Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Tiago Morais is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Tiago Morais.


European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics | 2012

Effect of surface coating on the biodistribution profile of gold nanoparticles in the rat

Tiago Morais; Maria Elisa Soares; José Alberto Duarte; Leonor Soares; Sílvia Maia; Paula Gomes; Eulália Pereira; Sónia Fraga; Helena Carmo; Maria de Lourdes Bastos

Successful application of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) in biomedicine requires extensive safety assessment for which biokinetic studies are crucial. We evaluated the biodistribution of AuNPs (∼20 nm) with different surface coatings: citrate, 11-MUA and 3 pentapeptides, CALNN, CALND and CALNS, after i.v. administration to rats (0.6-1 mg Au/kg). Biodistribution was evaluated based on Au tissue content measured by GFAAS. Citrate-AuNPs were rapidly removed from circulation with 60% of the injected dose depositing in the liver. Thirty minutes post-injection, the lungs presented about 6% of the injected dose with levels decreasing to 0.7% at 24 h. Gold levels in the spleen were of 2.6%. After 24 h, liver presented the highest Au level, followed by spleen and blood. A similar biodistribution profile was observed for MUA-coated AuNPs compared to Cit-AuNPs at 24h post-injection, while significantly higher levels of peptide-capped AuNPs were found in the liver (74-86%) accompanied by a corresponding decrease in blood levels. TEM analysis of liver slices showed AuNPs in Kupffer cells and hepatocytes, trapped inside endosomes. Our data demonstrate that AuNPs are rapidly distributed and that the liver is the preferential accumulation organ. Peptide capping significantly increased hepatic uptake, showing the influence of AuNPs functionalization in biodistribution.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2014

Short- and long-term distribution and toxicity of gold nanoparticles in the rat after a single-dose intravenous administration

Sónia Fraga; Ana Filipa Brandão; Maria Elisa Soares; Tiago Morais; José Alberto Duarte; Laura Pereira; Leonor Soares; Cristina S. Neves; Eulália Pereira; Maria de Lourdes Bastos; Helena Carmo

UNLABELLED Surface chemistry plays an important role in gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) stability and biocompatibility, which are crucial for their implementation into the clinical setting. We evaluated short- (30 min) and long-term (28 days) biodistribution and toxicity of ~20 nm citrate- and pentapeptide CALNN-coated AuNPs after a single intravenous injection in rats. The pattern of AuNPs distribution in Cit- and CALNN-AuNPs-injected rats was very similar in the assessed time-points. Both AuNPs were quickly removed from the bloodstream and preferentially accumulated in the liver. At 28 days liver remained the main accumulation site but at significantly lower levels compared to those found at 30 min. Spleen atrophy and hematological findings compatible with mild anemia were observed in CALNN-AuNPs-administered rats. Under our experimental conditions, surface coating had more impact on toxicity rather than on biodistribution of the AuNPs. Improvements in the design of capping peptides need to be done to increase biomedical applicability of peptide-coated AuNPs. FROM THE CLINICAL EDITOR The biodistribution and toxicity of ~ 20 nm citrate- and pentapeptide CALNN-coated gold nanoparticles was investigated after a single intravenous injection in rats. Rapid clearance and hepatic accumulation was found at 30-minutes, whereas mild anemia and spleen atrophy was seen 28 days post injection. The authors also concluded that the toxicity was related to the capping proteins as opposed to the biodistribution of the particles, providing important suggestion for future design of gold nanoparticles.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Adipocyte secreted factors enhance aggressiveness of prostate carcinoma cells.

Ângela Moreira; Sofia S Pereira; Madalena Costa; Tiago Morais; Ana Isabel Pinto; Rúben Fernandes

Obesity has been associated with increased incidence and risk of mortality of prostate cancer. One of the proposed mechanisms underlying this risk association is the change in adipokines expression that could promote the development and progression of the prostate tumor cells. The main goal of this study was to evaluate the effect of preadipocyte and adipocyte secretome in the proliferation, migration and invasion of androgen independent prostate carcinoma cells (RM1) and to assess cell proliferation in the presence of the adiposity signals leptin and insulin. RM1 cells were co-cultured in with preadipocytes, adipocytes or cultured in their respective conditioned medium. Cell proliferation was assessed by flow cytometry and XTT viability test. Cell migration was evaluated using a wound healing injury assay of RM1 cells cultured with conditioned media. Cellular invasion of RM1 cells co-cultured with adipocytes and preadipocytes was assessed using matrigel membranes. Preadipocyte conditioned medium was associated with a small increase in RM1 proliferation, while adipocytes conditioned media significantly increased RM1 cell proliferation (p<0.01). Adipocytes also significantly increased the RM1 cells proliferation in co-culture (p <0.01). Cell migration was higher in RM1 cells cultured with preadipocyte and adipocyte conditioned medium. RM1 cell invasion was significantly increased after co-culture with preadipocytes and adipocytes (p <0.05). Insulin also increased significantly the cell proliferation in contrast to leptin, which showed no effect. In conclusion, prostate carcinoma cells seem to be influenced by factors secreted by adipocytes that are able to increase their ability to proliferate, migrate and invade.


Surgery for Obesity and Related Diseases | 2015

Detailed characterization of incretin cell distribution along the human small intestine

Tiago P. Guedes; Sofia Martins; Madalena Costa; Sofia S Pereira; Tiago Morais; Agostinho Santos; Mário Nora

BACKGROUND Incretin hormones, glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) and glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1), are physiologic stimulants of insulin release that have been implicated in diabetes remission after bariatric surgery. The detailed distribution of incretin cells along the human small gut, so far unknown, is of utmost importance for the understanding of the metabolic changes observed after bariatric surgery because diabetes remission rate varies according to the type of anatomic rearrangement. OBJECTIVE To characterize the distribution of incretin producing cells along the human jejunum-ileum. SETTING Academic public institution. METHODS Small intestines (n = 30) from autopsies were sampled every 20 cm along their entire length and tissue microarrays were constructed. The percentage of immunohistochemistry-stained cell areas for GLP-1, GIP, and chromogranin A at each segment length was quantified using a computer-aided analysis tool. RESULTS The percentage of stained area for GLP-1 immunoreactive cells was found to be significantly higher from 200 cm from Treitz ligament onward compared with the first 80 cm of the small intestine, whereas GIP immunoreactive cells were predominant expressed in the first 80 cm. In contrast, chromogranin A expression was constant along the entire jejunum-ileum. CONCLUSION The uneven distribution of GLP-1-expressing cells, with a higher density from 200 cm of the jejunum-ileum, could contribute to explain the improvement of glycemic profile of diabetic patients observed after anatomic rearrangement of the intestinal tract, in particular when subjected to gastric bypass with longer biliopancreatic limbs.


International Journal of Obesity | 2016

Secreted factors derived from obese visceral adipose tissue regulate the expression of breast malignant transformation genes.

Ana B. Crujeiras; B Cabia; Marcos C. Carreira; M Amil; J Cueva; Sara Andrade; L M Seoane; M Pardo; A Sueiro; J Baltar; Tiago Morais; R Lopez-Lopez; Felipe F. Casanueva

Background/Objectives:Obese adipose tissue, especially the visceral depot, exhibits altered production of several molecules that could have a role on the initiation/promotion of breast cancer development. The aim of this work was to evaluate the effect of excess adipose tissue and its secreted factors on the expression of genes involved in the early steps of tumor promotion on the mammary gland.Subjects and methods:Carcinogenesis-related gene expression was evaluated in mammary gland tissue from female diet-induced obese (DIO) Sprague–Dawley rats and circulating leukocytes isolated from a group of breast cancer diagnosed and non-diagnosed obese women and compared with their normal weight counterparts. In addition, the human non-tumoral mammary epithelial cell line MCF10A was treated in vitro with the visceral (retroperitoneal adipose tissue (RPAT)) or subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) secretome and with rising concentrations of the lipid peroxidation by-product 4-hydroxynonenal (4-HNE).Results:DIO rats were classified as susceptible to DIO (DIO-S) or partially resistant to DIO (DIO-R) according to the maximum fat mass gain of the lean group as a cut-off. As compared with lean and DIO-R, the DIO-S group showed a higher fat mass and lower lean mass. The anatomical characteristic of DIO-S was correlated with differential expression of cellular proliferation (ALDH3A1 and MYC) and antioxidant and DNA protection (GSTM2, SIRT1), and tumor suppression (TP53, PTEN, TGFB1) genes. Remarkably, this carcinogenesis-related gene expression pattern was reproduced in MCF10A treated with the RPAT secretome from DIO-S rats and with the lipid peroxidation by-product 4-HNE. Moreover, this pattern was also detected in leukocytes from obese women compared with normal weight women without evidence of breast cancer.Conclusions:Lipid peroxides secreted by the obese visceral adipose tissue could be among the relevant factors that promote changes involved in the early steps of tumor development in mammary gland. These changes can be detected even before histological alterations and in circulating leukocytes.


Endocrine connections | 2013

The emerging role of the molecular marker p27 in the differential diagnosis of adrenocortical tumors

Sofia S Pereira; Tiago Morais; Madalena Costa; Duarte Pignatelli

Malignant adrenocortical tumors (ACTs) are rare and highly aggressive; conversely, benign tumors are common and frequently found incidentally (the so-called incidentalomas). Currently, the use of molecular markers in the diagnosis of ACTs is still controversial. The aim of this study was to analyze the molecular profile of different ACTs with the purpose of identifying markers useful for differentiating between these tumors. The ACTs that were studied (n=31) included nonfunctioning adenomas (ACAn)/incidentalomas (n=13), functioning adenomas with Cushings syndrome (ACAc) (n=7), and carcinomas (n=11); normal adrenal glands (n=12) were used as controls. For each sample, the percentage area stained for the markers StAR, IGF2, IGF1R, p53, MDM2, p21, p27, cyclin D1, Ki-67, β-catenin, and E-cadherin was quantified using a morphometric computerized tool. IGF2, p27, cyclin D1, and Ki-67 were the markers for which the percentage of stained area was significantly higher in carcinoma samples than in adenoma samples. Ki-67 and p27 were the markers that exhibited the highest discriminative power for differential diagnosis between carcinomas and all type of adenomas, while IGF2 and StAR were only found to be useful for differentiating between carcinomas and ACAn and between carcinomas and ACAc respectively. The usefulness of Ki-67 has been recognized before in the differential diagnosis of malignant tumors. The additional use of p27 as an elective marker to distinguish benign ACTs from malignant ACTs should be considered.


Medicine | 2017

Should Roux-en-y gastric bypass biliopancreatic limb length be tailored to achieve improved diabetes outcomes?

Mário Nora; Tiago Morais; Rui de Almeida; Marta Guimarães

Abstract The objective is to access the role of Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) biliopancreatic limb (BPL) length in type 2 diabetes (T2D) outcomes. RYGB is more effective than medical intervention for T2D treatment in obese patients. Despite the scarcity of available data, previous reports suggest that modifications of the RYGB limb lengths could improve the antidiabetic effects of the surgery. A cohort of obese T2D patients (n = 114) were submitted to laparoscopic RYGB, either with a standard BPL (SBPL) (n = 41; BPL 84 ± 2 cm) or long BPL (LBPL) (n = 73; BPL = 200 cm) and routinely monitored for weight loss and diabetic status up to 5 years after surgery. Baseline clinical features in the 2 patient subgroups were similar. After surgery, there was a significant reduction of body mass index (BMI) in both the groups, although the percentage of excess BMI loss (%EBMIL) after 5 years was higher for LBPL (75.50 ± 2.63 LBPL vs 65.90 ± 3.61 SBPL, P = .04). T2D remission rate was also higher (73% vs 55%, P < .05), while disease relapse rate (13.0% vs 32.5%; P < .05) and antidiabetic drug requirement in patients with persistent diabetes were lower after LBPL. Preoperative T2D duration predicted disease remission, but only for SBPL. RYGB with a longer BPL improves %EBMIL, T2D remission, and glycemic control in those with persistent disease, while it decreases diabetes relapse rate over time. The antidiabetic effects of LBPL RYGB also are less influenced by the preoperative disease duration. These data suggest the RYGB procedure could be tailored to improve T2D outcomes.


European thyroid journal | 2017

Lymph Node Metastases in Papillary and Medullary Thyroid Carcinoma Are Independent of Intratumoral Lymphatic Vessel Density

Filipe Pereira; Sofia S Pereira; Marta Mesquita; Tiago Morais; Madalena Costa; Pedro Quelhas; Carlos Lopes; Valeriano Leite

Background: Blood and lymph vessel invasion are well-recognized markers of tumor aggressiveness, as these are the routes that lead to metastases. Thyroid tumors, depending on the histological variant, tend to have distinctive biological behaviors and use different vascular routes to metastasize, yet the mechanisms underlying the metastatic process are still poorly understood. Objectives: The aim of this study was to assess how the lymph vessel density (LVD) in different histological types of thyroid tumors, and in their surrounding tissue, correlate with the presence of lymph node metastases (LNM) and tumor pathological features. Methods: Lymph vessels of papillary thyroid carcinomas (PTC), of the classical (CVPTC, n = 50) and follicular variants (FVPTC, n = 18), and medullary thyroid carcinomas (MTC, n = 34) were immunohistochemically stained against antigen D2-40. The stained area was quantified using a computerized morphometric analysis tool and correlated with the tumor pathological characteristics. Results: LVD within all analyzed thyroid tumor subtypes was significantly lower than in the surrounding thyroid tissues (p < 0.001). Despite intratumoral LVD being significantly higher in CVPTC than in FVPTC, and peritumoral LVD being significantly higher in MTC than in PTC (p < 0.05), no correlations were found between LVD (either intratumoral or peritumoral) and the presence of lymph node metastasis. Conclusions: As no LVD differences were found amongst thyroid tumors with or without LNM, dissemination is more likely to depend on the tumor ability to invade the abundant lymph vessel network of the surrounding thyroid tissue than on the ability of the tumor to promote de novo lymphangiogenesis.


Vaccine: Development and Therapy | 2014

Vaccines for metabolic diseases: current perspectives

Tiago Morais; Sara Andrade; Sofia S Pereira

License. The full terms of the License are available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/. Non-commercial uses of the work are permitted without any further permission from Dove Medical Press Limited, provided the work is properly attributed. Permissions beyond the scope of the License are administered by Dove Medical Press Limited. Information on how to request permission may be found at: http://www.dovepress.com/permissions.php Vaccine: Development and Therapy 2014:4 55–72 Vaccine: Development and Therapy Dovepress


Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 2018

Differential GIP/GLP-1 intestinal cell distribution in diabetics’ yields distinctive rearrangements depending on Roux-en-Y biliopancreatic limb length

António M. Palha; Sofia S Pereira; Madalena Costa; Tiago Morais; André F. Maia; Marta Guimarães; Mário Nora

As incretins are known to play an important role in type 2 diabetics (T2D) improvement observed after Roux‐en‐Y gastric bypass (RYGB), our aim was to assess whether increasing the length of RYGB biliopancreatic limb in T2D would modify the incretin staining cell density found after the gastric outlet. Small intestine biopsies (n = 38) were harvested during RYGB at two different distances from the duodenal angle; either 60‐90 cm (n = 28), from non‐diabetic (n = 18) patients, and T2D (n = 10), or 200 cm (n = 10) from T2D. GIP and GLP‐1 staining cells were identified by immunohistochemistry and GLP‐1/GIP co‐staining cells by immunofluorescence. Incretin staining cell density at the proximal small intestine of T2D and non‐diabetic individuals was similar. At 200 cm, T2D patients depicted a significantly lower GIP staining cell density (0.181 ± 0.016 vs 0.266 ± 0.033, P = 0.038) with a similar GLP‐1 staining cell density when compared to the proximal gut. GIP/GLP‐1 co‐staining cells was similar in all studied groups. In T2D patients, the incretin staining cells density in the distal intestine is significantly different from the proximal gut. Thus, a longer RYGB biliopancreatic limb produces a distinctive incretin cell pattern at the gastro‐enteric anastomosis that can result in different endocrine profiles.

Collaboration


Dive into the Tiago Morais's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge