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Featured researches published by Luiz Eloy Pereira.


Journal of Medical Virology | 1999

Genetic investigation of novel hantaviruses causing fatal HPS in Brazil

Angela M. Johnson; Luiza Terezinha Madia de Souza; Ivani Bisordi Ferreira; Luiz Eloy Pereira; Thomas G. Ksiazek; Pierre E. Rollin; C. J. Peters; Stuart T. Nichol

Although hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) was discovered in North America in 1993, more recent investigations have shown that the disease is a much larger problem in South America, where a greater number of cases and HPS‐associated viruses have now been detected. Here we describe the genetic investigation of three fatal HPS cases from Brazil, including a 1995 case in Castelo dos Sonhos (CAS) in the state of Mato Grosso and two 1996 cases in the counties of Araraquara (ARA) and Franca (FRA), in the state of São Paulo. Reverse transcription‐polymerase chain reaction (RT‐PCR) products representing fragments of the hantavirus N, G1, and G2 coding regions were amplified from patient acute‐phase serum samples, and the nucleotide (nt) sequences (394, 259, and 139 nt, respectively) revealed high deduced amino acid sequence identity between ARA and FRA viruses (99.2%, 96.5%, and 100%, respectively). However, amino acid differences of up to 14.0% were observed when ARA and FRA virus sequences were compared with those of the geographically more distant CAS virus. Analysis of a 643‐nt N coding region and a 1734‐nt predominantly G2‐encoding region of ARA and CAS virus genomes confirmed that these Brazilian viruses were distinct and monophyletic with previously characterized Argentinean hantaviruses, and suggested that Laguna Negra (LN) virus from Paraguay was ancestral to both the Brazilian and Argentinean viruses. The phylogenetic tree based on the N coding fragment also placed LN in a separate clade with Rio Mamore virus from Bolivia. At the amino acid level, ARA and CAS viruses appeared more closely related to the Argentinean viruses than they were to each other. Similarly, analysis of the diagnostic 139‐nt G2 fragment showed that the Juquitiba virus detected in a 1993 fatal HPS case close to São Paulo city, Brazil was closer to Argentinean viruses than to ARA or CAS viruses. These data indicate that at least three different hantavirus genetic lineages are associated with Brazilian HPS cases. J. Med. Virol. 59:527–535, 1999.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2004

Identifying Rodent Hantavirus Reservoirs, Brazil

Akemi Suzuki; Ivani Bisordi; Silvana Levis; Jorge García; Luiz Eloy Pereira; Renato Pereira de Souza; Teresa K.N. Sugahara; Noemi Pini; Delia Enria; Luiza Terezinha Madia de Souza

Bolomys lasiurus and Oligoryzomys nigripes are rodent reservoirs of Araraquara-like and Juquitiba-like hantaviruses, which cause HPS in Brazil.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2009

Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome, Central Plateau, Southeastern, and Southern Brazil

Luiz Tadeu Moraes Figueiredo; Marcos Lázaro Moreli; Ricardo Luiz Moro de Sousa; Alessandra Abel Borges; Glauciane Garcia de Figueiredo; Alex Martins Machado; Ivani Bisordi; Teresa Keico Nagasse-Sugahara; Akemi Suzuki; Luiz Eloy Pereira; Renato Pereira de Souza; Luiza Terezinha Madia de Souza; Carla Torres Braconi; Charlotte Marianna Hársi; Paolo Marinho de Andrade Zanotto

This syndrome is an increasing health problem because of human encroachment into habitats of rodent reservoirs.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2005

St. Louis encephalitis vírus: first isolation from a human in São Paulo state, Brasil

Iray Maria Rocco; Cecília Luiza Simões Santos; Ivani Bisordi; Selma Petrella; Luiz Eloy Pereira; Renato Pereira de Souza; Terezinha Lisieux Moraes Coimbra; Thirsa Álvares Franco Bessa; Fabíola Maiumi Oshiro; Luciana B.Q. Lima; Matheus de Paula Cerroni; Antonia T. Marti; Vera M. Barbosa; Gizelda Katz; Akemi Suzuki

This paper reports the isolation of St. Louis encephalitis virus (SLEV) from a febrile human case suspected to be dengue, in Sao Pedro, Sao Paulo State. A MAC-ELISA done on the patients acute and convalescent sera was inconclusive and hemagglutination inhibition test detected IgG antibody for flaviviruses. An indirect immunofluorescent assay done on the C6/36 cell culture inoculated with the acute serum was positive for flaviviruses but negative when tested with dengue monoclonal antibodies. RNA extracted from the infected cell culture supernatant was amplified by RT-PCR in the presence of NS5 universal flavivirus primers and directly sequenced. Results of BLAST search indicated that this sequence shares 93% nucleotide similarity with the sequence of SLEV (strain-MSI.7), confirmed by RT-PCR performed with SLEV specific primers. Since SLEV was identified as the cause of human disease, it is necessary to improve surveillance in order to achieve early detection of this agent in the state of Sao Paulo and in Brazil. This finding is also an alert to health professionals about the need for more complete clinical and epidemiological investigations of febrile illnesses as in the reported case. SLEV infections can be unrecognized or confused with other ones caused by an arbovirus, such as dengue.


Revista Da Sociedade Brasileira De Medicina Tropical | 1999

Report on ticks collected in the Southeast and Mid-West regions of Brazil: analyzing the potential transmission of tick-borne pathogens to man

Luiz Tadeu Moraes Figueiredo; Soraya Jabur Badra; Luiz Eloy Pereira; Matias Pablo Juan Szabó

Specimens of ticks were collected in 1993, 1996, 1997, and 1998, mostly from wild and domestic animals in the Southeast and Mid-West regions of Brazil. Nine species of Amblyommidae were identified: Anocentor nitens, Amblyomma cajennense, Amblyomma ovale, Amblyomma fulvum, Amblyomma striatum, Amblyomma rotundatum, Boophilus microplus, Boophilus annulatus, and Rhipicephalus sanguineus. The potential of these tick species as transmitters of pathogens to man was analyzed. A Flaviviridade Flavivirus was isolated from Amblyomma cajennense specimens collected from a sick capybara (Hydrochaeris hydrochaeris). Amblyomma cajennense is the main transmitter of Rickettsia rickettsii (=R. rickettsi), the causative agent of spotted fever in Brazil. Wild mammals, mainly capybaras and deer, infested by ticks and living in close contact with cattle, horses and dogs, offer the risk of transmission of wild zoonosis to these domestic animals and to man.


Journal of Medical Virology | 2010

Detection of a new yellow fever virus lineage within the South American genotype I in Brazil.

Renato Pereira de Souza; Peter G. Foster; Maria Anice Mureb Sallum; Terezinha Lisieux Moraes Coimbra; Adriana Yurika Maeda; Vivian Regina Silveira; Eduardo Stramandinoli Moreno; Fernanda Giselle da Silva; Iray Maria Rocco; Ivani Bisordi Ferreira; Akemi Suzuki; Fabíola M. Oshiro; Selma Petrella; Luiz Eloy Pereira; Giselda Katz; Ciléa H Tengan; Melissa Mascheratti Siciliano; Cecília L.S. dos Santos

Nucleotide sequences of two regions of the genomes of 11 yellow fever virus (YFV) samples isolated from monkeys or humans with symptomatic yellow fever (YF) in Brazil in 2000, 2004, and 2008 were determined with the objective of establishing the genotypes and studying the genetic variation. Results of the Bayesian phylogenetic analysis showed that sequences generated from strains from 2004 and 2008 formed a new subclade within the clade 1 of the South American genotype I. The new subgroup is here designated as 1E. Sequences of YFV strains recovered in 2000 belong to the subclade 1D, which comprises previously characterized YFV strains from Brazil. Molecular dating analyses suggested that the new subclade 1E started diversifying from 1D about 1975 and that the most recent 2004–2008 isolates arose about 1985. J. Med. Virol. 82:175–185, 2010.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 1994

Surveillance of arbovirus infections in the atlantic forest region, State of São Paulo, Brazil: I. detection of hemagglutination-inhibition antibodies in wild birds between 1978 and 1990

Ivani Bisordi Ferreira; Luiz Eloy Pereira; Iray Maria Rocco; Antonia T. Marti; Luiza Terezinha Madia de Souza; Lygia Busch Iversson

We report data related to arbovirus antibodies detected in wild birds periodically captured from January 1978 to December 1990 in the counties of Salesópolis (Casa Grande Station), Itapetininga and Ribeira Valley, considering the different capture environments. Plasmas were examined using hemagglutination-inhibition (HI) tests. Only monotypic reactions were considered, except for two heterotypic reactions in which a significant difference in titer was observed for a determined virus of the same antigenic group. Among a total of 39,911 birds, 269 birds (0.7%) belonging to 66 species and 22 families were found to have a monotypic reaction for Eastern equine encephalitis (EEE), Venezuelan equine encephalitis (VEE), Western equine encephalitis (WEE), Ilheus (ILH), Rocio (ROC), St. Louis encephalitis (SLE), SP An 71686, or Caraparu (CAR) viruses. Analysis of the data provided information of epidemiologic interest with respect to these agents. Birds with positive serology were distributed among different habitats, with a predominance of unforested habitats. The greatest diversity of positive reactions was observed among species which concentrate in culture fields.


Revista De Saude Publica | 2001

Arbovírus Ilheus em aves silvestres (Sporophila caerulescens e Molothrus bonariensis)

Luiz Eloy Pereira; Akemi Suzuki; Terezinha Lisieux Moraes Coimbra; Renato Pereira de Souza; Esther Luiza Bocato Chamelet

OBJETIVO: Relatar o isolamento do virus Ilheus no Estado de Sao Paulo e avaliar o seu impacto para a saude publica. METODOS: O isolamento de virus foi realizado em camundongos albinos Swiss, a partir de sangue de aves silvestres, capturadas com redes de espera tipo mist net, armadas no nivel do solo, no Parque Ecologico do Tiete, Sao Paulo. A identificacao das cepas isoladas foi feita pelos testes de inibicao da hemaglutinacao, fixacao de complemento e neutralizacao em camundongos. Amostras de plasma de aves e de mamiferos silvestres foram submetidas a pesquisa sorologica para deteccao de anticorpos inibidores de hemaglutinacao. RESULTADOS: Foram isoladas duas cepas do virus Ilheus em sangue de aves das especies Sporophila caerulescens e Molothrus bonariensis e detectados anticorpos em aves das especies Columbina talpacoti, Geopelia cuneata, Molothrus bonariensis e Sicalis flaveola, em saguis das especies Callithrix jacchus e Callithrix penicillata e no quati Nasua nasua. CONCLUSOES: O isolamento do virus Ilheus e a deteccao de anticorpos especificos em aves residentes, migratorias e de cativeiro, em saguis e quatis, comprovam a presenca desse agente no Parque Ecologico do Tiete. O comportamento migratorio de aves silvestres pode determinar a introducao do virus em outras regioes. Considerando-se a patogenicidade para o homem e a confirmacao da circulacao desse agente viral em area urbana, frequentada para atividade de lazer e de educacao, o risco de ocorrencia de infeccao na populacao humana nao pode ser descartado.


Vector-borne and Zoonotic Diseases | 2001

Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome in the State of São Paulo, Brazil, 1993-1998.

Gizelda Katz; R. Joel Williams; M. Scott Burt; Luiza Terezinha Madia de Souza; Luiz Eloy Pereira; James N. Mills; Akemi Suzuki; Ivani Bisordi Ferreira; Renato Pereira de Souza; V.A.F. Alves; Jorge Salazar Bravo; Terry L. Yates; Richard A. Meyer; Wun-Ju Shieh; Thomas G. Ksiazek; Sherif R. Zaki; Ali S. Khan; C. J. Peters

Between 1993 and 1998, 10 cases of clinical hantavirus infection were diagnosed in Brazil. Hantavirus-specific IgM, or positive immunohistochemical analysis for hantavirus antigen, or positive reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction results for hantavirus RNA were used to confirm nine of these cases; eight were hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS), and one was mild hantavirus disease. The remaining clinical case of hantavirus infection was fatal, and no tissue was available to confirm the diagnosis. During the first 7 months of 1998, five fatal HPS cases caused by a Sin Nombre-like virus were reported from three different regions in the State of São Paulo, Brazil: two in March (Presidente Prudente Region), two in May (Ribeirão Preto Region), and one in July (Itapecerica da Serra Region). Epidemiologic, ecologic, and serologic surveys were conducted among case contacts, area residents, and captured rodents in five locations within the State of São Paulo in June of 1998. Six (4.8%) of 125 case contacts and six (5.2%) of 116 area residents had IgG antibody to Sin Nombre virus (SNV) antigen. No case contacts had a history of HPS-compatible illness, and only one area resident reported a previous acute respiratory illness. A total of 403 rodents were captured during 9 nights of trapping (1969 trap nights). All 27 rodents that were found to be positive for IgG antibody to SNV antigen were captured in crop border and extensively deforested agricultural areas where four of the 1998 HPS case-patients had recently worked. The IgG antibody prevalence data for rodents suggest that Bolomys lasiurus and perhaps Akodon sp. are potential hantavirus reservoirs in this state of Brazil.


Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De Sao Paulo | 2013

Yellow fever epizootics in non-human primates, São Paulo state, Brazil, 2008-2009

Eduardo Stramandinoli Moreno; Roberta Spinola; Ciléa H Tengan; Roosecelis Brasil; Melissa Mascheratti Siciliano; Terezinha Lisieux Moraes Coimbra; Vivian Regina Silveira; Iray Maria Rocco; Ivani Bisordi; Renato Pereira de Souza; Selma Petrella; Luiz Eloy Pereira; Adriana Yurika Maeda; Fernanda Giselle da Silva; Akemi Suzuki

Since 2000, the expansion of Sylvatic Yellow Fever (YF) has been observed in the southeast of Brazil, being detected in areas considered silent for decades. Epizootics in non-human primates (NHPs) are considered sentinel events for the detection of human cases. It is important to report epizootic events that could have impact on the conservation status of susceptible species. We describe the epizootics in NHPs, notified in state of São Paulo, Brazil, between September 2008 to August 2009. Ninety-one epizootic events, involving 147 animals, were reported in 36 counties. Samples were obtained from 65 animals (44.2%). Most of the epizootics (46.6%) were reported between March and April, the same period during which human cases of YF occurred in the state. Biological samples were collected from animals found dead and were sent to Instituto Adolfo Lutz, in São Paulo. Two samples, collected in two counties without an indication for YF vaccination, were positive for the virus. Another 48 animals were associated with YF by clinical-epidemiological linkage with laboratory confirmed cases. Because the disease in human and NHPs occurred in the same period, the detection of the virus in NHPs did not work as sentinel, but aided in the delineation of new areas of risk.

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