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Dive into the research topics where Thaís L.S. Araujo is active.

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Featured researches published by Thaís L.S. Araujo.


Antioxidants & Redox Signaling | 2014

Nox NADPH Oxidases and the Endoplasmic Reticulum

Francisco R.M. Laurindo; Thaís L.S. Araujo; Thalita B. Abrahão

SIGNIFICANCE Understanding isoform- and context-specific subcellular Nox reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) oxidase compartmentalization allows relevant functional inferences. This review addresses the interplay between Nox NADPH oxidases and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), an increasingly evident player in redox pathophysiology given its role in redox protein folding and stress responses. RECENT ADVANCES Catalytic/regulatory transmembrane subunits are synthesized in the ER and their processing includes folding, N-glycosylation, heme insertion, p22phox heterodimerization, as shown for phagocyte Nox2. Dual oxidase (Duox) maturation also involves the regulation by ER-resident Duoxa2. The ER is the activation site for some isoforms, typically Nox4, but potentially other isoforms. Such location influences redox/Nox-mediated calcium signaling regulation via ER targets, such as sarcoendoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase (SERCA). Growing evidence suggests that Noxes are integral signaling elements of the unfolded protein response during ER stress, with Nox4 playing a dual prosurvival/proapoptotic role in this setting, whereas Nox2 enhances proapoptotic signaling. ER chaperones such as protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) closely interact with Noxes. PDI supports growth factor-dependent Nox1 activation and mRNA expression, as well as migration in smooth muscle cells, and PDI overexpression induces acute spontaneous Nox activation. CRITICAL ISSUES Mechanisms of PDI effects include possible support of complex formation and RhoGTPase activation. In phagocytes, PDI supports phagocytosis, Nox activation, and redox-dependent interactions with p47phox. Together, the results implicate PDI as possible Nox organizer. FUTURE DIRECTIONS We propose that convergence between Noxes and ER may have evolutive roots given ER-related functional contexts, which paved Nox evolution, namely calcium signaling and pathogen killing. Overall, the interplay between Noxes and the ER may provide relevant insights in Nox-related (patho)physiology.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2017

Protein disulfide isomerase externalization in endothelial cells follows classical and unconventional routes

Thaís L.S. Araujo; Julianna D. Zeidler; Percíllia V.S. Oliveira; Matheus H. Dias; Hugo A. Armelin; Francisco R.M. Laurindo

ABSTRACT Extracellular protein disulfide isomerase (PDIA1) pool mediates thrombosis and vascular remodeling, however its externalization mechanisms remain unclear. We performed systematic pharmacological screening of secretory pathways affecting extracellular PDIA1 in endothelial cells (EC). We identified cell‐surface (csPDIA1) and secreted non‐particulated PDIA1 pools in EC. Such Golgi bypass also occurred for secreted PDIA1 in EC at baseline or after PMA, thrombin or ATP stimulation. Inhibitors of Type I, II and III unconventional routes, secretory lysosomes and recycling endosomes, including syntaxin‐12 deletion, did not impair EC PDIA1 externalization. This suggests predominantly Golgi‐independent unconventional secretory route(s), which were GRASP55‐independent. Also, these data reinforce a vesicular‐type traffic for PDIA1. We further showed that PDIA1 traffic is ATP‐independent, while actin or tubulin cytoskeletal disruption markedly increased EC PDIA1 secretion. Clathrin inhibition enhanced extracellular soluble PDIA1, suggesting dynamic cycling. Externalized PDIA1 represents <2% of intracellular PDIA1. PDIA1 was robustly secreted by physiological levels of arterial laminar shear in EC and supported alpha 5 integrin thiol oxidation. Such results help clarify signaling and homeostatic mechanisms involved in multiple (patho)physiological extracellular PDIA1 functions. Graphical abstract Figure. No Caption Available. HighlightsProtein disulfide isomerase (PDIA1) externalization in vascular cells supports injury‐associated thrombosis or vascular remodeling.Cellular routes of PDIA1 externalization are unknown. We systematically screened PDIA1 secretion routes in endothelial cells.Golgi bypass supports PDIA1 secretion in endothelial cells, while classical pathway also contributes to cell‐surface PDIA1.Laminar shear stress triggers PDIA1 secretion and alpha‐5 integrin oxidation, suggesting a physiological role for this process.


Hypertension | 2016

Peri/Epicellular Protein Disulfide Isomerase Sustains Vascular Lumen Caliber Through an Anticonstrictive Remodeling Effect

Leonardo Y. Tanaka; Haniel Alves Araújo; Gustavo K. Hironaka; Thaís L.S. Araujo; Celso Kiyochi Takimura; Andres I. Rodriguez; Annelise S. Casagrande; Paulo Sampaio Gutierrez; Pedro Alves Lemos-Neto; Francisco R.M. Laurindo

Whole-vessel remodeling critically determines lumen caliber in vascular (patho)physiology, and it is reportedly redox-dependent. We hypothesized that the cell-surface pool of the endoplasmic reticulum redox chaperone protein disulfide isomerase-A1 (peri/epicellular=pecPDI), which is known to support thrombosis, also regulates disease-associated vascular architecture. In human coronary atheromas, PDI expression inversely correlated with constrictive remodeling and plaque stability. In a rabbit iliac artery overdistension model, there was unusually high PDI upregulation (≈25-fold versus basal, 14 days postinjury), involving both intracellular and pecPDI. PecPDI neutralization with distinct anti-PDI antibodies did not enhance endoplasmic reticulum stress or apoptosis. In vivo pecPDI neutralization with PDI antibody-containing perivascular gel from days 12 to 14 post injury promoted 25% decrease in the maximally dilated arteriographic vascular caliber. There was corresponding whole-vessel circumference loss using optical coherence tomography without change in neointima, which indicates constrictive remodeling. This was accompanied by decreased hydrogen peroxide generation. Constrictive remodeling was corroborated by marked changes in collagen organization, that is, switching from circumferential to radial fiber orientation and to a more rigid fiber type. The cytoskeleton architecture was also disrupted; there was a loss of stress fiber coherent organization and a switch from thin to medium thickness actin fibers, all leading to impaired viscoelastic ductility. Total and PDI-associated expressions of &bgr;1-integrin, and levels of reduced cell-surface &bgr;1-integrin, were diminished after PDI antibody treatment, implicating &bgr;1-integrin as a likely pecPDI target during vessel repair. Indeed, focal adhesion kinase phosphorylation, a downstream &bgr;1-integrin effector, was decreased by PDI antibody. Thus, the upregulated pecPDI pool tunes matrix/cytoskeleton reshaping to counteract inward remodeling in vascular pathophysiology.


Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2017

Novel antiplatelet role for a protein disulfide isomerase-targeted peptide: evidence of covalent binding to the C-terminal CGHC redox motif

H. R. Sousa; Renato Simões Gaspar; E. M. L. Sena; S. A. da Silva; João Lucas de Lima Fontelles; Thaís L.S. Araujo; Mauricio Mastrogiovanni; D. M. Fries; A. P. S. Azevedo-Santos; Francisco Rafael Martins Laurindo; Andrés Trostchansky; Antonio Marcus de Andrade Paes

Essentials Inhibitors of protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) have been considered a new antithrombotic class. CxxC is a PDI‐targeted peptide that has been previously shown to inhibit its reductase activity. CxxC binds to surface PDI and inhibits ADP‐ and thrombin‐evoked platelet activation and aggregation. CxxC binds to Cys400 on CGHC redox motif of PDI a’ domain, a site for PDI prothrombotic activity.


The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology | 2016

Fibrillin-1 mgΔlpn Marfan syndrome mutation associates with preserved proteostasis and bypass of a protein disulfide isomerase-dependent quality checkpoint

Thayna Meirelles; Thaís L.S. Araujo; Patrícia Nolasco; Ana Iochabel Soares Moretti; Maria C. Guido; Victor Debbas; Lygia V. Pereira; Francisco R.M. Laurindo

Fibrillin-1 mutations promote Marfan syndrome (MFS) via complex yet unclear pathways. The roles of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and the major ER redox chaperone protein disulfide isomerase-A1 in the processing of normal and mutated fibrillin-1 and ensuing protein secretion and/or intracellular retention are unclear. Our results in mouse embryonic fibroblasts bearing the exon-skipping mgΔ(lox-P-neo) (mgΔ(lpn)) mutation, which associates in vivo with MFS and in vitro with disrupted microfibrils, indicate a preserved ER-dependent proteostasis or redox homeostasis. Rather, mutated fibrillin-1 is secreted normally through Golgi-dependent pathways and is not intracellularly retained. Similar results occurred for the C1039G point mutation. In parallel, we provide evidence that PDIA1 physically interacts with fibrillin-1 in the ER. Moreover, siRNA against PDIA1 augmented fibrillin-1 secretion rates in wild-type cells. However, fibrillin-1 with the mgΔ(lpn) mutation bypassed PDI checkpoint delay, while the C1039G mutation did not. This heretofore undisclosed PDIA1-mediated mechanism may be important to control the extracellular availability of function-competent fibrillin-1, an important determinant of disease phenotype. Moreover, our results may reveal a novel, holdase-like, PDI function associated with ER protein quality control.


Biochemistry | 2014

Conformational changes in human Hsp70 induced by high hydrostatic pressure produce oligomers with ATPase activity but without chaperone activity.

Thaís L.S. Araujo; Júlio C. Borges; Carlos Ramos; José Roberto Meyer-Fernandes; Reinaldo S. Oliveira Júnior; Pedro G. Pascutti; Debora Foguel; Fernando L. Palhano

We investigated the folding of the 70 kDa human cytosolic inducible protein (Hsp70) in vitro using high hydrostatic pressure as a denaturing agent. We followed the structural changes in Hsp70 induced by high hydrostatic pressure using tryptophan fluorescence, molecular dynamics, circular dichroism, high-performance liquid chromatography gel filtration, dynamic light scattering, ATPase activity, and chaperone activity. Although monomeric, Hsp70 is very sensitive to hydrostatic pressure; after pressure had been removed, the protein did not return to its native sate but instead formed oligomeric species that lost chaperone activity but retained ATPase activity.


Nature Reviews Cancer | 2018

Adapting to stress — chaperome networks in cancer

Suhasini Joshi; Tai Wang; Thaís L.S. Araujo; Sahil Sharma; Jeffrey L. Brodsky; Gabriela Chiosis

In this Opinion article, we aim to address how cells adapt to stress and the repercussions chronic stress has on cellular function. We consider acute and chronic stress-induced changes at the cellular level, with a focus on a regulator of cellular stress, the chaperome, which is a protein assembly that encompasses molecular chaperones, co-chaperones and other co-factors. We discuss how the chaperome takes on distinct functions under conditions of stress that are executed in ways that differ from the one-on-one cyclic, dynamic functions exhibited by distinct molecular chaperones. We argue that through the formation of multimeric stable chaperome complexes, a state of chaperome hyperconnectivity, or networking, is gained. The role of these chaperome networks is to act as multimolecular scaffolds, a particularly important function in cancer, where they increase the efficacy and functional diversity of several cellular processes. We predict that these concepts will change how we develop and implement drugs targeting the chaperome to treat cancer.In this Opinion, Joshi et al. argue that in cancer cells, a state of chaperome hyperconnectivity is obtained by increasing the interaction strength among chaperome machinery members. These chaperome scaffolding platforms act to increase the functional diversity of oncogenic processes and have implications for the development of chaperome inhibitors.


Redox biology | 2017

Golgi-independent routes support protein disulfide isomerase externalization in vascular smooth muscle cells

Thaís L.S. Araujo; Carolina Gonçalves Fernandes; Francisco R.M. Laurindo

Extracellular pools of intracellular molecular chaperones are increasingly evident. The peri/epicellular(pec) pool of the endoplasmic reticulum redox chaperone protein disulfide isomerase-A1(PDI) is involved in thrombosis and vascular remodeling, while PDI externalization routes remain elusive. In endothelial cells, vesicular-type PDI secretion involves classical and unconventional pathways, while in platelets PDI exocytosis involves actin cytoskeleton. However, little is known about pecPDI in vascular smooth muscle cells(VSMC). Here, we showed that VSMC display a robust cell-surface(cs) PDI pool, which binds to cs independently of electrostatic forces. However, contrarily to other cells, soluble secreted PDI pool was undetectable in VSMC. Calcium ionophore A23187 and TNFα enhanced VSMC csPDI. Furthermore, VSMC PDI externalization occurred via Golgi-bypass unconventional route, which was independent of cytoskeleton or lysosomes. Secreted PDI was absent in ex vivo wild-type mice aortas but markedly enhanced in PDI-overexpressing mice. Such characterization of VSMC pecPDI reinforces cell-type and context specific routes of PDI externalization.


Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity | 2018

Effect of the Antioxidant Lipoic Acid in Aortic Phenotype in a Marfan Syndrome Mouse Model

Maria C. Guido; Victor Debbas; Vera Maria Cury Salemi; Elaine R. Tavares; Thayna Meirelles; Thaís L.S. Araujo; Patrícia Nolasco; Julio Ferreira-Filho; Celso Kiyochi Takimura; Lygia V. Pereira; Francisco R.M. Laurindo

Marfan syndrome (MFS) cardiovascular manifestations such as aortic aneurysms and cardiomyopathy carry substantial morbidity/mortality. We investigated the effects of lipoic acid, an antioxidant, on ROS production and aortic remodeling in a MFS mgΔloxPneo mouse model. MFS and WT (wild-type) 1-month-old mice were allocated to 3 groups: untreated, treated with losartan, and treated with lipoic acid. At 6 months old, echocardiography, ROS production, and morphological analysis of aortas were performed. Aortic ROS generation in 6-month-old MFS animals was higher at advanced stages of disease in MFS. An unprecedented finding in MFS mice analyzed by OCT was the occurrence of focal inhomogeneous regions in the aortic arch, either collagen-rich extremely thickened or collagen-poor hypotrophic regions. MFS animals treated with lipoic acid showed markedly reduced ROS production and lower ERK1/2 phosphorylation; meanwhile, aortic dilation and elastic fiber breakdown were unaltered. Of note, lipoic acid treatment associated with the absence of focal inhomogeneous regions in MFS animals. Losartan reduced aortic dilation and elastic fiber breakdown despite no change in ROS generation. In conclusion, oxidant generation by itself seems neutral with respect to aneurysm progression in MFS; however, lipoic acid-mediated reduction of inhomogeneous regions may potentially associate with less anisotropy and reduced chance of dissection/rupture.


Archive | 2018

Hemodynamic Forces in the Endothelium: From Mechanotransduction to Implications on Development of Atherosclerosis

Denise C. Fernandes; Thaís L.S. Araujo; Francisco R.M. Laurindo; Leonardo Y. Tanaka

Abstract Vascular cells are constantly exposed to dynamic mechanical forces such as shear stress or cyclic stretch. The endothelium is equipped to sense shear stress through mechanisms that include ion channels, vascular endothelial growth factors, adhesion molecules, and others. These signals are integrated in responses that adapt cells and whole vessels acutely or chronically through processes aimed to maintain shear stress setpoint levels. Increased laminar shear stress promotes vasodilation of conduit arteries and, if sustained, its expansive structural remodeling, associated with cytoskeletal and extracellular matrix reorganization. Redox processes are closely involved in shear-dependent endothelial responses. Mechanoresponse patterns associate closely with atherogenesis. Physiological laminar shear is atheroprotective, while oscillatory shear patterns, found, e.g., at bifurcations, associate with disrupted cell signaling, oxidative stress and enhanced tendency to atherosclerosis development. Overall, mechanical forces are a major determinant of vascular function in physiology and disease.

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