD64 on the cell surface and that thalidomide diminished overall expression. Patient classification based on clinical symptoms found that severe ENL presented high levels of neutrophil CD64. Collectively, these data revealed that ENL neutrophils express CD64, presumably contributing to the immunopathogenesis of the disease.


brazilian symposium on neural networks | 2008

Automatic Information Extraction in Semi-structured Official Journals

Valmir Macário Filho; Ricardo Bastos Cavalcante Prudêncio; F.de.A.T. de Carvalho; L.R. Torres; Luciana Silva Rodrigues; M.G. Lima

Information extraction systems are used to extract only relevant text information in digital repositories. The current work proposes an automatic system to extract information in semi-structured official journals. In our approach, given an input document, a Machine Learning (ML) algorithm classifies the documentpsilas fragments into class labels which correspond to the data fields to be extracted. The implemented system deployed different features sets and algorithms used in the classification of the fragments. The system was evaluated through experiments on a sample containing 22770 lines of the Pernambucopsilas Official Journal. The experiments performed revealed, in general, good results in terms of precision, which ranged from 70.14% to 98.63% depending on the feature set and algorithm used in the classification of the fragments.

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Daniela Pimenta

Rio de Janeiro State University

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Denise Herdy Afonso

Rio de Janeiro State University

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