Maria Lucia Carnevale Marin
University of São Paulo
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Featured researches published by Maria Lucia Carnevale Marin.
Human Immunology | 1998
Anna Carla Goldberg; Joyce Hisae Yamamoto; Josely M. Chiarella; Maria Lucia Carnevale Marin; M Sibinelli; R Neufeld; Carlos Eduardo Hirata; Edilberto Olivalves; Jorge Kalil
Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada (VKH) disease is a rare disorder affecting pigmented structures especially the eye and is the main cause of autoimmune non-infectious uveitis in the Brazilian population. The autoimmune target is believed to be the melanocyte. A strong association of VKH disease with HLA-DR4 in the Japanese population is well known. The same association, albeit with lower relative risks has been found in other populations. A secondary association to HLA-DR1 involving a sequence linked with susceptibility to Rheumatoid Arthritis has also been described. VKH disease is more common in non-Caucasian populations. Brazilian patients of varying ethnic origins have been typed for HLA class II antigens. Several of the features found in other population samples are present. Over half of the patients typed HLA-DR4 (20/37) and typing with sequence-specific oligonucleotides disclosed predominance of the DRB1*0405 allele with a relative risk of 11.76 over the general population. In addition, HLA-DR1 and DQ4 were also present, in patients both positive and negative for HLA-DR4. These results suggest that, as in other autoimmune diseases, multiple overlapping susceptibility factors encoded by the MHC complex contribute to the overall susceptibility for the disease, the major factor however, being the presence of the DRB1*0405 allele.
Autoimmunity Reviews | 2011
Lea Campos de Oliveira; Gilda Porta; Maria Lucia Carnevale Marin; Paulo Lisboa Bittencourt; Jorge Kalil; Anna Carla Goldberg
Autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) is a chronic inflammatory liver disease. Characteristic liver-infiltrating immune cells in portal and periportal areas, hypergammaglobulinemia and typical autoantibodies indicate an ongoing autoimmune reaction against liver self antigens, which lead to irreversible cellular damage and ultimately to severe hepatic failure. A significant part of adult, but not pediatric AIH patients, exhibit concurrent autoimmune diseases, further strengthening the immunological etiology of the disease. Genetic susceptibility to autoimmune hepatitis is strongly associated with HLA-DRB1 alleles. In Caucasian European and North American patients, AIH-1 is associated with the presence of DRB1*0301, DRB3*0101 and DRB1*0401 alleles, while AIH-2 is associated with DRB1*0301 or DRB1*07. In Brazil, the primary susceptibility allele for AIH-1 is DRB1*1301, but a secondary association with DRB1*0301 has also been identified. We looked for additional susceptibility factors in the extended MHC region. We genotyped 107 AIH-1 children and up to 326 healthy subjects for TNFA G-308A, TNFA G-238A, LTA A+252G, LTA A+80C, NFKBIL1 T-63A, BAT1 C-348T, BAT1 G-22C, MICA, and HLA-B polymorphisms. The TNFA-308 A allele was significantly increased in AIH-1 when compared with healthy controls, confirming data from other studies. Linkage disequilibrium analysis was carried out. The ancestral haplotype comprising TNFA-308A, TNFA-238G, LTA+252G, LTA+80C, NFKBIL1-63A, BAT1-348C, BAT1-22C, HLA-B*08, MICA*08 was more common in DRB1*03 positive patients than in controls (40% vs. 14%), showing a seven-fold increased risk for the disease [OR=7.8 (95%CI 2.04-29.9.2, p=0.0021). In contrast, the remaining patients carrying DRB1*03 exhibited varied haplotypes. Finally, a variety of class III haplotypes was also present in HLA-DRB1*13 patients, without a predominant pattern. The most common of the 98 haplotypes present in patients were completely absent in controls. The extended haplotype analysis in this sample of AIH-1 patients highlights not only the genetic diversity present in the Brazilian population, but is also in accordance with the previously documented microdiversity within the MHC region. The present knowledge of AIH suggests that the same or a very similar disease can be induced by yet unknown, but different, triggers followed by presentation on different HLA-DR molecules of the epitopes derived from the corresponding autoantigens, characterizing a much more complex disease than previously thought.
American Journal of Ophthalmology | 2009
Felipe Theodoro Bezerra Gaspar Carvalho da Silva; Francisco Max Damico; Maria Lucia Carnevale Marin; Anna Carla Goldberg; Carlos Eduardo Hirata; Pedro Henrique Takiuti; Edilberto Olivalves; Joyce Hisae Yamamoto
PURPOSE To evalulate the applicability of the Revised Diagnostic Criteria for Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada (VKH) disease to Brazilian patients and to verify the association between different disease categories, clinical parameters, and the presence of HLA-DRB1*0405. DESIGN A retrospective observational case series. METHODS Medical charts of 67 patients (10 to 64 years in age; 12 men and 55 women), from the Uveitis Service, Hospital das Clínicas, University of São Paulo School of Medicine (HCFMUSP), São Paulo, Brazil were reviewed. Patients, previously diagnosed with VKH disease using criteria proposed by the American Uveitis Society, underwent retrospective classification based on the Revised Diagnostic Criteria. The degree of concordance was assessed. At presentation, 46 patients (69%) were in the early phase. In this group, the mean time from disease onset to treatment was 15 days (range, one to 30 days). Forty-eight patients (72%) were typed for HLA-DRB1*0405 by polymerase chain reaction-sequence specific primer and polymerase chain reaction-sequence-specific oligonucleotides primer. Disease categories, phase at initial presentation, and ocular complications were analyzed. RESULTS There was a 100% of concordance between the two criteria. Disease was classified as complete in 10 patients (15%), incomplete in 37 patients (55%), and probable in 20 patients (30%). In each group, respectively, 90%, 76%, and 45% were in the early phase at presentation (P = .017). There was no association between disease categories, the presence of HLA-DRB1*0405, and clinical parameters. CONCLUSION The Revised Diagnostic Criteria proved useful for diagnosis of VKH disease in Brazilian patients. The present retrospective study did not find any association between disease category and severity parameters. To better understand the relevance of disease categories, a minimum follow-up period to categorize patients should be included in future prospective studies.
Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2007
Leo Kei Iwai; Márcia Yoshida; Aya Sadahiro; Washington Robert da Silva; Maria Lucia Carnevale Marin; Anna Carla Goldberg; Maria A. Juliano; Luiz Juliano; Maria Aparecida Shikanai-Yasuda; Jorge Kalil; Edecio Cunha-Neto; Luiz R. Travassos
ABSTRACT Vaccines with synthetic peptides induce the immune response to epitopes that bind to several HLA alleles. By using a TEPITOPE algorithm, we selected and analyzed the T-cell responses of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 29 paracoccidioidomycosis (PCM) patients to peptides of the immunodominant gp43 antigen of Paracoccidioides brasiliensis, the causative agent of PCM.
Scandinavian Journal of Immunology | 2007
Anna Carla Goldberg; P. L. Bittencourt; Lea Campos de Oliveira; Rajendranath Ramasawmy; Maria Lucia Carnevale Marin; Selma A. Palácios; Jorge Kalil; Gilda Porta
Autoimmune hepatitis is an immune cell‐mediated chronic liver disease of unknown cause that leads, when untreated, to cirrhosis and liver failure. Importantly, this disease affects not only adults but children as well. Genetic susceptibility is clearly important and the major susceptibility factor identified up to now is the HLA‐DRB1 locus, but other genes may play a role as well. HLA‐DRB1 alleles present in South American patients differ from those found in patients in other parts of the world. In addition, we have recently identified two chromosomal regions where additional susceptibility factors may be found in Brazilian patients, namely, the class III MHC region and the 5q31 region where the IL‐4 and IL‐13 genes are located. This review discusses the current knowledge of the pathogenesis of this autoimmune disease occurring in the setting of an immune‐privileged organ, the liver, and compares the data on gene polymorphisms studied in Brazil and in other parts of the world.
Parasite Immunology | 2001
Sandra do Lago Moraes de Ávila; Anna Carla Goldberg; Viviana G. Arruk; Maria Lucia Carnevale Marin; Luiza Guilherme; Jorge Kalil; Antonio Walter Ferreira
We have evaluated the immune responses of individuals living in a malaria endemic area of Brazil to the (T1B)4, a multiple antigen peptide (MAP) from Plasmodium falciparum circumsporozoite (CS) protein and the related monoepitope MAPs, B4 and (T1)4, and the linear peptides, T1B and B. The highest antibody frequencies were against MAPs containing the B cell epitope sequence (T1B)4 (42·2%) and B4 (28·8%), while the highest lymphoproliferative response frequencies were against the MAPs containing the T cell epitope sequence (T1)4 (47%) and (T1B)4 (36·4%). We analysed individual responses considering lymphoproliferative response to (T1)4 MAP and IgG antibody titre to (T1B)4 as patterns of ideal cellular and humoral responses, respectively. The frequency of responders, cellular and/or humoral was 66·6%, significantly higher than non responders (P = 0·003). We also determined the HLA class II haplotype of each individual but no association between these and immune response patterns to the MAPs was observed. The results showed that individuals primed against P. falciparum in their natural habitat, present a very diverse array of responses against the same peptide antigens, varying from no response in one‐third of the individuals to cognate B and T cell responses. Our study underlines the importance of previous studies of vaccine candidates to guarantee that the immunization will be capable of reverting inefficient or absent responses to malaria epitopes.
Clinics | 2009
Paulo Lisboa Bittencourt; Maria Lucia Carnevale Marin; Cláudia Alves Couto; Eduardo Luiz Rachid Cançado; Flair José Carrilho; Anna Carla Goldberg
BACKGROUND Approximately one-half of Brazilian patients with hereditary hemochromatosis (HH) are neither homozygous for the C282Y mutation nor compound heterozygous for the H63D and C282Y mutations that are associated with HH in Caucasians. Other mutations have been described in the HFE gene as well as in genes involved in iron metabolism, such as transferrin receptor 2 (TfR2) and ferroportin 1 (SCL40A1). AIMS To evaluate the role of HFE, TfR2 and SCL40A1 mutations in Brazilian subjects with HH. PATIENTS AND METHODS Nineteen male subjects (median age 42 [range: 20–72] years) with HH were evaluated using the Haemochromatosis StripAssay A®. This assay is capable of detecting twelve HFE mutations, which are V53M, V59M, H63D, H63H, S65C, Q127H, P160delC, E168Q, E168X, W169X, C282Y and Q283, four TfR2 mutations, which are E60X, M172K, Y250X, AVAQ594-597del, and two SCL40A1 mutations, which are N144H and V162del. RESULTS In our cohort, nine (47%) patients were homozygous for the C282Y mutation, two (11%) were heterozygous for the H63D mutation, and one each (5%) was either heterozygous for C282Y or compound heterozygous for C282Y and H63D. No other mutations in the HFE, TfR2 or SCL40A1 genes were observed in the studied patients. CONCLUSIONS One-third of Brazilian subjects with the classical phenotype of HH do not carry HFE or other mutations that are currently associated with the disease in Caucasians. This observation suggests a role for other yet unknown mutations in the aforementioned genes or in other genes involved in iron homeostasis in the pathogenesis of HH in Brazil.
Clinical & Developmental Immunology | 2015
Léa Campos de Oliveira; Anna Carla Goldberg; Maria Lucia Carnevale Marin; Karina Rosa Schneidwind; Amanda Farage Frade; Jorge Kalil; Irene Kasue Miura; Renata Pugliese; Vera B. Danesi; Gilda Porta
Pediatric autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) patients present hypergammaglobulinemia, periportal CD8+ cytotoxic T cell infiltration, and cirrhosis. Autoantibody profile defines AIH types 1 and 2 in addition to strong association with HLA-DRB1. We previously detected increased IgE serum levels and sought to compare clinical and histological features according to IgE levels in AIH (n = 74, ages 1–14 years) patients. Additionally, we typed 117 patients and 227 controls for functional polymorphisms of IL4, IL13, IL5, and IL4RA genes involved in IgE switching and eosinophil maturation that might contribute to overall genetic susceptibility to AIH. Serum IgE levels were high in 55% of AIH-1, but only in 12% of AIH-2 (P = 0.003) patients. Liver IgE was present in 91.3% of AIH-1 patients. The A alleles at both IL13 rs20541 and IL4RA rs1805011 were associated with AIH-1 (P = 0.024, OR = 1.55 and P < 0.0001, OR = 2.15, resp.). Furthermore, individuals presenting homozygosis for the A allele at IL4RA rs1805011 and HLA-DRB1∗03 and/or ∗13 allele had sixfold greater risk to develop the disease (OR = 14.00, P < 0.001). The novel association suggests an additional role for IgE-linked immune response genes in the pathogenesis of AIH.
Einstein (São Paulo) | 2011
Lea Campos de Oliveira; Rajendranath Ramasawmy; Jaila Dias Borges; Maria Lucia Carnevale Marin; Natalie Guida Muller; Jorge Kalil; Anna Carla Goldberg
OBJECTIVE To present the frequency of single nucleotide polymorphisms of a few immune response genes in a population sample from São Paulo City (SP), Brazil. METHODS Data on allele frequencies of known polymorphisms of innate and acquired immunity genes were presented, the majority with proven impact on gene function. Data were gathered from a sample of healthy individuals, non-HLA identical siblings of bone marrow transplant recipients from the Hospital das Clínicas da Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de São Paulo, obtained between 1998 and 2005. The number of samples varied for each single nucleotide polymorphism analyzed by polymerase chain reaction followed by restriction enzyme cleavage. RESULTS Allele and genotype distribution of 41 different gene polymorphisms, mostly cytokines, but also including other immune response genes, were presented. CONCLUSION We believe that the data presented here can be of great value for case-control studies, to define which polymorphisms are present in biologically relevant frequencies and to assess targets for therapeutic intervention in polygenic diseases with a component of immune and inflammatory responses.
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2005
Francisco Max Damico; Edecio Cunha-Neto; Anna Carla Goldberg; Leo Kei Iwai; Maria Lucia Carnevale Marin; Juergen Hammer; Jorge Kalil; Joyce Hisae Yamamoto