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Institution

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

EducationBelo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, Brazil
About: Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais is a education organization based out in Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, Brazil. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Immune system. The organization has 41631 authors who have published 75688 publications receiving 1249905 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An in vitro and in vivo flowchart was designed to serve as a general and standardised protocol for screening potential drugs for the treatment of Chagas disease.
Abstract: Chagas disease, a neglected illness, affects nearly 12-14 million people in endemic areas of Latin America. Although the occurrence of acute cases sharply has declined due to Southern Cone Initiative efforts to control vector transmission, there still remain serious challenges, including the maintenance of sustainable public policies for Chagas disease control and the urgent need for better drugs to treat chagasic patients. Since the introduction of benznidazole and nifurtimox approximately 40 years ago, many natural and synthetic compounds have been assayed against Trypanosoma cruzi, yet only a few compounds have advanced to clinical trials. This reflects, at least in part, the lack of consensus regarding appropriate in vitro and in vivo screening protocols as well as the lack of biomarkers for treating parasitaemia. The development of more effective drugs requires (i) the identification and validation of parasite targets, (ii) compounds to be screened against the targets or the whole parasite and (iii) a panel of minimum standardised procedures to advance leading compounds to clinical trials. This third aim was the topic of the workshop entitled Experimental Models in Drug Screening and Development for Chagas Disease, held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on the 25th and 26th of November 2008 by the Fiocruz Program for Research and Technological Development on Chagas Disease and Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative. During the meeting, the minimum steps, requirements and decision gates for the determination of the efficacy of novel drugs for T. cruzi control were evaluated by interdisciplinary experts and an in vitro and in vivo flowchart was designed to serve as a general and standardised protocol for screening potential drugs for the treatment of Chagas disease.

280 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the two-photon state generated in the process of spontaneous parametric down-conversion in a thin crystal carries information about the angular spectrum of the pump beam.
Abstract: We show that the two-photon state generated in the process of spontaneous parametric down-conversion in a thin crystal carries information about the angular spectrum of the pump beam. This information transfer allows one to control the transverse correlation properties of the down-converted fields by manipulating the pump field, with consequences for a broad class of experiments. The effect is demonstrated theoretically and experimentally, in connection with the formation of fourth-order images by the down-converted beams.

280 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An association between theProduction of IFN-γ by CD3+ CD4+ cells and morbidity in Chagas' disease, whereas the production of IL-10 by macrophages/monocytes leads to regulation of the immune response in IND patients is suggested.
Abstract: The role of interleukin 10 (IL-10) and gamma interferon (IFN-γ) on the development of pathology in human Chagas' disease was investigated. Two categories of patients, low and high producers of IFN-γ, were identified based on the levels of secretion of this cytokine in the supernatant of peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) cultures. Eighty-three percent of the patients presenting with cardiac disease (CARD) of different degrees and 59% of the patients with the indeterminate form of disease (IND) were identified as high IFN-γ producers. PBMC from IND patients classified as low IFN-γ producers secreted significantly higher amounts of IL-10 than did those from other groups. Flow cytometry analysis demonstrated that in PBMC from the IND group, the majority of the IL-10-producing cells were monocytes (CD14High+ cells), whereas in the CARD group, the major sources of IFN-γ were T lymphocytes (CD3+ CD4+ cells). These results suggest an association between the production of IFN-γ by CD3+ CD4+ cells and morbidity in Chagas' disease, whereas the production of IL-10 by macrophages/monocytes leads to regulation of the immune response in IND patients. We hypothesize that an exacerbated production of IFN-γ against Trypanosoma cruzi antigens favors the development of a strong Th1 response in CARD patients, which leads to progression of heart disease.

279 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Over 280 samples of local species of galling herbivorous insects from fourteen countries on all continents except Antarctica revealed a strong pattern of highest richness in warm temperate latitudes, or their altitudinal equivalents, and results were consistent with the hypothesis.
Abstract: . We evaluate a three-part hypothesis explaining why gall-inducing insect species richness is so high in scleromorphic vegetation: (1) persistence of low nutrient status scleromorphic leaves facilitates the galling habit in warm temperate latitudes; (2) favourable colonization sites for gallers result from reduced hygrothermal stress, high phenolics in the outer cortex of the gall, and reduced carnivore and fungal attack in the gall; and (3) in more mesic sites, mortality is high due to carnivore attack and invasion of galls by fungi. Over 280 samples of local species of galling herbivorous insects from fourteen countries on all continents except Antarctica revealed a strong pattern of highest richness in warm temperate latitudes, or their altitudinal equivalents. The peak of galling species richness on the latitudinal gradient from the equator into the Arctic was between 25 to 38° N or S. Galling species were particularly diverse in sclerophyllous vegetation, which commonly had greater than twelve species per local sample. In mesic, non-sclerophyllous vegetation types the number of galling species was lower with twelve or fewer species present. Many sites in sclerophyllous vegetation supported between thirteen and forty-six galling species locally, including campina islands in Amazonia, cerrado savanna in central Brazil, the Sonoran Desert in Arizona and Mexico, shrubland in Israel, fynbos in South Africa and coastal scleromorphic vegetation in Australia. At the same latitude, or its elevational equivalent, galling species richness was significantly higher in relatively xeric sites when compared to riparian or otherwise mesic habitats, even when scleromorphic vegetation dominated the mesic sites. The results were consistent with the hypothesis and extend to a more general level the patterns and predictions on the biogeography of gall-inducing insects.

278 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the potential for observing gravitational waves from cosmological phase transitions with LISA was investigated, based on current state-of-the-art simulations of sound waves in the cosmic fluid after the phase transition completes.
Abstract: We investigate the potential for observing gravitational waves from cosmological phase transitions with LISA in light of recent theoretical and experimental developments. Our analysis is based on current state-of-the-art simulations of sound waves in the cosmic fluid after the phase transition completes. We discuss the various sources of gravitational radiation, the underlying parameters describing the phase transition and a variety of viable particle physics models in this context, clarifying common misconceptions that appear in the literature and identifying open questions requiring future study. We also present a web-based tool, PTPlot, that allows users to obtain up-to-date detection prospects for a given set of phase transition parameters at LISA.

278 citations


Authors

Showing all 42077 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Michael Marmot1931147170338
Pulickel M. Ajayan1761223136241
Alan D. Lopez172863259291
Jens Nielsen1491752104005
Mildred S. Dresselhaus136762112525
Jing Kong12655372354
Mauricio Terrones11876061202
Michael Brammer11842446763
Terence G. Langdon117115861603
Caroline A. Sabin10869044233
Michael Brauer10648073664
Michael Bader10373537525
Michael S. Strano9848060141
Pablo Jarillo-Herrero9124539171
Riichiro Saito9150248869
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023111
2022624
20215,708
20205,955
20195,269
20185,020