ANTONIO CHARLYS DA COSTA

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
16
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
LIM/52 - Laboratório de Virologia, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina
LIM/46 - Laboratório de Parasitologia Médica, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 10 de 16
  • article 9 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Detection of RNA-Dependent RNA Polymerase of Hubei Reo-Like Virus 7 by Next-Generation Sequencing in Aedes aegypti and Culex quinquefasciatus Mosquitoes from Brazil
    (2019) RIBEIRO, Geovani de Oliveira; MONTEIRO, Fred Julio Costa; REGO, Marlisson Octavio da S.; RIBEIRO, Edcelha Soares D'Athaide; CASTRO, Daniela Funayama de; CASEIRO, Marcos Montani; MARINHO, Robson dos Santos Souza; KOMNINAKIS, Shirley Vasconcelos; WITKIN, Steven S.; DENG, Xutao; DELWART, Eric; SABINO, Ester Cerdeira; COSTA, Antonio Charlys da; LEAL, Elcio
    Advancements in next-generation sequencing and bioinformatics have expanded our knowledge of the diversity of viruses (pathogens and non-pathogens) harbored by mosquitoes. Hubei reo-like virus 7 (HRLV 7) was recently detected by the virome analysis of fecal samples from migratory birds in Australia. We now report the detection of RNA-dependent RNA polymerase sequences of HRLV 7 in pools of Aedes aegypti and Culex quinquefasciatus mosquitoes species from the Brazilian Amazon forest. Phylogenetic inferences indicated that all HRLV 7 strains fall within the same independent clade. In addition, HRLV 7 shared a close ancestral lineage with the Dinovernavirus genus of the Reoviridae family. Our findings indicate that HRLV 7 is present in two species of mosquitoes.
  • article 7 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    A Novel Highly Divergent Strain of Cell Fusing Agent Virus (CFAV) in Mosquitoes from the Brazilian Amazon Region
    (2018) FERNANDES, Licia Natal; COLETTI, Thais de Moura; MONTEIRO, Fred Julio Costa; REGO, Marlisson Octavio da Silva; RIBEIRO, Edcelha Soares D'Athaide; RIBEIRO, Geovani de Oliveira; MARINHO, Robson dos Santos Souza; KOMNINAKIS, Shirley Vasconcelos; WITKIN, Steven S.; DENG, Xutao; DELWART, Eric; SABINO, Ester Cerdeira; LEAL, Elcio; COSTA, Antonio Charlys da
    Classical insect-specific flaviviruses (cISFs) have been widely detected in different countries in the last decades. Here, we characterize the near full-length genomes of two cISFs detected in mosquitoes collected in the city of Macapa, state of Amapa, Amazon region of Brazil. A total of 105 pools of female mosquitos were analyzed by next-generation sequencing (NGS). Comparative genomics and phylogenetic analysis identified three strains of cell fusing agent virus (CFAV) and two of Culex flavivirus (CxFV). All sequences were obtained from pools of Culex sp., except for one sequence of CFAV detected in a pool of Aedes aegypti. Both CxFV strains are phylogenetically related to a strain isolated in 2012 in the Southeast region of Brazil. The CFAV strains are the first of this species to be identified in Brazil and one of them is highly divergent from other strains of CFAV that have been detected worldwide. In conclusion, CFAV and CxFV, circulate in mosquitoes in Brazil. One strain of CFAV is highly divergent from others previously described, suggesting that a novel strain of CFAV is present in this region.
  • article 10 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Aedes aegyptifrom Amazon Basin Harbor High Diversity of Novel Viral Species
    (2020) RIBEIRO, Geovani de Oliveira; MORAIS, Vanessa S.; MONTEIRO, Fred Julio Costa; RIBEIRO, Edcelha Soares D'Athaide; REGO, Marlisson Octavio da S.; SOUTO, Raimundo Nonato Picanco; VILLANOVA, Fabiola; TAHMASEBI, Roozbeh; HEFFORD, Philip Michael; DENG, Xutao; DELWART, Eric; SABINO, Ester Cerdeira; FERNANDES, Licia Natal; COSTA, Antonio Charlys da; LEAL, Elcio
    Viruses are the most diverse and abundant microorganisms on earth, highly adaptive to a wide range of hosts. Viral diversity within invertebrate hosts has gained notoriety in recent years in public health as several such viruses have been of medical importance.Aedes aegyptiserves as a vector for several viruses that have caused epidemics within the last year throughout Brazil; including Dengue, Zika and Chikungunya. This study aimed to identify new viral agents withinAedes aegyptimosquito in a city of the Amazonian region, where it is highly endemic. Metagenomic investigation was performed on 60 mosquito pools and viral RNA sequences present in their microbiota were characterized using genomic and phylogenetic tools. In total, we identified five putative novel virus species related to theSobemovirusgenus,Iflavirusgenus andPermutatetraviridaefamily. These findings indicate a diverse taxonomy of viruses present in the mosquito microbiota of the Amazon, the region with the greatest invertebrate diversity in the world.
  • article 2 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    SARS-CoV-2 Detection and Culture in Different Biological Specimens from Immunocompetent and Immunosuppressed COVID-19 Patients Infected with Two Different Viral Strains
    (2023) MENDES-CORREA, Maria Cassia; SALOMAO, Matias Chiarastelli; GHILARDI, Fabio; TOZETTO-MENDOZA, Tania Regina; VILLAS-BOAS, Lucy Santos; PAULA, Anderson Vicente de; PAIAO, Heuder Gustavo Oliveira; COSTA, Antonio Charlys da; LEAL, Fabio E.; FERRAZ, Andrea de Barros Coscelli; SALES, Flavia C. S.; CLARO, Ingra M.; FERREIRA, Noely E.; PEREIRA, Geovana M.; JR, Almir Ribeiro da Silva; FREIRE, Wilton; ESPINOZA, Evelyn Patricia Sanchez; MANULI, Erika R.; ROMANO, Camila M.; JESUS, Jaqueline G. de; SABINO, Ester C.; WITKIN, Steven S.
    Introduction-The dynamics of SARS-CoV-2 shedding and replication in humans remain incompletely understood. Methods-We analyzed SARS-CoV-2 shedding from multiple sites in individuals with an acute COVID-19 infection by weekly sampling for five weeks in 98 immunocompetent and 25 immunosuppressed individuals. Samples and culture supernatants were tested via RT-PCR for SARS-CoV-2 to determine viral clearance rates and in vitro replication. Results-A total of 2447 clinical specimens were evaluated, including 557 nasopharyngeal swabs, 527 saliva samples, 464 urine specimens, 437 anal swabs and 462 blood samples. The SARS-CoV-2 genome sequences at each site were classified as belonging to the B.1.128 (ancestral strain) or Gamma lineage. SARS-CoV-2 detection was highest in nasopharyngeal swabs regardless of the virus strain involved or the immune status of infected individuals. The duration of viral shedding varied between clinical specimens and individual patients. Prolonged shedding of potentially infectious virus varied from 10 days up to 191 days, and primarily occurred in immunosuppressed individuals. Virus was isolated in culture from 18 nasal swab or saliva samples collected 10 or more days after onset of disease. Conclusions-Our findings indicate that persistent SARS-CoV-2 shedding may occur in both competent or immunosuppressed individuals, at multiple clinical sites and in a minority of subjects is capable of in vitro replication.
  • article 5 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Detection of Hepatitis E Virus Genotype 3 in Feces of Capybaras (Hydrochoeris hydrochaeris) in Brazil
    (2023) CUNHA, Lia; LUCHS, Adriana; AZEVEDO, Lais S. S.; SILVA, Vanessa C. M.; LEMOS, Marcilio F. F.; COSTA, Antonio C. C.; COMPRI, Adriana P. P.; FRANCA, Yasmin; VIANA, Ellen; MALTA, Fernanda; MEDEIROS, Roberta S. S.; GUIDUCCI, Raquel; MORILLO, Simone G. G.; GOMES-GOUVEA, Michele S. S.; AMGARTEN, Deyvid; PINHO, Joao R. R.; MOREIRA, Regina C. C.
    Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is an emerging zoonotic pathogen associated with relevant public health issues. The aim of this study was to investigate HEV presence in free-living capybaras inhabiting urban parks in Sao Paulo state, Brazil. Molecular characterization of HEV positive samples was undertaken to elucidate the genetic diversity of the virus in these animals. A total of 337 fecal samples were screened for HEV using RT-qPCR and further confirmed by conventional nested RT-PCR. HEV genotype and subtype were determined using Sanger and next-generation sequencing. HEV was detected in one specimen (0.3%) and assigned as HEV-3f. The IAL-HEV_921 HEV-3f strain showed a close relationship to European swine, wild boar and human strains (90.7-93.2% nt), suggesting an interspecies transmission. Molecular epidemiology of HEV is poorly investigated in Brazil; subtype 3f has been reported in swine. This is the first report of HEV detected in capybara stool samples worldwide.
  • article 6 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Composition of Eukaryotic Viruses and Bacteriophages in Individuals with Acute Gastroenteritis
    (2021) RAMOS, Endrya do Socorro Foro; RIBEIRO, Geovani de Oliveira; VILLANOVA, Fabiola; MILAGRES, Flavio Augusto de Padua; BRUSTULIN, Rafael; ARAUJO, Emerson Luiz Lima; PANDEY, Ramendra Pati; RAJ, V. Samuel; DENG, Xutao; DELWART, Eric; LUCHS, Adriana; COSTA, Antonio Charlys da; LEAL, Elcio
    Metagenomics based on the next-generation sequencing (NGS) technique is a target-independent assay that enables the simultaneous detection and genomic characterization of all viruses present in a sample. There is a limited amount of data about the virome of individuals with gastroenteritis (GI). In this study, the enteric virome of 250 individuals (92% were children under 5 years old) with GI living in the northeastern and northern regions of Brazil was characterized. Fecal samples were subjected to NGS, and the metagenomic analysis of virus-like particles (VLPs) identified 11 viral DNA families and 12 viral RNA families. As expected, the highest percentage of viral sequences detected were those commonly associated with GI, including rotavirus, adenovirus, norovirus (94.8%, 82% and 71.2%, respectively). The most common co-occurrences, in a single individual, were the combinations of rotavirus-adenovirus, rotavirus-norovirus, and norovirus-adenovirus (78%, 69%, and 62%, respectively). In the same way, common fecal-emerging human viruses were also detected, such as parechovirus, bocaporvirus, cosavirus, picobirnavirus, cardiovirus, salivirus, and Aichivirus. In addition, viruses that infect plants, nematodes, fungi, protists, animals, and arthropods could be identified. A large number of unclassified viral contigs were also identified. We show that the metagenomics approach is a powerful and promising tool for the detection and characterization of different viruses in clinical GI samples.
  • article 5 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    High Heterogeneity of Echoviruses in Brazilian Children with Acute Gastroenteritis
    (2021) RAMOS, Endrya do Socorro Foro; ROSA, Ulisses Alves; RIBEIRO, Geovani de Oliveira; VILLANOVA, Fabiola; MILAGRES, Flavio Augusto de Padua; BRUSTULIN, Rafael; MORAIS, Vanessa dos Santos; BERTANHE, Mayara; MARCATTI, Roberta; ARAUJO, Emerson Luiz Lima; WITKIN, Steven S.; DELWART, Eric; LUCHS, Adriana; COSTA, Antonio Charlys da; LEAL, Elcio
    Echoviruses (E) are a diverse group of viruses responsible for various pathological conditions in humans including aseptic meningitis, myocarditis, and acute flaccid paralysis. The detection and identification of echovirus genotypes in clinical samples is challenging due to its high genetic diversity. Here, we report the complete genome sequences of nine echoviruses, obtained by next-generation sequencing of 238 fecal samples from individuals with gastroenteritis in regions of Brazil. Detected viruses were classified into six genotypes: Three E1 sequences (BRA/TO-028, BRA/TO-069 and BRA/TO-236), one E3 (BRA/TO-018), one E11 (BRA/TO-086), one E20 (BRA/TO-016), two E29 (BRA/TO-030 and BRA/TO-193), and one E30 sequence (BRA/TO-032). Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the echoviruses E1 and E29 circulating in Brazil are divergent from strains circulating worldwide. The genotype diversity identified in our study may under-represent the total echovirus diversity in Brazil because of the small sample size and the restricted geographical distribution covered by the survey.
  • article 2 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Chikungunya Virus Asian Lineage Infection in the Amazon Region Is Maintained by Asiatic and Caribbean-Introduced Variants
    (2022) RIBEIRO, Geovani de Oliveira; GILL, Danielle Elise; RAMOS, Endrya do Socorro Foro; VILLANOVA, Fabiola; RIBEIRO, Edcelha Soares D'Athaide; MONTEIRO, Fred Julio Costa; MORAIS, Vanessa S.; REGO, Marlisson Octavio da S.; ARAUJO, Emerson Luiz Lima; PANDEY, Ramendra Pati; RAJ, V. Samuel; DENG, Xutao; DELWART, Eric; COSTA, Antonio Charlys da; LEAL, Elcio
    The simultaneous transmission of two lineages of the chikungunya virus (CHIKV) was discovered after the pathogen's initial arrival in Brazil. In Oiapoque (Amapa state, north Brazil), the Asian lineage (CHIKV-Asian) was discovered, while in Bahia state, the East-Central-South-African lineage (CHIKV-ECSA) was discovered (northeast Brazil). Since then, the CHIKV-Asian lineage has been restricted to the Amazon region (mostly in the state of Amapa), whereas the ECSA lineage has expanded across the country. Despite the fact that the Asian lineage was already present in the Amazon region, the ECSA lineage brought from the northeast caused a large outbreak in the Amazonian state of Roraima (north Brazil) in 2017. Here, CHIKV spread in the Amazon region was studied by a Zika-Dengue-Chikungunya PCR assay in 824 serum samples collected between 2013 and 2016 from individuals with symptoms of viral infection in the Amapa state. We found 11 samples positive for CHIKV-Asian, and, from these samples, we were able to retrieve 10 full-length viral genomes. A comprehensive phylogenetic study revealed that nine CHIKV sequences came from a local transmission cluster related to Caribbean strains, whereas one sequence was related to sequences from the Philippines. These findings imply that CHIKV spread in different ways in Roraima and Amapa, despite the fact that both states had similar climatic circumstances and mosquito vector frequencies.
  • article 5 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Adaptive Evolution of New Variants of Dengue Virus Serotype 1 Genotype V Circulating in the Brazilian Amazon
    (2021) RIBEIRO, Geovani de Oliveira; GILL, Danielle Elise; RIBEIRO, Edcelha Soares D. Athaide; MONTEIRO, Fred Julio Costa; MORAIS, Vanessa S.; MARCATTI, Roberta; REGO, Marlisson Octavio da S.; ARAUJO, Emerson Luiz Lima; WITKIN, Steven S.; VILLANOVA, Fabiola; DENG, Xutao; SABINO, Ester Cerdeira; DELWART, Eric; LEAL, Elcio; COSTA, Antonio Charlys da
    Dengue virus (DENV) is a mosquito-borne viral pathogen that plagues many tropical-climate nations around the world, including Brazil. Molecular epidemiology is a growing and increasingly invaluable tool for understanding the dispersal, persistence, and diversity of this impactful virus. In this study, plasma samples (n = 824) from individuals with symptoms consistent with an arboviral febrile illness were analyzed to identity the molecular epidemiological dynamics of DENV circulating in the Brazilian state of Amapa. Twelve DENV type 1 (DENV-1) genomes were identified, which were phylogenetically related to the BR4 lineage of genotype V. Phylodynamics analysis suggested that DENV-1 BR-4 was introduced into Amapa around early 2010, possibly from other states in northern Brazil. We also found unique amino acids substitutions in the DENV-1 envelope and NS5 protein sequences in the Amapa isolates. Characterization of the DENV-1 BR-4 sequences highlights the potential of this new lineage to drive outbreaks of dengue in the Amazon region.
  • article 2 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    A New Circular Single-Stranded DNA Virus Related with Howler Monkey Associated Porprismacovirus 1 Detected in Children with Acute Gastroenteritis
    (2022) VILLANOVA, Fabiola; MILAGRES, Flavio Augusto de Padua; BRUSTULIN, Rafael; ARAUJO, Emerson Luiz Lima; PANDEY, Ramendra Pati; RAJ, V. Samuel; DENG, Xutao; DELWART, Eric; LUCHS, Adriana; COSTA, Antonio Charlys da; LEAL, Elcio
    Putative replication-associated protein (REP) and capsid-like (CAP) proteins are encoded by circular single-stranded DNA viruses (CRESS DNA), which have been found in samples from most eukaryotic groups. However, the details of these viruses' life cycles and their significance in diseases have yet to be established. We presented and analyzed two full-length CRESS DNA genomes acquired from two children diagnosed with acute gastroenteritis (GI) in the northeast state of Tocantins, Brazil, using next-generation sequencing and a virus-like filtration approach. Both sequences (named SmaCV3BR08 and SmaCV3BR291) are closely similar to a prior CRESS DNA sequence discovered in the feces of a new world monkey (Alouatta caraya) from the United States in 2009 and termed Howler monkey-associated porprismacovirus 1 (Genbank ID: NC 026317). According to our comparative study, these porprismacovirus genomes deviate by 10% at the nucleotide level. For comparative reasons, the divergence between our sequences (SmaCV3BR08 and SmaCV3BR291) and a porprismacovirus recently identified in a human fecal sample from Peru is 37%. These data suggest that there is a great diversity of porprismacoviruses in South America, perhaps more than two species. In addition, the finding of closely related sequences of porprismacoviruses in humans and native monkeys highlights the zoonotic potential of these viruses.