Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Mariana C. Oliveira is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Mariana C. Oliveira.


Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2004

Genome features of Leptospira interrogans serovar Copenhageni

Ana L. T. O. Nascimento; Sergio Verjovski-Almeida; M. A. Van Sluys; Claudia B. Monteiro-Vitorello; Luis Eduardo Aranha Camargo; Luciano Antonio Digiampietri; R.A. Harstkeerl; Paulo Lee Ho; Marilis V. Marques; Mariana C. Oliveira; João C. Setubal; David A. Haake; Elizabeth A. L. Martins

We report novel features of the genome sequence of Leptospira interrogans serovar Copenhageni, a highly invasive spirochete. Leptospira species colonize a significant proportion of rodent populations worldwide and produce life-threatening infections in mammals. Genomic sequence analysis reveals the presence of a competent transport system with 13 families of genes encoding for major transporters including a three-member component efflux system compatible with the long-term survival of this organism. The leptospiral genome contains a broad array of genes encoding regulatory system, signal transduction and methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins, reflecting the organisms ability to respond to diverse environmental stimuli. The identification of a complete set of genes encoding the enzymes for the cobalamin biosynthetic pathway and the novel coding genes related to lipopolysaccharide biosynthesis should bring new light to the study of Leptospira physiology. Genes related to toxins, lipoproteins and several surface-exposed proteins may facilitate a better understanding of the Leptospira pathogenesis and may serve as potential candidates for vaccine.


Journal of Phycology | 2011

A NEW LOOK AT AN ANCIENT ORDER: GENERIC REVISION OF THE BANGIALES (RHODOPHYTA)†

Judith E. Sutherland; Sandra C. Lindstrom; Wendy A. Nelson; Juliet Brodie; Michael D. J. Lynch; Mi Sook Hwang; Han-Gu Choi; Masahiko Miyata; Norio Kikuchi; Mariana C. Oliveira; Tracy J. Farr; Chris Neefus; Agnes Mols-Mortensen; Daniela Milstein; Kirsten M. Müller

The red algal order Bangiales has been revised as a result of detailed regional studies and the development of expert local knowledge of Bangiales floras, followed by collaborative global analyses based on wide taxon sampling and molecular analyses. Combined analyses of the nuclear SSU rRNA gene and the plastid RUBISCO LSU (rbcL) gene for 157 Bangiales taxa have been conducted. Fifteen genera of Bangiales, seven filamentous and eight foliose, are recognized. This classification includes five newly described and two resurrected genera. This revision constitutes a major change in understanding relationships and evolution in this order. The genus Porphyra is now restricted to five described species and a number of undescribed species. Other foliose taxa previously placed in Porphyra are now recognized to belong to the genera Boreophyllum gen. nov., Clymene gen. nov., Fuscifolium gen. nov., Lysithea gen. nov., Miuraea gen. nov., Pyropia, and Wildemania. Four of the seven filamentous genera recognized in our analyses already have generic names (Bangia, Dione, Minerva, and Pseudobangia), and are all currently monotypic. The unnamed filamentous genera are clearly composed of multiple species, and few of these species have names. Further research is required: the genus to which the marine taxon Bangia fuscopurpurea belongs is not known, and there are also a large number of species previously described as Porphyra for which nuclear SSU ribosomal RNA (nrSSU) or rbcL sequence data should be obtained so that they can be assigned to the appropriate genus.


Journal of Phycology | 2011

A NEW LOOK AT AN ANCIENT ORDER: GENERIC REVISION OF THE BANGIALES (RHODOPHYTA)(1).

Judith E. Sutherland; Sandra C. Lindstrom; Wendy A. Nelson; Juliet Brodie; Michael D. J. Lynch; Mi Sook Hwang; Han-Gu Choi; Masahiko Miyata; Norio Kikuchi; Mariana C. Oliveira; Tracy J. Farr; Chris Neefus; Agnes Mols-Mortensen; Daniela Milstein; Kirsten M. Müller

The red algal order Bangiales has been revised as a result of detailed regional studies and the development of expert local knowledge of Bangiales floras, followed by collaborative global analyses based on wide taxon sampling and molecular analyses. Combined analyses of the nuclear SSU rRNA gene and the plastid RUBISCO LSU (rbcL) gene for 157 Bangiales taxa have been conducted. Fifteen genera of Bangiales, seven filamentous and eight foliose, are recognized. This classification includes five newly described and two resurrected genera. This revision constitutes a major change in understanding relationships and evolution in this order. The genus Porphyra is now restricted to five described species and a number of undescribed species. Other foliose taxa previously placed in Porphyra are now recognized to belong to the genera Boreophyllum gen. nov., Clymene gen. nov., Fuscifolium gen. nov., Lysithea gen. nov., Miuraea gen. nov., Pyropia, and Wildemania. Four of the seven filamentous genera recognized in our analyses already have generic names (Bangia, Dione, Minerva, and Pseudobangia), and are all currently monotypic. The unnamed filamentous genera are clearly composed of multiple species, and few of these species have names. Further research is required: the genus to which the marine taxon Bangia fuscopurpurea belongs is not known, and there are also a large number of species previously described as Porphyra for which nuclear SSU ribosomal RNA (nrSSU) or rbcL sequence data should be obtained so that they can be assigned to the appropriate genus.


Brazilian Journal of Plant Physiology | 2006

Brazilian coffee genome project: an EST-based genomic resource

Luiz Gonzaga Esteves Vieira; Alan Carvalho Andrade; Carlos Augusto Colombo; Ana Heloneida de Araújo Moraes; Ângela Metha; Angélica Carvalho de Oliveira; Carlos Alberto Labate; Celso Luis Marino; Claudia B. Monteiro-Vitorello; Damares C. Monte; Éder A. Giglioti; Edna T. Kimura; Eduardo Romano; Eiko E. Kuramae; Eliana Gertrudes de Macedo Lemos; Elionor Rita Pereira de Almeida; Erika C. Jorge; Erika V.S. Albuquerque; Felipe Rodrigues da Silva; Felipe Vinecky; Haiko Enok Sawazaki; Hamza Fahmi A. Dorry; Helaine Carrer; Ilka Nacif Abreu; João A. N. Batista; João Batista Teixeira; João Paulo Kitajima; Karem Guimarães Xavier; Liziane Maria de Lima; Luis Eduardo Aranha Camargo

Coffee is one of the most valuable agricultural commodities and ranks second on international trade exchanges. The genus Coffea belongs to the Rubiaceae family which includes other important plants. The genus contains about 100 species but commercial production is based only on two species, Coffea arabica and Coffea canephora that represent about 70 % and 30 % of the total coffee market, respectively. The Brazilian Coffee Genome Project was designed with the objective of making modern genomics resources available to the coffee scientific community, working on different aspects of the coffee production chain. We have single-pass sequenced a total of 214,964 randomly picked clones from 37 cDNA libraries of C. arabica, C. canephora and C. racemosa, representing specific stages of cells and plant development that after trimming resulted in 130,792, 12,381 and 10,566 sequences for each species, respectively. The ESTs clustered into 17,982 clusters and 32,155 singletons. Blast analysis of these sequences revealed that 22 % had no significant matches to sequences in the National Center for Biotechnology Information database (of known or unknown function). The generated coffee EST database resulted in the identification of close to 33,000 different unigenes. Annotated sequencing results have been stored in an online database at http://www.lge.ibi.unicamp.br/cafe. Resources developed in this project provide genetic and genomic tools that may hold the key to the sustainability, competitiveness and future viability of the coffee industry in local and international markets.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2004

The genome sequence of the gram-positive sugarcane pathogen Leifsonia xyli subsp. xyli.

Claudia B. Monteiro-Vitorello; Luis Eduardo Aranha Camargo; Marie A. Van Sluys; João Paulo Kitajima; Daniela Truffi; Ricardo Harakava; Julio Cezar Franco de Oliveira; Derek W. Wood; Mariana C. Oliveira; Cristina Y. Miyaki; Marco A. Takita; Ana C. R. da Silva; Luis Roberto Furlan; Dirce Maria Carraro; Giovana Camarotte; Nalvo F. Almeida; Helaine Carrer; Luiz Lehmann Coutinho; Maria Inês Tiraboschi Ferro; Paulo R. Gagliardi; Éder A. Giglioti; Maria Helena S. Goldman; Gustavo H. Goldman; Edna T. Kimura; Emer S. Ferro; Eiko E. Kuramae; Eliana Gertrudes de Macedo Lemos; Manoel Victor Franco Lemos; Sônia Marli Zingaretti Di Mauro; Marcos Antonio Machado

The genome sequence of Leifsonia xyli subsp. xyli, which causes ratoon stunting disease and affects sugarcane worldwide, was determined. The single circular chromosome of Leifsonia xyli subsp. xyli CTCB07 was 2.6 Mb in length with a GC content of 68% and 2,044 predicted open reading frames. The analysis also revealed 307 predicted pseudogenes, which is more than any bacterial plant pathogen sequenced to date. Many of these pseudogenes, if functional, would likely be involved in the degradation of plant heteropolysaccharides, uptake of free sugars, and synthesis of amino acids. Although L. xyli subsp. xyli has only been identified colonizing the xylem vessels of sugarcane, the numbers of predicted regulatory genes and sugar transporters are similar to those in free-living organisms. Some of the predicted pathogenicity genes appear to have been acquired by lateral transfer and include genes for cellulase, pectinase, wilt-inducing protein, lysozyme, and desaturase. The presence of the latter may contribute to stunting, since it is likely involved in the synthesis of abscisic acid, a hormone that arrests growth. Our findings are consistent with the nutritionally fastidious behavior exhibited by L. xyli subsp. xyli and suggest an ongoing adaptation to the restricted ecological niche it inhabits.


American Journal of Botany | 2001

Ribosomal DNA phylogeny of the Bangiophycidae (Rhodophyta) and the origin of secondary plastids

Kirsten M. Muller; Mariana C. Oliveira; Robert G. Sheath; Debashish Bhattacharya

We sequenced the nuclear small subunit ribosomal DNA coding region from 20 members of the Bangiophycidae and from two members of the Florideophycidae to gain insights into red algal evolution. A combined alignment of nuclear and plastid small subunit rDNA and a data set of Rubisco protein sequences were also studied to complement the understanding of bangiophyte phylogeny and to address red algal secondary symbiosis. Our results are consistent with a monophyletic origin of the Florideophycidae, which form a sister-group to the Bangiales. Bangiales monophyly is strongly supported, although Porphyra is polyphyletic within Bangia. Bangiophycidae orders such as the Porphyridiales are distributed over three independent red algal lineages. The Compsopogonales sensu stricto, consisting of two freshwater families, Compsopogonaceae and Boldiaceae, forms a well-supported monophyletic grouping. The single taxon within the Rhodochaetales, Rhodochaete parvula, is positioned within a cluster containing members of the Erythropeltidales. Analyses of Rubisco sequences show that the plastids of the heterokonts are most closely related to members of the Cyanidiales and are not directly related to cryptophyte and haptophyte plastid genomes. Our results support the independent origins of these secondary algal plastids from different members of the Bangiophycidae.


Journal of Phycology | 2001

GENETIC VARIABILITY OF BRAZILIAN STRAINS OF THE MICROCYSTIS AERUGINOSA COMPLEX (CYANOBACTERIA/CYANOPHYCEAE) USING THE PHYCOCYANIN INTERGENIC SPACER AND FLANKING REGIONS (cpcBA)

Maria do Carmo Bittencourt-Oliveira; Mariana C. Oliveira; Christopher J. S. Bolch

The genetic and morphological variability among 15 Brazilian strains of Microcystis aeruginosa (Kütz.) Kütz. collected from four locations was examined and compared with several reference strains of M. aeruginosa, M. viridis (A. Br.) Lemm. and M. wesenbergii (Kom.) Kom. in Kondr. Brazilian strains were classified by morphological features and by comparison of the nucleotide sequences of the cpcBA intergenic spacer and flanking regions. Our results indicate that Brazilian strains classified as M. aeruginosa are phylogenetically diverse compared with reference strains of M. aeruginosa and that the current taxonomy underestimates genetic diversity within M. aeruginosa. The data also demonstrate that morphological criteria alone are inadequate to characterize Microcystis species. Although colonial characters were shown to vary considerably in culture, some genetic lineages demonstrated consistent cellular diameter ranges, indicating that cell size has value as a taxonomic character. The detection of six M. aeruginosa genotypes in a single water body indicates that morphological approaches can also seriously underestimate the diversity of Microcystis bloom populations.


Science | 2010

Biodiversity Conservation Research, Training, and Policy in São Paulo

Carlos Alfredo Joly; Ricardo Ribeiro Rodrigues; Jean Paul Metzger; Célio F. B. Haddad; Luciano M. Verdade; Mariana C. Oliveira; Vanderlan da Silva Bolzani

The BIOTA-FAPESP program is linking a decade of research on biodiversity into public policy in the state of São Paulo. Since the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) in 1992, biodiversity conservation (the protection of species, ecosystems, and ecological processes) and restoration (recovery of degraded ecosystems) have been high priorities for many countries. Scarce financial resources must be optimized, especially in developing countries considered megadiverse (1), by investing in programs that combine biodiversity research, personnel training, and public-policy impact. We describe an ongoing program in the state of São Paulo, Brazil, that may be a useful example of how conservation initiatives with a solid scientific basis can be achieved.


Phycological Research | 1995

A preliminary investigation of the order Bangiales (Bangiophycidae, Rhodophyta) based on sequences of nuclear small‐subunit ribosomal RNA genes

Mariana C. Oliveira; Joelius Kurniawan; Carolyn J. Bird; Ellen L. Rice; Colleen A. Murphy; Rama K. Singh; Robin R. Gutell; Mark A. Ragan

We investigated phylogenetic relationships among red algae of the order Bangiales by analysis of sequences of the nuclear gene encoding cytosolic small‐subunit ribosomal RNA in Bangia atropurpurea (Roth) C. Ag. and eight samples representing seven species of Porphyra. The ssu‐rDNA range from 1818 to 1845 nucleotides in length, with guanosine plus cytosine ratios between 47.0% and 48.6%. A group IC1 intron occurs in the B atropurpurea ssu‐rDNAs at the same position as in P. spiralis var. amplifolia Oliveira Filho et Coll and several other eukaryote ssu‐rDNAs. The nine sequences form a stable monophyletic group upon phylogenetic analysis. The ssu‐rDNA from B. atropurpurea nests stably within the Porphyra group and is closely related to P. amplissima (Kjellm.) Setchell et Hus in Hus, making the genus Porphyra paraphyletic. No correlation is seen between phylogenetic position and number of cell layers in the Porphyra thallus. We discuss possible taxonomic and evolutionary implications of these observations.


Journal of Phycology | 2002

PHYLOGENY AND SYSTEMATICS OF THE MARINE ALGAL FAMILY GRACILARIACEAE (GRACILARIALES, RHODOPHYTA) BASED ON SMALL SUBUNIT rDNA AND ITS SEQUENCES OF ATLANTIC AND PACIFIC SPECIES1

Alexis M. Bellorin; Mariana C. Oliveira; Eurico C. Oliveira

We sequenced the small subunit rDNA and internal transcribed spacer region of Gracilariaceae from the tropical Atlantic and Pacific, with emphasis on flattened or compressed species. Sequence comparisons confirmed three main lineages of Gracilariaceae: Curdiea/Melanthalia, Gracilariopsis/Gracilariophila, and Gracilaria. The Curdiea/Melanthalia diverged early in the family. Gracilariopsis was paraphyletic, because at least one Gracilariophila species evolved from it. The Atlantic Gracilariopsis were monophyletic and separated from the Pacific lineages. The Gracilaria included all species referable to its own species and to Hydropuntia, which was paraphyletic, formed by distantly related lineages. The new combination Gracilaria pauciramosa (N. Rodríguez Ríos) Bellorin, M. C. Oliveira et E. C. Oliveira is proposed for Polycavernosa pauciramosa N. Rodríguez Ríos. Recognition of subgenera within Gracilaria, based on spermatangial arrangement, was not supported. Instead, infrageneric groups were delineated by geographic origins and combinations of reproductive characters. Most Pacific species with either “textorii” or “verrucosa” type spermatangia were deeply separated from Atlantic species. Within the Atlantic Gracilaria, a lineage encompassing mostly tropical cylindrical species with “henriquesiana” type spermatangia and distinctive cystocarp anatomy was recognized. A lineage was also retrieved for cold water stringy species with verrucosa type spermatangia. Several species from the western Atlantic are closely related to Gracilaria tikvahiae McLachlan with nearly identical morphology. On the other hand, most flattened species from the tropical Atlantic were closely related despite their diverse morphologies. The interpretation of our data in addition to the literature indicates that more populations from the Indo‐Pacific must be studied before a general picture of Gracilariaceae evolution can be framed.

Collaboration


Dive into the Mariana C. Oliveira's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mutue T. Fujii

University of São Paulo

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pio Colepicolo

University of São Paulo

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Fungyi Chow

University of São Paulo

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Fábio Nauer

University of São Paulo

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Cintia Iha

University of São Paulo

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Abel Sentíes

Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jhoana Díaz-Larrea

Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge