Vera Lúcia Costa Vale
Federal University of Bahia
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Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology | 2003
Bruno Jean Adrien Paule; Vasco Azevedo; Lia Regis; Renato Carminati; C.R Bahia; Vera Lúcia Costa Vale; Lilia F. Moura-Costa; Songeli Menezes Freire; Ivana Nascimento; Robert Schaer; A.M Goes; Roberto Meyer
Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis is the cause of caseous lymphadenitis (CLA) in small ruminants, a chronic granulomatous disease that provokes significant zootechnics losses to ovine and goat breeders in northern Brazil. The present work was conducted to analyse aspects of humoral and cellular immune responses after experimental infection. Eight goats were infected intradermally with a single dose of virulent C. pseudotuberculosis strain and specific IgG, interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) production as well as IgG avidity and antigens pattern recognition dynamics against an excreted-secreted antigen were recorded during 20 weeks. At the end of the follow-up, animals were slaughtered and necropsied. Although no animals showed apparent clinical signs of infection at the end of the trial, IFN-gamma response, even more so than the humoral response, differentiated animals into two groups of high or medium/low response. The time-course of IFN-gamma production presented a short-lived primary response on day 5 after infection of animals of both groups, and a strong and long lasting secondary response starting on day 16 after infection in the high response group. The indirect ELISA used was able to detect a positive antibody titre between 6 and 11 days after infection in the two groups. IgG avidity index oscillated initially between 15 and 45%, and showed approximately 5% units increment during the 20 follow-up weeks. With only one individual exception, the qualitative antigens pattern recognition showed on day 11 after infection remained constant through the experiment. IgG avidity is highly correlated with IgG production, but could not be related with specific immunodominant bands. Both humoral and cellular responses kinetics presented a similar pattern of activation/deactivation but necropsy results suggested that the IFN-gamma test would be a very specific marker of CLA status.
Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology | 2008
Lilia F. Moura-Costa; Robson Bahia; Renato Carminati; Vera Lúcia Costa Vale; Bruno Jean Adrien Paule; Ricardo Wagner Portela; Songeli Menezes Freire; Ivana Nascimento; Robert Schaer; L.M.S. Barreto; Roberto Meyer
Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis is the etiologic agent of caseous lymphadenitis, a disease that affects goats and sheep, and can cause severe economic losses. In this study, four different antigenic extracts were obtained from the attenuated strain T1, which was isolated in the state of Bahia (Brazil). Forty-four Canindé breed goats were divided in five groups, each receiving a different antigen solution and saline buffer as a control. The humoral response was monitored through the identification of specific IgG by indirect ELISA and Western Blotting, and the production of IFN-gamma was followed in order to observe the activation of cellular response. After twelve weeks of antigen inoculation, the animals were challenged with 2 x 10(5)CFU of a wild strain, also isolated in Bahia, and necropsy was performed on all animals twelve weeks afterwards. It was observed that the attenuated bacteria gave a protection of 33.3%, in addition to the weak humoral response elicited. Animals inoculated with secreted antigen associated with Freunds incomplete adjuvant and oligodeoxynucleotide containing unmethylated CpG dinucleotides (CpG ODN) showed a strong humoral response, but this inoculation could not prevent the spread of challenge bacteria in the majority of animals. These results demonstrate the immunogenic potential of the attenuated T1 strain in the development of a vaccine against caseous lymphadenitis in goats.
Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation | 2011
Miriam F. Rebouças; Ricardo Wagner Portela; Danielle D. Lima; Dan Loureiro; Bruno Lopes Bastos; Lilia F. Moura-Costa; Vera Lúcia Costa Vale; Anderson Miyoshi; Vasco Azevedo; Roberto Meyer
In the current study, the applicability of the quantification of gamma interferon (IFN-γ) levels for the detection of animals infected with Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis and for determining caseous lymphadenitis (CLA) clinical status was evaluated. Peripheral blood leukocytes were collected from CLA nonendemic areas animals, from CLA seropositive animals without clinical signs of the disease, and from seropositive animals presenting CLA clinical signs. The leukocytes were stimulated with C. pseudotuberculosis—secreted antigens that were concentrated by the three-phase partitioning technique. An ovine IFN-γ enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was used to quantify IFN-γ production. Goats and sheep with CLA had higher IFN-γ levels than uninfected seronegative animals. Leukocytes from sheep with CLA chronic abscesses produced higher IFN-γ levels when compared with seropositive sheep without CLA clinical signs, but this difference was not significant in goats. The sensitivity of the assay was 55.8% and 56%, whereas the specificity was 100% and 93%, for goats and sheep, respectively. In conclusion, IFN-γ is a potential marker for the determination of CLA infection status in small ruminants; however, further research is needed to improve assay sensitivity.
Research in Veterinary Science | 2011
Maria Zoraida Daltro de Oliveira; Vera Lúcia Costa Vale; Lara Borges Keid; Songeli Menezes Freire; Roberto Meyer; Ricardo Wagner Portela; Stella Maria Barrouin-Melo
In the present study, the validation of an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for serodiagnosis of canine brucellosis is described. Two different antigenic extracts, obtained by heat or ultrasonic homogenization of microbial antigens from a wild isolate of Brucella canis bacteria, were compared by ELISA and Western blot (WB). A total of 145 canine sera were used to define sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of the ELISA as follows: (1) sera from 34 animals with natural B. canis infection, confirmed by blood culture and PCR, as well as 51 sera samples from healthy dogs with negative results by the agar-gel immunodiffusion (AGID) test for canine brucellosis, were used as the control panel for B. canis infection; and (2) to scrutinize the possibility of cross reactions with other common dog infections in the same geographical area in Brazil, 60 sera samples from dogs harboring known infections by Leptospira sp., Ehrlichia canis, canine distemper virus (CDV), Neospora caninum, Babesia canis and Leishmania chagasi (10 in each group) were included in the study. The ELISA using heat soluble bacterial extract (HE-antigen) as antigen showed the best values of sensitivity (91.18%), specificity (100%) and accuracy (96.47%). In the WB analyses, the HE-antigen showed no cross-reactivity with sera from dogs with different infections, while the B. canis sonicate had various protein bands identified by those sera. The performance of the ELISA standardized with the heat soluble B. canis antigen indicates that this assay can be used as a reliable and practical method to confirm infection by this microorganism, as well as a tool for seroepidemiological studies.
Dental Press Journal of Orthodontics | 2014
Milene de Freitas Lima Salomão; Sílvia Regina de Almeida Reis; Vera Lúcia Costa Vale; Cíntia de Vasconcellos Machado; Roberto Meyer; Ivana Nascimento
Objective This article aimed at identifying the expression of fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2) and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in the tension and pressure areas of rat periodontal ligament, in different periods of experimental orthodontic tooth movement. Methods An orthodontic force of 0.5 N was applied to the upper right first molar of 18 male Wistar rats for periods of 3 (group I), 7 (group II) and 14 days (group III). The counter-side first molar was used as a control. The animals were euthanized at the aforementioned time periods, and their maxillary bone was removed and fixed. After demineralization, the specimens were histologically processed and embedded in paraffin. FGF-2 and VEGF expressions were studied through immunohistochemistry and morphological analysis. Results The experimental side showed a higher expression of both FGF-2 and VEGF in all groups, when compared with the control side (P < 0.05). Statistically significant differences were also found between the tension and pressure areas in the experimental side. Conclusion Both FGF-2 and VEGF are expressed in rat periodontal tissue. Additionally, these growth factors are upregulated when orthodontic forces are applied, thereby suggesting that they play an important role in changes that occur in periodontal tissue during orthodontic movement.
Planta Medica | 2009
Renata Roseghini; Georgenes Morato Falcão; José Fernando Oliveira Costa; Jorge Clarêncio; Ivana Nascimento; Eudes da Silva Velozo; Robert Schaer; Vera Lúcia Costa Vale; Silvia Lima Costa; Maria de Fátima Dias Costa; M. Tardy; Roberto Meyer; Songeli Menezes Freire
The effects of arborinine, an alkaloid extracted from Erthela bahiensis and of rutin, a flavonoid obtained from Dimorphandra mollis (Benth.), Brazilian medicinal plants, on the viability and function of a murine B-cell hybridoma as a tumor model were investigated. The flavonoid rutin at 50 microM induced an increase in the number of apoptotic cells of one- to fivefold and reductions in cellular proliferation and monoclonal antibody production. Less but still significant necrosis was also induced by rutin under the same experimental conditions. On the other hand, the alkaloid arborinine exerted no significant effects on the studied parameters.
BMC Microbiology | 2014
Andréia Pacheco de Souza; Vera Lúcia Costa Vale; Marcos da Costa Silva; Inara Barbosa de Oliveira Araújo; Soraya Castro Trindade; Lilia F. Moura-Costa; Gabriele Rodrigues; Tatiane Santana Sales; Heidiane Alves dos Santos; Paulo Cirino de Carvalho-Filho; Milton Galdino de Oliveira-Neto; Robert Schaer; Roberto Meyer
BackgroundCaseous lymphadenitis (CL) is a contagious infectious disease of small ruminants caused by Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis. Is characterized by the formation of abscesses in the lymph nodes and intestines of infected animals, induced by inflammatory cytokines. The production of cytokines, such as IL-10, TNF-α, IL-4 and IFN-γ, is regulated by mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway activation. The present study investigated the involvement of MAPK pathways (MAPK p38, ERK 1 and ERK 2) with respect to the production of cytokines induced by antigens secreted by C. pseudotuberculosis over a 60-day course of infection. CBA mice (n = 25) were divided into three groups and infected with 102 colony forming units (CFU) of attenuated strain T1, 102 CFU of virulent strain VD57 or sterile saline solution and euthanized after 30 or 60 days. Murine splenocytes were treated with specific inhibitors (MAPK p38 inhibitor, ERK 1/2 inhibitor or ERK 2 inhibitor) and cultured with secreted antigens obtained from pathogenic bacteria (SeT1 or SeVD57).ResultsThe MAPK pathways evaluated were observed to be involved in the production of IL-10, under stimulation by secreted antigens, while the MAPK p38 and ERK 1 pathways were shown to be primarily involved in TNF-α production. By contrast, no involvement of the MAPK p38 and ERK 1 and 2 pathways was observed in IFN-γ production, while the ERK 2 pathway demonstrated involvement in IL-4 production only in the mouse splenocytes infected with VD57 under stimulation by SeT1.ConclusionThe authors hypothesize that MAPK p38 and ERK 1 pathways with respect to TNF-α production, as well as the MAPK p38 and ERK 1 and 2 pathways in relation to IL-10 production under infection by C. pseudotuberculosis are important regulators of cellular response. Additionally, the lack of the MAPK p38 and ERK 1/2 pathways in IFN-γ production in infected CBA murine cells stimulated with the two secreted/excreted antigens, in IL-4 production showing involvement only via the ERK 2 pathway under stimulation by SeT1 antigen during 60-day infection period with the virulent strain, suggests that these pathways regulated the production of pro-inflammatory and regulatory cytokines in the splenic cells of CBA mice.
Immunopharmacology and Immunotoxicology | 2006
R. Roseghini; P. Moreira; Vera Lúcia Costa Vale; Alexandre Moraes Pinheiro; J.F.O. Costa; T. Bittencourt; Ivana Nascimento; Robert Schaer; Eudes da Silva Velozo; R. El-Bachá; Roberto Meyer; Songeli Menezes Freire
The present study has examined the effects of arborinine, an alkaloid obtained from Erthela bahiensis, a Brazilian plant popularly used as diuretic, antidiabetic, antithermic and expectorant, on the viability and function of immune system cells in vitro using a murine model. Rat spleen and thymus cells were cultured with 10nM, 1µM e 10µM of the drug in the presence or absence of pokeweed (PWM), lipopolysaccharide (LPS), or concanavallin (ConA) mitogens. Cellular proliferation was analyzed by H3‐thymidin uptake after 48 and 72 hr. Our results showed an inhibitory effect of arborinine on splenocytes proliferation under ConA or PWM stimulation and increased apoptosis on splenocytes and thymocytes stimulated with PWM in 24 hr. A decrease was observed on Interferon gamma (IFN-γ) production by ConA- or LPS-stimulated splenocytes in 48 hr and 72 hr and ConA- or PWM-stimulated thymocytes in 72 hr. In contrast, an increase on lymphoproliferation was observed on LPS-stimulated splenocytes and ConA- or PWM-stimulated thymocytes in 48 hr. On this period, apoptosis decreased on LPS- or PWM-stimulated splenocytes and IFN-γ production increased in PWM stimulated thymocytes. Arborinine also induced a decrease on Interleukin-10 production by splenocytes and thymocytes stimulated with ConA or PWM. There was no significant variation on the necrosis rate of the cells treated with arborinine or any change on their viability or function values in the absence of mitogenic stimulus.
Revista de Ciências Médicas e Biológicas | 2004
Bruno Jean Adrien Paule; Vasco Azevedo; Lilia F. Moura-Costa; Songeli Menezes Freire; Lia Regis; Vera Lúcia Costa Vale; Robson Bahia; Renato Carminati; Ivana Nascimento; Roberto Meyer
Different techniques to isolate secreted, cell-surface located and somatic fractions of Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis have been studied by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting, by using a pool of sera from naturally infected goats. The secreted antigens were obtained from culture supernatant of the bacteria grown in a chemically defined medium or in Brain Heart Infusion medium. The surface fraction was obtained by NaCl 1 M treatment and the somatic ones were obtained by using distinct procedures (detergents and ultrasounds). By Coomassie blue staining, we observed 20 bands in the secreted fraction, 35 bands in the surface extract and 40 to 50 bands in the somatic fraction, depending on the extraction procedure. Sixteen immunoreactive proteins were detected among the studied fractions. Bands with molecular weights of 125, 108, 75, 68, 41, 40, 31 and 24 kDa were recognized with higher intensity and all of them were found in the secreted fraction. The use of the chemically defined medium allowed us to evidence the presence of proteins with high molecular masses in the secreted fraction of C. pseudotuberculosis, which had not been previously described.
Protein Expression and Purification | 2004
Bruno Jean Adrien Paule; Roberto Meyer; Lilia F. Moura-Costa; Robson Bahia; Renato Carminati; Lia Regis; Vera Lúcia Costa Vale; Songeli Menezes Freire; Ivana Nascimento; Robert Schaer; Vasco Azevedo