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Dive into the research topics where Oscar N. Mesquita is active.

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Featured researches published by Oscar N. Mesquita.


Applied Physics Letters | 2006

Defocusing microscopy : An approach for red blood cell optics

Leonardo G. Mesquita; Ubirajara Agero; Oscar N. Mesquita

Thin transparent objects (phase objects) can become visible in a bright-field light microscope, if the microscope is slightly defocused. Thick transparent objects, like red blood cells (RBC), are seen because some of their parts are always out of focus. By applying our recently developed defocusing microscopy technique to RBC, we are able to interpret RBC bright-field light microscopy images, an old standing problem. From the average image contrast we obtain RBC shape, size, and refractive index. From contrast fluctuations caused by the flicker phenomenon, we obtain RBC bending modulus and cytoplasm viscosity.


Applied Optics | 2006

Characterization of objective transmittance for optical tweezers.

Nathan B. Viana; M. S. Rocha; Oscar N. Mesquita; A. Mazolli; P. A. Maia Neto

We have measured the overall transmittance of a laser beam through an oil immersion objective as a function of the transverse size of the laser beam, using the dual-objective method. Our results show that the objective transmittance is not uniform and that its dependence on the radial beams position can be modeled by a Gaussian function. This property affects the intensity distribution pattern in the sample region and should be taken into account in theoretical descriptions of optical tweezers. Moreover, one must consider this position dependence to determine the local laser power delivered at the sample region by the dual-objective method, especially when the beam overfills the objectives back entrance. If the transmittance is assumed to be uniform, the local power is overestimated.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Membrane Cholesterol Removal Changes Mechanical Properties of Cells and Induces Secretion of a Specific Pool of Lysosomes

Barbara Hissa; Bruno Pontes; Paula Magda S. Roma; Ana Paula P. Alves; Carolina Damas Rocha; Thalita M. Valverde; Pedro Henrique Nascimento Aguiar; Fernando P. Almeida; Allan J. Guimarães; Cristina Guatimosim; Aristóbolo M. Silva; Maria Cecilia Fernandes; Norma W. Andrews; Nathan B. Viana; Oscar N. Mesquita; Ubirajara Agero; Luciana O. Andrade

In a previous study we had shown that membrane cholesterol removal induced unregulated lysosomal exocytosis events leading to the depletion of lysosomes located at cell periphery. However, the mechanism by which cholesterol triggered these exocytic events had not been uncovered. In this study we investigated the importance of cholesterol in controlling mechanical properties of cells and its connection with lysosomal exocytosis. Tether extraction with optical tweezers and defocusing microscopy were used to assess cell dynamics in mouse fibroblasts. These assays showed that bending modulus and surface tension increased when cholesterol was extracted from fibroblasts plasma membrane upon incubation with MβCD, and that the membrane-cytoskeleton relaxation time increased at the beginning of MβCD treatment and decreased at the end. We also showed for the first time that the amplitude of membrane-cytoskeleton fluctuation decreased during cholesterol sequestration, showing that these cells become stiffer. These changes in membrane dynamics involved not only rearrangement of the actin cytoskeleton, but also de novo actin polymerization and stress fiber formation through Rho activation. We found that these mechanical changes observed after cholesterol sequestration were involved in triggering lysosomal exocytosis. Exocytosis occurred even in the absence of the lysosomal calcium sensor synaptotagmin VII, and was associated with actin polymerization induced by MβCD. Notably, exocytosis triggered by cholesterol removal led to the secretion of a unique population of lysosomes, different from the pool mobilized by actin depolymerizing drugs such as Latrunculin-A. These data support the existence of at least two different pools of lysosomes with different exocytosis dynamics, one of which is directly mobilized for plasma membrane fusion after cholesterol removal.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2004

DNA-psoralen interaction: A single molecule experiment

M. S. Rocha; N. B. Viana; Oscar N. Mesquita

By attaching one end of a single lambda-DNA molecule to a microscope coverslip and the other end to a polystyrene microsphere trapped by an optical tweezers, we can study the entropic elasticity of the lambda-DNA by measuring force versus extension as we stretch the molecule. This powerful method permits single molecule studies. We are particularly interested in the effects of the photosensitive drug psoralen on the elasticity of the DNA molecule. We have illuminated the sample with different light sources, studying how the different wavelengths affect the psoralen-DNA linkage. To do this, we measure the persistence length of individual DNA-psoralen complexes.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2012

Membrane cholesterol regulates lysosome-plasma membrane fusion events and modulates Trypanosoma cruzi invasion of host cells.

Barbara Hissa; Jacqueline Garcia Duarte; Ludmila F. Kelles; Fábio P. Santos; Helen L. Del Puerto; Pedro Henrique Gazzinelli-Guimarães; Ana Paula; Ubirajara Agero; Oscar N. Mesquita; Cristina Guatimosim; Egler Chiari; Luciana O. Andrade

Background Trypomastigotes of Trypanosoma cruzi are able to invade several types of non-phagocytic cells through a lysosomal dependent mechanism. It has been shown that, during invasion, parasites trigger host cell lysosome exocytosis, which initially occurs at the parasite-host contact site. Acid sphingomyelinase released from lysosomes then induces endocytosis and parasite internalization. Lysosomes continue to fuse with the newly formed parasitophorous vacuole until the parasite is completely enclosed by lysosomal membrane, a process indispensable for a stable infection. Previous work has shown that host membrane cholesterol is also important for the T. cruzi invasion process in both professional (macrophages) and non-professional (epithelial) phagocytic cells. However, the mechanism by which cholesterol-enriched microdomains participate in this process has remained unclear. Methodology/Principal Finding In the present work we show that cardiomyocytes treated with MβCD, a drug able to sequester cholesterol from cell membranes, leads to a 50% reduction in invasion by T. cruzi trypomastigotes, as well as a decrease in the number of recently internalized parasites co-localizing with lysosomal markers. Cholesterol depletion from host membranes was accompanied by a decrease in the labeling of host membrane lipid rafts, as well as excessive lysosome exocytic events during the earlier stages of treatment. Precocious lysosomal exocytosis in MβCD treated cells led to a change in lysosomal distribution, with a reduction in the number of these organelles at the cell periphery, and probably compromises the intracellular pool of lysosomes necessary for T. cruzi invasion. Conclusion/Significance Based on these results, we propose that cholesterol depletion leads to unregulated exocytic events, reducing lysosome availability at the cell cortex and consequently compromise T. cruzi entry into host cells. The results also suggest that two different pools of lysosomes are available in the cell and that cholesterol depletion may modulate the fusion of pre-docked lysosomes at the cell cortex.


Applied Physics Letters | 2014

Total three-dimensional imaging of phase objects using defocusing microscopy: Application to red blood cells

P. M. S. Roma; L. Siman; F. T. Amaral; Ubirajara Agero; Oscar N. Mesquita

We introduce Defocusing Microscopy (DM), a bright-field optical microscopy technique able to perform total three-dimensional (3D) imaging of transparent objects. By total 3D imaging, we mean the determination of the actual shapes of the upper and lower surfaces of a phase object. We propose a methodology using DM and apply it to red blood cells subject to different osmolality conditions: hypotonic, isotonic, and hypertonic solutions. For each situation, the shapes of the upper and lower cell surface-membranes (lipid bilayer/cytoskeleton) are completely recovered, displaying the deformation of red blood cell (RBC) surfaces due to adhesion on the glass-substrate. The axial resolution of our technique allowed us to image surface-membranes separated by distances as small as 300 nm. Finally, we determine the volume, surface area, sphericity index, and RBC refractive index for each osmotic condition.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2012

Real-time study of shape and thermal fluctuations in the echinocyte transformation of human erythrocytes using defocusing microscopy.

Sebastián Etcheverry; María José Gallardo; Pablo Solano; Mario Suwalsky; Oscar N. Mesquita; C. Saavedra

Abstract. We present a real-time method to measure the amplitude of thermal fluctuations in biological membranes by means of a new treatment of the defocusing microscopy (DM) optical technique. This approach was also applied to study the deformation of human erythrocytes to its echinocyte structure. This was carried out by making three-dimensional shape reconstructions of the cell and measuring the thermal fluctuations of its membrane, as the cell is exposed to the anti-inflammatory drug naproxen and as it recovers its original shape, when it is subsequently cleansed of the drug. The results showed biomechanical changes in the membrane even at low naproxen concentration (0.2 mM). Also, we found that when the cell recovered its original shape, the membrane properties were different compared to the nondrugged initial erythrocyte, indicating that the drug administration-recovery process is not completely reversible.


Applied Physics Letters | 2009

DNA-psoralen: Single-molecule experiments and first principles calculations

M. S. Rocha; A. D. Lúcio; Simone S. Alexandre; R. W. Nunes; Oscar N. Mesquita

The authors measure the persistence and contour lengths of DNA-psoralen complexes, as a function of psoralen concentration, for intercalated and crosslinked complexes. In both cases, the persistence length monotonically increases until a certain critical concentration is reached, above which it abruptly decreases and remains approximately constant. The contour length of the complexes exhibits no such discontinuous behavior. By fitting the relative increase of the contour length to the neighbor exclusion model, we obtain the exclusion number and the intrinsic intercalating constant of the interaction. Ab initio calculations are employed in order to provide an atomistic picture of these experimental findings.


Applied Physics Letters | 2009

Tomography of fluctuating biological interfaces using defocusing microscopy

G. Glionna; C. K. Oliveira; L. G. Siman; H. W. Moyses; D. M. U. Prado; C. H. Monken; Oscar N. Mesquita

We show that a bright-field defocused microscope is effectively a phase-contrast microscope, but with advantages over the conventional one and maintaining the same optical resolution. In a multilayered transparent object, the height amplitude (static and dynamic) of each interface can be measured separately with nanometer sensitivity. By scanning the position of the objective focal plane in relation to the surfaces of a red blood cell, we obtain quantitative information on height fluctuations from each surface individually, which can be analyzed with our model of a defocused microscope and compared with theoretical models.


Malaria Journal | 2016

Anti-erythrocyte antibodies may contribute to anaemia in Plasmodium vivax malaria by decreasing red blood cell deformability and increasing erythrophagocytosis.

Luiza Carvalho Mourão; Paula Magda S. Roma; Jamila da Silva Sultane Aboobacar; Camila Maia Pantuzzo Medeiros; Zélia Barbosa de Almeida; Cor Jesus Fernandes Fontes; Ubirajara Agero; Oscar N. Mesquita; Marcelo P. Bemquerer; Érika Martins Braga

BackgroundPlasmodium vivax accounts for the majority of human malaria infections outside Africa and is being increasingly associated in fatal outcomes with anaemia as one of the major complications. One of the causes of malarial anaemia is the augmented removal of circulating non-infected red blood cells (nRBCs), an issue not yet fully understood. High levels of auto-antibodies against RBCs have been associated with severe anaemia and reduced survival of nRBCs in patients with falciparum malaria. Since there are no substantial data about the role of those antibodies in vivax malaria, this study was designed to determine whether or not auto-antibodies against erythrocytes are involved in nRBC clearance. Moreover, the possible immune mechanisms elicited by them that may be associated to induce anaemia in P. vivax infection was investigated.MethodsConcentrations of total IgG were determined by sandwich ELISA in sera from clinically well-defined groups of P. vivax-infected patients with or without anaemia and in healthy controls never exposed to malaria, whereas the levels of specific IgG to nRBCs were determined by cell-ELISA. Erythrophagocytosis assay was used to investigate the ability of IgGs purified from each studied pooled sera in enhancing nRBC in vitro clearance by THP-1 macrophages. Defocusing microscopy was employed to measure the biomechanical modifications of individual nRBCs opsonized by IgGs purified from each group.ResultsAnaemic patients had higher levels of total and specific anti-RBC antibodies in comparison to the non-anaemic ones. Opsonization with purified IgG from anaemic patients significantly enhanced RBCs in vitro phagocytosis by THP-1 macrophages. Auto-antibodies purified from anaemic patients decreased the nRBC dynamic membrane fluctuations suggesting a possible participation of such antibodies in the perturbation of erythrocyte flexibility and morphology integrity maintenance.ConclusionsThese findings revealed that vivax-infected patients with anaemia have increased levels of IgG auto-antibodies against nRBCs and that their deposition on the surface of non-infected erythrocytes decreases their deformability, which, in turn, may enhance nRBC clearance by phagocytes, contributing to the anaemic outcome. These data provide insights into the immune mechanisms associated with vivax malaria anaemia and may be important to the development of new therapy and vaccine strategies.

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Ubirajara Agero

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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M. S. Rocha

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Nathan B. Viana

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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José Coelho Neto

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Livia Siman

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Paula Magda S. Roma

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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A. Mazolli

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Barbara Hissa

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Ana Paula P. Alves

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Cristina Guatimosim

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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