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Dive into the research topics where Michele Fagundes is active.

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Featured researches published by Michele Fagundes.


Aquaculture | 2004

Nursery rearing of jundiá, Rhamdia quelen (Quoy & Gaimard) in cages: cage type, stocking density and stress response to confinement

Leonardo José Gil Barcellos; Luiz Carlos Kreutz; Rosmari Mezzalira Quevedo; Irineo Fioreze; Leonardo Cericato; Auren Benck Soso; Michele Fagundes; Jaqueline Conrad; Rodrigo Krammer Baldissera; Aline Bruschi; Filipe Ritter

Abstract The use of net cages allows the exploration of some water bodies, without usual aquacultural techniques for earthen ponds. Several advantages are proposed for the use of cages, however some disadvantages, as the higher possibility of stress and diseases are known. Growth parameters, survival rate and stress response of hatchery-bred Jundia ( Rhamdia quelen , Quoy & Gaimard) fry reared at different cage types and densities in net cages suspended in pond were evaluated. The first experiment compared fry reared at the circular and cubic-shaped cages at a density of 100 fry/m 3 . Fish held in cubic cages were heavier than the fish held in circular cages, presented higher weight gain and daily weight gain and a better food conversion. The survival rates were similar between fish raised in both types of cages. In the second experiment, cubic cages were stocked with 100, 200 and 300 fry/m 3 . Fish held in cages with lower density were heavier than the ones held at higher densities, presented higher weight gain and daily weight gain. Food conversion and survival rates were similar between different fish densities. According to the results presented in this study, the growth of jundia in cubic-shaped cages was density dependent. In terms of weight parameters, the most effective stocking density of jundia was 100 fry/m 3 that reaches 63.74±3.69 g of body weight. However, if the desirable weight was from 30 to 40 g, the density of 300 fry/m 3 is most effective because the fingerling production increases three times. In experiment 3, in all sample days, the serum cortisol levels were higher than the pre-stock and basal levels. The 80 days of cage confinement were not enough for adaptation of fingerlings to cage environment. The maintenance of high cortisol concentrations after 80 days of experimental period suggests the presence of typical chronic stress response that might have some detrimental effects over fish growth. Taken together, the data presented herein suggests that the improvement of rearing conditions (e.g. water quality, food quality, cage design, culture management, etc.) capable to minimize the stress response, may affect positively the growth performance in jundia during the nursery period.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Alcohol impairs predation risk response and communication in zebrafish.

Thiago Acosta Oliveira; Gessi Koakoski; Luiz Carlos Kreutz; Daiane Ferreira; João Gabriel Santos da Rosa; Murilo S. Abreu; Ana C.V.V. Giacomini; Ricardo Pimentel Oliveira; Michele Fagundes; Angelo L. Piato; Rodrigo Egydio Barreto; Leonardo José Gil Barcellos

The effects of ethanol exposure on Danio rerio have been studied from the perspectives of developmental biology and behavior. However, little is known about the effects of ethanol on the prey-predator relationship and chemical communication of predation risk. Here, we showed that visual contact with a predator triggers stress axis activation in zebrafish. We also observed a typical stress response in zebrafish receiving water from these conspecifics, indicating that these fish chemically communicate predation risk. Our work is the first to demonstrate how alcohol effects this prey-predator interaction. We showed for the first time that alcohol exposure completely blocks stress axis activation in both fish seeing the predator and in fish that come in indirect contact with a predator by receiving water from these conspecifics. Together with other research results and with the translational relevance of this fish species, our data points to zebrafish as a promising animal model to study human alcoholism.


Physiology & Behavior | 2012

Divergent time course of cortisol response to stress in fish of different ages.

Gessi Koakoski; Thiago Acosta Oliveira; João Gabriel Santos da Rosa; Michele Fagundes; Luiz Carlos Kreutz; Leonardo José Gil Barcellos

This study investigated differences in the cortisol response of fish at different developmental stages after exposure to an acute stressor. Three experiments using 126 fish each were performed using 3 different age groups of jundiá (Rhamdia quelen): fingerlings at 60 days of age, juveniles at 180 days, and adults at 360 days. In each experiment, the fish in each group were randomly distributed into either a handled experimental group or a non-handled control group. The handled group was then exposed to an acute stressor for measurement of cortisol concentrations at 5, 15, 30, 60, and 240 min after exposure and subsequent comparison of cortisol concentrations with those of the non-handled groups at the 6 sampling times. Between the experimental and control groups, the results revealed that the handled fish in each of the 3 age groups had higher cortisol concentrations compared to the non-handled fish in the equivalent age group. Among the age groups of the handled fish, the results revealed that the fingerlings and juveniles attained peak cortisol concentrations within 5 to 30 min after stressor exposure whereas the adults attained peak concentrations 60 min after exposure. This finding has important implications for the design of research into stress and welfare among fish at different developmental stages.


Chemosphere | 2014

Agrichemicals chronically inhibit the cortisol response to stress in fish.

Gessi Koakoski; Rosmari Mezzalira Quevedo; Daiane Ferreira; Thiago Acosta Oliveira; João Gabriel Santos da Rosa; Murilo S. Abreu; Darlan Gusso; Alessandra Marqueze; Luiz Carlos Kreutz; Ana Cristina Vendrameto Giacomini; Michele Fagundes; Leonardo José Gil Barcellos

We studied the stress response of Rhamdia quelen fingerlings at 45, 90, 135 and 180 d following acute exposure to agrichemicals. Herein, we report the novel observation that acute exposure of fingerling-aged fish to a methyl parathion-based insecticide (MPBI) and to a tebuconazole-based fungicide (TBF) induced chronic inhibition of the stress response. In contrast, fish exposed to an atrazine-simazine-based herbicide (ASBH) recovered the stress response on day 45, and fish exposed to a glyphosate-based herbicide (GBH) did not present stress response inhibition. Additionally, fish exposed to MPBI, GBH and ASBH showed lower survival rates and attained lower final weights. In the case of TBF, the presence of the stressful stimulus more strongly influenced the changes in the performance parameters than did the agrichemical exposure itself. An impairment of the cortisol response may seriously hamper the adaptive response and the ability to promote the necessary metabolic and ionic adjustments to respond to environmental stress.


Environmental Toxicology and Pharmacology | 2016

Waterborne psychoactive drugs impair the initial development of Zebrafish

Fabiana Kalichak; Renan Idalencio; João Gabriel Santos da Rosa; Thiago Acosta Oliveira; Gessi Koakoski; Darlan Gusso; Murilo S. Abreu; Ana Cristina Varrone Giacomini; Heloísa Helena de Alcântara Barcellos; Michele Fagundes; Angelo L. Piato; Leonardo José Gil Barcellos

The contamination of rivers and other natural water bodies, including underground waters, is a current reality. Human occupation and some economic activities generate a wide range of contaminated effluents that reach these water resources, including psychotropic drug residues. Here we show that fluoxetine, diazepam and risperidone affected the initial development of zebrafish. All drugs increased mortality rate and heart frequency and decreased larvae length. In addition, risperidone and fluoxetine decreased egg hatching. The overall results points to a strong potential of these drugs to cause a negative impact on zebrafish initial development and, since the larvae viability was reduced, promote adverse effects at the population level. We hypothesized that eggs and larvae absorbed the drugs that exert its effects in the central nervous system. These effects on early development may have significant environmental implications.


Neotropical Ichthyology | 2013

Repeated stressors do not provoke habituation or accumulation of the stress response in the catfish Rhamdia quelen

Gessi Koakoski; Luiz Carlos Kreutz; Michele Fagundes; Thiago Acosta Oliveira; Daiane Ferreira; João Gabriel Santos da Rosa; Leonardo José Gil Barcellos

Fish repeatedly experience stressful situations under experimental and aquaculture conditions, even in their natural habitat. Fish submitted to sequential stressors can exhibit accumulation or habituation on its cortisol response. We posed a central question about the cortisol response profiles after exposure to successive acute stressors of a similar and different nature in Rhamdia quelen. We have shown that successive acute stressors delivered with 12-h, 48-h, and 1-week intervals provoked similar cortisol responses in juvenile R. quelen, without any habituation or accumulation. The cumulative stress response is more associated to short acute stressors with very short intervals of minutes to hours. In our work, we used an interval as short as 12h, and no cumulative response was found. However, if the length of time between stressors is of a day or week as used in our work the most common and an expected phenomenon is the attenuation of the response. Thus, also, the absence of both accumulation of the stress response and the expected habituation is an intriguing result. Our results show that R. quelen does not show habituation or accumulation in its stress responses to repeated stressors, as reported for other fish species


Scientific Reports | 2016

Waterborne aripiprazole blunts the stress response in zebrafish

Heloísa Helena de Alcantara Barcellos; Fabiana Kalichak; João Gabriel Santos da Rosa; Thiago Acosta Oliveira; Gessi Koakoski; Renan Idalencio; Murilo S. Abreu; Ana Cristina Varrone Giacomini; Michele Fagundes; Cristiane Variani; Mainara Rossini; Angelo L. Piato; Leonardo José Gil Barcellos

Here we provide, at least to our knowledge, the first evidence that aripiprazole (APPZ) in the water blunts the stress response of exposed fish in a concentration ten times lower than the concentration detected in the environment. Although the mechanism of APPZ in the neuroendocrine axis is not yet determined, our results highlight that the presence of APPZ residues in the environment may interfere with the stress responses in fish. Since an adequate stress response is crucial to restore fish homeostasis after stressors, fish with impaired stress response may have trouble to cope with natural and/or imposed stressors with consequences to their welfare and survival.


General and Comparative Endocrinology | 2017

α-Methyltyrosine, a tyrosine hydroxylase inhibitor, decreases stress response in zebrafish (Danio rerio)

Renan Idalencio; Heloísa Helena de Alcântara Barcellos; Fabiana Kalichak; João Gabriel Santos da Rosa; Thiago Acosta Oliveira; Murilo S. Abreu; Michele Fagundes; Fernanda Dametto; Letícia Marcheto; Caio Maximino de Oliveira; Leonardo José Gil Barcellos

In this article, we show that the tyrosine hydroxylase inhibitor α-Methyl-l-tyrosine (AMPT) decreased the responsiveness of the zebrafish stress axis to an acute stressful challenge. These effects were specific for responses to stimulation, since unstimulated (basal) cortisol levels were not altered by AMPT. Moreover, AMPT decreased the stress response 15min after stimulation, but not after that time period. To our knowledge, this is the first report about the effects of AMPT on the neuroendocrine axis of adult zebrafish in acute stress responses. Overall, these results suggest a mechanism of catecholamine-glucocorticoid interplay in neuroendocrine responses of fish, pointing an interesting avenue for physiological research, as well as an important endpoint that can be disrupted by environmental contamination. Further experiments will unravel the mechanisms by which AMPT blocked the cortisol response.


Environmental Toxicology | 2017

Muscarinic receptors mediate the endocrine-disrupting effects of an organophosphorus insecticide in zebrafish: SANTOS DA ROSA et al.

João Gabriel Santos da Rosa; Heloísa Helena de Alcântara Barcellos; Michele Fagundes; Cristiane Variani; Mainara Rossini; Fabiana Kalichak; Gessi Koakoski; Thiago Acosta Oliveira; Renan Idalencio; Rafael Frandoloso; Angelo L. Piato; Leonardo José Gil Barcellos

The glucocorticoid cortisol, the end product of hypothalamus‐pituitary‐interrenal axis in zebrafish (Danio rerio), is synthesized via steroidogenesis and promotes important physiological regulations in response to a stressor. The failure of this axis leads to inability to cope with environmental challenges preventing adaptive processes in order to restore homeostasis. Pesticides and agrichemicals are widely used, and may constitute an important class of environmental pollutants when reach aquatic ecosystems and nontarget species. These chemical compounds may disrupt hypothalamus‐pituitary‐interrenal axis by altering synthesis, structure or function of its constituents. We present evidence that organophosphorus exposure disrupts stress response by altering the expression of key genes of the neural steroidogenesis, causing downregulation of star, hsp70, and pomc genes. This appears to be mediated via muscarinic receptors, since the muscarinic antagonist scopolamine blocked these effects.


Brazilian Journal of Biology | 2017

Protein and lipid metabolism adjustments in silver catfish (Rhamdia quelen) during different periods of fasting and refeeding

A. Marqueze; C. F. Garbino; M. Trapp; L. C. Kucharski; Michele Fagundes; D. J. Ferreira; Gessi Koakoski; João Gabriel Santos da Rosa

The fish may experience periods of food deprivation or starvation which produce metabolic changes. In this study, adult Rhamdia quelen males were subjected to fasting periods of 1, 7, 14, and 21 days and of refeeding 2, 4, 6, and 12 days. The results demonstrated that liver protein was depleted after 1 day of fasting, but recovered after 6 days of refeeding. After 14 days of fasting, mobilization in the lipids of the muscular tissue took place, and these reserves began to re-establish themselves after 4 days of refeeding. Plasmatic triglycerides increased after 1 day of fasting, and decreased following 2 days of refeeding. The glycerol in the plasma oscillated constantly during the different periods of fasting and refeeding. Changes in the metabolism of both protein and lipids during these periods can be considered as survival strategies used by R. quelen. The difference in the metabolic profile of the tissues, the influence of the period of fasting, and the type of reserves mobilized were all in evidence.

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Dive into the Michele Fagundes's collaboration.

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João Gabriel Santos da Rosa

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

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Gessi Koakoski

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

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Thiago Acosta Oliveira

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

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Luiz Carlos Kreutz

Universidade de Passo Fundo

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Angelo L. Piato

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Murilo S. Abreu

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

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Renan Idalencio

Universidade de Passo Fundo

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Fabiana Kalichak

Universidade Federal de Santa Maria

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