Mauro Cesar Isoldi
University of São Paulo
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Featured researches published by Mauro Cesar Isoldi.
Photochemistry and Photobiology | 2007
T. Kumbalasiri; Mark D. Rollag; Mauro Cesar Isoldi; A. M. de Lauro Castrucci; Ignacio Provencio
Melanopsin is the photopigment that confers photosensitivity upon intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells (ipRGCs). This subset of retinal ganglion cells comprises less than 2% of all RGCs in the mammalian retina. The paucity of melanopsin‐positive cells has made studies on melanopsin signaling difficult to pursue in ipRGCs. To address this issue, we have established several cell lines consisting of a transformed human embryonic kidney cell line (HEK293) stably expressing human melanopsin. With these cell lines, we have investigated the intracellular rise in calcium triggered upon light activation of melanopsin. Our human melanopsin‐expressing cells exhibit an irradiance‐dependent increase in intracellular calcium. Control cells expressing human melanopsin, where the Schiff‐base lysine has been mutated to alanine, show no responses to light. Chelating extracellular calcium has no effect on the light‐induced increase in intracellular calcium suggesting that calcium is mobilized from intracellular stores. This involvement of intracellular stores has been confirmed through their depletion by thapsigargin, which inhibits a subsequent light‐induced increase in intracellular calcium. Addition of the nonselective cation channel blocker lanthanum does not alter light‐induced rises in intracellular calcium, further supporting that melanopsin triggers a release of internal calcium from internal stores. HEK293 cells stably expressing melanopsin have proven to be a useful tool to study melanopsin‐initiated signaling.
Chronobiology International | 2009
Fernanda Pizão Farhat; Cássia Bulhões Martins; Leonardo Henrique Ribeiro Graciani de Lima; Mauro Cesar Isoldi; Ana Maria de Lauro Castrucci
It is well known that clocks are present in brain regions other than the suprachiasmatic nucleus and in many peripheral tissues. In the teleost, Danio rerio, peripheral oscillators can be directly synchronized by light. Danio rerio ZEM-2S embryonic cells respond to light with differential growth: cells kept in constant light exhibited a strong inhibition of proliferation, whereas in cells kept in light:dark (LD) cycles (14L:10D and 10L:14D) or in constant darkness (DD), the doubling times were not statistically different. We demonstrated by RT-PCR followed by PCR that ZEM-2S cells express two melanopsins, Opn4x and Opn4m, and the six Cry genes. The presence of the protein OPN4x was demonstrated by immunocytochemistry. The pattern of temporal expression of the genes Opn4x, Per1, Cry1b, and Clock was studied in ZEM-2S cells kept for five days in 12L:12D or DD. In 12L:12D, the clock genes Per 1 and Cry1b exhibited robust circadian expression, while Opn4x and Clock expression seemed to vary in an ultradian pattern. Both Per1 and Cry1b genes had higher expression during the L phase; Clock gene had an increase in expression coincident with the D phase, and during the subjective night. In DD, the temporal variation of Per1 and Cry1b genes was greatly attenuated but not extinguished, and the higher expressions were shifted to the transition times between subjective day and night, demonstrating that Per and Cry1b were synchronized by the LD cycle. Clock and Opn4x kept the ultradian oscillation, but the rhythm was not statistically significant. As endothelins (ET) have been reported to be a potent stimulator of Per genes in rodents, we investigated the effect of endothelin on ZEM-2S cells, which express ETA receptors. Cells were kept in 12D:12L for five days, and then treated with 10 − 11 to 10 − 8M ET-1 for 24 h. ET-1 exhibited a biphasic effect on Opn4x expression. At 10 − 11M, the hormone exerted a highly significant stimulation of Opn4x expression during the L phase and introduced a circadian oscillatory pattern. At 10 − 10M, a significant increase was seen at ZT21 and ZT0 (i.e., at the end of the D phase and beginning of the L phase), whereas 10 − 9 and 10 − 8M ET-1 inhibited the expression of Opn4x at most ZTs. Clock expression was unaffected by 10 − 8M ET-1; however, in the presence of lower concentrations, the expression was enhanced at some ZTs, strengthening the ultradian oscillation. ET-1 at 10 − 11 and 10 − 10M had no effect on Per1 circadian expression; however, 10 − 9 and 10 − 8M ET-1 reduced the amplitude of Per1 expression in the beginning of the L phase. ET-1 effects were less evident on Cry 1b. For both genes, the reduction in expression was not sufficient to abolish the circadian oscillatory pattern. Based on these results and data in the literature, a link between ET-1 stimulation of ETA receptors may be established by E4BP4 binding to the promoters and consequent inhibition of gene expression. (Author correspondence: [email protected])
Biological Rhythm Research | 2006
Leonardo Henrique Ribeiro Graciani de Lima; Ana Cristina Scarparo; Mauro Cesar Isoldi; Maria Aparecida Visconti; Ana Maria de Lauro Castrucci
Abstract The vertebrate pigment cell, with the exception of mammals and birds, is able to provide the animal with rapid colour changes, which involve dispersion and aggregation of pigment granules in response to hormonal and neuronal agents, and in some cases as a direct response to light. The search for the mechanisms through which Xenopus leavis melanophores respond to light led to the discovery of a new photopigment, melanopsin, with a different spectral sensitivity to that of rhodopsin. This photopigment was also found in mammalian retinal ganglion cells that project to the suprachiasmatic nucleus and other non-visual retinorecipient areas. Herein we demonstrate (by RT-PCR, cloning and sequencing) for the first time that chick melanocytes express melanopsin, and confirmed the presence of the protein by immunocytochemistry. In the chicken retina, we revealed by immunocytochemistry that ganglion cells express melanopsin, but the highest density of immunopositive cells was found in the inner nuclear layer. Quantitative PCR showed that the retina of animals kept in 6 h light: 18 h dark possessed three-fold higher melanopsin mRNA content than animals kept in longer photoperiod, thus demonstrating that light modulates melanopsin expression in chickens.
Medicinal Chemistry | 2008
Paulo A. A. Allil; Maria Aparecida Visconti; Ana Maria de Lauro Castrucci; Mauro Cesar Isoldi
In vivo and in vitro assays were performed with S91 murine melanoma cells aiming to investigate the effects of testosterone and photoperiod on tumor growth and melanogenesis (tyrosinase activity). In vivo assays were performed by inducing melanoma tumors in castrated mice receiving increasing concentrations of testosterone and submitted to varying photoperiod regimens. The results demonstrated that the increase of melanin content was higher in animals submitted to the longest days, thus demonstrating the importance of photoperiod length in melanin synthesis. Increase in tumor growth and protein content was observed in testosterone-treated animals submitted to 12L:12D; in testosterone-treated animals submitted to 4L:20D and 20L:4D tumor growth was significantly smaller. In S91 cultured cells, testosterone increased cell proliferation and reduced tyrosinase activity in a dose-dependent manner. Radioactive binding assays demonstrated that the hormone was acting through low affinity testosterone receptors, since the presence of aromatase inhibitor did not affect the binding assay in a statistically significant way, and all the in vitro experiments were performed in the presence of the inhibitor. Our in vivo data added to the in vitro results corroborate the hypothesis that S91 melanoma cells directly respond to testosterone and that this effect is modulated by light.
General and Comparative Endocrinology | 2010
Mauro Cesar Isoldi; Ignacio Provencio; Ana Maria de Lauro Castrucci
Melanin granule (melanosome) dispersion within Xenopus laevis melanophores is evoked either by light or alpha-MSH. We have previously demonstrated that the initial biochemical steps of light and alpha-MSH signaling are distinct, since the increase in cAMP observed in response to alpha-MSH was not seen after light exposure. cAMP concentrations in response to alpha-MSH were significantly lower in cells pre-exposed to light as compared to the levels in dark-adapted melanophores. Here we demonstrate the presence of an adenylyl cyclase (AC) in the Xenopus melanophore, similar to the mammalian type IX which is inhibited by Ca(2+)-calmodulin-activated phosphatase. This finding supports the hypothesis that the cyclase could be negatively modulated by a light-promoted Ca(2+) increase. In fact, the activity of calcineurin PP2B phosphatase was increased by light, which could result in AC IX inhibition, thus decreasing the response to alpha-MSH. St-Ht31, a disrupting agent of protein kinase A (PKA)-anchoring kinase A protein (AKAP) complex totally blocked the melanosome dispersing response to alpha-MSH, but did not impair the photo-response in Xenopus melanophores. Sequence comparison of a melanophore AKAP partial clone with GenBank sequences showed that the anchoring protein was a gravin-like adaptor previously sequenced from Xenopus non-pigmentary tissues. Co-immunoprecipitation of Xenopus AKAP and the catalytic subunit of PKA demonstrated that PKA is associated with AKAP and it is released in the presence of alpha-MSH. We conclude that in X. laevis melanophores, AKAP12 (gravin-like) contains a site for binding the inactive PKA thus compartmentalizing PKA signaling and also possesses binding sites for PKC. Light diminishes alpha-MSH-induced increase of cAMP by increasing calcineurin (PP2B) activity, which in turn inhibits adenylyl cyclase type IX, and/or by activating PKC, which phosphorylates the gravin-like molecule, thus destabilizing its binding to the cell membrane.
Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2004
Mauro Cesar Isoldi; E. A Pereira; Maria Aparecida Visconti; Ana Maria de Lauro Castrucci
8-Methoxy psoralen (8-MOP) exerts a short-term (24 h) mitogenic action, and a long-term (48-72 h) anti-proliferative and melanogenic action on two human melanoma cell lines, SK-Mel 28 and C32TG. An increase of intracellular calcium concentration was observed by spectrofluorometry immediately after the addition of 0.1 mM 8-MOP to both cell lines, previously incubated with calcium probe fluo-3 AM (5 micro M). The intracellular Ca2+ chelator BAPTA/AM (1 micro M) blocked both early (mitogenic) and late (anti-proliferative and melanogenic) 8-MOP effects on both cell lines, thus revealing the importance of the calcium signal in both short- and long-term 8-MOP-evoked responses. Long-term biological assays with 5 and 10 mM tetraethylammonium chloride (TEA, an inhibitor of Ca2+-dependent K+ channels) did not affect the responses to psoralen; however, in 24-h assays 10 mM TEA blocked the proliferative peak, indicating a modulation of Ca2+-dependent K+ channels by 8-MOP. No alteration of cAMP basal levels or forskolin-stimulated cAMP levels was promoted by 8-MOP in SK-Mel 28 cells, as determined by radioimmunoassay. However, in C32TG cells forskolin-stimulated cAMP levels were further increased in the presence of 8-MOP. In addition, assays with 1 micro M protein kinase C and calcium/calmodulin-dependent kinase inhibitors, Ro 31-8220 and KN-93, respectively, excluded the participation of these kinases in the responses evoked by 8-MOP. Western blot with antibodies anti-phosphotyrosine indicated a 92% increase of the phosphorylated state of a 43-kDa band, suggesting that the phosphorylation of this protein is a component of the cascade that leads to the increase of tyrosinase activity.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005
Mauro Cesar Isoldi; Mark D. Rollag; Ana Maria de Lauro Castrucci; Ignacio Provencio
European Journal of Pharmacology | 2005
Lidiana Duarte de Almeida-Paula; Letícia V. Costa-Lotufo; Zulma S. Ferreira; Amanda Elisa G. Monteiro; Mauro Cesar Isoldi; Rosely Oliveira Godinho; Regina P. Markus
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A-molecular & Integrative Physiology | 2007
Letícia Hyoo Jung Im; Mauro Cesar Isoldi; Ana Cristina Scarparo; Maria Aparecida Visconti; Ana Maria de Lauro Castrucci
Mini-reviews in Medicinal Chemistry | 2005
Mauro Cesar Isoldi; Maria Aparecida Visconti; Ana Maria de Lauro Castrucci