Marcelo Rodrigues
University of São Paulo
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Featured researches published by Marcelo Rodrigues.
Anais Da Academia Brasileira De Ciencias | 2003
Leticia Burone; Pablo Muniz; Ana Maria S. Pires-Vanin; Marcelo Rodrigues
Analyses of organic matter content, organic carbon, nitrogen, sulfur and granulometric variables were performed on 101 surface sediment samples from Ubatuba Bay in order to investigate the spatial distribution of organic matter, its origin and the relationships among its components. The samples were obtained with a manual corer, from water depths between 1 and 15m during 5 cruises of the R/V ‘‘Veliger II’’, two months apart. Pearson correlation, regression and Principal Component Analysis (PCA) statistical methods were used to analyze the data. Strong correlations between organic matter and fine sediment fractions were obtained. The PCA revealed at least two main sample groups that reflect the different environmental conditions prevalent in the bay. There is a simple linear relationship between organic carbon content and the organic matter content determined by the calcination technique. Taking into account that the analysis of organic matter content is less expensive and less time consuming than the analysis of organic carbon, the present method of estimation can be useful when fast evaluation of the organic carbon content is needed for samples from similar environments.
Continental Shelf Research | 1999
Michel Michaelovitch de Mahiques; Yasufumi Mishima; Marcelo Rodrigues
Abstract A total of 111 Petersen grab sediment samples, collected during two cruises in 1991 and 1993, on the inner and middle continental shelf between Guanabara Bay and Sao Francisco do Sul, on the southeastern Brazilian margin, were analyzed for the purpose of understanding the nature and distribution of the organic matter in the surface sediments. The analysis of the distribution of the different parameters related to the organic matter revealed the existence of an important distinction between the sediments to the south and to the north of the Sao Sebastiao Island. Six sedimentary zones characterized by different mean values of the organic matter parameters can be identified. The analysis of the δ 13 C and C/N ratios distribution suggest an increasing contribution of land derived organic matter toward the north. The distribution of the organic matter in the area can be explained qualitatively by a model of water mass dynamics, which acts over the southeastern shelf of Brazil.
Marine Geology | 2002
Michel Michaelovitch de Mahiques; Ilson Carlos Almeida da Silveira; Silvia Helena de Mello e Sousa; Marcelo Rodrigues
Abstract Sedimentary and isotope data as well as 14 C AMS dating on 15 box cores were used to identify the main post-Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) processes in the outer shelf and upper slope of the northernmost part of the Sao Paulo Bight, southeastern Brazil. Results show slight but significant variations in calcium carbonate, total sulphur and nitrogen contents as well as carbon and oxygen isotope ratios. Sedimentation rates, varying from 5 to 184 mm kyr −1 are controlled by the shelf and upper slope morphology, the Brazil Current meander dynamics, and the Coastal Water offshore motion.
Revista Brasileira De Farmacognosia-brazilian Journal of Pharmacognosy | 2007
F. F. Perazzo; José Carlos Tavares Carvalho; Marcelo Rodrigues; Ellen K. L. Morais; Maria Aparecida M. Maciel
The 19-nor-clerodane trans-crotonin (CTN) and the triterpene acetyl aleuritolic acid (AAA), isolated from the stem bark of Croton cajucara Benth (Euphorbiaceae), a traditional medicinal plant from Amazon region of Brazil, as well as the aqueous extract (AE) from its stem bark, were submitted to pharmacological screening for anti-inflammatory and antinociceptive activities in animal models. The oral administration of AAA (50 mg/kg), CTN (50 mg/kg) or AE (300 mg/kg) inhibited the acetic acid-induced writhing in mice. The AE, CTN and AAA had shown significant inhibition of carrageenin-induced edema in rats, in all time intervals measured after the injection of the stimulus, with the greatest inhibition at the first hour for AAA (47.7%) and the second hour for CTN (54.4%). They have also exhibited significant inhibition in the dextran-induced edema 90 minutes after the stimulus: 31.9% for CTN and 28.5% for AAA. In the histamine-induced edema, the inhibition showed by CTN and AAA were 43.2% and 40.5%, respectively, 90 minutes after the injection of stimulus. This study extends and supports the popular medicine and folkloric uses of Croton cajucara in the Amazon region of Brazil.
Angewandte Chemie | 2013
Norberto Garcia-Cairasco; Miguel Moyses-Neto; Flavio Del Vecchio; J.A.C. Oliveira; Francisco L. dos Santos; Olagide W. Castro; Gabriel Maisonnave Arisi; Márcio Dantas; Ruither Oliveira Gomes Carolino; Joaquim Coutinho-Netto; Andre L. A. Dagostin; Marcelo Rodrigues; Ricardo M. Leão; Samir A. P. Quintiliano; Luiz F. Silva; Leonardo Gobbo-Neto; Norberto Peporine Lopes
Caramboxin: Patients suffering from chronic kidney disease are frequently intoxicated after ingesting star fruit. The main symptoms of this intoxication are named in the picture. Bioguided chemical procedures resulted in the discovery of caramboxin, which is a phenylalanine-like molecule that is responsible for intoxication. Functional experiments in vivo and in vitro point towards the glutamatergic ionotropic molecular actions of caramboxin, which explains its convulsant and neurodegenerative properties.
Epilepsy & Behavior | 2005
Marcelo Rodrigues; Franco Rossetti; Maira Licia Foresti; Gabriel Maisonnave Arisi; Márcio Araújo Furtado; Maria Luiza Cleto Dal-Cól; Poliana Bertti; Artur Fernandes; Francisco L. dos Santos; Flavio Del Vecchio; Norberto Garcia-Cairasco
Wet dog shakes (WDS) and head shakes (HS) are associated with experimentally induced convulsive seizures. We sought to determine whether these behaviors are correlated or not with major (status epilepticus (SE) or fully kindled animals) or minor (non-SE or partially kindled animals) seizure severity. WDS are directly correlated with SE induced by intracerebral star fruit extract (Averrhoa carambola) injection and with kindled animals in the amygdala fast kindling model. On the other hand, WDS are inversely correlated with SE induced by intracerebral bicuculline and pilocarpine injections. Systemic pilocarpine in animals pretreated with methyl-scopolamine barely induced WDS or HS. The role of shaking behaviors may vary from ictal to anticonvulsant depending on the experimental seizure model, circuitries involved, and stimulus intensity. The physical presence of acrylic helmets may per se inhibit the HS response. Also, methyl-scopolamine, a drug incapable of crossing the blood-brain barrier, can induce HS in animals without acrylic helmets.
Epilepsy & Behavior | 2011
Franco Rossetti; Marcelo Rodrigues; J.A.C. Oliveira; Norberto Garcia-Cairasco
The superior colliculus (SC), substantia nigra pars reticulata (SNPr), and striatum have been characterized as important structures involved in the modulation of seizure activity. In the current study, bicuculline (GABA(A) antagonist) and muscimol (GABA(A) agonist) were microinjected into the deep layers of either the anterior SC (aSC) or posterior SC (pSC) of genetically developed Wistar audiogenic rats. Behavior and EEG activity were studied simultaneously. Only muscimol microinjected into the pSC had behavioral and EEG anticonvulsant effects in Wistar audiogenic rats, eliciting EEG oscillation changes in both SNPr and pSC, primarily during tonic seizures. The SC of Wistar audiogenic rats thus comprises two functionally different subregions, pSC and aSC, defined by distinct behavioral and EEG features. The pSC has proconvulsant audiogenic seizure activity in Wistar audiogenic rats. Our data suggest that this phenomenon may be a consequence of the genetic selection of the Wistar audiogenic rat strain.
Brazilian Journal of Oceanography | 2009
Marília Cunha-Lignon; Michel Michaelovitch de Mahiques; Yara Schaeffer-Novelli; Marcelo Rodrigues; Daniel Andreas Klein; Samara Cazzoli y Goya; Ricardo P. Menghini; Clodoaldo C. Tolentino; Gilberto Cintrón-Molero; Farid Dahdouh-Guebas
Sediment cores are an essential tool for the analysis of the dynamics of mangrove succession. Coring was used to correlate changes in depositional environments and lateral sedimentary facies with discrete stages of forest succession at the Cananeia-Iguape Coastal System in southeastern Brazil. A local level successional pattern was examined based on four core series T1) a sediment bank; T2) a smooth cordgrass Spartina alterniflora bank; T3) an active mangrove progradation fringe dominated by Laguncularia racemosa, and; T4) a mature mangrove forest dominated by Avicennia schaueriana. Cores were macroscopically described in terms of color, texture, sedimentary structure and organic components. The base of all cores exhibited a similar pattern suggesting common vertical progressive changes in depositional conditions and subsequent successional colonization pattern throughout the forest. The progradation zone is an exposed bank, colonized by S. alterniflora. L. racemosa, replaces S. alterniflora as progradation takes place. As the substrate consolidates A. schaueriana replaces L. racemosa and attains the greatest structural development in the mature forest. Cores collected within the A. schaueriana dominated stand contained S. alterniflora fragments near the base, confirming that a smooth cordgrass habitat characterized the establishment and early seral stages. Cores provide a reliable approach to describe local-level successional sequences in dynamic settings subject to drivers operating on multiple temporal and spatial scales where spatial heterogeneity can lead to multiple equilibria and where similar successional end-points may be reached through convergent paths.
Epilepsy & Behavior | 2012
Franco Rossetti; Marcelo Rodrigues; Simone Saldanha Marroni; Artur Fernandes; Maira Licia Foresti; Rodrigo N. Romcy-Pereira; Draulio B. de Araujo; Norberto Garcia-Cairasco
The role of the substantia nigra pars reticulata (SNPr) and superior colliculus (SC) network in rat strains susceptible to audiogenic seizures still remain underexplored in epileptology. In a previous study from our laboratory, the GABAergic drugs bicuculline (BIC) and muscimol (MUS) were microinjected into the deep layers of either the anterior SC (aSC) or the posterior SC (pSC) in animals of the Wistar audiogenic rat (WAR) strain submitted to acoustic stimulation, in which simultaneous electroencephalographic (EEG) recording of the aSC, pSC, SNPr and striatum was performed. Only MUS microinjected into the pSC blocked audiogenic seizures. In the present study, we expanded upon these previous results using the retrograde tracer Fluorogold (FG) microinjected into the aSC and pSC in conjunction with quantitative EEG analysis (wavelet transform), in the search for mechanisms associated with the susceptibility of this inbred strain to acoustic stimulation. Our hypothesis was that the WAR strain would have different connectivity between specific subareas of the superior colliculus and the SNPr when compared with resistant Wistar animals and that these connections would lead to altered behavior of this network during audiogenic seizures. Wavelet analysis showed that the only treatment with an anticonvulsant effect was MUS microinjected into the pSC region, and this treatment induced a sustained oscillation in the theta band only in the SNPr and in the pSC. These data suggest that in WAR animals, there are at least two subcortical loops and that the one involved in audiogenic seizure susceptibility appears to be the pSC-SNPr circuit. We also found that WARs presented an increase in the number of FG+ projections from the posterior SNPr to both the aSC and pSC (primarily to the pSC), with both acting as proconvulsant nuclei when compared with Wistar rats. We concluded that these two different subcortical loops within the basal ganglia are probably a consequence of the WAR genetic background.
Journal of Coastal Conservation | 2012
Luis Américo Conti; Carlos Alberto Sampaio de Araújo; Fernando S. Paolo; Roberto Lima Barcellos; Marcelo Rodrigues; Michel Michaelovitch de Mahiques; Valdenir Veronese Furtado
The aim of this work is to use GIS integration data to characterize sedimentary processes in a SubTropical lagoon environment. The study area was the Cananéia Inlet estuary in the southeastern section of the Cananéia Lagoon Estuarine System (CLES), state of São Paulo, Brazil (25°03′S/47°53′W). The area is formed by the confluence of two estuarine channels forming a bay-shaped water body locally called “Trapandé Bay”. The region is surrounded by one of the most preserved tracts of Atlantic Rain Forest in Southwestern Brazil and presents well-developed mangroves and marshes. In this study a methodology was developed using integrated a GIS database based on bottom sediment parameters, geomorphological data, remote sensing images, Hidrodynamical Modeling data and geophysical parameters. The sediment grain size parameters and the bottom morphology of the lagoon were also used to develop models of net sediment transport pathways. It was possible to observe that the sediment transport vectors based on the grain size model had a good correlation with the transport model based on the bottom topography features and Hydrodynamic model, especially in areas with stronger energetic conditions, with a minor contribution of finer sediments. This relation is somewhat less evident near shallower banks and depositional features. In these regions the organic matter contents in the sediments was a good complementary tool for inferring the hydrodynamic and depositional conditions (i.e. primary productivity, sedimentation rates, sources, oxi-reduction rates).