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Featured researches published by Rovilson Gilioli.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2015

Bartonella spp. Bacteremia in Blood Donors from Campinas, Brazil

Luiza Helena Urso Pitassi; Pedro Paulo Vissotto de Paiva Diniz; Diana G. Scorpio; Marina Rovani Drummond; Bruno Grosselli Lania; Maria Lourdes Barjas-Castro; Rovilson Gilioli; Silvia Colombo; Stanley Sowy; Edward B. Breitschwerdt; William L. Nicholson; Paulo Eduardo Neves Ferreira Velho

Bartonella species are blood-borne, re-emerging organisms, capable of causing prolonged infection with diverse disease manifestations, from asymptomatic bacteremia to chronic debilitating disease and death. This pathogen can survive for over a month in stored blood. However, its prevalence among blood donors is unknown, and screening of blood supplies for this pathogen is not routinely performed. We investigated Bartonella spp. prevalence in 500 blood donors from Campinas, Brazil, based on a cross-sectional design. Blood samples were inoculated into an enrichment liquid growth medium and sub-inoculated onto blood agar. Liquid culture samples and Gram-negative isolates were tested using a genus specific ITS PCR with amplicons sequenced for species identification. Bartonella henselae and Bartonella quintana antibodies were assayed by indirect immunofluorescence. B. henselae was isolated from six donors (1.2%). Sixteen donors (3.2%) were Bartonella-PCR positive after culture in liquid or on solid media, with 15 donors infected with B. henselae and one donor infected with Bartonella clarridgeiae. Antibodies against B. henselae or B. quintana were found in 16% and 32% of 500 blood donors, respectively. Serology was not associated with infection, with only three of 16 Bartonella-infected subjects seropositive for B. henselae or B. quintana. Bartonella DNA was present in the bloodstream of approximately one out of 30 donors from a major blood bank in South America. Negative serology does not rule out Bartonella spp. infection in healthy subjects. Using a combination of liquid and solid cultures, PCR, and DNA sequencing, this study documents for the first time that Bartonella spp. bacteremia occurs in asymptomatic blood donors. Our findings support further evaluation of Bartonella spp. transmission which can occur through blood transfusions.


Molecules | 2014

Antiproliferative Activity and Induction of Apoptosis in PC-3 Cells by the Chalcone Cardamonin from Campomanesia adamantium (Myrtaceae) in a Bioactivity-Guided Study

Aislan Cristina Rheder Fagundes Pascoal; Carlos Ehrenfried; Begoña Giménez-Cassina López; Thiago Matos de Araújo; Vinícius D. B. Pascoal; Rovilson Gilioli; Gabriel F. Anhê; João Ernesto de Carvalho; Maria Élida Alves Stefanello; Marcos J. Salvador

The Myrtaceae family is a common source of medicines used in the treatment of numerous diseases in South America. In Brazil, fruits of the Campomanesia species are widely used to make liqueurs, juices and sweets, whereas leaves are traditionally employed as a medicine for dysentery, stomach problems, diarrhea, cystitis and urethritis. Ethanol extracts of Campomanesia adamantium (Myrtaceae) leaves and fruits were evaluated against prostate cancer cells (PC-3). The compound (2E)-1-(2,4-dihydroxy-6-methoxyphenyl)-3-phenylprop-2-en-1-one, cardamonin) was isolated from ethanol extracts of C. adamantium leaves in a bioactivity-guided study and quantified by UPLC-MS/MS. In vitro studies showed that the isolated chalcone cardamonin inhibited prostate cancer cell proliferation and decreased the expression of NFkB1. Moreover, analysis by flow cytometry showed that this compound induced DNA fragmentation, suggesting an effect on apoptosis induction in the PC-3 cell line.


Arquivo Brasileiro De Medicina Veterinaria E Zootecnia | 2000

Parasite survey in mouse and rat colonies of Brazilian laboratory animal houses kept under differents sanitary barrier conditions

Rovilson Gilioli; Lenira Aparecida Guaraldo de Andrade; Luiz Augusto Corrêa Passos; F.A. Silva; Daniele Masselli Rodrigues; Ana Maria Aparecida Guaraldo

A parasitological study was undertaken to determine the health status of 15 mouse and 10 rat colonies bred in 18 Brazilian laboratory animal houses maintained under different sanitary barrier conditions which supply animals for teaching, research purposes and manufacture of biological products for medical or veterinary use. Parasitological methods were used for diagnosis of mites, lices, helminthes and protozoan parasites. A questionnaire was answered by institutions with the intention to obtain information about the existence of barriers against infections and of regular sanitary monitoring program of their colonies. The questionnaire data show that the majority of the animal houses investigated do not possess an efficient sanitary barrier system able to keep animals under controlled health sanitary conditions. Ecto and endoparasite infections are widespread in the colonies and multiple infections were common in animals from most facilities investigated. The prevalences of parasites detected among the mouse and rat colonies of the laboratory animal houses investigated were: Myocoptes musculinus (46.6%), Myobia musculi (26.6%), Radfordia ensifera (13.3%), Syphacia obvelata (86.6%), Aspiculuris tetraptera (60.0%), Hymenolepis nana (53.3%), Spironucleus muris (80.0%), Tritrichomonas muris (80.0%), Giardia muris (66.0%), Entamoeba muris (20.0%), Eimeria sp. (13.3%), Hexamastix muris (26.6%), Poliplax spinulosa (30.0%), Poliplax serrata (10.0%), Radfordia ensifera (30.0%), Syphacia muris (80.0%), Hymenolepis nana (40.0%), Trichosomoides crassicauda (55.5%), Spironucleus muris (90.0%), Tritrichomonas muris (80.0%), Giardia muris (60.0%), Entamoeba muris (80.0%), Eimeria sp. (60.0%) and Hexamastix muris (60.0%).


Journal of Molecular Neuroscience | 2008

Expression Profile of Lgi1 Gene in Mouse Brain During Development

Patrícia A. O. Ribeiro; Lourenço Sbragia; Rovilson Gilioli; Francesco Langone; Fábio F. Conte; Iscia Lopes-Cendes

Mutations in LGI1 were described in patients with autosomal dominant partial epilepsy with auditory features (ADPEAF), and recent clinical findings have implicated LGI1 in human brain development. However, the precise role of LGI1 in epileptogenesis remains largely unknown. The objective of this study was to determine the expression pattern of Lgi1 in mice brain during development and in adult animals. Real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) quantification and Western blot experiments showed a relative low expression during intrauterine stages, increasing until adulthood. In addition, we did not find significant differences between left and right hemispheres. The hippocampus presented higher levels of Lgi1 expression when compared to the neocortex and the cerebellum of adult animals; however, these results did not reach statistical significance. This study was the first to determine a specific profile of Lgi1 gene expression during central nervous system development, which suggests a possible inhibitory function in latter stages of development. In addition, we did not find differences in hemispheric expression that could explain the predominance of left-sided abnormalities in patients with ADPEAF.


Arquivo Brasileiro De Medicina Veterinaria E Zootecnia | 2000

Frequency of parasites and Salmonella infection in captive maned-wolf, Chrysocyon brachyurus, kept in Zoos at the State of São Paulo, Brazil.

Rovilson Gilioli; F.A. Silva

Trinta e um lobos guara (Chrysocyon brachyurus, Illiger 1815), mantidos em 11 zoologicos no Estado de Sao Paulo, foram estudados para verificar a presenca de parasitas e de infeccao por Salmonella usando-se metodos de diagnostico parasitologico e cultura seletiva de fezes. Os ecto e endoparasitas encontrados foram: Ctenocephalides felis (56,2%), Rhipicephalus sanguineus (12,5%), Ancylostoma caninum (45,1%), Strongyloides sp. (29,0%), Uncinaria stenocephala (3,2%), Capillaria sp. (3,2%), Entamoeba sp. (22,9%), Sarcocystis sp. (29,0%), Cryptosporidium sp. (19,3%), Eimeria sp. (19,3%), Giardia sp. (9,6%) e Isospora sp. (3,2%). Seis animais apresentaram infeccao por Salmonella e quatro diferentes sorotipos foram identificados. Somente um animal apresentava quadro de diarreia sugerindo que a capacidade de portar Salmonella spp. como flora gastrintestinal nao patogenica parece ser uma adaptacao fisiologica dessa especie animal.


Journal of Molecular Neuroscience | 2009

Expression Profile and Distribution of Efhc1 Gene Transcript During Rodent Brain Development

Fábio F. Conte; Patrícia A. O. Ribeiro; Rafael Breglio Marchesini; Vinícius D. B. Pascoal; Joelcimar M. da Silva; Amanda Ribeiro de Oliveira; Rovilson Gilioli; Lourenço Sbragia; Jackson C. Bittencourt; Iscia Lopes-Cendes

One of the putative causative genes for juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME) is EFHC1. We report here the expression profile and distribution of Efhc1 messenger RNA (mRNA) during mouse and rat brain development. Real-time polymerase chain reaction revealed that there is no difference in the expression of Efhc1 mRNA between right and left hemispheres in both species. In addition, the highest levels of Efhc1 mRNA were found at intra-uterine stages in mouse and in adulthood in rat. In common, there was a progressive decrease in Efhc1 expression from 1-day-old neonates to 14-day-old animals in both species. In situ hybridization studies showed that rat and mouse Efhc1 mRNAs are expressed in ependymal cells of ventricle walls. Our findings suggest that Efhc1 expression is more important during initial phases of brain development and that at this stage it could be involved in key developmental mechanisms underlying JME.


Acta Cirurgica Brasileira | 2014

Paired evaluation of calvarial reconstruction with prototyped titanium implants with and without ceramic coating

Davi Reis Calderoni; Rovilson Gilioli; André Luiz Jardini Munhoz; Rubens Maciel Filho; Cecília A.C. Zavaglia; C.S. Lambert; Eder S.N. Lopes; Ivan Felizardo Contrera Toro; Paulo Kharmandayan

PURPOSE To investigate the osseointegration properties of prototyped implants with tridimensionally interconnected pores made of the Ti6Al4V alloy and the influence of a thin calcium phosphate coating. METHODS Bilateral critical size calvarial defects were created in thirty Wistar rats and filled with coated and uncoated implants in a randomized fashion. The animals were kept for 15, 45 and 90 days. Implant mechanical integration was evaluated with a push-out test. Bone-implant interface was analyzed using scanning electron microscopy. RESULTS The maximum force to produce initial displacement of the implants increased during the study period, reaching values around 100N for both types of implants. Intimate contact between bone and implant was present, with progressive bone growth into the pores. No significant differences were seen between coated and uncoated implants. CONCLUSION Adequate osseointegration can be achieved in calvarial reconstructions using prototyped Ti6Al4V Implants with the described characteristics of surface and porosity.


Laboratory Animals | 2003

Subsensitivity to beta-adrenergic stimulation in atria from rats infested with Syphacia sp.

Ana Carolina Silveira; Rovilson Gilioli; Elizângela S. Oliveira; Rosana A. Bassani

Syphacia sp. is a common intestinal parasite in conventionally-housed laboratory rodents. Although gross lesions are rare in oxyuriasis, it is possible that more subtle changes may develop, which may affect research results. In this study, we analysed the responsiveness to β-adrenergic stimulation by isoproterenol (ISO) of left atria isolated from Syphacia-infested (SYPH) and control, non-infested adult male Wistar rats (CONT). In the non-infested animals, ISO pD2 was not significantly changed by ivermectin treatment. Whereas the maximal inotropic response to ISO was not significantly affected, the pD2 value was decreased in SYPH (7.61 ± 0.09, n = 7, vs 8.21 ± 0.25 in CONT, n = 5, P < 0.05), indicating lower sensitivity to β-adrenergic stimulation. This change was similar to that caused by a classic stressor, namely repeated immobilization, in non-infested rats (IMMO). In this group, ISO pD2 was 7.62 ± 0.14, n = 6 (P < 0.05 with relation to CONT). The results indicate that infestation with Syphacia sp. is as effective as immobilization at diminishing cardiac reactivity to β-adrenergic stimulation. It is thus possible that oxyuriasis may affect the response of other tissues to physiological modulators.


Brazilian Journal of Microbiology | 2011

Detection of Bartonella henselae in defibrinated sheep blood used for culture media supplementation

Marina Rovani Drummond; Luiza Helena Urso Pitassi; Bruno Grosselli Lania; Silvio Rogério Cardoso dos Santos; Rovilson Gilioli; Paulo Eduardo Neves Ferreira Velho

Bartonella henselae was detected in defibrinated sheep blood employed in supplementing a selective bacteria culture medium by nested PCR. We recommended that highly sensitive technical tests be run to ensure a sterile culture medium for Bartonella spp. isolation, since infected blood samples used in preparation could lead to false-positive results.


Transfusion | 2016

Bartonella henselae transmission by blood transfusion in mice.

Marilene Neves da Silva; Gislaine Vieira-Damiani; Marna E. Ericson; Kalpna Gupta; Rovilson Gilioli; Amanda Roberta de Almeida; Marina Rovani Drummond; Bruno Grosselli Lania; Karina de Almeida Lins; Tânia Cristina Benetti Soares; Paulo Eduardo Neves Ferreira Velho

Bartonella spp. are neglected fastidious Gram‐negative bacilli. We isolated Bartonella henselae from 1.2% of 500 studied blood donors and demonstrated that the bacteria remain viable in red blood cell units after 35 days of experimental infection. Now, we aim to evaluate the possibility of B. henselae transmission by blood transfusion in a mouse model.

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Delma Pegolo Alves

State University of Campinas

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