Navegando por Autor "SOUSA, Aline Andrade de"
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Item Acesso aberto (Open Access) Influências do envelhecimento e do ambiente sobre a progressão da encefalite experimental por arbovírus Piry em modelo murino: mudanças morfológicas microgliais e alterações comportamentais(Universidade Federal do Pará, 2014-10-03) SOUSA, Aline Andrade de; DINIZ, Cristovam Wanderley Picanço; http://lattes.cnpq.br/2014918752636286Environmental enrichment and aging effects on behavioral and microglial morphological changes were investigated in a murine model of sub-lethal arbovirus encephalitis. To that end two-months-old female albino Swiss mice were raised in impoverished (IE) or in enriched environments (EE) during 6 (young - Y) or 16 (aged - A) months. After behavioral tests, Y and A mice were nasally instilled with an equal volume of Piry virus infected (Py) or normal brain homogenates. Eight days post-infection (DPI), when behavioral tests first revealed sickness changes, mice brains sections were immunoreacted with anti-IBA1 and anti-Piry virus antibodies. At 20 and 40 dpi, the remaining infected animals were behaviorally re-tested, and processed for the same markers. In infected young mice from impoverished environment (IYPy), burrowing activity decreased and recovered earlier (8–10 dpi) than open field activity (20–40 dpi) but remained unaltered in age-matched mice from enriched environment (EYPy). In contrast, aged infected mice, both from enriched (EAPy) and impoverished (IAPy) environments, reduced significantly burrowing activity at all-time windows. Piry virus encephalitis induced transitory olfactory losses in IYPy and EYPy but permanent in IAPy and EAPy. Piry virus antigens immunolabeling reached a peak in CNS parenchyma at 5 and 6dpi and disappeared at 8dpi. All microglia three-dimensional reconstructions were done at 8dpi. Microglial changes were significantly more severe in young adult than in aged mice but EY mice seem to recover to the microglial homeostatic morphology earlier than IY. EE beneficial effects were smaller in aged mice.Item Acesso aberto (Open Access) Microglia and neurons in the hippocampus of migratory sandpipers(Universidade Federal do Pará, 2015-11) DINIZ, Cristovam Guerreiro; MAGALHÃES, Nara Gyzely de Morais; SOUSA, Aline Andrade de; SANTOS FILHO, Carlos; DINIZ, Daniel Guerreiro; LIMA, Camila Mendes de; OLIVEIRA, Marcus Augusto de; PAULO, Dario Carvalho; PEREIRA, Patrick Douglas Corrêa; SHERRY, David FrancisThe semipalmated sandpiper Calidris pusilla and the spotted sandpiper Actitis macularia are long- and short-distance migrants, respectively. C. pusilla breeds in the sub-arctic and mid-arctic tundra of Canada and Alaska and winters on the north and east coasts of South America. A. macularia breeds in a broad distribution across most of North America from the treeline to the southern United States. It winters in the southern United States, and Central and South America. The autumn migration route of C. pusilla includes a non-stop flight over the Atlantic Ocean, whereas autumn route of A. macularia is largely over land. Because of this difference in their migratory paths and the visuo-spatial recognition tasks involved, we hypothesized that hippocampal volume and neuronal and glial numbers would differ between these two species. A. macularia did not differ from C. pusilla in the total number of hippocampal neurons, but the species had a larger hippocampal formation and more hippocampal microglia. It remains to be investigated whether these differences indicate interspecies differences or neural specializations associated with different strategies of orientation and navigation.