Patricia de Azambuja
Federal Fluminense University
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Featured researches published by Patricia de Azambuja.
Journal of Insect Physiology | 1990
Eloi S. Garcia; N. Luz; Patricia de Azambuja; Heinz Rembold
Azadirachtin A (1.0 μg/ml) if fed to last-instar larvae of Rhodnius prolixus through a blood meal, affects PTTH production as shown by a reduction or absence of stimulation of ecdysteroid titres in decapitation experiments. The host larvae, when decapitated 5 days after feeding, showed steadily declining haemolymph ecdysteroid titres whereas untreated larvae at this stage maintained their moulting hormone titre. Head transplantations from untreated donors 4–5 days after feeding onto headless larvae sustained hormone production for about 18 h. Heads from azadirachtin-treated donors were unable to sustain a constant ecdysteroid level which declined immediately after transplantation. In converse experiments, heads transplantation from untreated donors 5 days feeding stimulated the production of ecdysteroids in azadirachtin-treated recipients (40 days after azadirachtin A treatment) for about 18 h. It is suggested that the synthesis and release of PTTH was deficient in the azadirachtin-treated animals. The significance of these results is discussed in relation to a general mode of azadirachtin action in insects.
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1991
Patricia de Azambuja; Eloi S. Garcia; Norman A. Ratcliffe
The objective of this work was to characterize, and compare different morphological types of hemocytes of Rhodnius prolixus, Rhodnius robustus, Rhodnius neglectus, Triatoma infestans, Panstrongylus megistus, and Dipetalogaster maximus. This information provides the basis for studying the cellular immune systems of these insects. Seven morphological hemocyte types were identified by phase-contrast microscopy: prohemocytes, plasmatocytes, granular cells, cystocytes, oenocytoids, adipohemocytes and giant cells. All seven types of hemocytes are not present in every species. For example, adipohemocytes and oenocytoids were not observed in P. megistus and P. infestans, and giant cells were rarely found in any of the species studied. The hemocytes of Rhodnius and Dipetalogaster are more similar to each other than those from Triatoma and Panstronglus which in turn closely resemble each other. Emphasis is placed on methodological problems arising in this work which are discussed in detail.
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1990
José Eugenio P. Lima Gomes; Patricia de Azambuja; Eloi S. Garcia
Host blood source was found to affect both the development and the reproductive performance of Rhodnius prolixus. The insects were reared on citrated human, rabbit, chicken, sheep and horse blood sources, through a membrane feeder, during an entire life cycle, from eggs to adults. Development and reproduction in terms of the number of unfed insects, number of moulting, mortality intermoulting period, number of egg/female, conversion of blood into egg (mg meal/egg) and percentage of hatch as effective physiological parameters were investigated. Our results showed that human or rabbit blood meals were more nutritionally efficient than the other blood samples used because (i) the insects developed faster, presented low mortality and about 80% of them reached the adult stage; and (ii) females oviposited an average of at least 100% more eggs. The inefficiency of chicken and horse blood sources as diets for R. prolixus was manifested in (i) a decrease of the amount of ingested blood and (ii) only a reasonable nutritional quality. The inadequacy of sheep blood was observed by a mortality extremely high, poor moulting response and drastic reduction in egg production.
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 1982
Patricia de Azambuja; W. S. Bowers; J. M. C. Ribeiro; E. S. Garcia
Precocene and analogs added to the meal of 4th instar larvae ofRhodnius prolixus were tested as antifeedants. While precocene II had a strong antifeedant effect (ED50=48 μg/ml), the other compounds showed no drastic inhibition of feeding (ED50>140 μg/ml). ATP, a phagostimulant, did not reverse the antifeedant action of precocene II. The mechanism of feeding inhibition is discussed.
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1987
Eloi S. Garcia; Denise Feder; José Eugenio P. Lima Gomes; Patricia de Azambuja
The results presented in this paper clearly indicate that precocene and azadirachtin are effective inhibitors of moulting and reproduction in the hemipteran Rhodnius prolixus. The time of application is important and only applications of these substances early in the intermoulting period cause their effects in nymphs. The inhibition of moulting is fully reversed by ecdysone therapy. Precocene and azadirachtin also affected drastically the oogenesis and egg deposition in this insect. Precocene-induced sterilization is reversed by application of juvenile hormone III. However, this hormone is unable to reverse the effect of azadirachtin on reproduction. Ecdysteroid titers in nymphs and adult females are decreased by these treatments. In vitro analysis suggest that precocene and azadirachtin may act directly on the prothoracic glands and ovaries producing ecdysteroids. Based on these and other findings the possible mode of action of these compounds on the development and reproduction of Rhodnius prolixus is discussed.
Journal of Insect Physiology | 1986
Patricia de Azambuja; Cícero C. Freitas; Eloi S. Garcia
Abstract Antibacterial activity induced in the haemolymph of adult Rhodnius prolixus was investigated. Little or no antibacterial activity appeared in the first hours after Streptococcus mutans inoculation, but the activity increased reaching a maximum 5–6 days later and then declined gradually. The bacteria were destroyed in the haemolymph when the level of the antibacterial activity attained maximal value. The antibacterial activity appears to be related to the defence mechanism of the insect against bacterial infection. The activity was semi-purified by one-step Bio-Gel P-10 Gel-filtration and the estimated apparent mol. wt was 7,000 Daltons. It was found that this activity was due to a protein of small molecular weight. The activity was heat-stable, dialyzable and inactivated by trypsin treatment. The addition of haemolymph, obtained after inoculation of S. mutans into insects, to label-DNA growing cells (1) caused a dramatic reduction in the viable cells, measured by colony-forming units, and (2) increased approx 4-fold the releasing of labelled-DNA into the supernatant of the bacterial culture media. The possibility of this activity being lysozyme was excluded. The possible mechanism of action of this antibacterial activity is discussed.
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1999
Denise Feder; S. A. O. Gomes; Eloi S. Garcia; Patricia de Azambuja
Protease activities in the haemolymph and fat body in a bloodsucking insect, Rhodnius prolixus, infected with Trypanosoma rangeli, were investigated. After SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis containing gelatin as substrate, analysis of zymograms performed on samples of different tissues of controls and insects inoculated or orally infected with short or long epimastigotes of T. rangeli, demonstrated distinct patterns of protease activities: (i) proteases were detected in the haemolymph of insects which were fed on, or inoculated with, short epimastigotes of T. rangeli (39 kDa and 33 kDa, respectively), but they were not observed in the fat body taken from these insects; (ii) protease was also presented in the fat bodies derived from naive insects or controls inoculated with sterile phosphate-saline buffer (49 kDa), but it was not detected in the haemolymph of these insects; (iii) no protease activity was observed in both haemolymph and fat bodies taken from insects inoculated with, or fed on, long epimastigotes of T. rangeli. Furthermore, in short epimastigotes of T. rangeli extracts, three bands of the protease activities with apparent molecular weights of 297, 198 and 95 kDa were detected while long epimastigotes preparation presented only two bands of protease activities with molecular weights of 297 and 198 kDa. The proteases from the insect infected with T. rangeli and controls belong to the class of either metalloproteases or metal-activated enzymes since they are inhibited by 1,10-phenanthroline. The significance of these proteases in the insects infected with short epimastigotes of T. rangeli is discussed in relation to the success of the establishment of infection of these parasites in its vector, R. prolixus.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1987
Carl P. Dietrich; Helena B. Nader; Leny Toma; Patricia de Azambuja; Eloi S. Garcia
The insect Rhodnius prolixus synthesizes heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate after a blood meal containing [35S]-inorganic sulfate. A 40 to 80% inhibition of heparan sulfate synthesis was obtained when the meal was supplemented with 10(-5) and 10(-4) M sodium selenate respectively. Likewise an inhibition of the molting in the order of 30 to 60% was observed when the insects were fed with blood containing 10(-5) and 10(-4) M selenate respectively. The insects after a subsequent meal without selenate molted normally. Except for the inhibition of the ecdysis no gross physiological or morphological changes could be observed in the insects. Based on these and other findings the possible role of sulfated glycosaminoglycans in the control of cell growth is discussed.
Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 1985
Patricia de Azambuja; José Eugenio P. Lima Gomes; Fernando Lopes; Eloi S. Garcia
Ivermectin (0.2 mg/kg body weight) caused a high mortality in nymphs and adults of Rhodnius prolixus following a single meal in mice sub-cutaneously injected with the drug. This effect was more evident in nymphs of 1st-and 2nd-instar than in older nymphs and adults. Third-instar nymphs presented a high mortality when fed on mice treated with ivermectin 24 and 48 hours previously, while mortality was significantly reduced in nymphs fed on mice treated 72 hours before. Surviving 3rd-instar nymphs did not molt. When adult females were fed once on mice treated for 24 hours with ivermectin there was a considerable reduction in egg production. This inhibition was not reversed by a second feeding on normal mice. We concluded that sub-lethal doses of ivermectin caused toxic effects interfering in the neuro-endocrine control of development and reproduction of this bloodsucking insect.
Journal of Insect Physiology | 1993
Patricia de Azambuja; Denise Feder; Eloi S. Garcia
Abstract Blood meal components in addition to the abdominal distension observed after feeding, are important in producing ecdysteroids and establishing the ecdysis processes in fourth-instar larvae of Rhodnius prolixus. This hypothesis is supported by the following results: (i) numbers undergoing ecdysis were proportional to the percentage haemoglobin added to the plasma upon which they feed; (ii) plasma alone induced only about 20% ecdysis; (iii) the haemoglobin content rather than the red cell membrane component stimulates ecdysis; (iv) ecdysteroid production was dependent upon the presence of haemoglobin or of erythrocytes but not plasma or erythrocyte membranes in the meal. The significance of these data is discussed in relation to the effects of haemoglobin or other erythrocyte components on ecdysis processes in R. prolixus larvae.