Márcia Kazumi Nagamine
University of São Paulo
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Featured researches published by Márcia Kazumi Nagamine.
Experimental and Toxicologic Pathology | 2009
Márcia Kazumi Nagamine; Tereza Cristina da Silva; Patrícia Matsuzaki; Kátia Cristina Pinello; Bruno Cogliati; Célia Regina Pizzo; Gokithi Akisue; Mitsue Haraguchi; Silvana Lima Górniak; Idércio Luiz Sinhorini; Kurapati Venkata Kesava Rao; José Alexandre Marzagão Barbuto; M.L. Dagli
Roots of Pfaffia paniculata have been well documented for multifarious therapeutic values and have also been used for cancer therapy in folk medicine. This study has been performed in a human breast tumor cell line, the MCF-7 cells. These are the most commonly used model of estrogen-positive breast cancer, and it has been originally established in 1973 at the Michigan Cancer Foundation from a pleural effusion taken from a woman with metastatic breast cancer. Butanolic extract of the roots of P. paniculata showed cytotoxic effect MCF-7 cell line, as determined with crystal violet assay, cellular death with acridine orange/ethidium bromide staining, and cell proliferation with immunocytochemistry of bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU). Subcellular alterations were evaluated by electron microscopy. Cells treated with butanolic extract showed degeneration of cytoplasmic components and profound morphological and nuclear alterations. The results show that this butanolic extract indeed presents cytotoxic substances, and its fractions merit further investigations.
Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2008
Heidge Fukumasu; J.L. Avanzo; Márcia Kazumi Nagamine; José Alexandre Marzagão Barbuto; Kurapati Venkata Kesava Rao; M.L. Dagli
We showed that guaraná (Paullinia cupana Mart var. sorbilis) had a chemopreventive effect on mouse hepatocarcinogenesis and reduced diethylnitrosamine-induced DNA damage. In the present experiment, we evaluated the effects of guaraná in an experimental metastasis model. Cultured B16/F10 melanoma cells (5 x 10(5) cells/animal) were injected into the tail vein of mice on the 7th day of guaraná treatment (2.0 mg P. cupana/g body weight, per gavage) and the animals were treated with guaraná daily up to 14 days until euthanasia (total treatment time: 21 days). Lung sections were obtained for morphometric analysis, apoptotic bodies were counted to calculate the apoptotic index and proliferating cell nuclear antigen-positive cells were counted to determine the proliferation index. Guaraná-treated (GUA) animals presented a 68.6% reduction in tumor burden area compared to control (CO) animals which were not treated with guaraná (CO: 0.84 +/- 0.26, N = 6; GUA: 0.27 +/- 0.24, N = 6; P = 0.0043), a 57.9% reduction in tumor proliferation index (CO: 23.75 +/- 20.54, N = 6; GUA: 9.99 +/- 3.93, N = 6; P = 0.026) and a 4.85-fold increase in apoptotic index (CO: 66.95 +/- 22.95, N = 6; GUA: 324.37 +/- 266.74 AB/mm(2), N = 6; P = 0.0152). In this mouse model, guaraná treatment decreased proliferation and increased apoptosis of tumor cells, consequently reducing the tumor burden area. We are currently investigating the molecular pathways of the effects of guaraná in cultured melanoma cells, regarding principally the cell cycle inhibitors and cyclins.
Molecular Carcinogenesis | 2014
Gregory Mennecier; Luciana Neves Torres; Bruno Cogliati; Daniel S. Sanches; Claudia Madalena Cabrera Mori; Andreia O. Latorre; Lucas Martins Chaible; Ivone I. Mackowiak; Márcia Kazumi Nagamine; Tereza Cristina da Silva; Heidge Fukumasu; M.L. Dagli
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer‐related mortality in both men and women throughout the world. This disease is strongly associated with tobacco smoking. The aim of this manuscript was to establish an in vitro model that mimics the chronic exposures of alveolar epithelial type II cells to the tobacco‐specific nitrosamine carcinogen, NNK. Immortalized non‐neoplastic alveolar epithelial cells type II, (E10 cells), from BALB/c mice were exposed to low concentration of NNK (100 pM) during 5, 10, 15, and 20 cycles of 48 h. NNK‐transformed cells showed an increase of proliferation rate and motility. Moreover, these cells underwent epithelial‐to‐mesenchymal transition (EMT). Increased migratory capacity and EMT were correlated to the time of exposure to NNK. NNK‐transformed cells were tested for their growth and metastatic capacity in vivo. Subcutaneous injection of cells exposed to NNK for 20 cycles (E10‐NNK20 clone) into BALB/c mice led to the formation of subcutaneous tumors that arose after 40 ± 17 d in all animals, which died 95 ± 18 d after cell inoculation, with lymph nodes and lung metastasis. The morphological characteristics of tumors were compatible with metastatic undifferentiated carcinoma. Cells exposed to NNK for 5–10 cycles did not display metastatic capacity, while those exposed for 15 cycles displayed low capacity. Our results show that prolonged exposures to NNK led the cells to increasingly acquire malignant properties. The cellular model presented in this study is suitable for studying the molecular events involved in the different stages of malignant transformation.
Brazilian Archives of Biology and Technology | 2010
Juliana Vieira; Patrícia Matsuzaki; Márcia Kazumi Nagamine; Mitsue Haraguchi; Gokithi Akisue; Silvana Lima Górniak; M.L. Dagli
This study aimed to investigate the effects of the administration of butanolic residue (BR) of Pfaffia paniculata by intraperitoneal route to Ehrlich ascitis tumor bearing mice. Initially, a toxicity study of P. paniculata BR was performed in which doses of 12.5; 25 and 50mg/Kg were administered by intraperitoneal injection for seven days to Swiss mice. The treatment did not show toxicity. Then, Swiss male mice received, by intraperitoneal injection, once a day, 12.5; 25 or 50mg/Kg of P. paniculata BR for seven days. This protocol started in the same day of tumor inoculation with 5X106 cells i.p. The treatment with butanolic residue of P.paniculata i.p caused a significant increase in the ascitic volume; however, a significant decrease in tumor cells number per ml (p<0.05) was observed in P. paniculata treated mice that was followed by a numerical (although non-significant) decrease in the total numbers of tumor cells in the collected ascitic fluid. These results indicated a tumor cell inhibitory effect by P. paniculata butanolic residue in this experimental system, and indicate that topical application of this residue can be useful to control the cancer growth.
Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine | 2015
Tereza Cristina da Silva; Bruno Cogliati; Andreia O. Latorre; Gokithi Akisue; Márcia Kazumi Nagamine; Mitsue Haraguchi; Daiane Hansen; Daniel S. Sanches; Maria Lúcia Zaidan Dagli
Hebanthe paniculata roots (formerly Pfaffia paniculata and popularly known as Brazilian ginseng) show antineoplastic, chemopreventive, and antiproliferative properties. Functional properties of these roots and their extracts are usually attributed to the pfaffosidic fraction, which is composed mainly by pfaffosides A–F. However, the therapeutic potential of this fraction in cancer cells is not yet entirely understood. This study aimed to analyze the antitumoral effects of the purified pfaffosidic fraction or saponinic fraction on the human hepatocellular carcinoma HepG2 cell line. Cellular viability, proliferation, and apoptosis were evaluated, respectively, by MTT assay, BrdU incorporation, activated caspase-3 immunocytochemistry, and DNA fragmentation assay. Cell cycle was analyzed by flow cytometry and the cell cycle-related proteins were analyzed by quantitative PCR and Western blot. The cells exposed to pfaffosidic fraction had reduced viability and cellular growth, induced G2/M at 48 h or S at 72 h arrest, and increased sub-G1 cell population via cyclin E downregulation, p27KIP1 overexpression, and caspase-3-induced apoptosis, without affecting the DNA integrity. Antitumoral effects of pfaffosidic fraction from H. paniculata in HepG2 cells originated by multimechanisms of action might be associated with cell cycle arrest in the S phase, by CDK2 and cyclin E downregulation and p27KIP1 overexpression, besides induction of apoptosis through caspase-3 activation.
Veterinary Journal | 2012
Ivone I. Mackowiak; Luciana Boffoni Gentile; Lucas Martins Chaible; Márcia Kazumi Nagamine; J.M. Guerra; E.F.F. Mota; J.M. Matera; Gregory Mennecier; Daniel S. Sanches; M.L. Dagli
Mast cell tumors (MCTs) are the most frequent round cell tumors in dogs and comprise approximately 21% of all canine cutaneous tumors. MCTs are highly invasive and metastatic corresponding to the histological grade. E-cadherin is an adhesion molecule expressed in epithelial cells and although it is an epithelial cellular marker, studies have shown expression of E-cadherin in canine round cell tumors. To better characterize the expression pattern of E-cadherin in several different histological grades of MCTs in dogs, the expression and localization of the adhesion molecule was investigated using immunohistochemistry. For this purpose, 18 cutaneous MCTs were classified into three histological grades, 1, 2 or 3. Clinical history and follow-up data were available for all of the dogs. Cytoplasmic and nuclear expressions of E-cadherin in all three types of tumors were verified by immunostaining using two different antibodies. There was decreased E-cadherin expression in the more aggressive MCTs (Grade 3), suggesting an association between E-cadherin and tumor aggressiveness. Additionally, the loss of E-cadherin expression in either the cytoplasm or nucleus in more aggressive and undifferentiated tumor types confirmed the importance of cellular adhesion in tumor behavior.
PLOS ONE | 2017
Luciana B. Gentile; Márcia Kazumi Nagamine; Luiz Roberto Biondi; Daniel Sanches; Fábio Toyota; Tatiane M. Giovani; Isis P. de Jesus; Ivone I. M. da Fonseca; Nicolle Queiroz-Hazarbassanov; Bruno L. Diaz; Cristina M. Gomes; Maria Lúcia Zaidan Dagli
There are many factors which make canine cancer like cancer in humans. The occurrence of spontaneous mammary tumors in pet dogs, tumor genetics, molecular targets and exposure to the same environmental risk factors are among these factors. Therefore, the study of canine cancer can provide useful information to the oncology field. This study aimed to establish and characterize a panel of primary mixed cell cultures obtained from spontaneous canine mammary tumors. Eight established cell cultures obtained from one normal mammary gland, one complex adenoma, one mixed adenoma, two complex carcinomas and two mixed carcinomas were analyzed. The gene expression levels of classic molecular cancer players such as fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) 2, breast cancer (BRCA) 1, BRCA2 and estrogen receptor (ESR) 1 were evaluated. For the first time, three orphan nuclear receptors, estrogen-related receptors (ERRs) α, β and γ were studied in canine mammary cancer. The highest expression level of ERRα was observed in complex carcinoma-derived cell culture, while the highest levels of ERRβ and γ were observed in cells derived from a mixed carcinoma. Meanwhile, complex carcinomas presented the highest levels of expression of ESR1, BRCA1 and FGFR2 among all samples. BRCA2 was found exclusively in complex adenoma. The transcription factor GATA3 had its highest levels in mixed carcinoma samples and its lowest levels in complex adenoma. Proliferation assays were also performed to evaluate the mixed cell cultures response to ER ligands, genistein and DES, both in normoxia and hypoxic conditions. Our results demonstrate that morphological and functional studies of primary mixed cell cultures derived from spontaneous canine mammary tumors are possible and provide valuable tool for the study of various stages of mammary cancer development.
BMC Proceedings | 2013
Luciana Boffoni Gentile; Márcia Kazumi Nagamine; Isis P. de Jesus; Fábio Toyota; A. T. Nishiya; Tatiane M. Giovani; Daniel S. Sanches; Heidge Fukumasu; M.L. Dagli
Background Mammary gland neoplasms are the most prevalent tumors in dogs, and their treatment is still challenging. A crucial problem in the handling of this type of neoplasm is to obtain primary mammary epithelial cell cultures from the original tumors. The aim of this study was to determine the best conditions to culture primary mammary epithelial cells from several histological types of canine breast tumors.
Cancer Letters | 2005
Tereza Cristina da Silva; Ana Paula da Silva; Gokithi Akisue; José Luis Avanzo; Márcia Kazumi Nagamine; Heidge Fukumasu; Patrícia Matsuzaki; Paulo César Raspantini; Mitsue Haraguchi; Silvana Lima Górniak; M.L. Dagli
Life Sciences | 2006
Kátia Cristina Pinello; E.S.M. Fonseca; Gokithi Akisue; Ana Paula da Silva; Silvia Catarina Salgado Oloris; Mônica Sakai; Patrícia Matsuzaki; Márcia Kazumi Nagamine; João Palermo Neto; M.L. Dagli