Publications by authors named "Stella G Colombarolli"

Cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) encompass a class of peptides that possess the remarkable ability to cross cell membranes and deliver various types of cargoes, including drugs, nucleic acids, and proteins, into cells. For this reason, CPPs are largely investigated in drug delivery applications in the context of many diseases, such as cancer, diabetes, and genetic disorders. While sharing this functionality and some common structural features, such as a high content of positively charged amino acids, CPPs represent an extremely diverse group of elements, which can differentiate under many aspects.

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Phage display is a molecular biology cloning technique that allows the expression of genes of interest along with the phage surface protein. The technique described for the following method used a genomic library for the expression of peptides composed of 12 amino acids, with the objective of selecting peptides which presented specific affinity to the molecules of interest. As a target, purified extracellular vesicles from cell cultures of cells 5637 and RT4 were chosen, which in turn have enormous application and can help to understand the functioning of bladder cancer, allowing the development of new vaccines, drugs, therapies, and diagnoses.

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Flavivirus are the most alarming prevalent viruses worldwide due to its vast impact on public health. Most early symptoms of diseases caused by Flavivirus are similar among each other and to other febrile illnesses making the clinical differential diagnosis challenging. In addition, due to cross-reactivity and a relatively limited persistence of viral RNA in infected individuals, the current available diagnosis strategies fail to efficiently provide a differential viral identification.

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Article Synopsis
  • Yellow Fever is caused by the Yellow Fever Virus (YFV), which has re-emerged due to urbanization, widespread mosquitoes, and low vaccination rates in the Americas, leading to severe outbreaks with high mortality rates.
  • Researchers developed serological methods to differentiate between antibodies from wild-type YFV infections and those from vaccinated individuals using the YFV-17DD strain.
  • In a study during the 2017/2018 Brazilian outbreak, ten promising peptides were identified that could help in differentiating between vaccinated and naturally infected individuals, with one peptide successfully synthesized and validated through ELISA testing.
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Dengue virus (DENV) is a Flavivirus estimated to cause 390 million infections/year. Currently, there is no anti-viral specific treatment for dengue, and efficient DENV vector control is still unfeasible. Here, we designed and produced chimeric proteins containing potential immunogenic epitopes from the four DENV serotypes in an attempt to further compose safer, balanced tetravalent dengue vaccines.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The inflammatory process significantly affects the outcome of dengue, specifically through the regulation of eicosanoids related to inflammation.
  • - Researchers measured various molecules involved in inflammatory pathways during dengue infection, including thromboxane A2 and prostaglandin E2, in different groups of individuals to assess their role in the disease.
  • - The findings indicate that elevated thromboxane A2 levels in people with active dengue antibodies (IgM-positive) might help protect against severe dengue symptoms, such as vascular leakage.
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