Maria Lúcia Harada
Federal University of Pará
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Featured researches published by Maria Lúcia Harada.
International Journal of Primatology | 1997
C. M. L. Barroso; Horacio Schneider; Maria Paula Cruz Schneider; Iracilda Sampaio; Maria Lúcia Harada; John Czelusniak; Morris Goodman
We determined DNA sequences spanning the 1.8-kb long intron 1 of the interstitial retinol-binding protein nuclear gene (IRBP) for Callithrix geoffroyi, Callithrix humeralifer, and Callithrix argentata. With the 22 previously determined IRBP intron 1 sequences—21 from the 16 currently recognized genera of New World monkeys—the enlarged IRBP data represent for the marmoset genus Callithrix both its argentata and its jacchus species groups. Maximum-parsimony and neighbor-joining trees, constructed for the 25 aligned IRBP intron 1 sequences, support a provisional phylogenetic classification with three families: Atelidae, containing subfamily Atelinae; Pitheciidae, containing subfamily Pitheciinae; and Cebidae, containing subfamilies Cebinae, Aotinae, and Callitrichinae. In order to have taxa at the same hierarchical rank at equivalent age, this classification has all living callitrichines in a single tribe, Callitrichini, with four subtribes: Saguinina (Saguinus), Callimiconina (Callimico), Leontopithecina (Leontopithecus), and Callitrichina (Callithrix with the pygmy marmoset, Cebuella pygmaea, merged into it). The DNA evidence shows not only that Callithrix must include C. pygmaea to be monophyletic but also that the times of separation of pygmaea and the argentata and jacchus species groups from one another are to be expected (<5 Ma—million years ago) for species in a single genus. On relating the time course of the ceboid radiation to biogeographic information, it appears that in mid-Miocene times (10–11 Ma) a basal callitrichin stock branched into the ancestral population of Saguinus in one clade and the ancestral population of Leontopithecus and Callimico–Callithrix (or Leontopithecus–Callimico and Callithrix) in another clade. The proto-lion tamarins migrated south and eastward, where they were isolated in refugia, becoming the genus Leontopithecus. The stock remaining in Amazonia gave rise to present-day Callimico and Callithrix. The latter genus occupied a vast geographic area, giving rise to the argentata and pygmaea groups in Amazonia and to the jacchus group in central and eastern Brazil.
European Journal of Protistology | 2011
Gabriela Cristina Küppers; Thiago da Silva Paiva; Bárbara do Nascimento Borges; Maria Lúcia Harada; Gabriela González Garraza; Gabriela Mataloni
The ciliate Parasterkiella thompsoni (Foissner, 1996) nov. gen., nov. comb. was originally described from Antarctica. In the present study, we report the morphology, morphogenesis during cell division, and molecular phylogeny inferred from the 18S-rDNA sequence of a population isolated from the Rancho Hambre peat bog, Tierra del Fuego Province (Argentina). The study is based on live and protargol-impregnated specimens. Molecular phylogeny was inferred from trees constructed by means of the maximum parsimony, neighbor joining, and Bayesian analyses. The interphase morphology matches the original description of the species. During the cell division, stomatogenesis begins with the de novo proliferation of two fields of basal bodies, each one left of the postoral ventral cirri and of transverse cirri, which later unify. Primordia IV-VI of the proter develop from disaggregation of cirrus IV/3, while primordium IV of the opisthe develops from cirrus IV/2 and primordia V and VI from cirrus V/4. Dorsal morphogenesis occurs in the Urosomoida pattern-that is, the fragmentation of kinety 3 is lacking. Three macronuclear nodules are generated before cytokinesis. Phylogenetic analyses consistently placed P. thompsoni within the stylonychines. New data on the morphogenesis of the dorsal ciliature justifies the transference of Sterkiella thompsoni to a new genus Parasterkiella.
International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2012
Thiago da Silva Paiva; Bárbara do Nascimento Borges; Inácio Domingos da Silva-Neto; Maria Lúcia Harada
Morphology of the urostylid ciliate Hemicycliostyla sphagni Stokes, 1886, the type of Hemicycliostyla Stokes, 1886, is investigated based on live and protargol-impregnated specimens from a Brazilian population. The absence of transverse cirri, which has been considered the main diagnostic feature of Hemicycliostyla, separating it from Pseudourostyla Borror, 1972, was found to vary within the studied population, with 50% of the specimens exhibiting inconspicuous and/or rudimentary transverse cirri. A redefinition of Hemicycliostyla was possible based on combined features of interphase and divisional morphogenesis: Retroextendia Berger, 2006, with bi- or multicoronal frontal cirral pattern; fronto-terminal cirri present; multiple left and right marginal cirral rows that replicate independently via within-row development, each parental row producing one primordium per divider; caudal cirri lacking; and presence/absence of transverse cirri may be intrapopulationally variable. Phylogenetic analyses of the 18S rDNA marker unambiguously placed H. sphagni as sister group of Pseudourostyla franzi Foissner, 1987, which is herein transferred to Hemicycliostyla as Hemicycliostyla franzi comb. nov.
Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2004
Eleonidas Moura Lima; Jorge Dores Rissino; Maria Lúcia Harada; Paulo Pimentel Assumpção; Samia Demachki; Adriana Costa Guimarães; Cacilda Casartelli; Marília de Arruda Cardoso Smith; Rommel Rodriguez Burbano
Gastric cancer is the second most frequent type of neoplasia and also the second most important cause of death in the world. Virtually all the established cell lines of gastric neoplasia were developed in Asian countries, and western countries have contributed very little to this area. In the present study we describe the establishment of the cell line ACP01 and characterize it cytogenetically by means of in vitro immortalization. Cells were transformed from an intestinal-type gastric adenocarcinoma (T4N2M0) originating from a 48-year-old male patient. This is the first gastric adenocarcinoma cell line established in Brazil. The most powerful application of the cell line ACP01 is in the assessment of cytotoxicity. Solid tumor cell lines from different origins have been treated with several conventional and investigational anticancer drugs. The ACP01 cell line is triploid, grows as a single, non-organized layer, similar to fibroblasts, with focus formation, heterogeneous division, and a cell cycle of approximately 40 h. Chromosome 8 trisomy, present in 60% of the cells, was the most frequent cytogenetic alteration. These data lead us to propose a multifactorial triggering of gastric cancer which evolves over multiple stages involving progressive genetic changes and clonal expansion.
Clinical and Experimental Medicine | 2005
André Salim Khayat; L. Lobo Gatti; E. Moura Lima; P. P. de Assumpção; F. J. Nascimento Motta; Maria Lúcia Harada; Cacilda Casartelli; S. L. Marques Payão; M. A. Cardoso Smith; Rommel Rodrigues Burbano
Gastric cancer is the second most frequent type of neoplasia and also the second most common cause of death in the world. TP53 codon 72, which produces variant proteins with an arginine (Arg) or proline (Pro), has been reported to be associated with cancers of the lung, oesophagus, stomach and cervix. Werner’s syndrome (WS) is a premature ageing disease caused by a mutation in the WRN gene. The WRN protein acts as a DNA helicase and as an exonuclease. WRN codon 1367 produces variant proteins with an Arg or cysteine (Cys). This polymorphism has been studied, in order to understand the clinical impact of the molecular variants in WS and in age-related disorders. In the present study, the TP53 codon 72 and the WRN codon 1367 polymorphisms were investigated in 54 gastric adenocarcinoma patients (31 diffuse-type and 25 intestinal-type) and 54 controls. DNA samples were extracted, and PCR-RFLP was utilised for genotyping TP53 codon 72 and WRN codon 1367. The allele frequencies of the TP53 polymorphism were: Arg=0.74 and Pro=0.26. The allele frequencies of the WRN polymorphism were: Cys=0.73 and Arg=0.27. The crude genotypic frequencies in gastric cancer patients were similar to those of the controls, but in the WRN codon 1367 polymorphisms the mean age tended to be higher in the Arg/Arg genotypes. There also was an association, although not statistically significant, between the presence of Helicobacter pylori and the genotypes Cys/Cys and Cys/Arg and a higher percentage of cardia cancer among the Arg/Arg genotypes, and of non-cardia cancer among genotypes Cys/Cys and Cys/Arg. These findings may be a reflection of differences in the interaction between WRN codon 1367 polymorphisms and local factors in the stomach. To our knowledge, this is the first study to examine a genetic polymorphism of the WRN gene in cancer. The precise mechanisms of action of the TP53 and WRN polymorphisms involved in the aetiopathogeny of this disease need further investigation.
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 2015
Michelle P. Mercês; Jessica W. Lynch Alfaro; Wallax Augusto Silva Ferreira; Maria Lúcia Harada; José de Sousa e Silva Júnior
Saimiri has a complicated taxonomic history, and there is continuing disagreement about the number of valid taxa. Despite these controversies, one point of consensus among morphologists has been that the eastern Amazonian populations of squirrel monkeys form a single terminal taxon, Saimiri sciureus sciureus (Linnaeus, 1758). This group is distributed to both the north and south of the middle to lower Amazon River and in the Marajó Archipelago. However, a recent molecular study by Lavergne and colleagues suggested that the Saimiri sciureus complex (comprised of S. s. sciureus sensu lato, S. s. albigena, S. s. macrodon, and S. s. cassiquiarensis) was paraphyletic. The discordance between morphological and molecular studies prompted us to conduct a new multidisciplinary analysis, employing a combination of morphological, morphometric, and molecular markers. Our results suggest the currently recognized taxon S. s. sciureus contains two distinct species, recognized by the Phylogenetic Species Concept: Saimiri sciureus (Linnaeus, 1758) and Saimiri collinsi Osgood, 1916. East Amazonian squirrel monkeys north of the Amazon have a gray crown (S. sciureus), and south of the Amazon, the crown is yellow (S. collinsi). Morphometric measurements also clearly distinguish between the two species, with the most important contributing factors including width across upper canines for both sexes. For males, the mean zygomatic breadth was significantly wider in S. sciureus compared to S. collinsi, and for females, the width across the upper molars was wider in S. sciureus compared to S. collinsi. Mitochondrial phylogenetic analyses support this separation of the eastern Amazonian squirrel monkeys into two distinct taxa, recovering one clade (S. sciureus) distributed to the north of the Amazon River, from the Negro River and Branco River to the Guiana coast and the Brazilian state of Amapá, and another clade (S. collinsi) south of the Amazon River, from the region of the Tapajós River to the state of Maranhão, as well as within the Marajó Archipelago. The revalidation of the species S. collinsi was corroborated by all of the methods in the study, as the clades recovered in our molecular study are congruent with the pattern of morphological variation. We confirm both the paraphyly of the Saimiri sciureus complex and the paraphyly of the subspecies S. s. sciureus as defined in the current literature.
International Journal of Primatology | 2013
Fernanda Pozzan Paim; José de Sousa e Silva Júnior; João Valsecchi; Maria Lúcia Harada; Helder L. Queiroz
Eleven taxa of primates are found in the floodplains of the western portion of the central Brazilian Amazon, protected in part by the Mamirauá Sustainable Development Reserve. The taxonomy of the squirrel monkeys, the number of taxa, and their geographic distributions are still poorly understood. Here we investigate differentiation among the taxa of this genus in Mamirauá, examining their morphology and geographic distribution. We registered 333 points of occurrence of squirrel monkeys and examined 117 specimens deposited in scientific collections. The results of the morphological analyses were generally in good agreement with field observations. Together they indicate the existence of three taxa: Saimiri vanzolinii, Saimiri sciureus macrodon, and S. s. cassiquiarensis. The restricted range of Saimiri vanzolinii in the southeastern portion of the reserve covers an area of 870 km2, and it is among the smallest of the distribution areas for any Neotropical primate species. Saimiri sciureus cassiquiarensis has a disjunct distribution, crossing the Japurá River to the right bank into the reserve in two places, and S. s. macrodon is the squirrel monkey ranging widely in the northwest of Mamirauá. There are three areas of parapatry: one between Saimiri vanzolinii and Saimiri sciureus macrodon and two between S. vanzolinii and S. s. cassiquiarensis. We recommend that anthropogenic changes in the region be monitored, and conservation measures be taken to protect these primates, especially considering the endemism and very restricted range of Saimiri vanzolinii and its consequent vulnerability to extinction.
Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology | 2016
Inácio Domingos da Silva-Neto; Thiago da Silva Paiva; Bárbara do Nascimento Borges; Maria Lúcia Harada
Metopid armophoreans are ciliates commonly found in anaerobic environments worldwide; however, very little is known of their fine structure. In this study, the metopid Parametopidium circumlabens (Biggar and Wenrich 1932) Aescht, 1980, a common endocommensal of sea urchins, is investigated for the first time with emphasis on transmission electron microscopy, revealing several previously unknown elements of its morphology. Somatic dikinetids of P. circumlabens have a typical ribbon of transverse microtubules, an isolated microtubule near triplets 4 and 5 of the anterior kinetosome, plus two other microtubules between anterior and posterior kinetosomes, a short kinetodesmal striated fiber and long postciliary microtubules. In the dikinetids of the perizonal stripe, the kinetodesmal fiber is very pronounced, and there is a conspicuous microfibrillar network system associated with the kinetosomes. A new structure, shaped as a dense, roughly cylindrical mass surrounded by microtubules, is found associated with the posterior kinetosome of perizonal dikinetids. The paroral membrane is diplostichomonad and the adoral membranelles are of the “paramembranelle” type. Bayesian inference and maximum‐likelihood analysis of the 18S‐rDNA gene unambiguously placed P. circumlabens as sister group of the cluster formed by ((Atopospira galeata, Atopospira violacea) Metopus laminarius) + Clevelandellida, corroborating its classification within the Metopida.
Protein and Peptide Letters | 2009
Soelange Bezerra Nascimento; Julio Cezar de Mattos Cascardo; Ilmarina Campos de Menezes; Maria de Lourdes Reis Duarte; Sylvain Darnet; Maria Lúcia Harada; Cláudia Regina Batista de Souza
Piper tuberculatum is an exotic Piper from the Amazon region that shows resistance to infection by Fusarium solani f. sp. piperis, causal agent of Fusarium disease in black pepper (Piper nigrum L.). In this work we aimed to study the interaction between P. tuberculatum and F. solani f. sp. piperis at a molecular level, using suppression subtractive hybridization to identify genes potentially related to Fusarium disease resistance. Comparative sequence analysis confirmed that clones isolated here show a high identity with genes coding for proteins that have a known role in plant defense response mechanisms, such as peroxidase, hydroxyproline-rich glycoprotein and CBL-interacting protein kinase. The present study constitutes the first effort to understand the molecular basis of this plant-pathogen interaction, identifying genes which may be used in the future genetic improvement of black pepper.
Clinical and Experimental Medicine | 2005
Eleonidas Moura Lima; J. J. Araújo; Maria Lúcia Harada; P. Pimentel de Assumpção; Rommel Rodríguez Burbano; Cacilda Casartelli
Among all tumours diagnosed worldwide, gastric adenocarcinoma is the second most frequent type of malignancy. In Brazil, it is estimated to be the fifth most frequent type of neoplasia. According to the classification of Laurén, these tumours are divided into well differentiated and ill differentiated gastric adenocarcinomas. There are studies suggesting that the first type develops through remodulation of genes involved in the suppressor pathway and the second through remodulation of genes belonging to the mutational pathway. The gene PTEN is located in region 10q23 and is altered in several human tumours. In gastric cancer, this gene is thought to take part in the suppressor pathway. In our study, DNA was obtained from 48 gastric adenocarcinoma samples, amplified, screened for all exons of the PTEN gene by PCR-SSCP and then confirmed by sequencing. There was only one sample that presented an alteration and that was a transversion. Our results corroborate the hypothesis that somatic alterations in the PTEN gene are rare events in gastric cancer.