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Dive into the research topics where Márcia E. Oliveira is active.

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Featured researches published by Márcia E. Oliveira.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Characterization of peroxisomal Pex5p from rat liver. Pex5p in the Pex5p-Pex14p membrane complex is a transmembrane protein.

Alexandra Gouveia; Carlos Reguenga; Márcia E. Oliveira; Clara Sá-Miranda; Jorge E. Azevedo

Pex5p is the receptor for the vast majority of peroxisomal matrix proteins. Here, we show that about 15% of rat liver Pex5p is found in the peroxisomal fraction representing 0.06% of total peroxisomal protein. This population of Pex5p displays all the characteristics of an intrinsic membrane protein. Protease protection assays indicate that this pool of Pex5p has domains exposed on both sides of the peroxisomal membrane. The strong interaction of Pex5p with the membrane of the organelle is not affected by mild protease treatment of intact organelles, conditions that result in the partial degradation of Pex13p. Cytosolic Pex5p is a monomeric protein. In contrast, virtually all peroxisomal Pex5p was found to be part of a stable 250-kDa protein assembly. This complex was isolated and shown to comprise just two subunits, Pex5p and Pex14p.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

The Energetics of Pex5p-mediated Peroxisomal Protein Import

Márcia E. Oliveira; Alexandra Gouveia; Rui A. Pinto; Clara Sá-Miranda; Jorge E. Azevedo

Most newly synthesized peroxisomal matrix proteins are targeted to the organelle by Pex5p, the peroxisomal cycling receptor. According to current models of peroxisomal biogenesis, Pex5p interacts with cargo proteins in the cytosol and transports them to the peroxisomal membrane. After delivering the passenger protein into the peroxisomal matrix, Pex5p returns to the cytosol to catalyze additional rounds of transportation. Obviously, such cyclic pathway must require energy, and indeed, data confirming this need are already available. However, the exact step(s) of this cycle where energy input is necessary remains unclear. Here, we present data suggesting that insertion of Pex5p into the peroxisomal membrane does not require ATP hydrolysis. This observation raises the possibility that at the peroxisomal membrane ATP is needed predominantly (if not exclusively) downstream of the protein translocation step to reset the Pex5p-mediated transport system.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Insertion of Pex5p into the Peroxisomal Membrane Is Cargo Protein-dependent

Alexandra Gouveia; Carla P. Guimarães; Márcia E. Oliveira; Clara Sá-Miranda; Jorge E. Azevedo

It is now generally accepted that Pex5p, the receptor for most peroxisomal matrix proteins, cycles between the cytosol and the peroxisomal compartment. According to current models of peroxisomal biogenesis, this intracellular trafficking of Pex5p is coupled to the transport of newly synthesized peroxisomal proteins into the organelle matrix. However, direct evidence supporting this hypothesis was never provided. Here, using an in vitroperoxisomal import system, we show that insertion of Pex5p into the peroxisomal membrane requires the presence of cargo proteins. Strikingly the peroxisomal docking/translocation machinery is also able to catalyze the membrane insertion of a Pex5p truncated molecule lacking any known cargo-binding domain. These results suggest that the cytosol/peroxisomal cycle in which Pex5p is involved is directly or indirectly regulated by Pex5p itself and not by the peroxisomal docking/translocation machinery.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

The import competence of a peroxisomal membrane protein is determined by Pex19p before the docking step.

Manuel P. Pinto; Cláudia P. Grou; Inês S. Alencastre; Márcia E. Oliveira; Clara Sá-Miranda; Marc Fransen; Jorge E. Azevedo

Biogenesis of the mammalian peroxisomal membrane requires the action of Pex3p and Pex16p, two proteins present in the organelle membrane, and Pex19p, a protein that displays a dual subcellular distribution (peroxisomal and cytosolic). Pex19p interacts with most peroxisomal intrinsic membrane proteins, but whether this property reflects its role as an import receptor for this class of proteins or a chaperone-like function in the assembly/disassembly of peroxisomal membrane proteins has been the subject of much controversy. Here, we describe an in vitro system particularly suited to address this issue. It is shown that insertion of a reporter protein into the peroxisomal membrane is a Pex3p-dependent process that does not require ATP/GTP hydrolysis. The system can be programmed with recombinant versions of Pex19p, allowing us to demonstrate that Pex19p-cargo protein complexes formed in the absence of peroxisomes are the substrates for the peroxisomal docking/insertion machinery. Data suggesting that cargo-loaded Pex19p displays a much higher affinity for Pex3p than Pex19p alone are also provided. These results suggest that soluble Pex19p participates in the targeting of newly synthesized peroxisomal membrane proteins to the organelle membrane and support the existence of a cargo-induced peroxisomal targeting mechanism for Pex19p.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2002

Mammalian Pex14p: membrane topology and characterisation of the Pex14p-Pex14p interaction

Márcia E. Oliveira; Carlos Reguenga; Alexandra Gouveia; Carla P. Guimarães; Wolfgang Schliebs; Wolf-H. Kunau; Manuel T. Silva; Clara Sá-Miranda; Jorge E. Azevedo

Peroxisomal biogenesis is a complex process requiring the action of numerous peroxins. One central component of this machinery is Pex14p, an intrinsic peroxisomal membrane protein probably involved in the docking of Pex5p, the receptor for PTS1-containing proteins (peroxisomal targeting signal 1-containing proteins). In this work the membrane topology of mammalian Pex14p was studied. Using a combination of protease protection assays and CNBr cleavage, we show that the first 130 amino acid residues of Pex14p are highly protected from exogenously added proteases by the peroxisomal membrane itself. Data indicating that this domain is responsible for the strong interaction of Pex14p with the organelle membrane are presented. All the other Pex14p amino acid residues are exposed to the cytosol. The properties of recombinant human Pex14p were also characterised. Heterologous expressed Pex14p was found to be a homopolymer of variable stoichiometry. Finally, in vitro binding assays indicate that homopolymerisation of Pex14p involves a domain comprising amino acid residues 147-278 of this peroxin.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2003

Selective detection of UCP 3 expression in skeletal muscle: effect of thyroid status and temperature acclimation

O. Cunningham; Anthony M. McElligott; Audrey M. Carroll; Eamon P. Breen; Carlos Reguenga; Márcia E. Oliveira; Jorge E. Azevedo; Richard K. Porter

A novel peptide antibody to UCP 3 is characterized which is sensitive and discriminatory for UCP 3 over UCP 2, UCP 1 and other mitochondrial transporters. The peptide antibody detects UCP 3 expression in E. coli, COS cells and yeast expression systems. The peptide antibody detects a single approximately 33 kDa protein band in mitochondria from isolated rat skeletal muscle, mouse and rat brown adipose tissue, and in whole muscle groups (soleus and extensor digitorum longus) from mice. No 33 kDa band is detectable in isolated mitochondria from liver, heart, brain, kidney and lungs of rats, or gastrocnemius mitochondria from UCP 3 knock-out mice. From our data, we conclude that the peptide antibody is detecting UCP 3 in skeletal muscle, skeletal muscle mitochondria and brown adipose tissue mitochondria. It is also noteworthy that the peptide antibody can detect human, mouse and rat forms of UCP 3. Using the UCP 3 peptide antibody, we confirm and quantify the increased (2.8-fold) UCP 3 expression observed in skeletal muscle mitochondria isolated from 48-h-starved rats. We show that UCP 3 expression is increased (1.6-fold) in skeletal muscle of rats acclimated over 8 weeks to 8 degrees C and that UCP 3 expression is decreased (1.4-fold) in rats acclimated to 30 degrees C. Furthermore, UCP 3 expression is increased (2.3-fold) in skeletal muscle from hyperthyroid rats compared to euthyroid controls. In addition, we show that UCP 3 expression is only coincident with the mitochondrial fraction of skeletal muscle homogenates and not peroxisomal, nuclear or cytosolic and microsomal fractions.


Cell Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2004

Protein translocation across the peroxisomal membrane.

Jorge E. Azevedo; João Costa-Rodrigues; Carla P. Guimarães; Márcia E. Oliveira; Clara Sá-Miranda

Peroxisomal matrix proteins are synthesized on free cytosolic ribosomes and posttranslationally imported into the organelle. Translocation of these newly synthesized proteins across the peroxisomal membrane requires the concerted action of many different proteins, the majority of which were already identified. However, not much is known regarding the mechanism, of protein translocation across this membrane system. Here, we discuss recent mechanistic and structural data. These results point to a model in which proteins en route to the peroxisomal matrix are translocated across the organelle membrane by their own receptor in a process that occurs, through a large membrane protein assembly.


Clinical Genetics | 2008

LAMA2 gene analysis in a cohort of 26 congenital muscular dystrophy patients

Jorge Oliveira; Rosário Santos; Isabel Soares-Silva; P Jorge; Emília Vieira; Márcia E. Oliveira; A Moreira; Teresa Coelho; Jc Ferreira; Mj Fonseca; C Barbosa; J Prats; Ml Aríztegui; Ml Martins; Teresa Moreno; K. Heinimann; C Barbot; Si Pascual-Pascual; A Cabral; Isabel Fineza; Manuela Santos; Elsa Bronze-da-Rocha

Congenital muscular dystrophy type 1A (MDC1A) is caused by mutations in the LAMA2 gene encoding laminin‐α2. We describe the molecular study of 26 patients with clinical presentation, magnetic resonance imaging and/or laminin‐α2 expression in muscle, compatible with MDC1A. The combination of full genomic sequencing and complementary DNA analysis led to the particularly high mutation detection rate of 96% (50/52 disease alleles). Besides 22 undocumented polymorphisms, 18 different mutations were identified in the course of this work, 14 of which were novel. In particular, we describe the first fully characterized gross deletion in the LAMA2 gene, encompassing exon 56 (c.7750‐1713_7899‐2153del), detected in 31% of the patients. The only two missense mutations detected were found in heterozygosity with nonsense or truncating mutations in the two patients with the milder clinical presentation and a partial reduction in muscle laminin‐α2. Our results corroborate the previous few genotype/phenotype correlations in MDC1A and illustrate the importance of screening for gross rearrangements in the LAMA2 gene, which may be underestimated in the literature.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1999

Identification of a 24 kDa intrinsic membrane protein from mammalian peroxisomes

Carlos Reguenga; Márcia E. Oliveira; Alexandra Gouveia; Christoph Eckerskorn; Clara Sá-Miranda; Jorge E. Azevedo

A 24 kDa protein from rat liver peroxisomal membrane was isolated and subjected to Edman degradation. Using the N-terminal sequence of this polypeptide we have identified several rat and human expressed sequence tags in the GenBank Database. The complete sequence of a human cDNA clone was determined. The open reading frame encodes an extremely basic protein 212 amino acid residues long. A high similarity between this mammalian protein and hypothetical proteins from Caenorhabditis elegans and Neurospora crassa was found. Hydropathy analysis reveals the existence of two putative membrane-spanning domains in conserved regions of the three homologous proteins.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2013

Expanding the MTM1 mutational spectrum: novel variants including the first multi-exonic duplication and development of a locus-specific database

Jorge Oliveira; Márcia E. Oliveira; Wolfram Kress; Ricardo Taipa; Manuel Melo Pires; Pascale Hilbert; Peter Baxter; Manuela Santos; Henk P. J. Buermans; Johan T. den Dunnen; Rosário Santos

Myotubular myopathy (MIM#310400), the X-linked form of Centronuclear myopathy (CNM) is mainly characterized by neonatal hypotonia and inability to maintain unassisted respiration. The MTM1 gene, responsible for this disease, encodes myotubularin – a lipidic phosphatase involved in vesicle trafficking regulation and maturation. Recently, it was shown that myotubularin interacts with desmin, being a major regulator of intermediate filaments. We report the development of a locus-specific database for MTM1 using the Leiden Open Variation database software (http://www.lovd.nl/MTM1), with data collated for 474 mutations identified in 472 patients (by June 2012). Among the entries are a total of 25 new mutations, including a large deletion encompassing introns 2–15. During database implementation it was noticed that no large duplications had been reported. We tested a group of eight uncharacterized CNM patients for this specific type of mutation, by multiple ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) analysis. A large duplication spanning exons 1–5 was identified in a boy with a mild phenotype, with results pointing toward possible somatic mosaicism. Further characterization revealed that this duplication causes an in-frame deletion at the mRNA level (r.343_444del). Results obtained with a next generation sequencing approach suggested that the duplication extends into the neighboring MAMLD1 gene and subsequent cDNA analysis detected the presence of a MTM1/MAMLD1 fusion transcript. A complex rearrangement involving the duplication of exon 10 has since been reported, with detection also enabled by MLPA analysis. It is thus conceivable that large duplications in MTM1 may account for a number of CNM cases that have remained genetically unresolved.

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Clara Sá-Miranda

Instituto de Biologia Molecular e Celular

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Rosário Santos

Intelligence and National Security Alliance

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Emília Vieira

Intelligence and National Security Alliance

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Manuela Santos

Université de Montréal

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Jorge Oliveira

Instituto Português de Oncologia Francisco Gentil

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Carla P. Guimarães

Instituto de Biologia Molecular e Celular

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