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5
result(s) for
"Leandro, João Gabriel B."
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Acetylsalicylic acid and salicylic acid present anticancer properties against melanoma by promoting nitric oxide-dependent endoplasmic reticulum stress and apoptosis
by
Branco, Jessica R.
,
Esteves, Amanda M.
,
Mendonça, Ana Paula M.
in
631/67/1813/1634
,
631/80/82/23
,
631/80/82/39
2020
Melanoma is the most aggressive and fatal type of skin cancer due to being highly proliferative. Acetylsalicylic acid (ASA; Aspirin) and salicylic acid (SA) are ancient drugs with multiple applications in medicine. Here, we showed that ASA and SA present anticancer effects against a murine model of implanted melanoma. These effects were also validated in 3D- and 2D-cultured melanoma B16F10 cells, where the drugs promoted pro-apoptotic effects. In both in vivo and in vitro models, SA and ASA triggered endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, which culminates with the upregulation of the pro-apoptotic transcription factor C/EBP homologous protein (CHOP). These effects are initiated by ASA/SA-triggered Akt/mTOR/AMPK-dependent activation of nitric oxide synthase 3 (eNOS), which increases nitric oxide and reactive oxygen species production inducing ER stress response. In the end, we propose that ASA and SA instigate anticancer effects by a novel mechanism, the activation of ER stress.
Journal Article
Colors for Resources: Reward-Linked Visual Displays in Orchids
2026
Pollination syndromes reflect the convergence of floral traits among plants sharing the same pollinator guild. However, bee-pollinated orchids exhibit striking variation in color and size. This diversity reflects the multiple reward strategies that evolved within the family, each interacting differently with bee sensory biases. Here, we tested whether the complex floral visual displays of orchids differ in signal identity and intensity among reward systems. We also considered intrafloral modularity, measured as the color differentiation among flower parts, and color–size integration. For this, we measured and modeled floral morphometric and reflectance data from sepals, petals, lip tips, and lip bases under bee vision from 95 tropical Epidendroid species to compare chromatic and achromatic contrasts, spectral purity, and mean reflectance across wavebands, plus flower and display size, among reward systems. Reward types included 19 food-deceptive, 8 nectar-offering, 10 oil-offering, 11 fragrance-offering, and 47 orchid species of unknown reward strategy. Principal component analyses on 34 color and 9 size variables summarized major gradients of visual trait variation: first component (19.1%) represented overall green-red reflectance and achromatic contrasts, whereas the second (16.5%) captured chromatic contrast–size covariation. Reward systems differed mostly in signal identity rather than signal intensity. Flower chromatic contrasts presented strong integration with flower size, while achromatic contrasts were negatively associated with display size. While deceptive and nectar-offering orchids tend toward larger solitary flowers with bluer and spectrally purer displays, oil- and fragrance-offering orchids tend toward smaller, brownish, or yellow to green flowers, with larger inflorescences. Rewardless orchids presented more achromatically conspicuous signals than rewarding orchids, but smaller displays. Orchid species clustered by reward both in PCA spaces and in bee hexagon color space. Deceptive orchids were typically associated with UV + White colors, oil orchids with UV + Yellow lip tips, and fragrance orchids with UV-Black lip bases and UV-Green lip tips. Together, these results indicate that orchid reward systems promote qualitative rather than quantitative differentiation in visual signals, integrating display color and size. These long-evolved distinct signals potentially enable foraging bees to discriminate among resource types within the community floral market. Our results demonstrate that color and flower display size are important predictors of reward strategy, likely used by foraging bees for phenotype-reward associations, thus mediating the evolution of floral signals.
Journal Article
Sustainability Agenda for the Pantanal Wetland: Perspectives on a Collaborative Interface for Science, Policy, and Decision-Making
by
Campos, Zilca
,
Pellegrin, Aiesca O.
,
Landeiro, Victor L.
in
Aquatic ecosystems
,
biodiversity
,
Biodiversity and Ecology
2019
Building bridges between environmental and political agendas is essential nowadays in face of the increasing human pressure on natural environments, including wetlands. Wetlands provide critical ecosystem services for humanity and can generate a considerable direct or indirect income to the local communities. To meet many of the sustainable development goals, we need to move our trajectory from the current environmental destructive development to a wiser wetland use. The current article contain a proposed agenda for the Pantanal aiming the improvement of public policy for conservation in the Pantanal, one of the largest, most diverse, and continuous inland wetland in the world. We suggest and discuss a list of 11 essential interfaces between science, policy, and development in region linked to the proposed agenda. We believe that a functional science network can booster the collaborative capability to generate creative ideas and solutions to address the big challenges faced by the Pantanal wetland.
Journal Article
Rivaroxaban Versus Enoxaparin for Thromboprophylaxis After major Gynecological Cancer Surgery: The VALERIA Trial
by
Longo de Oliveira, André Luiz Malavasi
,
Pirani, Márcia Bermudez
,
Castelli, Valter
in
Original Manuscript
2022
Direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) for venous thromboembolism (VTE) prevention
after major gynecological cancer surgery might be an alternative to parenteral
low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH). Patients undergoing major gynecological
cancer surgery were randomized at hospital discharge to receive rivaroxaban 10
mg once daily or enoxaparin 40 mg once daily for 30 days. The primary efficacy
outcome was a combination of symptomatic VTE and VTE-related death or
asymptomatic VTE at day 30. The primary safety outcome was the incidence of
major or clinically relevant nonmajor bleeding. Two hundred and twenty-eight
patients were enrolled and randomly assigned to receive rivaroxaban
(n = 114)or enoxaparin (n = 114). The trial was stopped due to a
lower-than-expected event rate. The primary efficacy outcome occurred in 3.51%
of patients assigned to rivaroxaban and in 4.39% of patients assigned to
enoxaparin (relative risk 0.80, 95% CI 0.22 to 2.90; p = 0.7344). Patients
assigned to rivaroxaban had no primary bleeding event, and 3 patients (2.63%) in
the enoxaparin group had a major or CRNM bleeding event (hazard ratio, 0.14; 95%
CI, 0.007 to 2.73; P = 0.1963). In patients undergoing major gynecological
cancer surgery, thromboprophylaxis with rivaroxaban 10 mg daily for 30 days had
similar rates of thrombotic and bleeding events compared to parenteral
enoxaparin 40 mg daily. While the power is limited due to not reaching the
intended sample size, our results support the hypothesis that DOACs might be an
attractive alternative strategy to LMWH to prevent VTE in this high-risk
population.
Journal Article