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Dive into the research topics where Tiago Franco de Oliveira is active.

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Featured researches published by Tiago Franco de Oliveira.


Pigment Cell & Melanoma Research | 2012

Proteasome inhibition and ROS generation by 4-nerolidylcatechol induces melanoma cell death.

Carla Abdo Brohem; Renato Ramos Massaro; Manoela Tiago; Camila Eduardo Marinho; Miriam Galvonas Jasiulionis; Rebeca L. de Almeida; Diogo Pineda Rivelli; Renata Chaves Albuquerque; Tiago Franco de Oliveira; Ana Paula de Melo Loureiro; Sabrina Sayori Okada; Maria S. Soengas; Silvia Berlanga de Moraes Barros; Silvya Stuchi Maria-Engler

Induction of apoptotic cell death in response to chemotherapy and other external stimuli has proved extremely difficult in melanoma, leading to tumor progression, metastasis formation and resistance to therapy. A promising approach for cancer chemotherapy is the inhibition of proteasomal activity, as the half‐life of the majority of cellular proteins is under proteasomal control and inhibitors have been shown to induce cell death programs in a wide variety of tumor cell types. 4‐Nerolidylcatechol (4‐NC) is a potent antioxidant whose cytotoxic potential has already been demonstrated in melanoma tumor cell lines. Furthermore, 4‐NC was able to induce the accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins, including classic targets of this process such as Mcl‐1. As shown for other proteasomal inhibitors in melanoma, the cytotoxic action of 4‐NC is time‐dependent upon the pro‐apoptotic protein Noxa, which is able to bind and neutralize Mcl‐1. We demonstrate the role of 4‐NC as a potent inducer of ROS and p53. The use of an artificial skin model containing melanoma also provided evidence that 4‐NC prevented melanoma proliferation in a 3D model that more closely resembles normal human skin.


Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry | 2014

Exposure to lard-based high-fat diet during fetal and lactation periods modifies breast cancer susceptibility in adulthood in rats

Fabia O Andrade; Camile Castilho Fontelles; Mariana Rosim; Tiago Franco de Oliveira; Ana Paula de Melo Loureiro; Jorge Mancini-Filho; Marcelo Macedo Rogero; Fernando Salvador Moreno; Sonia de Assis; Luiz Fernando Barbisan; Leena Hilakivi-Clarke; Thomas Prates Ong

The present study investigated whether early life exposure to high levels of animal fat increases breast cancer risk in adulthood in rats. Dams consumed a lard-based high-fat (HF) diet (60% fat-derived energy) or an AIN93G control diet (16% fat-derived energy) during gestation or gestation and lactation. Their 7-week-old female offspring were exposed to 7,12-dimethyl-benzo[a]anthracene to induce mammary tumors. Pregnant dams consuming an HF diet had higher circulating leptin levels than pregnant control dams. However, compared to the control offspring, significantly lower susceptibility to mammary cancer development was observed in the offspring of dams fed an HF diet during pregnancy (lower tumor incidence, multiplicity and weight), or pregnancy and lactation (lower tumor multiplicity only). Mammary epithelial elongation, cell proliferation (Ki67) and expression of NFκB p65 were significantly lower and p21 expression and global H3K9me3 levels were higher in the mammary glands of rats exposed to an HF lard diet in utero. They also tended to have lower Rank/Rankl ratios (P=.09) and serum progesterone levels (P=.07) than control offspring. In the mammary glands of offspring of dams consuming an HF diet during both pregnancy and lactation, the number of terminal end buds, epithelial elongation and the BCL-2/BAX ratio were significantly lower and serum leptin levels were higher than in the controls. Our data confirm that the breast cancer risk of offspring can be programmed by maternal dietary intake. However, contrary to our expectation, exposure to high levels of lard during early life decreased later susceptibility to breast cancer.


Toxicology | 2011

In vivo hydroquinone exposure alters circulating neutrophil activities and impairs LPS-induced lung inflammation in mice

André Luiz Teroso Ribeiro; Ana Lúcia Borges Shimada; Cristina Bichels Hebeda; Tiago Franco de Oliveira; Ana Paula de Melo Loureiro; Walter dos Reis Pereira Filho; Alcinéa Meigikos dos Anjos Santos; Wothan Tavares de Lima; Sandra Helena Poliselli Farsky

Hydroquinone (HQ) is an environmental contaminant which causes immune toxicity. In this study, the effects of exposure to low doses of HQ on neutrophil mobilization into the LPS-inflamed lung were investigated. Male Swiss mice were exposed to aerosolized vehicle (control) or 12.5, 25 or 50ppm HQ (1h/day for 5 days). One hour later, oxidative burst, cell cycle, DNA fragmentation and adhesion molecules expressions in circulating neutrophils were determined by flow cytometry, and plasma malondialdehyde (MDA) levels were measured by HPLC. Also, 1h later the last exposures, inflammation was induced by LPS inhalation (0.1mg/ml/10min) and 3h later, the numbers of leukocytes in peripheral blood and in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) were determined using a Neubauer chamber and stained smears; adhesion molecules expressed on lung microvessel endothelial cells were quantified by immunohistochemistry; myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity was measured in the lung tissue by colorimetric assay; and cytokines in the BALF were determined by ELISA. In vivo HQ exposure augmented plasma MDA levels and oxidative activity of neutrophils, but did not cause alterations in cell cycle and DNA fragmentation. Under these conditions, the number of circulating leukocytes was not altered, but HQ exposure reduced LPS-induced neutrophil migration into the alveolar space, as these cells remained in the lung tissue. The impaired neutrophil migration into BALF may not be dependent on reduced cytokines secretions in the BALF and lung endothelial adhesion molecules expressions. However, HQ exposure increased the expression of β(2) and β(3) integrins and platelet-endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1 (PECAM-1) in neutrophils, which were not further enhanced by fMLP in vitro stimulation, indicating that HQ exposure activates circulating neutrophils, impairing further stimulatory responses. Therefore, it has been shown, for the first time, that neutrophils are target of lower levels of in vivo HQ exposure, which may be considered in host defense in infectious diseases.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Luminescent threat: toxicity of light stick attractors used in pelagic fishery

Tiago Franco de Oliveira; Amanda Lucila Medeiros da Silva; Rafaela Alves de Moura; Raquel Bagattini; Antonio Anax Falcão de Oliveira; Marisa H. G. Medeiros; Paolo Di Mascio; Ivan Pérsio de Arruda Campos; Fabiano Prado Barretto; Etelvino J. H. Bechara; Ana Paula de Melo Loureiro

Light sticks (LS) are sources of chemiluminescence commonly used in pelagic fishery, where hundreds are discarded and reach the shores. Residents from fishing villages report an improper use of LS contents on the skin. Given the scarce information regarding LS toxicity, the effects of LS solutions in cell cultures were evaluated herein. Loss of viability, cell cycle changes and DNA fragmentation were observed in HepG2 cell line and skin fibroblasts. A non-cytotoxic LS concentration increased the occurrence of the mutagenic lesion 1,N6-εdAdo in HepG2 DNA by three-fold. Additionally, in vitro incubations of spent LS contents with DNA generated dGuo-LS adducts, whose structure elucidation revealed the presence of a reactive chlorinated product. In conclusion, the LS contents were found to be highly cyto- and genotoxic. Our data indicate an urgent need for LS waste management guidelines and for adequate information regarding toxic outcomes that may arise from human exposure.


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2014

The chemopreventive activity of the histone deacetylase inhibitor tributyrin in colon carcinogenesis involves the induction of apoptosis and reduction of DNA damage

Renato Heidor; Kelly S. Furtado; Juliana Festa Ortega; Tiago Franco de Oliveira; Paulo Eduardo Latorre Martins Tavares; Alessandra Vieira; Mayara Lilian Paulino Miranda; Eduardo Purgatto; Fernando Salvador Moreno

The chemopreventive activity of the histone deacetylase inhibitor (HDACi) tributyrin (TB), a prodrug of butyric acid (BA), was evaluated in a rat model of colon carcinogenesis. The animals were treated with TB (TB group: 200mg/100g of body weight, b.w.) or maltodextrin (MD isocaloric control group: 300 mg/100g b.w.) daily for 9 consecutive weeks. In the 3rd and 4th weeks of treatment, the rats in the TB and MD groups were given DMH (40 mg/kg b.w.) twice a week. After 9 weeks, the animals were euthanized, and the distal colon was examined. Compared with the control group (MD group), TB treatment reduced the total number of aberrant crypt foci (ACF; p<0.05) as well as the ACF with ≥4 crypts (p<0.05), which are considered more aggressive, but not inhibited the formation of DMH-induced O6-methyldeoxyguanosine DNA adducts. The TB group also showed a higher apoptotic index (p<0.05) and reduced DNA damage (p<0.05) compared with MD group. TB acted as a HDACi, as rats treated with the prodrug of BA had higher levels of histone H3K9 acetylation compared with the MD group (p<0.05). TB administration resulted in increased colonic tissue concentrations of BA (p<0.05) compared with the control animals. These results suggest that TB can be considered a promising chemopreventive agent for colon carcinogenesis because it reduced the number of ACF, including those that were more aggressive. Induction of apoptosis and reduction of DNA damage are cellular mechanisms that appear to be involved in the chemopreventive activity of TB.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Sustained kidney biochemical derangement in treated experimental diabetes: a clue to metabolic memory

Antonio Anax Falcão de Oliveira; Tiago Franco de Oliveira; Larissa Leticia Bobadilla; Camila Carrião Machado Garcia; Carolina Maria Berra; Nadja C. de Souza-Pinto; Marisa H. G. Medeiros; Paolo Di Mascio; Roberto Zatz; Ana Paula de Melo Loureiro

The occurrence of biochemical alterations that last for a long period of time in diabetic individuals even after adequate handling of glycemia is an intriguing phenomenon named metabolic memory. In this study, we show that a kidney pathway is gradually altered during the course of diabetes and remains persistently changed after late glycemic control in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. This pathway comprises an early decline of uric acid clearance and pAMPK expression followed by fumarate accumulation, increased TGF-β expression, reduced PGC-1α expression, and downregulation of methylation and hydroxymethylation of mitochondrial DNA. The sustained decrease of uric acid clearance in treated diabetes may support the prolonged kidney biochemical alterations observed after tight glycemic control, and this regulation is likely mediated by the sustained decrease of AMPK activity and the induction of inflammation. This manuscript proposes the first consideration of the possible role of hyperuricemia and the underlying biochemical changes as part of metabolic memory in diabetic nephropathy development after glycemic control.


Nutrition | 2014

Selenium inadequacy is not associated with oxidative stress in child and adolescent acute lymphocytic leukemia survivors

Kaluce Gonçalves de Sousa Almondes; Tiago Franco de Oliveira; Adriana Aparecida Siviero-Miachon; Maria Lucia de Martino Lee; Patrícia Helen de Carvalho Rondó; Ana Paula de Melo Loureiro; Ângela Maria Spinola-Castro; Silvia Maria Franciscato Cozzolino

OBJECTIVE Acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) and its subsequent treatment may provoke increased oxidative stress. The aim of this study was to investigate the antioxidant status of children and adolescents who had received ALL therapy, and to test the hypothesis that selenium (Se) inadequacy is correlated with reduced defenses against oxidative stress in this population. METHODS This case-control study involved 24 patients between ages 5 and 13 y who had been treated successfully for ALL (ALL group) and 60 children of similar age and socioeconomic background with no clinical history of leukemia (control group). Dietary intake of Se was evaluated by the 24-h recall method, and the concentrations of Se in plasma, erythrocytes, and urine determined. Antioxidant status was assessed by analysis of the oxidative stress markers, namely, superoxide dismutase (SOD), glutathione peroxidase (GPx), malondialdehyde (MDA), α-tocopherol, and 8-oxo-deoxyguanosine (8-oxo-dG). RESULTS There were no between-group differences with respect to plasma (P = 0.122), erythrocyte (P = 0.202), urinary (P = 0.608), or dietary (P = 0.757) levels of Se. GPx activity was significantly (P < 0.001) reduced in the ALL group compared with the control group, whereas SOD activity and MDA concentrations were similar. The concentrations of α-tocopherol and 8-oxo-dG were significantly increased in the ALL group compared with the control group (P < 0.001 and P = 0.031, respectively). CONCLUSION All participants were Se inadequate, but such inadequacy was not correlated with reduced defenses against oxidative stress. However, individuals of the ALL group were with increased oxidative stress compared with the control group, possibly due to previous disease and to intensive polychemotherapy.


Medicinal Chemistry Research | 2017

Molecular modeling and structure–activity relationships studies of bioisoster hybrids of N -acylhydrazone and furoxan groups on cruzain

Ricardo Augusto Massarico Serafim; Tiago Franco de Oliveira; Ana Paula de Melo Loureiro; Renata Krogh; Adriano D. Andricopulo; Luiz C. Dias; Elizabeth Igne Ferreira

Chagas disease is a very important neglected disease and millions of people live in endemic areas at the risk of acquiring the infection. Due to scarce and ineffective current chemotherapy, the introduction of new drugs on therapeutics is highly necessary. Bioisoster hybrids derivatives were previously designed, synthesized, and assayed in terms of trypanocidal activity and permeability. Structure activity-relationships were performed with a set of N-acylhydrazone and furoxan derivatives aiming at identifying if the enzyme cruzain might be the target of the system. In addition, lowest unoccupied molecular orbital analysis and docking studies of the two most promising compounds were carried out with the purpose of elucidating the key properties and interactions between the ligands and cruzain. The analysis of cruzain inhibition tests showed that the position of the nitro group is important for the compounds inhibitory activity. The results lead to the conclusion that cruzain may not be the only target. This hypothesis was advanced because the most active in Trypanosoma cruzi, compound 6, is not the most effective in cruzain tests. Notwithstanding, this compound was considered the most promising hit for further in vivo studies, as it did not show toxicity in cycle cell tests.


Journal of the Brazilian Chemical Society | 2015

Determination of Amphetamine, Amfepramone and Fenproporex in Urine Samples by HPLC-DAD: Application to a Population of Brazilian Truck Drivers

Juliana Takitane; Rafael Menck de Almeida; Tiago Franco de Oliveira; Natanael Vitoriano Do Prado; Daniel Romero Muñoz; Vilma Leyton; Mauricio Yonamine

Commercially available immunoassay tests are designed to detect the presence of amphetamine/methamphetamine or methylenodioxyamphetamines. However, it is known that Brazilian truck drivers also report the use of other illicit amphetamines, such as amfepramone and fenproporex. Thus, a method was developed and validated in order to quantify amphetamine-type stimulants (amphetamine, fenproporex and amfepramone) in urine by high performance liquid chromatography with diode array detection (HPLC-DAD). Prior to this, a liquid-liquid extraction (LLE) with diethyl ether was performed in order to extract the analytes. The limit of detection was 150 ng mL-1. The method showed to be precise (relative standard deviation, RSD 0.99). Urine samples randomly collected from 385 truck drivers in Brazilian roads were submitted to the developed method. Nine samples were tested positive for amphetamine and one was tested positive for fenproporex and amphetamine.


Brazilian Journal of Forensic Sciences, Medical Law and Bioethics | 2016

Estimativa Da Incerteza De Medição Em Análises De Benzoilecgonina Em Urina Por Gc-Ms

Sarah Carobini Werner de Souza Eller Franco de Oliveira; Ligia Yuki Takai; Tiago Franco de Oliveira; Mauricio Yonamine

Epidemiological studies indicate that the consumption of illegal substances is associated with a serious public health problem. To sum up, the present situation demands an immediate action, with major focus on reliable analytical methods which can be capable of detecting such compounds in biological fluids. Furthermore, the application of drug analysis in urine has increased significantly and for this reason, forensic toxicologists are being asked to determine and report their measurement uncertainty (MU) in drug analysis. The purpose of this study was to estimate the MU of confirmatory toxicological analysis of benzoylecgonine in urine by GC-MS. The limit of detection was 5.0 ng.ml. The calibration curves were linear over the specified range (7.5 – 3200 ng.ml; r 0.99). The effect of the accuracy on the overall combined uncertainty was most significant. The developed method was successfully applied to a human urine standard reference material. The obtained relative combined uncertainty was 4.8 %. The MU obtained is in accordance with the acceptable values and are also consistent with the values stipulated by certificate of analysis of NIST reference samples. Therefore, this method is relevant and the obtained result has reliability and quality. 216 Brazilian Journal of Forensic Sciences, Medical Law and Bioethics 5(2): 215-231 (2016) S. C. W. S. E. Franco de Oliveira

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