981 resultados para 2 Experimental-models
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The growth of breast cancer is regulated by hormones and growth factors. Recently, aberrant fibroblast growth factor (FGF) signalling has been strongly implicated in promoting the progression of breast cancer and is thought to have a role in the development of endocrine resistant disease. FGFs mediate their auto- and paracrine signals through binding to FGF receptors 1-4 (FGFR1-4) and their isoforms. Specific targets of FGFs in breast cancer cells and the differential role of FGFRs, however, are poorly described. FGF-8 is expressed at elevated levels in breast cancer, and it has been shown to act as an angiogenic, growth promoting factor in experimental models of breast cancer. Furthermore, it plays an important role in mediating androgen effects in prostate cancer and in some breast cancer cell lines. We aimed to study testosterone (Te) and FGF-8 regulated genes in Shionogi 115 (S115) breast cancer cells, characterise FGF-8 activated intracellular signalling pathways and clarify the role of FGFR1, -2 and -3 in these cells. Thrombospondin-1 (TSP-1), an endogenous inhibitor of angiogenesis, was recognised as a Te and FGF-8 regulated gene. Te repression of TSP-1 was androgen receptor (AR)-dependent. It required de novo protein synthesis, but it was independent of FGF-8 expression. FGF-8, in turn, downregulated TSP-1 transcription by activating the ERK and PI3K pathways, and the effect could be reversed by specific kinase inhibitors. Differential FGFR1-3 action was studied by silencing each receptor by shRNA expression in S115 cells. FGFR1 expression was a prerequisite for the growth of S115 tumours, whereas FGFR2 expression alone was not able to promote tumour growth. High FGFR1 expression led to a growth advantage that was associated with strong ERK activation, increased angiogenesis and reduced apoptosis, and all of these effects could be reversed by an FGFR inhibitor. Taken together, the results of this thesis show that FGF-8 and FGFRs contribute strongly to the regulation of the growth and angiogenesis of experimental breast cancer and support the evidence for FGF-FGFR signalling as one of the major players in breast cancers.
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Leishmaniasis is a disease caused by protozoa of the genus Leishmania, and visceral leishmaniasis is a form in which the inner organs are affected. Since knowledge about immunity in experimental visceral leishmaniasis is poor, we present here a review on immunity and immunosuppression in experimental visceral leishmaniasis in mouse and hamster models. We show the complexity of the mechanisms involved and differences when compared with the cutaneous form of leishmaniasis. Resistance in visceral leishmaniasis involves both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, and interleukin (IL)-2, interferon (IFN)- gamma, and IL-12, the latter in a mechanism independent of IFN- gamma and linked to transforming growth factor (TGF)-ß production. Susceptibility involves IL-10 but not IL-4, and B cells. In immune animals, upon re-infection, the elements involved in resistance are different, i.e., CD8+ T cells and IL-2. Since one of the immunopathological consequences of active visceral leishmaniasis in humans is suppression of T-cell responses, many studies have been conducted using experimental models. Immunosuppression is mainly Leishmania antigen specific, and T cells, Th2 cells and adherent antigen-presenting cells have been shown to be involved. Interactions of the co-stimulatory molecule family B7-CTLA-4 leading to increased level of TGF-ß as well as apoptosis of CD4+ T cells and inhibition of macrophage apoptosis by Leishmania infection are other components participating in immunosuppression. A better understanding of this complex immune response and the mechanisms of immunosuppression in experimental visceral leishmaniasis will contribute to the study of human disease and to vaccine development.
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INTRODUÇÃO: O adenocarcinoma de pâncreas apresenta um mau prognóstico. A utilização de modelos experimentais é necessária para a compreensão do comportamento biológico tumoral, principalmente das lesões precoces (neoplasias intra-epiteliais pancreáticas - NIPan) e para o desenvolvimento de opções terapêuticas. OBJETIVO: Avaliar a carcinogênese pancreática induzida por 7,12-dimetilbenzantraceno (DMBA), em camundongos, aplicando a classificação das neoplasias intra-epiteliais pancreáticas. MÉTODOS: 90 camundongos machos, mus musculus, da cepa CF1, foram submetidos à laparotomia mediana e 1 mg de DMBA foi implantado na porção cefálica do pâncreas. Os animais foram divididos em dois grupos, com eutanásia em 30 e 60 dias. Em seguida, o pâncreas foi retirado, fixado em formalina e foram confeccionadas lâminas coradas com hematoxilina eosina. Os cortes histológicos foram avaliados por dois patologistas de acordo com os seguintes critérios: pâncreas normal, hiperplasia reacional, NIPan 1A, NIPan 1B, NIPan 2, NIPan 3 e carcinoma. As alterações inflamatórias também foram analisadas. RESULTADOS: A avaliação patológica evidenciou, no grupo de 30 dias: 4 (16,7%) animais com hiperplasia reativa, 16 (66,6%) com NIPan e 4 (16,7%) com adenocarcinoma. No grupo de 60 dias: 10 (27,1%) animais com hiperplasia reativa, 13 (35,1%) com NIPan e 14 (37,8%) com adenocarcinoma. A diferença entre os grupos apresentou significância estatistística (P < 0,05 – teste exato de Fisher). A prevalência de alterações inflamatórias em 30 dias foi: pancreatite aguda (n=11), pancreatite crônica (n=5) e inflamação dependente da bolsa (n=8). No grupo de 60 dias 11 espécimes apresentavam pancreatite aguda e 26 pancreatite crônica. CONCLUSÕES: O modelo experimental com DMBA em camundongos, induz neoplasia intra-epitelial pancreática e adenocarcinoma ductal histologicamente semelhantes ao carcinoma pancreático em humanos. Este modelo pode ser utilizado na investigação da carcinogênese com enfoque na progressão molecular das lesões precursoras até o adenocarcinoma.
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Objetivo: desenvolver o modelo experimental de hipertensão tipo Goldblatt I (1 rim - 1 clipe), em ratas, para estudar a interação entre hipertensão e prenhez. Métodos: o experimento foi dividido em 5 períodos: adaptação (2 semanas), cirúrgico (1 semana), desenvolvimento da hipertensão (6 semanas), acasalamento e estabilização da pressão arterial (6 semanas) e prenhez (3 semanas). Foram utilizadas 82 ratas virgens da raça Wistar, pesando entre 180-240 gramas e com idade entre 3 e 4 meses. As ratas foram sorteadas para compor os 4 grupos experimentais (controle, manipulação, nefrectomia e hipertensão) e estudadas em 15 momentos distintos (M1 a M15). A hipertensão foi induzida experimentalmente pela técnica de Goldblatt I (1 rim, 1 clipe), que consiste na constrição da artéria renal esquerda e nefrectomia contralateral. Posteriormente, foram realizadas medidas periódicas da pressão arterial pelo método da pletismografia de cauda (PAC). Resultados: os animais sem tratamento cirúrgico (controle) e com manipulação não apresentaram alterações na PAC durante o experimento. A nefrectomia determinou discreta elevação da PAC. Nos grupos de ratas prenhes, observou-se tendência a discreta diminuição da PAC, que se acentuou no final da prenhez. Conclusões: o modelo experimental foi adequado para o objetivo de nosso estudo, pois permitiu a obtenção de animais hipertensos.
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Citrus aurantium L. is popularly used to treat anxiety, among other indications suggesting central nervous system action. Previous studies showed anxiolytic effect in the essential oil from peel in mice evaluated on the elevated plus maze [Carvalho-Freitas, M.I.R., Costa, M., 2002. Anxiolytic and sedative effects of extracts and essential oil from Citrus aurantium L. Biological and Pharmaceutical Bulletin 25, 1629-1633.]. In order to better characterize the activity of the essential oil, it was evaluated in two other experimental models: the light-dark box and the marble-burying test, respectively related to generalized anxiety disorder and to obsessive compulsive disorder. Mice were treated acutely by oral route 30 min (single dose) or once a day for 15 days (repeated doses) before experimental procedures. In light-dark box test, single treatment with essential oil augmented the time spent by mice in the light chamber and the number of transitions between the two compartments. There were no observed alterations in the parameters evaluated in light-dark box after repeated treatment. Otherwise, single and repeated treatments with essential oil were able to suppress marble-burying behavior. At effective doses in the behavioral tests, mice showed no impairment on rotarod procedure after both single and repeated treatments with essential oil, denoting absence of motor deficit. Results observed in marble-burying test, related to obsessive compulsive disorder, appear more consistent than those observed in light-dark box. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Many plants are used in traditional medicine as active agents against various effects induced by snakebite. The methanolic extract from Cordia verbenacea (Cv) significantly inhibited paw edema induced by Bothrops jararacussu snake venom and by its main basic phospholipase A(2) homologs, namely bothropstoxins I and II (BthTXs). The active component was isolated by chromatography on Sephadex LH-20 and by RP-HPLC on a C18 column and identified as rosmarinic acid (Cv-RA). Rosmarinic acid is an ester of caffeic acid and 3,4-dihydroxyphenyllactic acid [2-O-cafeoil-3-(3,4-di-hydroxy-phenyl)-R-lactic acid]. This is the first report of RA in the species C. verbenacea ('baleeira', 'whaler') and of its anti-inflammatory and antimyotoxic properties against snake venoms and isolated toxins. RA inhibited the edema and myotoxic activity induced by the basic PLA(2)s BthTX-I and BthTX-II. It was, however, less efficient to inhibit the PLA(2) activity of BthTX-II and, still less, the PLA(2) and edema-inducing activities of the acidic isoform BthA-1-PLA(2), from the same venom, showing therefore a higher inhibitory activity upon basic PLA(2)s. RA also inhibited most of the myotoxic and partially the edema-inducing effects of both basic PLA(2)s, thus reinforcing the idea of dissociation between the catalytic and pharmacological domains. The pure compound potentiated the ability of the commercial equine polyvalent antivenom in neutralizing lethal and myotoxic effects of the crude venom and of isolated PLA(2)s in experimental models. CD data presented here suggest that, after binding, no significant conformation changes occur either in the Cv-RA or in the target PLA(2). A possible model for the interaction of rosmarinic acid with Lys49-PLA(2) BthTX-I is proposed. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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The exoantigen of Paracoccidioides brasiliensis standardized by Camargo et al. [1] (AgR) was used to evaluate the in vivo and in vitro cell immune response of experimental animals and of patients with paracoccidioidomycosis (PBM). Fava Netto antigen (AgF) was tested in parallel as a control antigen. The study was conducted with mice and guinea pigs infected with P. brasiliensis or immunized with its fungal antigens, on patients with PBM and on their respective control groups. The cell immune response was analysed by skin tests, and by the macrophage and leucocyte migration inhibition tests (MMIT and LMIT) in the animals and in the patients, respectively. The skin test with AgR as paracoccidioidin was positive in infected or immunized mice and guinea pigs and negative in control animals. The skin tests with AgR (24 h) showed 96.7% positivity in patients with PBM and were negative in control individuals. Histopathological study of the in vivo tests in the different experimental models was consistent with a delayed hypersensitivity response (DHR). Immunohistochemical study of the skin tests of PBM patients demonstrated a predominance of T lymphocytes, confirming the nature of a DHR to the fungal antigens. The in vitro cell immune response showed variable results for the various experimental models, i.e. significant rates of MMIT in immunized mice, a tendency to positivity in infected guinea pigs, and the absence of migration inhibition in PBM patients. Taken together, the data indicate that the AgR is efficient as paracoccidioidin in the evaluation of DHR in PBM, with an optimum time of reading the test of 24 h.
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Leaves from Carpolobia lutea (Polygalaceae) were screened to establish the antiulcer ethnomedicinal claim and to quantitatively isolate, elucidate the active compounds by semi-preparative HPLC. The anti-nociceptive effects of Carpolobia lutea (CL) G. Don (Polygalaceae) organic leaf extracts were tested in experimental models in mice. The anti-nociceptive mechanism was determined using tail-flick test, acetic acid-induced abdominal constrictions, formalin-induced hind paw licking and the hot plate test. The fractions (ethanol, ethyl acetate, chloroform, n-hexane) and crude ethyl acetate extract of CL (770 mg/kg, i.p.) produced significant inhibitions of both phases of the formalin-induced pain in mice, a reduction in acetic acid-induced writhing as well as and an elevation of the pain threshold in the hot plate test in mice. The inhibitions were greater to those produced by indomethacin (5 mg/kg, i.p.). Ethyl acetate fraction revealed cinnamic and coumaric acids derivatives, which are described for the first time in literature. These cinnamalglucosides polyphenols characterised from CL may in part account for the pharmacological activities. These findings confirm its ethnomedical use in anti-inflammatory pain and in pains from gastric ulcer-associated symptoms. © 2011 Springer Basel AG.
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The presence of diabetes in pregnancy leads to hormonal and metabolic changes making inappropriate intrauterine environment, favoring the onset of maternal and fetal complications. Human studies that explore mechanisms responsible for changes caused by diabetes are limited not only for ethical reasons but also by the many uncontrollable variables. Thus, there is a need to develop appropriate experimental models. The diabetes induced in laboratory animals can be performed by different methods depending on dose, route of administration, and the strain and age of animal used. Many of these studies are carried out in neonatal period or during pregnancy, but the results presented are controversial. So this paper, addresses the review about the different models of mild diabetes induction using streptozotocin in pregnant rats and their repercussions on the maternal and fetal organisms to propose an adequate model for each approached issue. © 2013 D. C. Damasceno et al.
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Pós-graduação em Biologia Geral e Aplicada - IBB
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Pós-graduação em Ciências Biológicas (Farmacologia) - IBB
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Diversos estudos sugerem que a tetraciciclina semi-sintética minociciclina e o transplante de células mononucleares da medula óssea (CMMOs) induzem neuroproteção em modelos experimentais de acidente vascular encefálico (AVENC). No entanto, poucos investigaram, comparativamente, os efeitos destas duas abordagens terapêuticas após AVENC induzido por microinjeções de endotelina – 1 (ET -1). Nesta dissertação, objetivou-se comparar os efeitos do bloqueio microglial com minociclina com os obtidos pelo transplante intraestriatal de CMMOs na fase aguda após acidente vascular encefálico experimental, sobre a área de lesão, neuroproteção, apoptose de recuperação funcional. Ratos machos adultos, da raça Wistar, pesando entre 250 e 350g, foram distribuídos em quatro grupos experimentais: controle (chamado de Salina) - isquêmico tratado com salina (N=4), isquêmico tratado com minociclina (N=4), isquêmico tratado com CMMOs (N=3) e doador de CMMOs (N=2). Testes comportamentais foram realizados em 1, 3 e 7 dias pós-isquemia para avaliar a recuperação funcional entre os grupos. Animais tratados com minociclina receberam 2 doses diárias de 50mg/kg nos 2 primeiros dias, e 5 aplicações únicas de 25mg/kg (i.p) nos dias subsequentes até o sexto dia após a indução isquêmica. 1x106 de CMMOs foram obtidas de ratos da mesma linhagem e transplantadas diretamente no estriato, 24h após a lesão isquêmica. Todos os animais foram perfundidos 7 dias após a indução isquêmica. Secções coronais foram coradas por violeta de cresila para análise histopatológica geral, e por imunohistoquímica para a identificação de corpos neuronais (neuN), microglia/macrófagos ativados (ED1) e células apoptóticas (Caspase-3). A análise histopatológica geral mostrou grande palor, perda tecidual e intensa ativação microglial/ macrofágica no estriato de animais tratados com solução salina estéril. O tratamento com CMMO foi mais eficaz do que a minociclina (P<0,05, ANOVA-Tukey) na redução do número de microglia/macrófagos ativados (salina 276,3 ± 9,3); CMMOs 133,8 ± 6,8) e minociclina 244,6 ± 7,1). CMMOs e minociclina reduziram a área de lesão, em 67,75% e 69,1%, respectivamente. Os dois tratamentos promoveram o mesmo nível de preservação neuronal (p< 0,05) em relação ao controle, 61,3 ± 1,5); 86,8 ± 3,4) e 81 ± 3,4). As CMMOs reduziram de forma mais eficaz (p<0,01) o número de células apoptóticas em relação à minociclina e grupo controle (26,5 ± 1,6); 13,1 ± 0,7) e 19,7 ± 1,1). Ambas as abordagens terapêuticas promoveram recuperação funcional dos animais isquêmicos. Os resultados sugerem que o tratamento com CMMOs é mais eficaz na modulação da resposta microglial e na diminuição da apoptose do que o tratamento com minociclina, apesar de ambos serem igualmente eficazes para indução da neuroproteção. Estudos futuros devem investigar se o tratamento com minociclina associado ao transplante de CMMOs produzem efeitos sinérgicos, o que poderia amplificar os níveis de neuroproteção observados.