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The genetic and molecular basis of congenital cataract

Base genética e molecular da catarata congênita

Abstracts

Congenital cataracts are one of the most treatable causes of visual impairment and blindness during infancy, with an estimated prevalence of 1 to 6 cases per 10,000 live births. Approximately fifty percent of all congenital cataract cases may have a genetic cause. All three types of Mendelian inheritance have been reported for cataract; however, autosomal dominant transmission seems to be the most frequent. The transparency and high refractive index of the lens are achieved by the precise architecture of the fiber cells and the homeostasis of the lens proteins in terms of their concentration, stability, and supramolecular organization. Research on hereditary congenital cataract led to the identification of several classes of candidate genes that encode proteins such crystallins, lens specific connexins, aquaporine, cytoskeletal structural proteins, and developmental regulators. The purpose of this study was to review the literature on the recent advances made in understanding the molecular genetic basis of congenital cataracts.

Cataract; Blindness; Crystallins; Gammacrystallins; Molecular biology; Genes; Mutation


A catarata congênita é uma das principais causas tratáveis de cegueira na infância, com prevalência estimada em 1 a 6 casos por 10.000 nascidos vivos, sendo a causa hereditária responsável por até metade dos casos. Dentre os padrões de herança já descritos para a catarata, a transmissão autossômica dominante é a mais frequente. A transparência e o alto índice refrativo do cristalino são resultados da disposição regular das fibras lenticulares e do equilíbrio homeostático; além da estabilidade e da organização supramolecular das proteínas do cristalino. Pesquisas sobre catarata congênita hereditária têm levado à identificação de várias classes de genes responsáveis pela codificação das proteínas do cristalino, tais como: cristalinas, conexinas, aquaporinas, proteínas do citoesqueleto e reguladores do desenvolvimento. O objetivo deste estudo foi a revisão da literatura sobre os recentes avanços na compreensão da base genética e molecular da catarata congênita.

Catarata; Cegueira; Cristalinas; Gama-cristalinas; Biologia molecular; Genes; Mutação


REVIEW ARTICLES

The genetic and molecular basis of congenital cataract

Base genética e molecular da catarata congênita

Alessandro Santana; Mauro Waiswo

Physician, Seção de Catarata Congênita, Departamento de Oftalmologia, Irmandade da Santa Casa de Misericórdia de São Paulo - São Paulo (SP) - Brasil

Correspondence address Correspondence address: Alessandro Santana. Rua Dona Veridiana, 107/74 São Paulo - SP de São Paulo. CEP: 01238-010 Brazil E-mail: alessandro-santana@uol.com.br

ABSTRACT

Congenital cataracts are one of the most treatable causes of visual impairment and blindness during infancy, with an estimated prevalence of 1 to 6 cases per 10,000 live births. Approximately fifty percent of all congenital cataract cases may have a genetic cause. All three types of Mendelian inheritance have been reported for cataract; however, autosomal dominant transmission seems to be the most frequent. The transparency and high refractive index of the lens are achieved by the precise architecture of the fiber cells and the homeostasis of the lens proteins in terms of their concentration, stability, and supramolecular organization. Research on hereditary congenital cataract led to the identification of several classes of candidate genes that encode proteins such crystallins, lens specific connexins, aquaporine, cytoskeletal structural proteins, and developmental regulators. The purpose of this study was to review the literature on the recent advances made in understanding the molecular genetic basis of congenital cataracts.

Keywords: Cataract/congenital; Blindness/etiology; Crystallins/genetics; Gammacrystallins/genetics; Molecular biology; Genes; Mutation

RESUMO

A catarata congênita é uma das principais causas tratáveis de cegueira na infância, com prevalência estimada em 1 a 6 casos por 10.000 nascidos vivos, sendo a causa hereditária responsável por até metade dos casos. Dentre os padrões de herança já descritos para a catarata, a transmissão autossômica dominante é a mais frequente. A transparência e o alto índice refrativo do cristalino são resultados da disposição regular das fibras lenticulares e do equilíbrio homeostático; além da estabilidade e da organização supramolecular das proteínas do cristalino. Pesquisas sobre catarata congênita hereditária têm levado à identificação de várias classes de genes responsáveis pela codificação das proteínas do cristalino, tais como: cristalinas, conexinas, aquaporinas, proteínas do citoesqueleto e reguladores do desenvolvimento. O objetivo deste estudo foi a revisão da literatura sobre os recentes avanços na compreensão da base genética e molecular da catarata congênita.

Descritores: Catarata/congênito; Cegueira/etiologia; Cristalinas/genética; Gama-cristalinas/genética; Biologia molecular; Genes; Mutação

INTRODUCTION

The identification of the mutations causing childhood cataract should lead to a greater understanding of the mechanisms implicated in cataractogenesis and provide further insights into normal lens development and physiology. Moreover, gene mapping is an important step in understanding the molecular defects of age-related cataract, which also has a strong genetic component to its etiology, and in longer term may lead to the development for a medical therapy to slow lens opacification.

CHILDHOOD BLINDNESS

There are approximately 1.5 million blind children in the world; 90% of them live in developing countries(1-2). The control of blindness in children is considered a high priority within the World Health Organization's (WHO's) VISION 2020 - The Right to Sight pro-gram(3). There are several reasons for this: the greatly emotional, social, and economic costs to the child, the family, and society; in addition, many of the causes of blindness in children are either preventable or treatable(4). Although the total number of blind children is lower than of adults, the number of "blind years" due to childhood blindness is estimated to be similar to the number of "cataract blind years" in adults.

Congenital cataract is the leading cause of reversible blindness in childhood. Its occurrence, depending on the regional socioeconomic development, is of 1 to 6 cases per 10,000 live births in industrialized countries(3-5), and of 5 to 15 per 10,000 in the poorest areas of the world(2). Congenital cataract is visible at birth or during the first decade of life. About 20,000 to 40,000 new cases of bilateral congenital cataract are diagnosed each year(2). In Brazil, congenital cataract accounts for 12.8% of the cases of blindness in childhood(6-8). Due to different causes, including metabolic disorders (galactosemia), infections during embryogenesis(5), gene defects and chromosomal abnormalities(9). Cataract may be an isolated anomaly, seen in association with another ocular developmental abnormality, or part of a multisystem syndrome, such as Down's syndrome, Wilson's disease, and myotonic dystrophy(10).

Inherited cataracts correspond to 8 to 25% of congenital cataracts(11), particularly for bilateral cataract, Rahi and Dezateux(12) found that 27% of children with bilateral isolated congenital cataract had a genetic basis compared with 2% of unilateral cases. In Brazil, some authors(13) reported hereditary etiology in 22%, intrauterine infections (rubella, toxoplasmosis, cytomegalovirus, herpes simplex, varicella, and syphilis) in 38%, and idiopathic in 40% of the bilateral cases. Although X-linked and autosomal recessive transmission has been observed, the most frequent mode of inheritance is autosomal dominant with a high degree of penetrance(14). Inherited cataracts are clinically highly heterogeneous and show considerable inter and intrafamilial variability(15).

EMBRIOLOGY

Lens formation is the result of a series of inductive processes. Studies of the embryology and morphogenesis of the ocular lens in animal models and humans provide an insight into the temporal and spatial disturbances that may result in the different ocular phenotypes found in inherited congenital cataract(16). The lens forms from surface ectodermal cells overlying the optic vesicle. The lens placode appears on the optic vesicle which protrudes from the forebrain, around the 25th day of gestation, it is a thickening of the surface ectoderm, a single layer of cuboidal cells, which invaginate into the neural ectoderm of the optic vesicle as the lens pit, becoming free from the surface by the 33rd day. The anterior cells remain as a single layer of cuboidal epithelial cells whereas the posterior cells elongate to form primary lens fiber cells and obliterate the lumen of the vesicle. These cells are called primary lens fibers. The epithelial cells on the anterior surface of the lens vesicle then migrate laterally to the equatorial region and form the lens bow. During the third gestational month the cells in the bow region form secondary lens fibers which elongate until they encapsulate the primary lens fibers(14).

Lens sutures appear in the second month at the anterior and posterior poles of the spherical embryonal nucleus and occur as a result of the terminal ends of the secondary lens fibers abutting each other. The anterior lens suture has an upright Y-configuration while the posterior suture has an inverted Y-configuration. The secondary lens fibers are laid down in a strictly ordered manner, such that a diffraction grating is set up with destructive interference to minimize scattering of light(17). The secondary lens fibers are continually produced after birth and these post-natal fibers form the lens cortex. The adult lens is aneural, avascular and alymphatic. The lens contains large concentrations of proteins, known as crystallins. Up to 90% of the total soluble protein in the ocular lens is contributed by crystallins, which account for about 38% of the wet weight of the lens. High concentrations of protein in the fiber cells lead to higher refractive indices, giving the lens its functional phenotype, namely transparency. The center of the lens is usually somewhat dehydrated and compacted and, therefore, contains higher protein concentration(18).

GENES IMPLICATED IN CATARACTOGENESIS

Congenital cataracts are also genetically heterogeneous. It is known that different mutations in the same gene can cause similar cataract patterns, while the highly variable morphologies of cataracts within some families suggest that the same mutation in a single gene can lead to different phenotypes(15). To date, more than 25 loci and genes on different chromosomes have been associated with congenital cataract(19). Mutations in distinct genes, which encode the main cytoplasmic proteins of human lens, have been associated with cataracts of various morphologies(20), including genes encoding crystallins (CRYA, CRYB, and CRYG)(21), lens specific connexins (Cx43, Cx46, and Cx50)(22), major intrinsic protein (MIP) or aquaporine(23), cytoskeletal structural proteins(24), paired-like homeodomain transcription factor 3 (PITX3)(25), avian musculoaponeurotic fibrosarcoma (MAF)(26), and heat shock transcription factor 4 (HSF4)(27).

1. Crystallin proteins

Crystallin proteins represent more than 90% of lens soluble proteins in humans, encompassing almost 35% of its mass, and accounting for its optical transparency and high refractive index(14). Crystallins are subdivided into α, β-, and ϒ-crystallins according to the order of their elution on gel exclusion chromatography. They are thus presumed to be inherently stable and are synthesized in the fiber cells, which lack nuclei; therefore, there is no chance of their renewal(21).

The α-crystallins make up 40% of human lens crystallin and comprise of two related proteins, αA and αB-crystallin, with molecular weights around 20 kDa. These proteins are encoded by separate genes; respectively, CRYAA and CRYAB genes(22). Both genes consist of three exons (coding regions) separated by two introns (non-coding regions). The αA is 173 amino acids long and αB is 175 amino acids long. The αA is slightly more acid than αB. These two proteins exist in a ratio of three (αA) to one (αB) in the lens(21). A number of reports have suggested that αA and αB are independent proteins and not subunits of the same protein. However, others observations have indicated structural and functional similarities, between these proteins, in the lens(28). The occurrence of mutations in the CRYAA gene, for example, would have a similar effect to the αB-crystallin function. Experimental studies have supported these findings and showed accumulation of insoluble residues and inclusion bodies of αB-crystallin protein associated with the presence of mutations in CRYAA(29).

The α-crystallins are related to the small heat-shock protein family, and are found in high levels in the brain, muscle, and lung. However, they are essentially a lens-specific protein. The importance of α-crystallins in the maintenance of lens transparency is in its ability to inhibit the precipitation of denatured protein, including the β- and ϒ-crystallins(28). It acts as a molecular chaperone and is thereby stabilizing, and maintains the integrity of lens fiber cells and their homeostasis from various insults. Molecular chaperons facilitate the correct folding of proteins in vivo and are of extreme importance in keeping these proteins properly folded and in a functional state. Ultimately, α-crystallins contribute to cellular architecture by interacting with and regulating the cytoskeleton(16).

Currently, eight mutations in CRYAA gene were described(22) (Table 1). First mutation (R116C) have been associated with congenital nuclear cataract, microcornea, and microphthalmia, arginine is replaced by cysteine at position 116. This substitution resulted in abnormal oligomerization of α- and β-crystallins resulting in opacification of the lens(29-30). Second mutation is characterized for substitution of a threonine by a premature stop codon (W9X), with recessive inheritance, resulting in a truncated protein, the three affected members in this family were found to be homozygous for this substitution(31). Others three mutations, associated with autosomal dominant inheritance were described, R21L, R49C, and G98R, this associated with a total cataract phenotype in an Indian family(32). Recently, new mutations were related (R12C, R21W, and R116H), respectively associated with posterior polar, lamellar, and nuclear cataract(22). Autosomal dominant isolated posterior polar cataract has been mapped to the CRYAB gene locus on 11q22 and a deletion mutation (450delA) identified in all affected family members(33).

The β- and ϒ-crystallins polypeptides are recognized as members of a related β/ϒ-crystallin superfamily. The ϒ-crystallins are found as monomers, consisting of 173-174 residues, with a molecular mass of about 20 kDa(21). The β-crystallins are polymeric structures comprised of a family of seven subunits of 22-33 kDa. The β-crystallin family consists of four acidic and three basic forms depending on the isoelectric point and the terminal extensions. The basic (βB) members of this group contain C-terminal extensions, while the acidic members (βA) do not have this extension(34).

The β/ϒ-crystallins proteins are proteins that share a "Greek Key" (GK) motif unit base. They contain two domains, an N-terminal domain and a C-terminal domain as the core. Each domain contains two GK motifs; each GK motif is composed of four antiparallel β-strands. The two domains are connected by a distinct connecting peptide(21).

The β-crystallins are divided into seven subgroups, three basic (βB1, βB2, and βB3-crystallins) located on chromosome 22q11 and four acidic forms; βA1/A3-crystallin located on chromosome 17q11; βA2-crystallin located on chromosome2q33, and βA4-crystallin located on chromosome 22q11(10). Two mutations in CRYBA1 gene, that encode the βA1-crystallin protein, were identified (IVS3 + 1G → A, and c.271-273delGGA). The IVS3 + 1G → A mutation has been described in two unrelated families and cause different cataract phenotypes; lamellar, and sutural cataract in an Indian family, and nuclear cataract in an Australian family(34). To the CRYBB2 gene three mutations were identified (Table 1), Q155X, D128V, and W151C, the first mutation is predicted to remove the final 51 amino acids, resulting in an unstable molecule(35).

Biochemically, the ϒ-crystallins are characterized as monomers with a molecular mass of 21 kDa, and 173-174 amino acid residues long. Mutations associated with a clinical phenotype have been found up to now only in CRYGC and CRYGD genes (located on chromosome 2q), which encode respectively, the ϒC and ϒD-crystallin proteins(21). Although the resulting phenotypes can vary significantly, mutations in ϒ-crystallins tend to produce nuclear or lamellar cataracts, consistent with their high level of expression in the lens nucleus. The ϒ-crystallins encoding genes (CRYG genes) in all mammals consist of three exons: the first one codes only three amino acids, and the subsequent two are responsible for two Greek Key motifs each.

An increasing number of mutations in the CRYG genes have been described in association with human congenital cataract(32). To date, five mutations in the CRYGC gene (T5P, 225-226insGCGGC, C109X, W157X, and R168W) were reported(36). Of the missense mutations, T5P is associated with nuclear cataract and R168W have been reported to cause lamellar and nuclear cataract in Mexican and Indian families(37). Others ten mutations in the CRYGD gene have been described(11) (Table 2). Hansen et al.(22) related that the mechanisms through which protein abnormalities cause loss of lens transparency are still speculative. Functional studies on the mutant CRYGD gene have shown that the R36S and R58H not alter the protein fold, but rather to alter the surface characteristics of the protein, turned out them less soluble and more prone to crystallization. In the R14C mutation the protein also maintains a normal protein fold, but is susceptible to aggregation. Consequently, the crystallins do not need to undergo denaturation or other major changes in their protein folds to cause cataracts(20).

2. Connexin proteins

Connexin proteins are constituents of gap-junctions, especially important for nutrition and intercellular communication in the avascular lens. They mediate the intercellular transportation of small biomolecules, including ions, nutrients, and metabolites. These functions of connexins play an important role in lens metabolic homeostasis and maintenance of transparency of fibers within the ocular lens. Because of its unique function and anatomy, the mammalian lens is critically dependent on the proper functioning of gap-junction proteins(16). Each gap-junction channel is composed of two hemi-channels, or connexons, which dock in the extracellular space between adjacent cells, and each connexon is comprised of six integral transmembrane protein subunits known as connexins(38). Connexins are a multigene family consisting of >20 members, three of which are expressed in the lens (Cx43, Cx46, and Cx50). The lens epithelial cells show a predominant expression of connexin 43 (Cx43). During differentiation into fibers, Cx43 expression is down regulated and replaced by connexin 46 (Cx46) and connexin 50 (Cx50)(14).

Mutations of specific connexin genes have been associated with several disease including genetic deafness, skin disease, peripheral neuropathies, heart defects and cataracts. Mutations in both Cx46 and Cx50 genes have produced phenotypically similar autosomal dominant lamellar pulverulent cataracts. Cx50 on chromosome 1q22 is constituted of two exons, which resulted in a protein with 433 residues. Shiels et al.(39) reported a missense mutation in codon 88 of the Cx50 gene, leading to the substitution of proline by serine (P88S), associated with autosomal dominant lamellar pulverulent cataract in an English family. To date, there are other thirteen mutations on Cx50 found in different hereditary cataract pedigrees; they are V44E, V64G, V79L, P88Q, Q48K, P189S, R198Q, R23T, W45S, D47N, D47Y, S276F, and I274M. This last mutation, located in the cytoplasmic COOH-terminus, was found in a Russian family in 2001, and it was related to a lamellar pulverulent cataract(40). Cx46 consists of a single exon encoding a 435 amino acid protein in humans and is localized on chromosome 13 (13q11-q13). Fourteen mutations in Cx46 gene involving the different domains so far been reported to be associated with autosomal dominant congenital cataract in humans (Table 3).

3. Major intrinsic protein (MIP) or Aquaporine-0 (AQP0)

MIP is an integral membrane protein member of the aquaporine family of water transporters and small selected molecular of plasmatic membrane. It is the most highly expressed membrane protein in the lens, almost 80% of transport protein. Lamellar, cortical and polymorphic cataracts have been associated with missense mutations in the AQP0 gene. Recently, two mutations have been related; the first mutation, T138R, is associated with a progressive congenital lamellar and polar cataract, and the second E134G is associated with lamellar cataract(23). Both of these mutations appear to act by interfering with normal trafficking of AQP0 to the plasma membrane and thus with water channel activity (Table 3).

4. Cytoskeletal proteins

The architecture of lens cells is resulted of the interaction of the cytoskeleton, crystallin proteins, and cytoplasm. The cytoskeletal is a network of varied cytoplasmatic proteins which are involved in providing structural support, cell motility, and determination and maintenance of cell volume and shape. Lens cells present three different filaments, which are differentiated by diameter, types of subunits, and molecular organization: microfilaments, microtubes, and intermediate filaments(16). Microfilaments and microtubes facilitate changes of ions, while intermediate filaments aid lens cells in overcomping physical stresses including lens accommodation and changes of temperature(41).

Beaded Filament Structural Proteins (BFSP) are a type of intermediate filament unique eye-lens-specific cytoskeletal structure, which contains two core components of BFSP1(also called filensin) and BFSP2 (also called CP49), highly divergent intermediate filament proteins that combine in the presence of α-crystallin to form the appropriate beaded structure. The gene encoding BFSP2 are located on human chromosome 3q21. Actually, two mutations in BFSP2 gene have been demonstrated with the occurrence of congenital cataracts. The first mutation (R278W) had associated with juvenile-onset cataract(41), while the second mutation (delE233), had identified in a large family, which affected members had congenital nuclear, sutural, and cortical cataracts that varied in severity among different individuals (Table 4).

5. Developmental regulators

Embryonic lens development is predicted by spatial and temporal interactions of several genes and their products. The genes involved in this complex process encoding growth factors and transcription factors. These proteins regulate transcription of a number of tissue-specific genes during differentiation, and play a crucial role in lens plan specification. Depending on the nature of the genetic defect involved, mutations in genes that define development can result in multiple abnormalities of the eye, particularly congenital cataract. Mutations in transcription factors genes have been implicated in anterior segment dysgenesis, but only three: PITX3, MAF, and HSF4, have been associated with isolated cataract (Table 4).

Mutations PITX3 gene result predominantly in autosomal dominant congenital cataract associated with dysgenesis of the anterior segment, including corneal opacity, iris adhesions, microcornea, and microphthalmia. Two mutations had been described, a 17-bp insertion of the coding sequence (656-657ins17bp), resulting in a frame shift, and a G→A transition in exon 2 of PITX3 gene, resulting in a serine to asparagine substitution at codon 13 (S13N)(25). Jamieson et al.(42) related a R288P substitution within the MAF gene on chromosome 16q22-q23 in a family with autosomal dominant juvenile pulverulent cataract, iris coloboma, and microcornea. In addition to MAF gene, another missense mutation (K297R) was found in twelve affected members in an Indian family, associated with autosomal dominant cerulean cataract and microcornea(26). HSF4 gene regulates the expression of heat-shock proteins (HSPs), which may be important components of lens development. Currently, six mutations of this gene had been associated with congenital cataracts, which resulted in lamellar progressive and nuclear phenotype(27).

CRYSTALLIN GENE MUTATIONS ASSOCIATED WITH CONGENITAL CATARACT IN BRAZILIAN FAMILIES

A recent study in Brazil, Santana et al.(43) have demonstrated a novel nonsense mutation (Y56X) in the CRYGD gene and a previously reported missense mutation (R12C) in the CRYAA gene associated with nuclear congenital cataract in Brazilian families. Additionally, they also observed a new polymorphism (S119S) in the CRYGC gene. In this study, eleven families with autosomal dominant childhood cataracts were identified, seven families presenting with nuclear phenotype and remaining families with lamellar phenotype. A total of thirty-four affected members and forty-four unaffected members were evaluated. DNA sequencing analysis of CRYGD gene showed a novel heterozygous nonsense mutation (TAC→TAG) within the second exon (Figure 1). Cataract was most likely caused by this point mutation that led to the replacement of a tyrosine by a premature stop codon at position 56 (Y56X). The congenital bilateral nuclear cataract in another family was associated with a mutation in CRYAA, a point mutation in exon 1 (CGC→ TGC), which led to the replacement of an arginine at position 12 for a cysteine (R12C) (Figure 2). A variety of sequence variations referred as single nucleotide polymorphisms was observed in the probands for the CRYAA, CRYGC and CRYGD genes. None of these sequences changed in the coding regions led to amino acids alterations. Three known polymorphisms were observed in the sequencing analysis: D2D (rs872331) polymorphism (GAC→GAT) in the CRYAA gene (exon 1), observed in ten probands, Y17Y (rs2242074) polymorphism (TAT→TAC) observed in the CRYGD gene (exon 2), in seven probands, and R95R (rs2305430) polymorphism (AGA→AGG) in the CRYGD gene (exon 3), in nine probands. A new polymorphism in the third exon of the CRYGC gene (S119S) was observed in a family (Figure 3).




CONCLUSION

The study of genes related to congenital cataract and know ledge about the molecular mechanisms of their origin could in the near future, be extended also to the age-related cataracts, which remains the leading cause of blindness worldwide. The accumulation of information about the physiology of the lens and the factors associated with the formation of senile cataracts acquired through genetic studies of congenital hereditary form, allow the emergence of new treatments and techniques to prevent this type of cataract. The age-related cataract has been considered multi-factorial with multiple genes and environmental factors influencing the phenotype. Increasing age is the most important risk factor for age-related cataract, as the opacities result from the cumulative damage of environmental insult to proteins and cells of the lens. Photochemical insult, producing hydrogen peroxide, superoxide and hydroxyl radical induces damage to the lens epithelial cell DNA thus triggering a sequence of events leading to cataract. A markedly inhibition of the DNA synthesis and repair has also been observed in experimental studies. Oxidative stress has been associated expression changes (increase or decrease) of genes in the lens epithelium. Known genetic and environmental factors might direct the application of preventive measures, such as identification of risk groups, change of lifestyle, control of serum glucose, decreased alcohol consumption, smoking and exposure to ultraviolet rays. In addition, the prophylactic use of therapeutic agents (antioxidant, vitamin supplement, carotenoids), diet therapy and gene therapy will prevent or delay opacification.

Submitted for publication: September 5, 2010

Accepted for publication: February 28, 2011

Funding: No specific financial support was available for this study.

Disclosure of potential conflicts of interest: A.Santana, None; M.Waiswol, None. Study carried out at the Department of Ophthalmology of Irmandade da Santa Casa de Misericórdia

Editorial Note: After completing the confidential analysis of the manuscript, ABO discloses, with his agreement, the name Dr. Paulo Pierre Filho as a reviewer. We thank his effort and expertise in participating in this process.

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  • Correspondence address:
    Alessandro Santana.
    Rua Dona Veridiana, 107/74
    São Paulo - SP de São Paulo.
    CEP: 01238-010
    Brazil
    E-mail:
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      11 July 2011
    • Date of issue
      Apr 2011

    History

    • Received
      05 Sept 2010
    • Accepted
      28 Feb 2011
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    E-mail: abo@cbo.com.br