GIOVANA SANTOS CALEIRO

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
4
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
LIM/52 - Laboratório de Virologia, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

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Agora exibindo 1 - 7 de 7
  • article 3 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Detection of Reticuloendotheliosis Virus in Muscovy Ducks, Wild Turkeys, and Chickens in Brazil
    (2020) CALEIRO, Giovana S.; NUNES, Cristina F.; URBANO, Paulo R.; KIRCHGATTER, Karin; ARAUJO, Jansen de; DURIGON, Edison Luiz; THOMAZELLI, Luciano M.; STEWART, Brittany M.; EDWARDS, Dustin C.; ROMANO, Camila M.
    Reticuloendotheliosis viruses (REVs) are known to cause immunosuppressive and oncogenic disease that affects numerous avian species. Reticuloendotheliosis viruses are present worldwide and recently have been reported in South America with cases of infected commercial flocks in Argentina. We surveyed for the presence of REV in birds from a state in the northern region of Brazil using real-time PCR. We report here the presence of REV in Brazil, detected in Muscovy Ducks (Cairina moschata), Wild Turkeys (Meleagris gallopavo), and chickens (Gallus gallus) at a relatively high prevalence (16.8%). Phylogenetic analysis indicated a close relationship of these strains to variants in the US. This study provides evidence of REV in the Amazon biome and provides a baseline for future surveillance of the virus in the region and throughout Brazil.
  • article 4 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Expression of human endogenous retrovirus K and W in babies
    (2017) NALI, L. H. S.; OLIVEIRA, A. C. S.; ALVES, D. O.; CALEIRO, G. S.; NUNES, C. F.; GERHARDT, D.; SUCCI, R. C. M.; ROMANO, Camila M.; MACHADO, D. M.
    Here we determined the relative expression of HERV-K and W proviruses in HIV infected and non-infected mothers as well as their respective babies up to 1 year-old. HIV-infected mothers, their babies and uninfected control groups presented expression of both HERV-K and HERV-W with relatively high frequency. While the level of HERV-K expression was similar among groups, the level of HERV-W expression in HIV-infected mothers was four-fold higher than the uninfected mothers from the control group (p < 0.01). HERV-W was down regulated in HIV-exposed babies in comparison to non-exposed babies. To our knowledge, this is the first report of HERV transcriptional activity in babies from 0-1 year-old.
  • article 6 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Applying a pan-flavivirus RT-qPCR assay in Brazilian public health surveillance
    (2020) CUNHA, Mariana Sequetin; LUCHS, Adriana; SANTOS, Fabiana Cristina Pereira dos; CALEIRO, Giovana Santos; NOGUEIRA, Mauricio Lacerda; MAIORKA, Paulo Cesar
    The aim of this study was to improve flavivirus field monitoring in Brazil using a reliable probe-based RT-qPCR assay. Standard flavivirus strains were employed to evaluate the performance of the assay, and its applicability was evaluated using 235 stored pools of Culicidae samples collected between 1993 and 1997 and in 2016. Flavivirus species were identified by sequencing. Sixteen (6.8%) samples tested positive: Ilheus virus, Iguape virus, and Saint Louis encephalitis virus were identified in historical specimens from 1993-1994, while insect-specific flaviviruses were detected in the samples from 2016. This approach was demonstrated to be accurate for flavivirus detection and characterization, and it can be successfully applied for vector surveillance and for monitoring and discovery of insect specific flaviviruses.
  • article 0 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Phylogenetics, Epidemiology and Temporal Patterns of Dengue Virus in Araraquara, São Paulo State
    (2024) SOUZA, Caio Santos de; CALEIRO, Giovana Santos; CLARO, Ingra Morales; JESUS, Jaqueline Goes de; COLETTI, Thais Moura; SILVA, Camila Alves Maia da; COSTA, Angela Aparecida; INENAMI, Marta; RIBEIRO, Andreia C.; FELIX, Alvina Clara; PAULA, Anderson Vicente de; FIGUEIREDO, Walter M.; LUNA, Expedito Jose de Albuquerque; SABINO, Ester C.; ROMANO, Camila M.
    Dengue virus (DENV) is a prominent arbovirus with global spread, causing approximately 390 million infections each year. In Brazil, yearly epidemics follow a well-documented pattern of serotype replacement every three to four years on average. Araraquara, located in the state of Sao Paulo, has faced significant impacts from DENV epidemics since the emergence of DENV-1 in 2010. The municipality then transitioned from low to moderate endemicity in less than 10 years. Yet, there remains an insufficient understanding of virus circulation dynamics, particularly concerning DENV-1, in the region, as well as the genetic characteristics of the virus. To address this, we sequenced 37 complete or partial DENV-1 genomes sampled from 2015 to 2022 in Araraquara. Then, using also Brazilian and worldwide DENV-1 sequences we reconstructed the evolutionary history of DENV-1 in Araraquara and estimated the time to the most recent common ancestor (tMRCA) for serotype 1, for genotype V and its main lineages. Within the last ten years, there have been at least three introductions of genotype V in Araraquara, distributed in two main lineages (L Ia and L Ib, and L II). The tMRCA for the first sampled lineage (2015/2016 epidemics) was approximately 15 years ago (in 2008). Crucially, our analysis challenges existing assumptions regarding the emergence time of the DENV-1 genotypes, suggesting that genotype V might have diverged more recently than previously described. The presence of the two lineages of genotype V in the municipality might have contributed to the extended persistence of DENV-1 in the region.
  • article 20 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    First report of Aedes albopictus infected by Dengue and Zika virus in a rural outbreak in Brazil
    (2020) REZENDE, Helder Ricas; ROMANO, Camila Malta; CLARO, Ingra Morales; CALEIRO, Giovana Santos; SABINO, Ester Cerdeira; FELIX, Alvina Clara; BISSOLI, Jefferson; HILL, Sarah; FARIA, Nuno Rodrigues; SILVA, Theresa Cristina Cardoso da; SANTOS, Ana Paula Brioschi; CERUTTI JUNIOR, Crispim; VICENTE, Creuza Rachel
    In Brazil, Dengue (DENV) and Zika (ZIKV) viruses are reported as being transmitted exclusively by Aedes aegypti in urban settings. This study established the vectors and viruses involved in an arbovirus outbreak that occurred in 2019 in a rural area of Espi ' rito Santo state, Brazil. Mosquitoes collected were morphologically identified, sorted in samples, and submitted to molecular analysis for arboviruses detection. Phylogenetic reconstruction was performed for the viral sequence obtained. All 393 mosquitoes were identified as Aedes albopictus. DENV-1 genotype V was present in one sample and another sample was positive for ZIKV. The DENV-1 clustered with viruses that have circulated in previous years in large urban centers of different regions in Brazil. This is the first report of A. albopictus infected by DENV and ZIKV during an outbreak in a rural area in Brazil, indicating its involvement in arboviral transmission. The DENV-1 strain found in the A. albopictus was not new in Brazil, being involved previously in epidemics related to A. aegypti, suggesting the potential to A. albopictus in transmitting viruses already circulating in the Brazilian population. This finding also indicates the possibility of these viruses to disperse across urban and rural settings, imposing additional challenges for the control of the diseases.
  • article 27 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Possible non-sylvatic transmission of yellow fever between non-human primates in SAo Paulo city, Brazil, 2017-2018
    (2020) CUNHA, Mariana Sequetin; TUBAKI, Rosa Maria; MENEZES, Regiane Maria Tironi de; PEREIRA, Mariza; CALEIRO, Giovana Santos; COELHO, Esmenia; SAAD, Leila del Castillo; FERNANDES, Natalia Coelho Couto de Azevedo; GUERRA, Juliana Mariotti; NOGUEIRA, Juliana Silva; SUMMA, Juliana Laurito; COIMBRA, Amanda Aparecida Cardoso; ZWARG, Ticiana; WITKIN, Steven S.; MUCCI, Luis Filipe; TIMENETSKY, Maria do Carmo Sampaio Tavares; SABINO, Ester Cerdeira; DEUS, Juliana Telles de
    Yellow Fever (YF) is a severe disease caused by Yellow Fever Virus (YFV), endemic in some parts of Africa and America. In Brazil, YFV is maintained by a sylvatic transmission cycle involving non-human primates (NHP) and forest canopy-dwelling mosquitoes, mainly Haemagogus-spp and Sabethes-spp. Beginning in 2016, Brazil faced one of the largest Yellow Fever (YF) outbreaks in recent decades, mainly in the southeastern region. In SAo Paulo city, YFV was detected in October 2017 in Aloutta monkeys in an Atlantic Forest area. From 542 NHP, a total of 162 NHP were YFV positive by RT-qPCR and/or immunohistochemistry, being 22 Callithrix-spp. most from urban areas. Entomological collections executed did not detect the presence of strictly sylvatic mosquitoes. Three mosquito pools were positive for YFV, 2 Haemagogus leucocelaenus, and 1 Aedes scapularis. In summary, YFV in the SAo Paulo urban area was detected mainly in resident marmosets, and synanthropic mosquitoes were likely involved in viral transmission.
  • article 16 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Genomic evidence of yellow fever virus in Aedes scapularis, southeastern Brazil, 2016
    (2020) CUNHA, Mariana Sequetin; FARIA, Nuno Rodrigues; CALEIRO, Giovana Santos; CANDIDO, Darlan Silva; HILL, Sarah C.; CLARO, Ingra Morales; COSTA, Antonio Charlys da; NOGUEIRA, Juliana Silva; MAEDA, Adriana Yurika; SILVA, Fernanda Gisele da; SOUZA, Renato Pereira de; SPINOLA, Roberta; TUBAKI, Rosa Maria; MENEZES, Regiane Maria Tironi de; ABADE, Leandro; MUCCI, Luis Filipe; TIMENETSKY, Maria do Carmo Sampaio Tavares; SABINO, Esther
    The southeastern region of Brazil has recently experienced the largest yellow fever disease outbreak in decades. Since July 2016 epizootic events were reported in Sao Paulo state's north region, where 787 Culicidae were captured as part of public health surveillance efforts and tested using real-time quantitative PCR. One Aedes scapularis pool collected in November 2016 in an agriculture area in Urupes city tested positive for YFV-RNA. Using a validated multiplex PCR approach we were able to recover a complete virus genome sequence from this pool. Phylogenetic analysis of the novel strain and publicly available data indicates that the belongs to the South American genotype 1 clade circulating in Sao Paulo state and is basal to the recent outbreak clade in southeast Brazil. Our findings highlight the need of additional studies, including vector competence studies, to disentangle the role of Aedes scapularis in yellow fever transmission in the Americas.