JACQUELINE DE FATIMA JACYSYN

(Fonte: Lattes)
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Projetos de Pesquisa
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LIM/08 - Laboratório de Anestesiologia, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

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Agora exibindo 1 - 10 de 19
  • article 14 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Jararhagin disruption of endothelial cell anchorage is enhanced in collagen enriched matrices
    (2015) BALDO, C.; LOPES, D. S.; FAQUIM-MAURO, E. L.; JACYSYN, J. F.; NILAND, S.; EBLE, J. A.; CLISSA, P. B.; MOURA-DA-SILVA, A. M.
    Hemorrhage is one of the most striking effects of bites by viper snakes resulting in fast bleeding and ischemia in affected tissues. Snake venom metalloproteinases (SVMPs) are responsible for hemorrhagic activity, but the mechanisms involved in SVMP-induced hemorrhage are not entirely understood and the study of such mechanisms greatly depends on in vivo experiments. In vivo, hemorrhagic SVMPs accumulate on basement membrane (BM) of venules and capillary vessels allowing the hydrolysis of collagen IV with consequent weakness and rupture of capillary walls. These effects are not reproducible in vitro with conventional endothelial cell cultures. In this study we used two-dimension (2D) or threedimension (3D) cultures of HUVECs on matrigel and observed the same characteristics as in ex vivo experiments: only the hemorrhagic toxin was able to localize on surfaces or internalize endothelial cells in 2D cultures or in the surface of tubules formed on 3D cultures. The contribution of matrigel, fibronectin and collagen matrices in jararhagin-induced endothelial cell damage was then analyzed. Collagen and matrigel substrates enhanced the endothelial cell damage induced by jararhagin allowing toxin binding to focal adhesions, disruption of stress fibers, detachment and apoptosis. The higher affinity of jararhagin to collagen than to fibronectin explains the localization of the toxin within BM. Moreover, once located in BM, interactions of jararhagin with alpha(2)beta(1) integrin would favor its localization on focal adhesions, as observed in our study. The accumulation of toxin in focal adhesions, observed only in cells grown in collagen matrices, would explain the enhancement of cell damage in these matrices and reflects the actual interaction among toxin, endothelial cells and BM components that occurs in vivo and results in the hemorrhagic lesions induced by viper venoms.
  • conferenceObject
    LYMPHOCYTE SUBSETS, EXPRESSION OF ADHESION MOLECULES AND APOPTOSIS IN BONE MARROW CELLS OF BRAIN-DEAD RATS
    (2015) MENEGAT, Laura; SIMAS, Rafael; ZANONI, Fernando; BORELLI, Primavera; JACYSYN, Jacqueline; MOREIRA, Luiz Felipe; SANNOMIYA, Paulina
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    Proliferative Activity and Neovascularization of the Ovarian Graft in Rats Treated with N-Acetylcysteine
    (2012) DURANDO, M. C. S.; GOMES, E. A. M.; DAMOUS, L. L.; SIMOES, M. J.; JACYSYN, J. F.; MONTERO, E. F. S.
  • article 7 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Ischemic preconditioning modifies mortality and inflammatory response
    (2016) PINHEIRO, Daniel Faria de Campos; FONTES, Belchor; SHIMAZAKI, John Kioshi; HEIMBECKER, Ana Maria Cattani; JACYSYN, Jacqueline de Fatima; RASSLAN, Samir; MONTERO, Edna Frasson de Souza; UTIYAMA, Edivaldo Massazo
    PURPOSE: To evaluate the effect of ischemic preconditioning on mortality, inflammatory mediators and oxidative stress after intestinal ischemia and reperfusion. METHODS: Male Wistar rats were allocated according to the period of ischemia with or without ischemic preconditioning which consist on clamping the superior mesenteric artery for 10 minutes followed by reperfusion for 10 minutes before the sustained ischemia period. Mortality was assessed in Phase 1 study, and the CINC-1, CINC-2 and MDA levels in the lungs were analyzed in Phase 2. RESULTS: Mortality was lower in the ischemic preconditioning group subjected to 90 minutes of ischemia compared to the group without ischemic preconditioning (I-90: 50% and IPC-90: 15%, p=0.018), and it was lower in the ischemic preconditioning group as a whole compared to the groups without ischemic preconditioning (IPC-14% and I=30%, p=0.006). Lower levels of MDA, CINC-1, and CINC-2 were observed in the animals that were subjected to ischemic preconditioning compared to the animals that were not (MDA: I-45=1.23 nmol/mg protein, and IPC-45=0.62 nmol/mg protein, p=0.0333; CINC-1: I-45=0.82 ng/mL and IPC-45=0.67 ng/mL, p=0.041; CINC-2: I-45=0.52 ng/mL and IPC-45=0.35 ng/mL, p=0.032). CONCLUSION: Ischemic preconditioning reduces mortality, inflammatory process and oxidative stress in rats subjected to intestinal ischemia and reperfusion.
  • article 14 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    High molecular weight components containing N-linked oligosaccharides of Ascaris suum extract inhibit the dendritic cells activation through DC-SIGN and MR
    (2017) FAVORETTO, Bruna C.; CASABUONO, Adriana A. C.; PORTES-JUNIOR, Jose A.; JACYSYN, Jacqueline F.; COUTO, Alicia S.; FAQUIM-MAURO, Eliana L.
    Helminths, as well as their secretory/excretory products, induce a tolerogenic immune microenvironment. High molecular weight components (PI) from Ascaris suum extract down-modulate the immune response against ovalbumin (OVA). The PI exerts direct effect on dendritic cells (DCs) independent of TLR 2, 4 and MyD88 molecule and, thus, decreases the T lymphocytes response. Here, we studied the glycoconjugates in PI and the role of C-type lectin receptors (CLRs), DC-SIGN and MR, in the modulation of DCs activity. Our data showed the presence of glycoconjugates with high mannose- and complex-type N-linked oligosaccharide chains and phosphorylcholine residues on PI. In addition, these N-linked glycoconjugates inhibited the DCs maturation induced by LPS. The binding and internalization of PI-Alexa were decreased on DCs previously incubated with mannan, anti-DC-SIGN and/or anti-MR antibodies. In agreement with this, the incubation of DCs with mannan, anti-DC-SIGN and/or anti-MR antibodies abolished the down-modulatory effect of PI on these cells. It was also observed that the blockage of CLRs, DC-SIGN and MR on DCs reverted the inhibitory effect of PI in in vitro T cells proliferation. Therefore, our data show the involvement of DC-SIGN and MR in the recognition and consequent modulatory effect of N-glycosylated components of PI on DCs.
  • article 3 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Improving the therapeutic potential of endostatin by fusing it with the BAX BH3 death domain
    (2014) CHURA-CHAMBI, R. M.; BELLINI, M. H.; JACYSYN, J. F.; ANDRADE, L. N.; MEDINA, L. P.; PRIETO-DA-SILVA, A. R. B.; AMARANTE-MENDES, G. P.; MORGANTI, L.
    Endostatin (ES) inhibits angiogenesis, reducing tumor growth in animal models. However, it has low therapeutic effect in human clinical trials. BAX is a member of the BCL-2 family of proteins; its proapoptotic (BH3) domain interacts with other members of the family in the cytoplasm, to induce apoptosis. Here, we fused the BAX BH3 domain with murine ES, to enhance ES potency. Endothelial cells specifically internalize the fusion protein ES-BAX. The presence of the BAX domain enhances endothelial cell death by apoptosis by 1.8-fold and diminishes microvessel outgrowth in the rat aortic ring assay by 6.5-fold. Daily injections of 15 mu g of ES-BAX/g in tumor-bearing mice reduce tumor weight by 86.9% as compared with ES-treated animals. Co-immunoprecipitation assays confirmed that ES-BAX interacts with members of the BCL-2 family. Also, ES interacts with BCL-2, BCL-XL, and BAK in endothelial cell lysates, suggesting a potential new mechanism for the apoptosis induction by ES. The superiority of the ES-BAX antiangiogenic effect indicates that this fusion protein could be a promising therapeutic alternative to treat cancer.
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    Immunomodulation of the Intestinal Graft in Fetal Mouse Model Transplant: Remote Ischemic Preconditioning and N-Acetylcysteine
    (2012) ABRAHAO, M. S.; VICTO, N. C.; SILVA, R. C.; KOIKE, M. K.; CAMARA, N. O. S.; JACYSYN, J. F.; MONTERO, E. F. S.
  • article 9 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    BCR-ABL1-induced downregulation of WASP in chronic myeloid leukemia involves epigenetic modification and contributes to malignancy
    (2017) PEREIRA, Welbert O.; CARVALHO, Daniel D. De; ZENTENO, Maria Emilia; RIBEIRO, Beatriz F.; JACYSYN, Jacqueline F.; SARDINHA, Luiz R.; ZANICHELLI, Maria A.; HAMERSCHLAK, Nelson; JONES, Gareth E.; PAGNANO, Katia B.; CASTRO, Fabiola A.; CALLE, Yolanda; AMARANTE-MENDES, Gustavo P.
    Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is a myeloproliferative disease caused by the BCR-ABL1 tyrosine kinase (TK). The development of TK inhibitors (TKIs) revolutionized the treatment of CML patients. However, TKIs are not effective to those at advanced phases when amplified BCR-ABL1 levels and increased genomic instability lead to secondary oncogenic modifications. Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein (WASP) is an important regulator of signaling transduction in hematopoietic cells and was shown to be an endogenous inhibitor of the c-ABL TK. Here, we show that the expression of WASP decreases with the progression of CML, inversely correlates with the expression of BCR-ABL1 and is particularly low in blast crisis. Enforced expression of BCR-ABL1 negatively regulates the expression of WASP. Decreased expression of WASP is partially due to DNA methylation of the proximal WASP promoter. Importantly, lower levels of WASP in CML advanced phase patients correlate with poorer overall survival (OS) and is associated with TKI response. Interestingly, enforced expression of WASP in BCR-ABL1-positive K562 cells increases the susceptibility to apoptosis induced by TRAIL or chemotherapeutic drugs and negatively modulates BCR-ABL1-induced tumorigenesis in vitro and in vivo. Taken together, our data reveal a novel molecular mechanism that operates in BCR-ABL1-induced tumorigenesis that can be used to develop new strategies to help TKI-resistant, CML patients in blast crisis (BC).
  • article 18 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Comparative effect of FGF2, synthetic peptides 1-28 N-POMC and ACTH on proliferation in rat adrenal cell primary cultures
    (2011) MATTOS, Gabriele E.; JACYSYN, Jacqueline F.; AMARANTE-MENDES, Gustavo P.; LOTFI, Claudimara Ferini Pacicco
    There is evidence that pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC)-derived peptides other than adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) have a role in adrenal cell proliferation. We compared the activity of synthetic rat N-terminal POMC fragment 1-28 with disulfide bridges (N-POMC(w)) and without disulfide bridges (N-POMC(w/o)), with the activity of fibroblast growth factor (FGF2), a widely studied adrenal growth factor, and ACTH, in well-characterized pure cultures of both isolated adrenal Glomerulosa (G) and Fasciculata/Reticularis (F/R) cells. Three days of FGF2-treatment had a proliferative effect similar to serum, and synthetic peptide N-POMC(w) induced proliferation more efficiently than N-POMC(w/o). Moreover, both induced proliferation via the ERK1/2 pathway. In contrast, sustained ACTH treatment decreased proliferation and viability through apoptosis induction, but not necrosis, and independently of PKA and PKC pathways. Further elucidation of 1-28 POMC signal transduction is of interest, and primary cultures of adrenal cells were found to be useful for examining the trophic activity of this peptide.
  • article 41 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Cytotoxicity of cashew flavonoids towards malignant cell lines
    (2012) KONAN, Nzi Andre; LINCOPAN, Nilton; DIAZ, Ingrit Elida Collantes; JACYSYN, Jacqueline de Fatima; TIBA, Mirtes Midori Tanae; MENDES, Joao Gustavo Pessini Amarante; BACCHI, Elfriede Marianne; SPIRA, Beny
    The leaves of the Cashew plant (Anacardium occidentale L.) are used by the folk medicine in South America and West Africa. This plant is rich in flavonoids, which are polyphenolic compounds widespread in plants, and that have diverse physiological effects. In a sub-acute toxicity assay it was found that an ethanolic extract of Cashew leaves elicited lymphopenia in rats. The extract was also found to be cytotoxic and to induce apoptosis in Jurkat (acute lymphoblastic leukemia) cells. The crude ethanolic extract was fractionated and resolved by HPLC. One of the four fractions obtained led to the isolation of the biflavonoid agasthisflavone. [H-3]-thymidine incorporation assays and flow cytometry analysis showed that the isolated compound displayed a high anti-proliferative effect in Jurkat cells with an IC50 of 2.4 mu g/ml (4.45 mu M). The effect of agathisflavone on the acute promyelocytic leukemia cell line HL60, Burkitt lymphoma Raji cells and Hep-2 laryngeal carcinoma cells was also tested. The two latter ones were only mildly affected by agathisflavone. It is also shown that agathisflavone induces apoptosis in Jurkat cells and it this proposed that this is the likely mechanism of agathisflavone specific cytotoxicity.