13 resultados para Gaspar de Bono , Beato-Canonización

em Repositório Digital da UNIVERSIDADE DA MADEIRA - Portugal


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Disease, injury, and age problems compromise human quality of life and continuously motivate the search for new and more efficacious therapeutic approaches. The field of Tissue Regeneration and Engineering has greatly evolved over the last years, mainly due to the combination of the important advances verified in Biomaterials Science and Engineering with those of Cell and Molecular Biology. In particular, a new and promising area arose – Nanomedicine – that takes advantage of the extremely small size and especial chemical and physical properties of Nanomaterials, offering powerful tools for health improvement. Research on Stem Cells, the self-renewing progenitors of body tissues, is also challenging to the medical and scientific communities, being expectable the appearance of new and exciting stem cell-based therapies in the next years. The control of cell behavior (namely, of cell proliferation and differentiation) is of key importance in devising strategies for Tissue Regeneration and Engineering. Cytokines, growth factors, transcription factors and other signaling molecules, most of them proteins, have been identified and found to regulate and support tissue development and regeneration. However, the application of these molecules in long-term regenerative processes requires their continuous presence at high concentrations as they usually present short half-lives at physiological conditions and may be rapidly cleared from the body. Alternatively, genes encoding such proteins can be introduced inside cells and be expressed using cell’s machinery, allowing an extended and more sustained production of the protein of interest (gene therapy). Genetic engineering of stem cells is particularly attractive because of their self-renewal capability and differentiation potential. For Tissue Regeneration and Engineering purposes, the patient’s own stem cells can be genetically engineered in vitro and, after, introduced in the body (with or without a scaffold) where they will not only modulate the behavior of native cells (stem cell-mediated gene therapy), but also directly participate in tissue repair. Cells can be genetically engineered using viral and non-viral systems. Viruses, as a result of millions of years of evolution, are very effective for the delivery of genes in several types of cells, including cells from primary sources. However, the risks associated with their use (like infection and immunogenic reactions) are driving the search for non-viral systems that will efficiently deliver genetic material into cells. Among them, chemical methods that are promising and being investigated use cationic molecules as carriers for DNA. In this case, gene delivery and gene expression level remain relatively low when primary cells are used. The main goal of this thesis was to develop and assess the in vitro potential of polyamidoamine (PAMAM) dendrimers based carriers to deliver genes to mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). PAMAM dendrimers are monodispersive, hyperbranched and nanospherical molecules presenting unique characteristics that make them very attractive vehicles for both drug and gene delivery. Although they have been explored for gene delivery in a wide range of cell lines, the interaction and the usefulness of these molecules in the delivery of genes to MSCs remains a field to be explored. Adult MSCs were chosen for the studies due to their potential biomedical applications (they are considered multipotent cells) and because they present several advantages over embryonic stem cells, such as easy accessibility and the inexistence of ethical restrictions to their use. This thesis is divided in 5 interconnected chapters. Chapter I provides an overview of the current literature concerning the various non-viral systems investigated for gene delivery in MSCs. Attention is devoted to physical methods, as well as to chemical methods that make use of polymers (natural and synthetic), liposomes, and inorganic nanoparticles as gene delivery vectors. Also, it summarizes the current applications of genetically engineered mesenchymal stem cells using non-viral systems in regenerative medicine, with special focus on bone tissue regeneration. In Chapter II, the potential of native PAMAM dendrimers with amine termini to transfect MSCs is evaluated. The level of transfection achieved with the dendrimers is, in a first step, studied using a plasmid DNA (pDNA) encoding for the β-galactosidase reporter gene. The effect of dendrimer’s generation, cell passage number, and N:P ratio (where N= number of primary amines in the dendrimer; P= number of phosphate groups in the pDNA backbone) on the level of transfection is evaluated, being the values always very low. In a second step, a pDNA encoding for bone morphogenetic protein-2, a protein that is known for its role in MSCs proliferation and differentiation, is used. The BMP-2 content produced by transfected cells is evaluated by an ELISA assay and its effect on the osteogenic markers is analyzed through several classical assays including alkaline phosphatase activity (an early marker of osteogenesis), osteocalcin production, calcium deposition and mineralized nodules formation (late osteogenesis markers). Results show that a low transfection level is enough to induce in vitro osteogenic differentiation in MSCs. Next, from Chapter III to Chapter V, studies are shown where several strategies are adopted to change the interaction of PAMAM dendrimers with MSCs cell membrane and, as a consequence, to enhance the levels of gene delivery. In Chapter III, generations 5 and 6 of PAMAM dendrimers are surface functionalized with arginine-glycine-aspartic acid (RGD) containing peptides – experiments with dendrimers conjugated to 4, 8 and 16 RGD units were performed. The underlying concept is that by including the RGD integrin-binding motif in the design of the vectors and by forming RGD clusters, the level of transfection will increase as MSCs highly express integrins at their surface. Results show that cellular uptake of functionalized dendrimers and gene expression is enhanced in comparison with the native dendrimers. Furthermore, gene expression is dependent on both the electrostatic interaction established between the dendrimer moiety and the cell surface and the nanocluster RGD density. In Chapter IV, a new family of gene delivery vectors is synthesized consisting of a PAMAM dendrimer (generation 5) core randomly linked at the periphery to alkyl hydrophobic chains that vary in length and number. Herein, the idea is to take advantage of both the cationic nature of the dendrimer and the capacity of lipids to interact with biological membranes. These new vectors show a remarkable capacity for internalizing pDNA, being this effect positively correlated with the –CH2– content present in the hydrophobic corona. Gene expression is also greatly enhanced using the new vectors but, in this case, the higher efficiency is shown by the vectors containing the smallest hydrophobic chains. Finally, chapter V reports the synthesis, characterization and evaluation of novel gene delivery vectors based on PAMAM dendrimers (generation 5) conjugated to peptides with high affinity for MSCs membrane binding - for comparison, experiments are also done with a peptide with low affinity binding properties. These systems present low cytotoxicity and transfection efficiencies superior to those of native dendrimers and partially degraded dendrimers (Superfect®, a commercial product). Furthermore, with this biomimetic approach, the process of gene delivery is shown to be cell surface receptor-mediated. Overall, results show the potential of PAMAM dendrimers to be used, as such or modified, in Tissue Regeneration and Engineering. To our knowledge, this is the first time that PAMAM dendrimers are studied as gene delivery vehicles in this context and using, as target, a cell type with clinical relevancy. It is shown that the cationic nature of PAMAM dendrimers with amine termini can be synergistically combined with surface engineering approaches, which will ultimately result in suitable interactions with the cytoplasmic membrane and enhanced pDNA cellular entry and gene expression. Nevertheless, the quantity of pDNA detected inside cell nucleus is always very small when compared with the bigger amount reaching cytoplasm (accumulation of pDNA is evident in the perinuclear region), suggesting that the main barrier to transfection is the nuclear membrane. Future work can then be envisaged based on the versatility of these systems as biomedical molecular materials, such as the conjugation of PAMAM dendrimers to molecules able to bind nuclear membrane receptors and to promote nuclear translocation.

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Desde há alguns anos que vêm sendo desenvolvidas, em vários sítios do mundo, experiências com a utilização de Robots como uma ferramenta educativa, com especial incidência ao nível do Ensino Superior e em alguns casos no Ensino Básico ou Secundário. Neste trabalho de investigação pretende-se fazer uma análise crítica sobre o uso dos robots no ensino da programação nas disciplinas de Informática do Ensino Secundário e disciplina de Inteligência Artificial da Licenciatura do Curso de Engenharia Informática. Com o objectivo de usar o robot como mediador entre o aluno e o ensino da programação, identificamos os conteúdos programáticos das diversas disciplinas do Ensino Secundário e fizemos o levantamento de ferramentas e soluções tecnológicas existentes que pudessem ser aplicadas nas aulas. Como contributo desta investigação pretende-se: (i)disponibilizar uma série de problemas adequados aos vários conteúdos programáticos, para serem utilizados nas salas de aulas; (ii) criar e optimizar ferramentas, mais concretamente plataformas de programação, para os alunos resolverem os problemas através dos robots.

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Orientador: Luís Alberto da Silva Gaspar

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Marinus Duran; Isabel G. Tavares de Almeida; Helena P. Gaspar Tomás

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O estágio pedagógico, teve como pano de fundo as linhas orientadoras do estágio, o qual foi exercido na Escola Básica dos 2º e 3º Ciclos de São Roque, nomeadamente, no 3º Ciclo no 9º ano de escolaridade. Este permitiu vivenciar e exercer um papel de professor, facultando conhecimentos e dificuldades associados ao primeiro contacto com a profissão de docente. As escolhas e decisões utilizadas ao longo do estágio, quer na prática lectiva, quer nas actividades desenvolvidas, foram fruto de um levantamento efectuado, de forma a dar resposta aos interesses identificados, designadamente, no âmbito das matérias alternativas, na rentabilização dos espaços e materiais que a escola proporciona e com vista a cumprir com o Projecto Curricular de Escola e com o Projecto Educativo. Com este relatório, procuramos entender o sentido de uma pedagogia da Educação Física, de uma unidade de ensino, bem como as suas matérias, o processo da avaliação adoptado, as estratégias aplicadas, os diversos tipos de recursos utilizados, como também todo o planeamento efectuado previamente, de forma a conduzir toda a nossa intervenção. Proporcionamos uma educação, como um processo que aponta garantir o desenvolvimento do indivíduo, nas suas competências e potencialidades, no âmbito da disciplina de Educação Física. Na análise que realizamos, averiguamos que grande parte das escolhas e decisões foram cumpridas pelos alunos e por nós, enquanto professoras estagiárias e daí surgiu a necessidade de descrever e de relatar todos os passos dados no estágio. Assim, possibilitamos aos alunos, um sentido de autonomia, de responsabilidade, de cooperação, de compreensão dos conteúdos e de certa forma, concedendo-lhes um papel de co-gestores, no sentido dos próprios gerirem os seus conhecimentos e competências. Assim, apresentamos uma realidade que está inserida num contexto particular, no qual adoptamos uma actuação coerente e integrada no processo pedagógico, no âmbito da docência da disciplina de Educação Física, que poderia ser diferente numa outra realidade escolar.

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A terapia genética tem se revelado uma ferramenta potente na Medicina, na tentativa de revolucionar o tratamento de várias doenças hereditárias e adquiridas. A introdução de genes em células pretende a expressão estável e prolongada de proteínas com efeitos terapêuticos. O silenciamento de genes, através da terapia genética que faz uso de oligonucleótidos antisense, pequenos RNA de interferência (siRNA) ou ribozimas, visa o decréscimo ou anulação do funcionamento de um gene cuja expressão amplificada, por algum motivo, leva ao desenvolvimento de umapatologia. A internalização de material genético nas células, usualmente, carece de métodos e/ou sistemas de entrega (vectores). Estes podem pertencer a duas categorias, designadamente, métodos virais e métodos não-virais. O primeiro é considerado o mais eficiente, apresentando porém, sérias desvantagens como o risco de carcinogénese. A solução é a utilização de métodos não virais,que podem ser físicos ou químicos. O objectivo principal desta dissertação foi a utilização de dendrímeros para o silenciamento do gene da proteína fluorescente optimizada (EGFP) em células HeLa, previamente modificadas para expressarem esta proteína. Dendrímeros poli(amidoamina) geração 5 (PAMAM G5) modificados com 4 ou 8 moléculas de ácidos gordos de diferentes comprimentos foram complexados com oligonucleótidos antisense. A vantagem que estes apresentam em relação aos dendrímeros nativos é que são capazes de interagir com os lípidos da membrana celular, esperando-se, por isso, uma melhor eficiência de transfecção e efeitos antisense. Isto foi efectivamente verificado, sendo que o nível de silenciamento do gene da EGFP obtido, está directamente relacionado com o aumento da razão NP, o número e o comprimento das cadeias hidrofóbicas. O silencimento de genes tem sofrido grandes avanços, havendo actualmente uma série de ensaios clínicos para a sua utilização no tratamento de doenças como cancros de origem hereditária ou viral, prevendo-se que venha para ficar, juntamente com o silenciamento mediado por siRNA.

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Nesta dissertação, apresenta-se o trabalho realizado no decorrer do segundo ano do Mestrado em Bioquímica Aplicada. Prepararam-se nanopartículas metálicas através da redução química de sais metálicos em solução. Obtiveram-se soluções coloidais monometálicas de Au, Ag e FeOx e bimetálicas de Au/Ag, Ag/Au, FeOx/Au e FeOx/Ag seguindo ou adaptando métodos publicados na literatura. Numa primeira fase foram sintetizadas nanopartículas monometálicas de prata e ouro utilizando-se β-D-glucose, borohidreto de sódio e β-ciclodextrina como agente redutor dos iões metálicos. Seguidamente, por co-redução de uma mistura de iões prepararam-se ligas de nanopartículas de prata e ouro e por redução sucessiva de Ag e Au sintetizaram-se nanopartículas com uma estrutura núcleo-concha. As nanopartículas de FeOx foram preparadas por co-precipitação de Fe (III) e Fe (II). O revestimento com ouro foi conseguido através da redução com citrato de sódio e para a deposição de prata utilizou-se o ácido ascórbico. As soluções coloidais preparadas foram caracterizadas através de estudos de espetroscopia do UV-vis, tendo sido registados os máximos de absorvância característicos do ouro e da prata e os desvios esperados para o caso das nanopartículas núcleo-concha. As análises por dispersão dinâmica de luz permitiram auferir o tamanho das nanopartículas, eventual aglomeração e, portanto, permitiram a apreciação da estabilidade dos coloides. Com o intuito de confirmar a formação de estruturas em camada núcleo-concha foi feita a caracterização das amostras por microscopia eletrónica de transmissão e espetroscopia de raios-X de energia dispersiva. Alguns dos espetros obtidos confirmam o sucesso na preparação de uma estrutura em multicamada. Finalmente, demonstrou-se a biocompatibilidade de algumas amostras preparadas através da realização de estudos de citotoxicidade na linha celular fibroblástica NIH 3T3.

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One of the main goals in Nanomedicine is to create innovative drug delivery systems (DDS) capable of delivering drugs into a specific location with high efficiency. In the development of DDS, some essential properties are desired, such as biocompatibility and biodegradability. Furthermore, an ideal DDS should be able to deliver a drug in a controlled manner and minimize its side effects. These two objectives are still a challenge for researchers all around the world. Nanogels are an excellent vehicle to use in drug delivery and several other applications due to their biocompatibility. They are polymer-based networks, chemically or physically crosslinked, with at least 80-90% water in their composition. Their properties can be tuned, like the nanogel size, multifunctionality and degradability. Nanogels are capable of carrying in their interior bioactive molecules and deliver them into cells. The main objective of this project was to produce nanogels for the delivery of anticancer drugs with the ability of responding to existent stimuli inside cells (cellresponsiveness nanogels) and/or of controlled drug delivery. The nanogels were mainly based on alginate (AG), a natural biopolymer, and prepared using emulsion approaches. After their synthesis, they were used to encapsulate doxorubicin (Dox) which was chosen as a model drug. In the first part of the experimental work, disulfide-linked AG nanogels were prepared and, as expected, were redox-sensitive to a reducing environment like the intracellular medium. In the second part, AG nanogels crosslinked with both calcium ions and cationic poly(amidoamine) dendrimers were developed with improved sustained drug delivery. The prepared nanogels were characterized in terms of size, chemical composition, morphology, and drug delivery behavior (under redox/pH stimuli). The in vitro cytotoxicity of the nanogels was also tested against CAL-72 cells (an osteosarcoma cell line).

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O presente relatório congrega os pressupostos teóricos e metodológicos que sustentaram a ação pedagógica desenvolvida na Escola do 1.º Ciclo com Pré-Escolar da Corujeira. Confere particular destaque à investigação-ação, metodologia privilegiada por promover a adoção de uma postura reflexiva e de questionamento, tornando exequível o aperfeiçoamento de estratégias durante a práxis alicerçada numa perspetiva construtivista e participativa da aprendizagem, tendo em consideração as caraterísticas das crianças, as suas experiências e conhecimentos prévios. Foram várias as estratégias desenvolvidas para proporcionar um ambiente educativo dinâmico e impulsionador de aprendizagens significativas e cooperativas, motivando as crianças para a adoção de comportamentos adequados na sala de aula. A intervenção com a comunidade educativa revelou-se, igualmente, relevante, pelo trabalho colaborativo que suscitou. Com efeito, este relatório traduz uma fase desafiante da construção de uma identidade profissional, que acaba de dar os primeiros passos.

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Gene therapy, which involves the transfer of nucleic acid into target cells in patients, has become one of the most important and widely explored strategies to treat a variety of diseases, such as cancer, infectious diseases and genetic disorders. Relative to viral vectors that have high immunogenicity, toxicity and oncogenicity, non-viral vectors have gained a lot of interest in recent years. This is largely due to their ability to mimic viral vector features including the capacity to overcome extra- and intra-cellular barriers and to enhance transfection efficiency. Polyethyleneimine (PEI) has been extensively investigated as a non-viral vector. This cationic polymer, which is able to compact nucleic acid through electrostatic interactions and to transport it across the negatively charged cell membranes, has been shown to effectively transfect nucleic acid into different cell lines. Moreover, entrapment of gold nanoparticles (Au NPs) into such an amine-terminated polymer template has been shown to significantly enhance gene transfection efficiency. In this work, a novel non-viral nucleic acid vector system for enhanced and targeted nucleic acid delivery applications was developed. The system was based on the functionalization of PEI with folic acid (FA; for targeted delivery to cancer cells overexpressing FA receptors on their surface) using polyethylene glycol (PEG) as a linker molecule. This was followed by the preparation of PEI-entrapped Au NPs (Au PENPs; for enhancement of transfection efficiency). In the synthesis process, the primary amines of PEI were first partially modified with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FI) using a molar ratio of 1:7. The formed PEI-FI conjugate was then further modified with either PEG or PEGylated FA using a molar ratio of 1:1. This process was finally followed by entrapment of Au NPs into the modified polymers. The resulting conjugates and Au PENPs were characterized by several techniques, namely Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Dynamic Light Scattering and Ultraviolet-Visible Spectroscopy, to assess their physicochemical properties. In the cell biology studies, the synthesized conjugates and their respective Au PENPs were shown to be non-toxic towards A2780 human ovarian carcinoma cells. The role of these materials as gene delivery agents was lastly evaluated. In the gene delivery studies, the A2780 cells were successfully transfected with plasmid DNA using the different vector systems. However, FA-modification and Au NPs entrapment were not determinant factors for improved transfection efficiency. In the gene silencing studies, on the other hand, the Au PENPs were shown to effectively deliver small interfering RNA, thereby reducing the expression of the B-cell lymphoma 2 protein. Based on these results, we can say that the systems synthesized in this work show potential for enhanced and targeted gene therapy applications.

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Tissue engineering is an important branch of regenerative medicine that uses cells, materials (scaffolds), and suitable biochemical and physicochemical factors to improve or replace specific biological functions. In particular, the control of cell behavior (namely, of cell adhesion, proliferation and differentiation) is a key aspect for the design of successful therapeutical approaches. In this study, poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) fiber mats were prepared using the electrospinning technology (the fiber diameters were in the micrometer range). Furthermore, the electrospun fiber mats thus formed were functionalized using the layer-by- layer (LbL) technique with chitosan and alginate (natural and biodegradable polyelectrolytes having opposite charges) as a mean for the immobilization of pDNA/dendrimer complexes. The polyelectrolyte multilayer deposition was confirmed by fluorescence spectroscopy using fluorescent-labeled polyelectrolytes. The electrospun fiber mats coated with chitosan and alginate were successfully loaded with complexes of pDNA and poly(amidoamine) (PAMAM) dendrimers (generation 5) and were able of releasing them in a controlled manner along time. In addition, these mats supported the adhesion and proliferation of NIH 3T3 cells and of human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) in their surface. Transfection experiments using a pDNA encoding for luciferase showed the ability of the electrospun fiber mats to efficiently serve as gene delivery systems. When a pDNA encoding for bone morphogenetic protein-2 (BMP-2) was used, the osteoblastic differentiation of hMSCs cultured on the surface of the mats was promoted. Taken together, the results revealed that merging the electrospinning technique with the LbL technique, can be a suitable methodology for the creation of biological active matrices for bone tissue engineering.

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In the present study, two low generation triazine-based dendrimers, G1.0(Cl)4 dendrimer and G1.5(OH)8 dendrimer, were synthesized and their cytotoxicity were tested by using the NIH 3T3 and the A2780 cell lines. In the synthesis process of the G1.0(Cl)4 dendrimer, cyanuric chloride (CAC) which has high reactivity chlorine atom was connected to the terminal of triethylene glycol (TEG) via nucleophilic substitution by controlling temperature. The prepared G1.0(Cl)4 dendrimer was purified by silica gel column chromatography. Then the four chlorine atoms in the G1.0(Cl)4 dendrimer were substituted by diethanolamine (DEA) to give dendrimer with the hydroxyl terminal group G1.5(OH)8. The starting materials, CAC, G1.0(Cl)4 dendrimer and G1.5(OH)8 dendrimer were analyzed by one-dimensional NMR, FTIR and MS techniques. The two dendrimers, G1.0(Cl)4 and G1.5(OH)8, showed perfect stability in the air environment at room temperature. However, G1.0(Cl)4 is not soluble in water while the G1.5(OH)8 dendrimer is a water soluble compound. Furthermore, cell biological evaluation at the studied concentrations showed that the CAC, as well as the prepared G1.0(Cl)4 and G1.5(OH)8 dendrimers, have no cytotoxicity towards the NIH 3T3 and A2780 cell lines.