SILVIA YUMI BANDO TAKAHARA

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
10
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Departamento de Pediatria, Faculdade de Medicina
LIM/36 - Laboratório de Pediatria Clínica, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 4 de 4
  • article 7 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Hippocampal CA3 transcriptional modules associated with granule cell alterations and cognitive impairment in refractory mesial temporal lobe epilepsy patients
    (2021) BANDO, Silvia Yumi; BERTONHA, Fernanda Bernardi; PIMENTEL-SILVA, Luciana Ramalho; OLIVEIRA, Joao Gabriel Mansano de; CARNEIRO, Marco Antonio Duarte; OKU, Mariana Hiromi Manoel; WEN, Hung-Tzu; CASTRO, Luiz Henrique Martins; MOREIRA-FILHO, Carlos Alberto
    In about a third of the patients with epilepsy the seizures are not drug-controlled. The current limitation of the antiepileptic drug therapy derives from an insufficient understanding of epilepsy pathophysiology. In order to overcome this situation, it is necessary to consider epilepsy as a disturbed network of interactions, instead of just looking for changes in single molecular components. Here, we studied CA3 transcriptional signatures and dentate gyrus histopathologic alterations in hippocampal explants surgically obtained from 57 RMTLE patients submitted to corticoamygdalohippocampectomy. By adopting a systems biology approach, integrating clinical, histopathological, and transcriptomic data (weighted gene co-expression network analysis), we were able to identify transcriptional modules highly correlated with age of disease onset, cognitive dysfunctions, and granule cell alterations. The enrichment analysis of transcriptional modules and the functional characterization of the highly connected genes in each trait-correlated module allowed us to unveil the modules' main biological functions, paving the way for further investigations on their roles in RMTLE pathophysiology. Moreover, we found 15 genes with high gene significance values which have the potential to become novel biomarkers and/or therapeutic targets in RMTLE.
  • article 3 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Blood leukocyte transcriptional modules and differentially expressed genes associated with disease severity and age in COVID-19 patients
    (2023) BANDO, Silvia Y.; BERTONHA, Fernanda B.; VIEIRA, Sandra E.; OLIVEIRA, Danielle B. L. de; CHALUP, Vanessa N.; DURIGON, Edison L.; PALMEIRA, Patricia; CURI, Ana Cristina P.; FARIA, Caroline S.; ANTONANGELO, Leila; LAUTERBACH, Gerhard da P.; REGALIO, Fabiane A.; CESAR, Roberto M.; MOREIRA-FILHO, Carlos A.
    Since the molecular mechanisms determining COVID-19 severity are not yet well understood, there is a demand for biomarkers derived from comparative transcriptome analyses of mild and severe cases, combined with patients' clinico-demographic and laboratory data. Here the transcriptomic response of human leukocytes to SARS-CoV-2 infection was investigated by focusing on the differences between mild and severe cases and between age subgroups (younger and older adults). Three transcriptional modules correlated with these traits were functionally characterized, as well as 23 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) associated to disease severity. One module, correlated with severe cases and older patients, had an overrepresentation of genes involved in innate immune response and in neutrophil activation, whereas two other modules, correlated with disease severity and younger patients, harbored genes involved in the innate immune response to viral infections, and in the regulation of this response. This transcriptomic mechanism could be related to the better outcome observed in younger COVID-19 patients. The DEGs, all hyper-expressed in the group of severe cases, were mostly involved in neutrophil activation and in the p53 pathway, therefore related to inflammation and lymphopenia. These biomarkers may be useful for getting a better stratification of risk factors in COVID-19.
  • article 17 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Minipuberty and Sexual Dimorphism in the Infant Human Thymus
    (2018) MOREIRA-FILHO, Carlos Alberto; BANDO, Silvia Yumi; BERTONHA, Fernanda Bernardi; FERREIRA, Leandro Rodrigues; VINHAS, Christiana de Freitas; OLIVEIRA, Lucila Habib Bourguignon; ZERBINI, Maria Claudia Nogueira; FURLANETTO, Glaucio; CHACCUR, Paulo; CARNEIRO-SAMPAIO, Magda
    AIRE expression in thymus is downregulated by estrogen after puberty, what probably renders women more susceptible to autoimmune disorders. Here we investigated the effects of minipuberty on male and female infant human thymic tissue in order to verify if this initial transient increase in sex hormones - along the first six months of life - could affect thymic transcriptional network regulation and AIRE expression. Gene co-expression network analysis for differentially expressed genes and miRNA-target analysis revealed sex differences in thymic tissue during minipuberty, but such differences were not detected in the thymic tissue of infants aged 7-18 months, i.e. the non-puberty group. AIRE expression was essentially the same in both sexes in minipuberty and in non-puberty groups, as assessed by genomic and immunohistochemical assays. However, A/RE-interactors networks showed several differences in all groups regarding gene-gene expression correlation. Therefore, minipuberty and genomic mechanisms interact in shaping thymic sexual dimorphism along the first six months of life.
  • article 1 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Transcriptomic analysis reveals distinct adaptive molecular mechanism in the hippocampal CA3 from rats susceptible or not-susceptible to hyperthermia-induced seizures
    (2023) BANDO, Silvia Y.; BERTONHA, Fernanda B.; MENEZES, Pedro H. N.; TAKAHARA, Andre K.; KHALED, Nathalia A.; SANTOS, Paula; JUNQUEIRA, Mara S.; CESAR, Roberto M.; MOREIRA-FILHO, Carlos A.
    Febrile seizures during early childhood are a relevant risk factor for the development of mesial temporal lobe epilepsy. Nevertheless, the molecular mechanism induced by febrile seizures that render the brain susceptible or not-susceptible to epileptogenesis remain poorly understood. Because the temporal investigation of such mechanisms in human patients is impossible, rat models of hyperthermia-induced febrile seizures have been used for that purpose. Here we conducted a temporal analysis of the transcriptomic and microRNA changes in the ventral CA3 of rats that develop (HS group) or not-develop (HNS group) seizures after hyperthermic insult on the eleventh postnatal day. The selected time intervals corresponded to acute, latent, and chronic phases of the disease. We found that the transcriptional differences between the HS and the HNS groups are related to inflammatory pathways, immune response, neurogenesis, and dendritogenesis in the latent and chronic phases. Additionally, the HNS group expressed a greater number of miRNAs (some abundantly expressed) as compared to the HS group. These results indicate that HNS rats were able to modulate their inflammatory response after insult, thus presenting better tissue repair and re-adaptation. Potential therapeutic targets, including genes, miRNAs and signaling pathways involved in epileptogenesis were identified.