EDECIO CUNHA NETO

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
28
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Departamento de Clínica Médica, Faculdade de Medicina - Docente
Instituto do Coração, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina
LIM/60 - Laboratório de Imunologia Clínica e Alergia, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina - Líder

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 10 de 18
  • article 25 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Polymorphism in the Alpha Cardiac Muscle Actin 1 Gene Is Associated to Susceptibility to Chronic Inflammatory Cardiomyopathy
    (2013) FRADE, Amanda Farage; TEIXEIRA, Priscila Camilo; IANNI, Barbara Maria; PISSETTI, Cristina Wide; SABA, Bruno; WANG, Lin Hui Tzu; KURAMOTO, Andreia; NOGUEIRA, Luciana Gabriel; BUCK, Paula; DIAS, Fabricio; GINIAUX, Helene; LLORED, Agnes; ALVES, Sthefanny; SCHMIDT, Andre; DONADI, Eduardo; MARIN-NETO, Jose Antonio; HIRATA, Mario; SAMPAIO, Marcelo; FRAGATA, Abilio; BOCCHI, Edimar Alcides; STOLF, Antonio Noedir; FIORELLI, Alfredo Inacio; SANTOS, Ronaldo Honorato Barros; RODRIGUES, Virmondes; PEREIRA, Alexandre Costa; KALIL, Jorge; CUNHA-NETO, Edecio; CHEVILLARD, Christophe
    Aims: Chagas disease, caused by the protozoan Trypanosoma cruzi is endemic in Latin America, and may lead to a life-threatening inflammatory dilated, chronic Chagas cardiomyopathy (CCC). One third of T. cruzi-infected individuals progress to CCC while the others remain asymptomatic (ASY). A possible genetic component to disease progression was suggested by familial aggregation of cases and the association of markers of innate and adaptive immunity genes with CCC development. Since mutations in multiple sarcomeric genes, including alpha-cardiac actin (ACTC1) have been involved in hereditary dilated cardiomyopathy, we investigated the involvement of the ACTC1 gene in CCC pathogenesis. Methods and Results: We conducted a proteomic and genetic study on a Brazilian study population. The genetic study was done on a main cohort including 118 seropositive asymptomatic subjects and 315 cases and the replication was done on 36 asymptomatic and 102 CCC cases. ACTC1 protein and mRNA levels were lower in myocardial tissue from patients with end-stage CCC than those found in hearts from organ donors. Genotyping a case-control cohort of CCC and ASY subjects for all informative single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in the ACTC1 gene identified rs640249 SNP, located at the 5' region, as associated to CCC. Associations are borderline after correction for multiple testing. Correlation and haplotype analysis led to the identification of a susceptibility haplotype. Functional assays have shown that the rs640249A/C polymorphism affects the binding of transcriptional factors in the promoter regions of the ACTC1 gene. Confirmation of the detected association on a larger independent replication cohort will be useful. Conclusions: Genetic variations at the ACTC1 gene may contribute to progression to chronic Chagas Cardiomyopathy among T. cruzi-infected patients, possibly by modulating transcription factor binding to ACTC1 promoter regions.
  • article 85 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Discordant congenital Zika syndrome twins show differential in vitro viral susceptibility of neural progenitor cells
    (2018) CAIRES JR., Luiz Carlos de; GOULART, Ernesto; MELO, UiraSouto; ARAUJO, Bruno Silva Henrique; ALVIZI, Lucas; SCHANOSKI, Alessandra Soares; OLIVEIRA, Danyllo Felipe de; KOBAYASHI, Gerson Shigeru; GRIESI-OLIVEIRA, Karina; MUSSO, Camila Manso; AMARAL, MuriloSena; DASILVA, Lucas Ferreira; ASTRAY, Renato Mancini; SUAREZ-PATINO, Sandra Fernanda; VENTINI, Daniella Cristina; SILVA, Sergio Gomes da; YAMAMOTO, Guilherme Lopes; EZQUINA, Suzana; NASLAVSKY, Michel Satya; SILVA, Kayque Telles Alves; WEINMANN, Karina; LINDEN, Vanessa Van der; LINDEN, Helio Van der; OLIVEIRA, Joao Mendes Ricardo de; ARRAIS, Nivia Rodrigues Maria; MELO, Adriana; FIGUEIREDO, Thalita; SANTOS, Silvana; MEIRA, Joanna Castro Goes; PASSOS, Saulo Duarte; ALMEIDA, Roque Pacheco de; BISPO, Ana JovinaBarreto; CAVALHEIRO, EsperAbrao; KALIL, Jorge; CUNHA-NETO, Edecio; NAKAYA, Helder; SANTOS, Robert Andreata; FERREIRA, Luis Carlos de Souza; VERJOVSKI-ALMEIDA, Sergio; HO, Paulo Lee; PASSOS-BUENO, Maria Rita; ZATZ, Mayana
    Congenital Zika syndrome (CZS) causes early brain development impairment by affecting neural progenitor cells (NPCs). Here, we analyze NPCs from three pairs of dizygotic twins discordant for CZS. We compare by RNA-Seq the NPCs derived from CZS-affected and CZS-unaffected twins. Prior to Zika virus (ZIKV) infection the NPCs from CZS babies show a significantly different gene expression signature of mTOR and Wnt pathway regulators, key to a neurodevelopmental program. Following ZIKV in vitro infection, cells from affected individuals have significantly higher ZIKV replication and reduced cell growth. Whole-exome analysis in 18 affected CZS babies as compared to 5 unaffected twins and 609 controls excludes a monogenic model to explain resistance or increased susceptibility to CZS development. Overall, our results indicate that CZS is not a stochastic event and depends on NPC intrinsic susceptibility, possibly related to oligogenic and/or epigenetic mechanisms.
  • article 18 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    HIV Envelope Trimer Specific Immune Response Is Influenced by Different Adjuvant Formulations and Heterologous Prime-Boost
    (2016) APOSTOLICO, Juliana de Souza; BOSCARDIN, Silvia Beatriz; YAMAMOTO, Marcio Massao; OLIVEIRA-FILHO, Jethe Nunes de; KALIL, Jorge; CUNHA-NETO, Edecio; ROSA, Daniela Santoro
    The development of a preventive vaccine against human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) infection is the most efficient method to control the epidemic. The ultimate goal is to develop a vaccine able to induce specific neutralizing, non-neutralizing antibodies and cellular mediated immunity (CMI). Humoral and CMI responses can be directed to glycoproteins that are normally presented as a trimeric spike on the virus surface (gp140). Despite safer, subunit vaccines are normally less immunogenic/effective and need to be delivered together with an adjuvant. The choice of a suitable adjuvant can induce effective humoral and CMI that utterly lead to full protection against disease. In this report, we established a hierarchy of adjuvant potency on humoral and CMI when admixed with the recombinant HIV gp140 trimer. We show that vaccination with gp140 in the presence of different adjuvants can induce high-affinity antibodies, follicular helper T cells and germinal center B cells. The data show that poly (I:C) is the most potent adjuvant to induce specific CMI responses evidenced by IFN-gamma production and CD4(+)/CD8(+) T cell proliferation. Furthermore, we demonstrate that combining some adjuvants like MPL plus Alum and MPL plus MDP exert additive effects that impact on the magnitude and quality of humoral responses while mixing MDP with poly (I:C) or with R848 had no impact on total IgG titers but highly impact IgG subclass. In addition, heterologous DNA prime-protein boost yielded higher IgG titers when compare to DNA alone and improved the quality of humoral response when compare to protein immunization as evidenced by IgG1/IgG2a ratio. The results presented in this paper highlight the importance of selecting the correct adjuvant-antigen combination to potentiate desired cells for optimal stimulation.
  • article 25 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Broad and Cross-Clade CD4(+) T-Cell Responses Elicited by a DNA Vaccine Encoding Highly Conserved and Promiscuous HIV-1 M-Group Consensus Peptides
    (2012) ALMEIDA, Rafael Ribeiro; ROSA, Daniela Santoro; RIBEIRO, Susan Pereira; SANTANA, Vinicius Canato; KALLAS, Esper Georges; SIDNEY, John; SETTE, Alessandro; KALIL, Jorge; CUNHA-NETO, Edecio
    T-cell based vaccine approaches have emerged to counteract HIV-1/AIDS. Broad, polyfunctional and cytotoxic CD4(+) T-cell responses have been associated with control of HIV-1 replication, which supports the inclusion of CD4(+) T-cell epitopes in vaccines. A successful HIV-1 vaccine should also be designed to overcome viral genetic diversity and be able to confer immunity in a high proportion of immunized individuals from a diverse HLA-bearing population. In this study, we rationally designed a multiepitopic DNA vaccine in order to elicit broad and cross-clade CD4(+) T-cell responses against highly conserved and promiscuous peptides from the HIV-1 M-group consensus sequence. We identified 27 conserved, multiple HLA-DR-binding peptides in the HIV-1 M-group consensus sequences of Gag, Pol, Nef, Vif, Vpr, Rev and Vpu using the TEPITOPE algorithm. The peptides bound in vitro to an average of 12 out of the 17 tested HLA-DR molecules and also to several molecules such as HLA-DP, -DQ and murine IA(b) and IA(d). Sixteen out of the 27 peptides were recognized by PBMC from patients infected with different HIV-1 variants and 72% of such patients recognized at least 1 peptide. Immunization with a DNA vaccine (HIVBr27) encoding the identified peptides elicited IFN-gamma secretion against 11 out of the 27 peptides in BALB/c mice; CD4(+) and CD8(+) T-cell proliferation was observed against 8 and 6 peptides, respectively. HIVBr27 immunization elicited cross-clade T-cell responses against several HIV-1 peptide variants. Polyfunctional CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells, able to simultaneously proliferate and produce IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha, were also observed. This vaccine concept may cope with HIV-1 genetic diversity as well as provide increased population coverage, which are desirable features for an efficacious strategy against HIV-1/AIDS.
  • article 10 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    A refined genome phage display methodology delineates the human antibody response in patients with Chagas disease
    (2021) TEIXEIRA, Andre Azevedo Reis; CARNERO, Luis Rodriguez; KURAMOTO, Andreia; TANG, Fenny Hui Fen; GOMES, Carlos Hernique; PEREIRA, Natalia Bueno; OLIVEIRA, Lea Campos de; GARRINI, Regina; MONTEIRO, Jhonatas Sirino; SETUBAL, Joao Carlos; SABINO, Ester Cerdeira; PASQUALINI, Renata; COLLI, Walter; ARAP, Wadih; ALVES, Maria Julia Manso; CUNHA-NETO, Edecio; GIORDANO, Ricardo Jose
    Large-scale mapping of antigens and epitopes is pivotal for developing immunotherapies but challenging, especially for eukaryotic pathogens, owing to their large genomes. Here, we developed an integrated platform for genome phage display (gPhage) to show that unbiased libraries of the eukaryotic parasite Trypanosoma cruzi enable the identification of thousands of antigens recognized by serum samples from patients with Chagas disease. Because most of these antigens are hypothetical proteins, gPhage provides evidence of their expression during infection. We built and validated a comprehensive map of Chagas disease antibody response to show howlinear and putative conformation epitopes, many rich in repetitive elements, allow the parasite to evade a buildup of neutralizing antibodies directed against protein domains that mediate infection pathogenesis. Thus, the gPhage platform is a reproducible and effective tool for rapid simultaneous identification of epitopes and antigens, not only in Chagas disease but perhaps also in globally emerging/reemerging acute pathogens.
  • article 41 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    A DNA Vaccine Encoding Multiple HIV CD4 Epitopes Elicits Vigorous Polyfunctional, Long-Lived CD4(+) and CD8(+) T Cell Responses
    (2011) ROSA, Daniela Santoro; RIBEIRO, Susan Pereira; ALMEIDA, Rafael Ribeiro; MAIRENA, Eliane Conti; POSTOL, Edilberto; KALIL, Jorge; CUNHA-NETO, Edecio
    T-cell based vaccines against HIV have the goal of limiting both transmission and disease progression by inducing broad and functionally relevant T cell responses. Moreover, polyfunctional and long-lived specific memory T cells have been associated to vaccine-induced protection. CD4(+) T cells are important for the generation and maintenance of functional CD8(+) cytotoxic T cells. We have recently developed a DNA vaccine encoding 18 conserved multiple HLA-DR-binding HIV-1 CD4 epitopes (HIVBr18), capable of eliciting broad CD4(+) T cell responses in multiple HLA class II transgenic mice. Here, we evaluated the breadth and functional profile of HIVBr18-induced immune responses in BALB/c mice. Immunized mice displayed high-magnitude, broad CD4(+)/CD8(+) T cell responses, and 8/18 vaccine-encoded peptides were recognized. In addition, HIVBr18 immunization was able to induce polyfunctional CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells that proliferate and produce any two cytokines (IFN gamma/TNF alpha, IFN gamma/IL-2 or TNF alpha/IL-2) simultaneously in response to HIV-1 peptides. For CD4(+) T cells exclusively, we also detected cells that proliferate and produce all three tested cytokines simultaneously (IFN gamma/TNF alpha/IL-2). The vaccine also generated long-lived central and effector memory CD4(+) T cells, a desirable feature for T-cell based vaccines. By virtue of inducing broad, polyfunctional and long-lived T cell responses against conserved CD4(+) T cell epitopes, combined administration of this vaccine concept may provide sustained help for CD8(+) T cells and antibody responses-elicited by other HIV immunogens.
  • article 3 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    MiRNA-30d and miR-770-5p as potential clinical risk predictors of Vasoplegic Syndrome in Patients undergoing on-pump coronary artery bypass grafting
    (2023) MEJIA, Omar Asdrubal Vilca; SOUZA, Renato Cesar de; SANTOS, Aritania S.; MENEGHINI, Bianca; SILVA, Ana Carolina Carvalho; BRASIL, Guilherme Visconde; RIGAUD, Vagner Oliveira Carvalho; DALLAN, Luis Roberto Palma; MOREIRA, Luiz Felipe Pinho; LISBOA, Luiz Augusto Ferreira; DALLAN, Luis Alberto Oliveira; KALIL, Jorge; CUNHA-NETO, Edecio; FERREIRA, Ludmila Rodrigues Pinto; JATENE, Fabio Biscegli
    The aims of this study were to perform pre-surgery miRNA profiling of patients who develop Vasoplegic syndrome (VS) after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) and identify those miRNAs that could be used as VS prognostic tools and biomarkers. The levels of 754 microRNAs (miRNAs) were measured in whole blood samples from a cohort of patients collected right before the coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) surgery. We compared the miRNA levels of those who developed VS (VASO group) with those who did not (NONVASO group) after surgery. Six miRNAs (hsa-miR-548c-3p, -199b-5p, -383-5p -571 -183-3p, -30d-5p) were increased and two (hsa-1236-3p, and hsa-miR770-5p) were decreased in blood of VASO compared to NONVASO groups. Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curve analysis revealed that a combination of the miRNAs, hsa-miR-30d-5p and hsa-miR-770-5p can be used as VS predictors (AUC = 0.9615, p < 0.0001). The computational and functional analyses were performed to gain insights into the potential role of these dysregulated miRNAs in VS and have identified the ""Apelin Liver Signaling Pathway"" as the canonical pathway containing the most target genes regulated by these miRNAs. The expression of the combined miRNAs hsa-miR-30d and hsa-miR-770-5p allowed the ability to distinguish between patients who could and could not develop VS, representing a potential predictive biomarker of VS.
  • article 18 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    In silico construction of a multiepitope Zika virus vaccine using immunoinformatics tools
    (2022) ANTONELLI, Ana Clara Barbosa; ALMEIDA, Vinnycius Pereira; CASTRO, Fernanda Oliveira Feitosa de; SILVA, Jacyelle Medeiros; PFRIMER, Irmtraut Araci Hoffmann; CUNHA-NETO, Edecio; MARANHAO, Andrea Queiroz; BRIGIDO, Marcelo Macedo; RESENDE, Renato Oliveira; BOCCA, Anamelia Lorenzetti; FONSECA, Simone Goncalves
    Zika virus (ZIKV) is an arbovirus from the Flaviviridae family and Flavivirus genus. Neurological events have been associated with ZIKV-infected individuals, such as Guillain-Barre syndrome, an autoimmune acute neuropathy that causes nerve demyelination and can induce paralysis. With the increase of ZIKV infection incidence in 2015, malformation and microcephaly cases in newborns have grown considerably, which suggested congenital transmission. Therefore, the development of an effective vaccine against ZIKV became an urgent need. Live attenuated vaccines present some theoretical risks for administration in pregnant women. Thus, we developed an in silico multiepitope vaccine against ZIKV. All structural and non-structural proteins were investigated using immunoinformatics tools designed for the prediction of CD4+and CD8+T cell epitopes. We selected 13 CD8+and 12 CD4+T cell epitopes considering parameters such as binding affinity to HLA class I and II molecules, promiscuity based on the number of different HLA alleles that bind to the epitopes, and immunogenicity. ZIKV Envelope protein domain III (EDIII) was added to the vaccine construct, creating a hybrid protein domain-multiepitope vaccine. Three high scoring continuous and two discontinuous B cell epitopes were found in EDIII. Aiming to increase the candidate vaccine antigenicity even further, we tested secondary and tertiary structures and physicochemical parameters of the vaccine conjugated to four different protein adjuvants: flagellin, 50S ribosomal protein L7/L12, heparin-binding hemagglutinin, or RS09 synthetic peptide. The addition of the flagellin adjuvant increased the vaccine's predicted antigenicity. In silico predictions revealed that the protein is a probable antigen, non-allergenic and predicted to be stable. The vaccine's average population coverage is estimated to be 87.86%, which indicates it can be administered worldwide. Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells (PBMC) of individuals with previous ZIKV infection were tested for cytokine production in response to the pool of CD4 and CD8 ZIKV peptide selected. CD4+and CD8+T cells showed significant production of IFN-gamma upon stimulation and IL-2 production was also detected by CD8+T cells, which indicated the potential of our peptides to be recognized by specific T cells and induce immune response. In conclusion, we developed an in silico universal vaccine predicted to induce broad and high-coverage cellular and humoral immune responses against ZIKV, which can be a good candidate for posterior in vivo validation.
  • article 10 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Rheumatic Heart Disease and Myxomatous Degeneration: Differences and Similarities of Valve Damage Resulting from Autoimmune Reactions and Matrix Disorganization
    (2017) MARTINS, Carlo de Oliveira; DEMARCHI, Lea; FERREIRA, Frederico Moraes; POMERANTZEFF, Pablo Maria Alberto; BRANDAO, Carlos; SAMPAIO, Roney Orismar; SPINA, Guilherme Sobreira; KALIL, Jorge; CUNHA-NETO, Edecio; GUILHERME, Luiza
    Autoimmune inflammatory reactions leading to rheumatic fever (RF) and rheumatic heart disease (RHD) result from untreated Streptococcus pyogenes throat infections in individuals who exhibit genetic susceptibility. Immune effector mechanisms have been described that lead to heart tissue damage culminating in mitral and aortic valve dysfunctions. In myxomatous valve degeneration (MXD), the mitral valve is also damaged due to non-inflammatory mechanisms. Both diseases are characterized by structural valve disarray and a previous proteomic analysis of them has disclosed a distinct profile of matrix/structural proteins differentially expressed. Given their relevance in organizing valve tissue, we quantitatively evaluated the expression of vimentin, collagen VI, lumican, and vitronectin as well as performed immunohistochemical analysis of their distribution in valve tissue lesions of patients in both diseases. We identified abundant expression of two isoforms of vimentin (45 kDa, 42 kDa) with reduced expression of the full-size protein (54 kDa) in RHD valves. We also found increased vitronectin expression, reduced collagen VI expression and similar lumican expression between RHD and MXD valves. Immunohistochemical analysis indicated disrupted patterns of these proteins in myxomatous degeneration valves and disorganized distribution in rheumatic heart disease valves that correlated with clinical manifestations such as valve regurgitation or stenosis. Confocal microscopy analysis revealed a diverse pattern of distribution of collagen VI and lumican into RHD and MXD valves. Altogether, these results demonstrated distinct patterns of altered valve expression and tissue distribution/ organization of structural/matrix proteins that play important pathophysiological roles in both valve diseases.
  • article 1 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    p16(INK4a) Expression and Immunologic Aging in Chronic HIV Infection (vol 11, e0166759, 2016)
    (2017) RIBEIRO, Susan Pereira; MILUSH, Jeffrey M.; CUNHA-NETO, Edecio; KAILAS, Esper G.; KALIL, Jorge; PASSERO, Luiz Felipe D.; HUNT, Peter W.; DEEKS, Steven G.; NIXON, Douglas F.; SENGUPTA, Devi