Publications by authors named "Daiani Alves"

Introduction: Healthcare workers (HCWs) are at higher risk of SARS-CoV-2 infection. Viral surveillance for early detection of COVID-19 is a critical strategy to understand this population's infection dynamics and prevent transmission. The study examines SARS-CoV-2 infection and reinfection among HCWs vaccinated against COVID-19 working at a primary healthcare unit serving a disenfranchised community in Brazil.

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  • * A metagenomic analysis of plasma samples from 120 waste pickers in Brasilia identified significant viral pathogens, such as HIV, HCV, and Chikungunya, that were not present in a control group of blood donors.
  • * The study highlights the importance of using metagenomics to discover viral threats in underserved populations, informing public health strategies to better address the health needs of those with socioeconomic challenges.
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  • Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCPyV) is linked to Merkel cell carcinoma and its prevalence in Brazilian blood donors was studied.
  • The research analyzed 450 serum samples from donors across three regions in Brazil, finding an overall MCPyV DNA prevalence of 1.1%.
  • Prevalence varied by region, with North and South Brazil at 1.33% and Central-West at 0.6%, showing generally low viral loads in positive samples, prompting the need for further studies on the virus's impact on transfusion medicine.
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Human gemykibivirus-2 (HuGkV-2) belonging to the Gemykibivirus genus (Genomoviridae family) is an emerging DNA virus which has been described as a component of the virome of a wide variety of samples including clinical ones. So far, the HuGkV-2 DNA prevalence in the human population as well as its clinical impact are completely unknown. The objective of this study was to investigate the HuGkV-2 DNA prevalence among Brazilian healthy blood donors from three different geographic regions.

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Animal cloning by nuclear transfer (NT) has made the production of transgenic animals using genetically modified donor cells possible and ensures the presence of the gene construct in the offspring. The identification of transgene insertion sites in donor cells before cloning may avoid the production of animals that carry undesirable characteristics due to positional effects. This article compares blastocyst development and competence to establish pregnancies of bovine cloned embryos reconstructed with lentivirus-mediated transgenic fibroblasts containing either random integration of a transgene (random integration group) or nuclear transfer derived transgenic fibroblasts with known transgene insertion sites submitted to recloning (recloned group).

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293T and Sk-Hep-1 cells were transduced with a replication-defective self-inactivating HIV-1 derived vector carrying FVIII cDNA. The genomic DNA was sequenced to reveal LTR/human genome junctions and integration sites. One hundred and thirty-two sequences matched human sequences, with an identity of at least 98%.

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