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Dive into the research topics where Ludgero C. Tavares is active.

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Featured researches published by Ludgero C. Tavares.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2014

Mitochondrial metabolism directs stemness and differentiation in P19 embryonal carcinoma stem cells

Ignacio Vega-Naredo; Rute Loureiro; Katia A. Mesquita; Inês A. Barbosa; Ludgero C. Tavares; Ana F. Branco; J R Erickson; Jon Holy; Ed Perkins; Rui A. Carvalho; Paulo J. Oliveira

The relationship between mitochondrial metabolism and cell viability and differentiation in stem cells (SCs) remains poorly understood. In the present study, we compared mitochondrial physiology and metabolism between P19SCs before/after differentiation and present a unique fingerprint of the association between mitochondrial activity, cell differentiation and stemness. In comparison with their differentiated counterparts, pluripotency of P19SCs was correlated with a strong glycolytic profile and decreased mitochondrial biogenesis and complexity: round, low-polarized and inactive mitochondria with a closed permeability transition pore. This decreased mitochondrial capacity increased their resistance against dichloroacetate. Thus, stimulation of mitochondrial function by growing P19SCs in glutamine/pyruvate-containing medium reduced their glycolytic phenotype, induced loss of pluripotent potential, compromised differentiation and became P19SCs sensitive to dichloroacetate. Because of the central role of this type of SCs in teratocarcinoma development, our findings highlight the importance of mitochondrial metabolism in stemness, proliferation, differentiation and chemoresistance. In addition, the present work suggests the regulation of mitochondrial metabolism as a tool for inducing cell differentiation in stem line therapies.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2015

Effects of moderate global maternal nutrient reduction on fetal baboon renal mitochondrial gene expression at 0.9 gestation

Susana P. Pereira; Paulo J. Oliveira; Ludgero C. Tavares; António J. Moreno; Laura A. Cox; Peter W. Nathanielsz; Mark J. Nijland

Early life malnutrition results in structural alterations in the kidney, predisposing offspring to later life renal dysfunction. Kidneys of adults who were growth restricted at birth have substantial variations in nephron endowment. Animal models have indicated renal structural and functional consequences in offspring exposed to suboptimal intrauterine nutrition. Mitochondrial bioenergetics play a key role in renal energy metabolism, growth, and function. We hypothesized that moderate maternal nutrient reduction (MNR) would adversely impact fetal renal mitochondrial expression in a well-established nonhuman primate model that produces intrauterine growth reduction at term. Female baboons were fed normal chow diet or 70% of control diet (MNR). Fetal kidneys were harvested at cesarean section at 0.9 gestation (165 days gestation). Human Mitochondrial Energy Metabolism and Human Mitochondria Pathway PCR Arrays were used to analyze mitochondrially relevant mRNA expression. In situ protein content was detected by immunohistochemistry. Despite the smaller overall size, the fetal kidney weight-to-body weight ratio was not affected. We demonstrated fetal sex-specific differential mRNA expression encoding mitochondrial metabolite transport and dynamics proteins. MNR-related differential gene expression was more evident in female fetuses, with 16 transcripts significantly altered, including 14 downregulated and 2 upregulated transcripts. MNR impacted 10 transcripts in male fetuses, with 7 downregulated and 3 upregulated transcripts. The alteration in mRNA levels was accompanied by a decrease in mitochondrial protein cytochrome c oxidase subunit VIc. In conclusion, transcripts encoding fetal renal mitochondrial energy metabolism proteins are nutrition sensitive in a sex-dependent manner. We speculate that these differences lead to decreased mitochondrial fitness that contributes to renal dysfunction in later life.


Mitochondrion | 2016

Cardiac cytochrome c and cardiolipin depletion during anthracycline-induced chronic depression of mitochondrial function.

Gonçalo C. Pereira; Susana P. Pereira; Ludgero C. Tavares; Filipa Carvalho; Silvia Magalhães-Novais; Inês A. Barbosa; Maria S. Santos; James A. Bjork; António J. Moreno; Kendall B. Wallace; Paulo J. Oliveira

AIMS It is still unclear why anthracycline treatment results in a cardiac-specific myopathy. We investigated whether selective doxorubicin (DOX) cardiotoxicity involving mitochondrial degeneration is explained by different respiratory complexes reserves between tissues by comparing and contrasting treatment effects in heart vs liver and kidney. Alternatively, we have also explored if the degeneration is due to alterations of mitochondrial thresholds to incompatible states. METHODS AND RESULTS Heart, liver and kidney mitochondria were isolated from male Wistar rats weekly injected with DOX during 7weeks. Global flux and isolated step curves were obtained for Complex I, III, IV, as well as for the adenine nucleotide translocator. We show treatment-related alterations in global flux curve for Complex III in all analyzed tissues and in Complex IV activity curve solely in heart. However, all mitochondrial threshold curves remained unchanged after treatment in the analyzed tissues. No treatment-related differences were detected on transcript or protein analysis of selected respiratory complexes subunits. However, a specific loss of cytochrome c and cardiolipin was measured in heart, but not in other organs, mitochondria from DOX-treated animals. CONCLUSIONS Contrary to our hypothesis, impaired mitochondrial respiration could not be explained by intrinsic differences in respiratory complexes reserves among tissues or, by alterations in mitochondrial thresholds after treatment. Instead, we propose that loss of cytochrome c and cardiolipin are responsible for the depressed mitochondrial respiration observed after chronic DOX treatment. Moreover, cardiac cytochrome c and cardiolipin depletion decreases metabolic network buffering, hindering cardiac ability to respond to increased workload, accelerating cardiac aging.


European Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2015

Metabolic evaluations of cancer metabolism by NMR-based stable isotope tracer methodologies

Ludgero C. Tavares; Ivana Jarak; Fernando Neves Nogueira; Paulo J. Oliveira; Rui A. Carvalho

Cancer cells are widely recognized for being able to adapt their metabolism towards converting available nutrients into biomass to increase proliferation rates.


BioMed Research International | 2014

Metabolic Effects of Hypoxia in Colorectal Cancer by 13C NMR Isotopomer Analysis

Ana Margarida Abrantes; Ludgero C. Tavares; Salomé Pires; João Casalta-Lopes; Cândida Mendes; Marta Simões; Manuela Grazina; Rui A. Carvalho; Maria Filomena Botelho

13C NMR isotopomer analysis was used to characterize intermediary metabolism in three colorectal cancer cell lines (WiDr, LS1034, and C2BBe1) and determine the “metabolic remodeling” that occurs under hypoxia. Under normoxia, the three colorectal cancer cell lines present high rates of lactate production and can be seen as “Warburg” like cancer cells independently of substrate availability, since such profile was dominant at both high and low glucose media contents. The LS1034 was the less glycolytic of the three cell lines and was the most affected by the event of hypoxia, raising abruptly glucose consumption and lactate production. The other two colorectal cell lines, WiDr and C2BBe1, adapted better to hypoxia and were able to maintain their oxidative fluxes even at the very low levels of oxygen. These differential metabolic behaviors of the three colorectal cell lines show how important an adequate knowledge of the “metabolic remodeling” that follows a given cancer treatment is towards the correct (re)design of therapeutic strategies against cancer.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2018

Reactive Oxygen Species Deficiency Due to Ncf1-Mutation Leads to Development of Adenocarcinoma and Metabolomic and Lipidomic Remodeling in a New Mouse Model of Dextran Sulfate Sodium-Induced Colitis

Lina Carvalho; Joana R. M. Gomes; Ludgero C. Tavares; Ana Ricardo Xavier; Karel D. Klika; Rikard Holmdahl; Rui A. Carvalho; M. Margarida Souto-Carneiro

Inflammatory bowel disease is characterized by chronic relapsing idiopathic inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract and persistent inflammation. Studies focusing on the immune-regulatory function of reactive oxygen species (ROS) are still largely missing. In this study, we analyzed an ROS-deficient mouse model leading to colon adenocarcinoma. Colitis was induced with dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) supplied via the drinking water in wild-type (WT) and Ncf1-mutant (Ncf1) B10.Q mice using two different protocols, one mimicking recovery after acute colitis and another simulating chronic colitis. Disease progression was monitored by evaluation of clinical parameters, histopathological analysis, and the blood serum metabolome using 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. At each experimental time point, colons and spleens from some mice were removed for histopathological analysis and internal clinical parameters. Clinical scores for weight variation, stool consistency, colorectal bleeding, colon length, and spleen weight were significantly worse for Ncf1 than for WT mice. Ncf1 mice with only a 7-day exposure to DSS followed by a 14-day resting period developed colonic distal high-grade dysplasia in contrast to the low-grade dysplasia found in the colon of WT mice. After a 21-day resting period, there was still β-catenin-rich inflammatory infiltration in the Ncf1 mice together with high-grade dysplasia and invasive well-differentiated adenocarcinoma, while in the WT mice, high-grade dysplasia was prominent without malignant invasion and only low inflammation. Although exposure to DSS generated less severe histopathological changes in the WT group, the blood serum metabolome revealed an increased fatty acid content with moderate-to-strong correlations to inflammation score, weight variation, colon length, and spleen weight. Ncf1 mice also displayed a similar pattern but with lower coefficients and showed consistently lower glucose and/or higher lactate levels which correlated with inflammation score, weight variation, and spleen weight. In our novel, DSS-induced colitis animal model, the lack of an oxidative burst ROS was sufficient to develop adenocarcinoma, and display altered blood plasma metabolic and lipid profiles. Thus, oxidative burst seems to be necessary to prevent evolution toward cancer and may confer a protective role in a ROS-mediated self-control mechanism.


Metabolomics | 2018

Response to dietary carbohydrates in European seabass (Dicentrarchus labrax) muscle tissue as revealed by NMR-based metabolomics

Ivana Jarak; Ludgero C. Tavares; Mariana Palma; João Rito; Rui A. Carvalho; Ivan Viegas

IntroductionFeed optimization is a key step to the environmental and economic sustainability of aquaculture, especially for carnivorous species. Plant-derived ingredients can contribute to reduce costs and nitrogenous effluents while sparing wild fish stocks. However, the metabolic use of carbohydrates from vegetable sources by carnivorous fish is still not completely understood.ObjectivesWe aimed to study the effects of diets with carbohydrates of different digestibilities, gelatinized starch (DS) and raw starch (RS), in the muscle metabolome of European seabass (Dicentrarchus labrax).MethodsWe followed an NMR-metabolomics approach, using two sample preparation procedures, the intact muscle (HRMAS) and the aqueous muscle extracts (1H NMR), to compare the variations in muscle metabolome between the two diets.ResultsIn muscle, multivariate analysis revealed similar metabolome shifts for DS and RS diets, when compared with the control diet. HRMAS of intact muscle, which included both hydrophobic and hydrophilic metabolites, showed increased lipid in DS-fed fish by univariate analysis. Regardless of the nature of the starch, increased glycine and phenylalanine, and decreased proline were observed when compared to the Ctr diet. Combined univariate analysis of intact muscle and aqueous extracts indicated specific diet related changes in lipid and amino acid metabolism, consistent with increased dietary carbohydrate supplementation.ConclusionsDue to differential sample processing, outputs differ in detail but provide complementary information. After tracing nutritional alterations by profiling fillet components, DS seems to be the most promising alternative to fishmeal-based diets in aquaculture. This approach should be reproducible for other farmed fish species and provide valuable information on nutritional and organoleptic properties of the final product.


Oncotarget | 2015

Melatonin antiproliferative effects require active mitochondrial function in embryonal carcinoma cells.

Rute Loureiro; Silvia Magalhães-Novais; Katia A. Mesquita; Inês Baldeiras; Isabel S. Sousa; Ludgero C. Tavares; Inês A. Barbosa; Paulo J. Oliveira; Ignacio Vega-Naredo


Revista Portuguesa de Estomatologia, Medicina Dentária e Cirurgia Maxilofacial | 2014

# 10. Metabolómica salivar e diabetes tipo 1: potencialidades na definição de biomarcadores

Ana Luísa Costa; João Carlos Ramos; Manuel Santos Rosa; João Abreu; Rui A. Carvalho; Ludgero C. Tavares


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012

Mitochondrial behavior on cancer stem cells and differentiated cancer cells: A key element for metabolic remodeling and regulation of chemoresistance

Ignacio Vega-Naredo; Rute Loureiro; Ludgero C. Tavares; Ana F. Branco; Ana Burgeiro; Jenna R. Erickson; Jon Holy; Edward Perkins; Rui A. Carvalho; Paulo J. Oliveira

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