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Dive into the research topics where Ursula Paula Reno Soci is active.

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Featured researches published by Ursula Paula Reno Soci.


Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2012

Swimming training in rats increases cardiac MicroRNA-126 expression and angiogenesis.

Natan D. Silva; Tiago Fernandes; Ursula Paula Reno Soci; Alex Willian A. Monteiro; M. Ian Phillips; Edilamar Menezes de Oliveira

PURPOSE MicroRNA (miRNA)-126 is angiogenic and has two validated targets: Sprouty-related protein 1 (Spred-1) and phosphoinositol-3 kinase regulatory subunit 2 (PI3KR2), negative regulators of angiogenesis by VEGF pathway inhibition. We investigated the role of swimming training on cardiac miRNA-126 expression related to angiogenesis. METHODS Female Wistar rats were assigned to three groups: sedentary (S), training 1 (T1, moderate volume), and training 2 (T2, high volume). T1 consisted of 60 min·d of swimming, five times per week for 10 wk with 5% body overload. T2 consisted of the same protocol of T1 until the eighth week; in the ninth week, rats trained for two times a day, and in the 10th week, rats trained for three times a day. MiRNA and PI3KR2 gene expression analysis was performed by real-time polymerase chain reaction in heart muscle. We assessed markers of training, the cardiac capillary-fiber ratio, cardiac protein expression of VEGF, Spred-1, Raf-1/ERK 1/2, and PI3K/Akt/eNOS. RESULTS The cardiac capillary-fiber ratio increased in T1 (58%) and T2 (101%) compared with S. VEGF protein expression was increased 42% in T1 and 108% in T2. Cardiac miRNA-126 expression increased 26% (T1) and 42% (T2) compared with S, correlated with angiogenesis. The miRNA-126 target Spred-1 protein level decreased 41% (T1) and 39% (T2), which consequently favored an increase in angiogenic signaling pathway Raf-1/ERK 1/2. On the other hand, the gene expression of PI3KR2, the other miRNA-126 target, was reduced 39% (T1) and 78% (T2), and there was an increase in protein expression of components of the PI3K/Akt/eNOS signaling pathway in the trained groups. CONCLUSIONS This study showed that aerobic training promotes an increase in the expression of miRNA-126 and that this may be related to exercise-induced cardiac angiogenesis, by indirect regulation of the VEGF pathway and direct regulation of its targets that converged in an increase in angiogenic pathways, such as MAPK and PI3K/Akt/eNOS.


Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2011

Eccentric and concentric cardiac hypertrophy induced by exercise training: microRNAs and molecular determinants

Thadeu Rangel Fernandes; Ursula Paula Reno Soci; Edilamar Menezes de Oliveira

Among the molecular, biochemical and cellular processes that orchestrate the development of the different phenotypes of cardiac hypertrophy in response to physiological stimuli or pathological insults, the specific contribution of exercise training has recently become appreciated. Physiological cardiac hypertrophy involves complex cardiac remodeling that occurs as an adaptive response to static or dynamic chronic exercise, but the stimuli and molecular mechanisms underlying transduction of the hemodynamic overload into myocardial growth are poorly understood. This review summarizes the physiological stimuli that induce concentric and eccentric physiological hypertrophy, and discusses the molecular mechanisms, sarcomeric organization, and signaling pathway involved, also showing that the cardiac markers of pathological hypertrophy (atrial natriuretic factor, β-myosin heavy chain and α-skeletal actin) are not increased. There is no fibrosis and no cardiac dysfunction in eccentric or concentric hypertrophy induced by exercise training. Therefore, the renin-angiotensin system has been implicated as one of the regulatory mechanisms for the control of cardiac function and structure. Here, we show that the angiotensin II type 1 (AT1) receptor is locally activated in pathological and physiological cardiac hypertrophy, although with exercise training it can be stimulated independently of the involvement of angiotensin II. Recently, microRNAs (miRs) have been investigated as a possible therapeutic approach since they regulate the translation of the target mRNAs involved in cardiac hypertrophy; however, miRs in relation to physiological hypertrophy have not been extensively investigated. We summarize here profiling studies that have examined miRs in pathological and physiological cardiac hypertrophy. An understanding of physiological cardiac remodeling may provide a strategy to improve ventricular function in cardiac dysfunction.


World Journal of Cardiology | 2014

Exercise training in hypertension: Role of microRNAs.

Vander José das Neves; Tiago Fernandes; Fernanda Roberta Roque; Ursula Paula Reno Soci; Stéphano Freitas Soares Melo; Edilamar Menezes de Oliveira

Hypertension is a complex disease that constitutes an important public health problem and demands many studies in order to understand the molecular mechanisms involving his pathophysiology. Therefore, an increasing number of studies have been conducted and new therapies are continually being discovered. In this context, exercise training has emerged as an important non-pharmacological therapy to treat hypertensive patients, minimizing the side effects of pharmacological therapies and frequently contributing to allow pharmacotherapy to be suspended. Several mechanisms have been associated with the pathogenesis of hypertension, such as hyperactivity of the sympathetic nervous system and renin-angiotensin aldosterone system, impaired endothelial nitric oxide production, increased oxygen-reactive species, vascular thickening and stiffening, cardiac hypertrophy, impaired angiogenesis, and sometimes genetic predisposition. With the advent of microRNAs (miRNAs), new insights have been added to the perspectives for the treatment of this disease, and exercise training has been shown to be able to modulate the miRNAs associated with it. Elucidation of the relationship between exercise training and miRNAs in the pathogenesis of hypertension is fundamental in order to understand how exercise modulates the cardiovascular system at genetic level. This can be promising even for the development of new drugs. This article is a review of how exercise training acts on hypertension by means of specific miRNAs in the heart, vascular system, and skeletal muscle.


Clinics | 2011

Moderate exercise training promotes adaptations in coronary blood flow and adenosine production in normotensive rats

Fernanda Roberta Roque; Ursula Paula Reno Soci; Kátia De Angelis; Marcele A. Coelho; Cristina R. Furstenau; Dalton Valentim Vassallo; Maria Claudia Irigoyen; Edilamar Menezes de Oliveira

OBJECTIVES: Aerobic exercise training prevents cardiovascular risks. Regular exercise promotes functional and structural adaptations that are associated with several cardiovascular benefits. The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of swimming training on coronary blood flow, adenosine production and cardiac capillaries in normotensive rats. METHODS: Wistar rats were randomly divided into two groups: control (C) and trained (T). An exercise protocol was performed for 10 weeks and 60 min/day with a tail overload of 5% bodyweight. Coronary blood flow was quantified with a color microsphere technique, and cardiac capillaries were quantified using light microscopy. Adenine nucleotide hydrolysis was evaluated by enzymatic activity, and protein expression was evaluated by western blot. The results are presented as the means ± SEMs (p<0.05). RESULTS: Exercise training increased the coronary blood flow and the myocardial capillary-to-fiber ratio. Moreover, the circulating and cardiac extracellular adenine nucleotide hydrolysis was higher in the trained rats than in the sedentary rats due to the increased activity and protein expression of enzymes, such as E-NTPDase and 5′-nucleotidase. CONCLUSIONS: Swimming training increases coronary blood flow, number of cardiac capillaries, and adenine nucleotide hydrolysis. Increased adenosine production may be an important contributor to the enhanced coronary blood flow and angiogenesis that were observed in the exercise-trained rats; collectively, these results suggest improved myocardial perfusion.


Archive | 2012

Signaling Pathways that Mediate Skeletal Muscle Hypertrophy: Effects of Exercise Training

Tiago Fernandes; Ursula Paula Reno Soci; Stéphano Freitas Soares Melo; Cleber R. Alves; Edilamar Menezes de Oliveira

© 2012 Oliveira et al., licensee InTech. This is an open access chapter distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Signaling Pathways that Mediate Skeletal Muscle Hypertrophy: Effects of Exercise Training


Journal of Hypertension | 2012

1011 ANGIOTENSIN II PROMOTES SKELETAL MUSCLE ANGIOGENESIS INDUCED BY EXERCISE TRAINING: ROLE of microRNAs-27a and 27b

Tiago Fernandes; Natan Daniel da Silva Junior; Ursula Paula Reno Soci; Everton do Carmo; Glória de Fátima Alves da Mota; Victoria Cachofeiro; Vicenti Lahera; Edilamar Menezes de Oliveira

Background: MicroRNAs-27a and -27b target the ACE. We investigated the effects of exercise training (ET) on soleus microRNAs-27a and 27b expression and whether they regulate the skeletal muscle renin angiotensin system (RAS) in ET-induced angiogenesis. Methods: Wistar rats (n = 30) were assigned to 3 groups: (1) sedentary; (2) swimming trained with protocol 1 (T1, moderate-volume training); and (3) protocol 2 (T2, high-volume training). Soleus microRNAs-27a and -27b were analyzed by real-time PCR and ACE activity and protein expression by fluorometric method and western blotting, respectively. Soleus angiotensin II and VEGF concentration were evaluated by ELISA. Angiotensinogen and Angiotensin II type 1 (AT1) receptor protein expression also were measured. RAS involvement in the soleus angiogenesis induced by ET was analyzed using AT1 receptor blockade (Losartan- 20 mg/kg/day) during ET protocol. Results: Skeletal muscle angiogenesis obtained by T1 and T2 was 87% and 137%, respectively. In contrast, Losartan prevented the soleus angiogenesis in both trained groups. Soleus microRNA-27a levels decreased 23% in both trained groups. Similar, microRNA-27b reduced 23% in T1 and 32% in T2 paralleled with an increase in ACE protein levels. Soleus angiotensinogen (52% in T1 and 96% in T2), angiotensin II (26% in T1 and 46% in T2) and VEGF levels (30% in T1 and 60% in T2) also were higher in all trained groups. In addition, AT1 receptor protein levels increased after training (39% in T1 and 48% in T2). Conclusions: RAS participates ET-induced skeletal muscle angiogenesis providing a new target for modulating vascular formation and suggest that microRNA-27 can be a potential therapeutic target for pathological conditions involving capillary rarefaction.


Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity | 2017

Exercise Training Restores Cardiac MicroRNA-1 and MicroRNA-29c to Nonpathological Levels in Obese Rats

André C. Silveira; Tiago Fernandes; Ursula Paula Reno Soci; João Lucas Penteado Gomes; Diego Barretti; Glória G. F. Mota; Carlos Eduardo Negrão; Edilamar Menezes de Oliveira

We previously reported that aerobic exercise training (AET) consisted of 10 weeks of 60-min swimming sessions, and 5 days/week AET counteracts CH in obesity. Here, we evaluated the role of microRNAs and their target genes that are involved in heart collagen deposition and calcium signaling, as well as the cardiac remodeling induced by AET in obese Zucker rats. Among the four experimental Zucker groups: control lean rats (LZR), control obese rats (OZR), trained lean rats (LZR + TR), and trained obese rats (OZR + TR), heart weight was greater in the OZR than in the LZR group due to increased cardiac intramuscular fat and collagen. AET seems to exert a protective role in normalizing the heart weight in the OZR + TR group. Cardiac microRNA-29c expression was decreased in OZR compared with the LZR group, paralleled by an increase in the collagen volumetric fraction (CVF). MicroRNA-1 expression was upregulated while the expression of its target gene NCX1 was decreased in OZR compared with the LZR group. Interestingly, AET restored cardiac microRNA-1 to nonpathological levels in the OZR-TR group. Our findings suggest that AET could be used as a nonpharmacological therapy for the reversal of pathological cardiac remodeling and cardiac dysfunction in obesity.


Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity | 2017

Obesity Downregulates MicroRNA-126 Inducing Capillary Rarefaction in Skeletal Muscle: Effects of Aerobic Exercise Training

João Lucas Penteado Gomes; Tiago Fernandes; Ursula Paula Reno Soci; André C. Silveira; Diego Barretti; Carlos Eduardo Negrão; Edilamar Menezes de Oliveira

Background. We investigated the effects of exercise training (ET) on miR-126 levels and skeletal muscle angiogenesis in obese Zucker rats. Results. Zucker rats were randomly assigned to sedentary and swimming-trained groups: lean sedentary (LS) and trained (LTR); obese sedentary (OB) and trained (OBTR). The OB group displayed capillary rarefaction compared with the LS group. In contrast, ET increased the capillary/fiber ratio by 38% in the LTR group and normalized capillary rarefaction in the OBTR group. VEGF, PI3K, and eNOS levels were reduced in the skeletal muscle of the OB group. ET normalized VEGF, PI3K, and eNOS levels in OBTR, contributing to vascular network homeostasis. PI3KR2 inhibits PI3K, a key mediator of the VEGF signaling pathway. Obesity decreased miR-126 and increased PI3KR2 levels compared with the LS group. However, ET normalized miR-126 levels in the OBTR group versus the LS group and decreased expression of PI3KR2. Conclusion. Our findings show that obesity leads to skeletal muscle capillary rarefaction, which is regulated by decreased miR-126 levels and increased PI3KR2. Inversely, ET normalizes miR-126 levels and VEGF signaling and should be considered an important therapeutic strategy for vascular disorders.


Revista Brasileira de Educação Física e Esporte | 2009

Esteróide anabolizante inibe a angiogênese induzida pelo treinamento físico de natação em músculo sóleo de ratos normotensos

Ursula Paula Reno Soci; Fernanda Roberta Roque Redondo; Tiago Fernandes; Kátia De Angelis; Maria Claudia Irigoyen; Marcele A. Coelho; Edilamar Menezes de Oliveira

Androgenic anabolic steroids (EAA) are synthetic derivatives of testosterone, used in therapeutic dosages in medical practice and in high doses by physically active people that could be health damaging. To study the effects of EAA on the cardiovascular system, Wistar rats were randomized into Sedentary Control (SC), Sedentary Steroid (SA), Trained Control (TC) and Trained Steroid (TA) groups. We evaluated the effects of swimming training (60min/day, 5x/week during 10 week) and AAS (nandrolone decanoate - 5 mg/kg sc, 2x/week) on cardiac output, basal blood flow (Qb, DC basal) and after injection of a vasodilator to observe the endothelium dependent vasodilatation (acetylcholine - Q Ach)(Q Ach, DC Ach), capillary to fiber ratio (r c/f) and vascular-endothelial growth factor expression (VEGF) in soleus muscle (oxidative fibers). Serum testosterone increased in SA and TA. Exercise training significantly decreased resting heart rate. Qb was not different among groups, and QAch was higher in TC group, however in TA group this beneficial effect of swimming exercise training was lost by association with EAA. Rc/f and VEGF were higher only in TC group. These results suggest that swimming training associated with EAA inhibit angiogenesis and arteriogenesis observed as effects of aerobic training, and impairs the red skeletal muscle blood flow which predispose physically active AAS users to vascular diseases.


Obesity Facts | 2018

Exercise Training Restores the Cardiac Microrna-16 Levels Preventing Microvascular Rarefaction in Obese Zucker Rats

Tiago Fernandes; Lilian Casaes; Ursula Paula Reno Soci; André C. Silveira; João Lucas Penteado Gomes; Diego Barretti; Fernanda Roberta Roque; Edilamar Menezes de Oliveira

Objective: To evaluate the effects of aerobic exercise training (AET) on cardiac miRNA-16 levels and its target gene VEGF related to microvascular rarefaction in obese Zucker rats (OZR). Methods: OZR (n = 11) and lean (L; n = 10) male rats were assigned into 4 groups: OZR, trained OZR (OZRT), L and trained L (LT). Swimming exercise training lasted 60 min, 1×/day/10 weeks, with 4% body weight workload. Cardiac angiogenesis was assessed by histological analysis (periodic acid-Schiff) by calculating the capillary/fiber ratio. The protein expressions of VEGF, VEGFR2, and CD31 were evaluated by western blot. The expression of miRNA-16 was evaluated by real-time PCR. Results: Heart rate decreased in the trained groups compared to sedentary groups. The cardiac capillary/fiber ratio was reduced in OZR compared to L, LT and OZRT groups, indicating that aerobic exercise training (AET) was capable of reversing the microvascular rarefaction in the obese animals. miRNA-16 expression was increased in OZR compared to L, LT and OZRT. In contrast, its target, VEGF protein expression was 24% lower in OZR compared to L group, which has been normalized in OZRT group. VEGFR2 protein expression was increased in trained groups compared to their controls. CD31, a endothelial cells marker, showed increased expression in OZRT compared to OZR, indicating greater vascularization in OZRT group. Conclusion: AET induced cardiac angiogenesis in obese animals. This revascularization is associated with a decrease in miRNA-16 expression permissive for increased VEGF protein expression, suggesting a mechanism for potential therapeutic application in vascular diseases.

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Diego Barretti

University of São Paulo

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