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Dive into the research topics where Thaís Maria da Mata Martins is active.

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Featured researches published by Thaís Maria da Mata Martins.


Acta Biomaterialia | 2015

Polyhydroxybutyrate-co-hydroxyvalerate structures loaded with adipose stem cells promote skin healing with reduced scarring.

Alessandra Zonari; Thaís Maria da Mata Martins; Ana Cláudia Chagas de Paula; Jankerle N. Boeloni; Silviene Novikoff; Alexandra P. Marques; Vitor M. Correlo; Rui L. Reis; Alfredo M. Goes

Currently available skin substitutes are still associated with a range of problems including poor engraftment resulting from deficient vascularization, and excessive scar formation, among others. Trying to overcome these issues, this work proposes the combination of poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-hydroxyvalerate) (PHBV) structures with adipose-derived stem cells (ASCs) to offer biomechanical and biochemical signaling cues necessary to improve wound healing in a full-thickness model. PHBV scaffold maintained the wound moisture and demonstrated enough mechanical properties to withstand wound contraction. Also, exudate and inflammatory cell infiltration enhanced the degradation of the structure, and thus healing progression. After 28 days all the wounds were closed and the PHBV scaffold was completely degraded. The transplanted ASCs were detected in the wound area only at day 7, correlating with an up-regulation of VEGF and bFGF at this time point that consequently led to a significant higher vessel density in the group that received the PHBV loaded with ASCs. Subsequently, the dermis formed in the presence of the PHBV loaded with ASCs possesses a more complex collagen structure. Additionally, an anti-scarring effect was observed in the presence of the PHBV scaffold indicated by a down-regulation of TGF-β1 and α-SMA together with an increase of TGF-β3, when associated with ASCs. These results indicate that although PHBV scaffold was able to guide the wound healing process with reduced scarring, the presence of ASCs was crucial to enhance vascularization and provide a better quality neo-skin. Therefore, we can conclude that PHBV loaded with ASCs possesses the necessary bioactive cues to improve wound healing with reduced scarring.


Journal of Biomedical Materials Research Part A | 2014

Synergistic effect between bioactive glass foam and a perfusion bioreactor on osteogenic differentiation of human adipose stem cells

A. R. P. Silva; Ana Cláudia Chagas de Paula; Thaís Maria da Mata Martins; Alfredo M. Goes; M. M. Pereria

Tissue engineering is a multidisciplinary science that combines a structural scaffold and cells to form a construct able to promote regeneration of injured tissue. Bioactive glass foam produced by sol-gel is an osteoinductive material with a network of interconnected macropores necessary for cell colonization. The use of human adipose-derived stem cell (hASC) presents advantages as the potential for a large number of cells, rapid expansion in vitro and the capability of differentiating into osteoblasts. The use of a bioreactor in three-dimensional cell culture enables greater efficiency for cell nutrition and application of mechanical forces, important modulators of bone physiology. The hASC seeded in a bioactive glass scaffold and cultured in osteogenic Leibovitz L-15 medium in a bioreactor with a flow rate of 0.1 mL min(-1) demonstrated a significant increase in cell proliferation and viability and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity peak after 14 days. The immunofluorescence assay revealed an expression of osteopontin, osteocalcin and type I collagen from 7 to 21 days after culture. The cells changed from a spindle shape to a cuboidal morphology characteristic of osteoblasts. The polymerase chain reaction assay confirmed that osteopontin, osteocalcin, and ALP genes were expressed. These results indicate that hASCs differentiated into an osteogenic phenotype when cultured in bioactive glass scaffold, osteogenic Leibovitz L-15 medium and a perfusion bioreactor. Therefore, these results highlight the synergism between a bioactive glass scaffold and the effect of perfusion on cells and indicate the differentiation into an osteogenic phenotype.


Stem Cell Reviews and Reports | 2014

Alkaline Phosphatase Expression/Activity and Multilineage Differentiation Potential are the Differences Between Fibroblasts and Orbital Fat-Derived Stem Cells – A Study in Animal Serum-Free Culture Conditions

Thaís Maria da Mata Martins; Ana Cláudia Chagas de Paula; Dawidson Assis Gomes; Alfredo M. Goes

Human orbital fat tissues are a potential source to isolate stem cells for the development of regenerative medicine therapies. For future safe clinical application of these cells, it is critical to establish animal component-free culture conditions as well as to clearly define the stem cell population characteristics differentiating them from other cell types, such as fibroblasts. Therefore, the present study aimed to compare phenotypic and functional characteristics of orbital fat-derived stem cells (OFSCs) and fibroblasts resident in the eyelid skin in donor-matched samples grown in culture medium supplemented with pooled allogeneic human serum (HS) replacing fetal bovine serum (FBS). We first investigated the proliferative effects of OFSCs on HS, and then we compared the alkaline phosphatase (AP) expression and activity, immunophenotypic profile, and in vitro multilineage differentiation potential of OFSCs side-by-side with fibroblasts. The results showed that HS enhanced OFSCs proliferation without compromising their immunophenotype, AP activity, and osteogenic, adipogenic, and chondrogenic differentiation capacities. In contrast to OFSCs, the fibroblasts did not exhibit AP expression and activity and did not have multilineage differentiation potential. The results enabled us to successfully distinguish OFSCs from fibroblasts populations, suggesting that AP expression/activity and multilineage differentiation assays can be used reliably to discriminate mesenchymal stem cells from fibroblasts. Our findings also support the feasibility of pooled allogeneic HS as a safer and more effective alternative to FBS for clinical applications.


npj Genomic Medicine | 2017

Familial STAG2 germline mutation defines a new human cohesinopathy

Fernanda C. Soardi; Alice Machado-Silva; Natália D. Linhares; Ge Zheng; Qianhui Qu; Heloísa B. Pena; Thaís Maria da Mata Martins; Helaine Graziele Santos Vieira; Núbia Braga Pereira; Raquel C. Melo-Minardi; Carolina Cavaliéri Gomes; Ricardo Santiago Gomez; Dawidson Assis Gomes; Douglas E. V. Pires; David B. Ascher; Hongtao Yu; Sérgio D.J. Pena

We characterize a novel human cohesinopathy originated from a familial germline mutation of the gene encoding the cohesin subunit STAG2, which we propose to call STAG2-related X-linked Intellectual Deficiency. Five individuals carry a STAG2 p.Ser327Asn (c.980 G > A) variant that perfectly cosegregates with a phenotype of syndromic mental retardation in a characteristic X-linked recessive pattern. Although patient-derived cells did not show overt sister-chromatid cohesion defects, they exhibited altered cell cycle profiles and gene expression patterns that were consistent with cohesin deficiency. The protein level of STAG2 in patient cells was normal. Interestingly, STAG2 S327 is located at a conserved site crucial for binding to SCC1 and cohesin regulators. When expressed in human cells, the STAG2 p.Ser327Asn mutant is defective in binding to SCC1 and other cohesin subunits and regulators. Thus, decreased amount of intact cohesin likely underlies the phenotypes of STAG2-SXLID. Intriguingly, recombinant STAG2 p.Ser327Asn binds normally to SCC1, WAPL, and SGO1 in vitro, suggesting the existence of unknown in vivo mechanisms that regulate the interaction between STAG2 and SCC1.Intellectual disability: mutation in cell cycle protein causes developmental diseaseA newly discovered developmental disease is characterized by mutations in a subunit of the cohesin protein involved in cell division. A team led by Sérgio Pena from GENE—Núcleo de Genética Médica, Brazil, and Hongtao Yu from the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, USA, describe a Brazilian family with five male relatives, all with intellectual deficiency, short stature, and other abnormalities. The family tree pointed toward an X-linked pattern of inheritance, so the researchers performed a network analysis of 24 genes on the X chromosome known to contribute to mental retardation. They found that all five individuals had a mutation in a gene called STAG2, which encodes a subunit of cohesin. The mutant STAG2 did not bind properly to other cohesin subunits in human cells, and patient-derived cells exhibited altered cell cycle profiles. The researchers propose calling the disease “STAG2-related X-linked intellectual deficiency”.


Nanotechnology | 2016

Thermosensitive gemcitabine-magnetoliposomes for combined hyperthermia and chemotherapy.

Roberta Viana Ferreira; Thaís Maria da Mata Martins; Alfredo M. Goes; José Domingos Fabris; Luis Carlos Duarte Cavalcante; Luis Eugenio Fernandez Outon; Rosana Zacarias Domingues

The combination of magnetic hyperthermia therapy with the controlled release of chemotherapeutic agents in tumors may be an efficient therapeutic with few side effects because the bioavailability, tolerance and amount of the drug can be optimized. Here, we prepared magnetoliposomes consisting of magnetite nanoparticle cores and the anticancer drug gemcitabine encapsulated by a phospholipid bilayer. The potential of these magnetoliposomes for controlled drug release and cancer treatment via hyperthermic behavior was investigated. The magnetic nanoparticle encapsulation efficiency was dependent on the initial amount of magnetite nanoparticles present at the encapsulation stage; the best formulation was 66%. We chose this formulation to characterize the physicochemical properties of the magnetoliposomes and to encapsulate gemcitabine. The mean particle size and distribution were determined by dynamic light scattering (DLS), and the zeta potential was measured. The magnetoliposome formulations all had acceptable characteristics for systemic administration, with a mean size of approximately 150 nm and a polydispersity index <0.2. The magnetoliposomes were stable in aqueous suspension for at least one week, as determined by DLS. Temperature increases due to the dissipation energy of magnetoliposome suspensions subjected to an applied alternating magnetic field (AMF) were measured at different magnetic field intensities, and the values were appropriated for cancer treatments. The drug release profile at 37 °C showed that 17% of the gemcitabine was released after 72 h. Drug release from magnetoliposomes exposed to an AMF for 5 min reached 70%.


RSC Advances | 2016

Attaching folic acid on hydroxyapatite nanorod surfaces: an investigation of the HA–FA interaction

Marcelo Fernandes Cipreste; Ismael José Gonzalez Gonzalez; Thaís Maria da Mata Martins; Alfredo M. Goes; Waldemar Augusto de Almeida Macedo; Edésia Martins Barros de Sousa

Hydroxyapatite (HA) nanostructures have attracted attention due to their great biocompatibility, bioactivity, osteoconductivity and good adherence to bone tissues and osteosarcoma cells, making possible the therapeutic replacement and reconstruction of bone matrix after tumor treatment. However, suitable surface modification is essential to enable the final performance of these materials. This paper describes the synthesis of HA nanorods and a route of functionalization of the HA surface with folic acid (folate). The samples were characterized by XRD, FTIR, TGA, CHN, XPS, BET, SEM and TEM in order to estimate the physical–chemical properties of the nanoparticles, such as morphology, size distribution, pore and surface parameters, and the stability of hydroxyapatite and folate interactions was systematically evaluated. In addition, an in vitro preliminary assay was conducted in order to investigate the biocompatibility of these systems in fibroblast cells. The results indicate that mesoporous hydroxyapatite nanorods around 70 nm were successfully synthesized with pure crystalline phase and folate can be strongly linked to hydroxyapatite nanorod surfaces following the methodology proposed in this work. In addition, this material shows great biocompatibility, presenting cell proliferation as an intrinsic characteristic, making this system suitable for the suggested biomedical applications.


Toxicon | 2014

Whole venom of Loxosceles similis activates caspases-3, -6, -7, and -9 in human primary skin fibroblasts

Arthur Estanislau Dantas; Carolina Campolina Rebello Horta; Thaís Maria da Mata Martins; Anderson Oliveira do Carmo; Bárbara Bruna Ribeiro de Oliveira Mendes; Alfredo M. Goes; Evanguedes Kalapothakis; Dawidson Assis Gomes

Spiders of the Loxosceles genus represent a risk to human health due to the systemic and necrotic effects of their bites. The main symptoms of these bites vary from dermonecrosis, observed in the majority of cases, to occasional systemic hemolysis and coagulopathy. Although the systemic effects are well characterized, the mechanisms of cell death triggered by the venom of these spiders are poorly characterized. In this study, we investigated the cell death mechanisms induced by the whole venom of the spider Loxosceles similis in human skin fibroblasts. Our results show that the venom initiates an apoptotic process and a caspase cascade involving the initiator caspase-9 and the effector caspases-3, -6, and -7.


BioMed Research International | 2015

Production of Human Endothelial Cells Free from Soluble Xenogeneic Antigens for Bioartificial Small Diameter Vascular Graft Endothelization

Juliana Lott Carvalho; Alessandra Zonari; Ana Cláudia Chagas de Paula; Thaís Maria da Mata Martins; Dawidson Assis Gomes; Alfredo M. Goes

Arterial bypass graft implantation remains the primary therapy for patients with advanced cardiovascular disease, but most lack adequate saphenous vein or other conduits for bypass procedures and would benefit from a bioartificial conduit. This study aimed to produce human endothelial cells (hECs) in large scale, free from xenogeneic antigens, to develop a small diameter, compatible vessel for potential use as a vascular graft. Human adipose-derived stromal cells (hASCs) were isolated, cultured, and differentiated in the presence of human serum and used for the reendothelization of a decellularized rat aorta. hASC derived ECs (hASC-ECs) expressed VEGFR2, vWf and CD31 endothelial cell markers, the latter in higher levels than hASCs and HUVECs, and were shown to be functional. Decellularization protocol yielded aortas devoid of cell nuclei, with preserved structure, including a preserved basement membrane. When seeded with hASC-ECs, the decellularized aorta was completely reendothelized, and the hASC-ECs maintained their phenotype in this new condition. hASCs can be differentiated into functional hECs without the use of animal supplements and are capable of reendothelizing a decellularized rat aorta while maintaining their phenotype. The preservation of the basement membrane following decellularization supported the complete reendothelization of the scaffold with no cell migration towards other layers. This approach is potentially useful for rapid obtention of compatible, xenogeneic-free conduit.


Revista Cefac | 2010

Alterações auditivas e fenilcetonúria: uma revisão sistemática

Patrícia Cotta Mancini; Ana Lúcia Pimenta Starling; Cláudia Fernanda Tolentino Alves; Thaís Maria da Mata Martins; Maria Cecília Martinelli Iório

BACKGROUND: phenylketonuria is a genetic disorder that causes biochemical alterations, leading to a deficiency in the synthesis of proteins and neurotransmitters and thereby hindering the myelination process. Structural and functional changes in myelin can alter neural conductivity patterns and or reduce synaptic connection in individuals with phenylketonuria. Essentially, a dietary treatment should be implemented in the first weeks of life in order to avoid clinical and biochemical manifestations of the disease. When diet is continually maintained, children with phenylketonuria show normal development. However, deficits in executive functions, interhemispherical interaction, language and memory have been observed even in children with early treatment and appropriate diet. Some researches were carried out for investigating the relationship between phenylketonuria and alterations in the hearing function. PURPOSE: to systematically review articles dedicated to the research of relationship between hearing disorders and hyperphenylalaninaemias, highlighting the classic phenylketonuria. The bibliographical references were obtained through research in the databases: Lilacs, Medline, Cochrane Library and Scielo and through search in the reference list of the identified and selected articles. CONCLUSION: the relationship among hyperphenylalaninaemias, including phenylketonuria, and hearing alterations is still controversial in the literature. It is suggested that more investigations as for the hearing function are necessary on those individuals in order to elucidate this possible relationship.


Polymer Degradation and Stability | 2015

Poly (butylene adipate-co-terephthalate)/hydroxyapatite composite structures for bone tissue recovery

Wilson Alves Ribeiro Neto; Ana Cláudia Chagas de Paula; Thaís Maria da Mata Martins; Alfredo M. Goes; Luc Avérous; Guy Schlatter; Rosario E. S. Bretas

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Alfredo M. Goes

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Ana Cláudia Chagas de Paula

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Dawidson Assis Gomes

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Alessandra Zonari

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Silviene Novikoff

Federal University of São Paulo

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Ana Lúcia Pimenta Starling

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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