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Dive into the research topics where A. Espinosa de los Monteros is active.

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Featured researches published by A. Espinosa de los Monteros.


Veterinary Pathology | 1999

Coordinate Expression of Cytokeratins 7 and 20 in Feline and Canine Carcinomas

A. Espinosa de los Monteros; A. Fernández; M. Y. Millán; Francisco Rodríguez; P. Herráez; J. Martín de las Mulas

Forty-seven feline and 60 canine epithelial tumors were studied to test the coordinate expression of cytokeratin 7 (CK 7) and cytokeratin 20 (CK 20) using commercially available monoclonal antibodies and an avidin-biotin immunoperoxidase staining technique. Previously, the distribution of both cytokeratins was examined in normal tissues from 4 cats and 4 dogs. The pattern of distribution of CK 7 in normal tissues was similar, with minor differences, to that described in humans, whereas the reactivity pattern of CK 20 in cats and dogs was wider than that in humans. The subset of tumors strongly expressing CK 7 and CK 20 included pancreatic adenocarcinomas (100%), transitional cell carcinomas (75%), and endometrial carcinomas (67%) in the cat. None of the canine tumors had this immunophenotype. Feline (50%) and canine (56%) mammary gland carcinomas and canine cholangiocarcinomas (67%) were the only tumors presenting the CK 7+/CK 20- immunophenotype, whereas the CK 7-/CK 20+ immunophenotype included thyroid carcinomas (100%), intestinal adenocarcinomas (60%), bronchioloalveolar carcinomas (50%), and renal carcinomas (50%) in the cat and intestinal adenocarcinomas (56%), gastric adenocarcinomas (50%), and ovarian carcinomas (50%) in the dog. The CK 7-/CK 20- immunophenotype included the rest of the analyzed tumors. The immunohistochemical evaluation of coordinate expression of both CK 7 and CK 20 in feline and canine carcinomas using monoclonal antibodies provides important information that can help to discriminate among carcinomas from different primary sites and could be particularly helpful in the determination of the primary site of origin of carcinomas presenting as metastatic disease.


Veterinary Pathology | 2002

Immunolocalization of the Smooth Muscle-Specific Protein Calponin in Complex and Mixed Tumors of the Mammary Gland of the Dog: Assessment of the Morphogenetic Role of the Myoepithelium

A. Espinosa de los Monteros; M. Y. Millán; J. Ordás; L. Carrasco; C. Reymundo; J. Martín de las Mulas

The immunohistochemical expression of the smooth muscle-specific protein calponin was studied to assess the contribution of myoepithelial cells to the histogenesis of spindle cells of complex and mixed tumors of the mammary gland of the dog and the origin of cartilage and bone in mixed tumors. Formalin-fixed tissues from 55 benign and malignant tumors (49 also containing surrounding normal mammary gland) were evaluated. Periacinar and periductal myoepithelial cells of all the 49 normal mammary glands were diffusely stained by the anti-human calponin monoclonal antibody. Calponin was found in 53 (98%) of the tumors studied, reacting with the myoepithelium-like cells of 86% of benign tumors and their remnants in 85% of malignant tumors. Five different types of calponin-immunoreactive myoepithelial cells were identified: hypertrophic myoepithelial cells, fusiform cells, stellate myoepithelial cells, rounded (myoepithelial) cells, and chondroblasts. Differences in staining intensity and staining pattern among these five types of cells suggested a transition of myoepithelial cells to chondroblasts. Stromal myofibroblasts also showed calponin immunoreactivity, but they did not react with a cytokeratin 14 monoclonal antibody, which recognizes myoepithelial cells in mammary gland. Calponin appears to be a very sensitive marker of normal and neoplastic myoepithelium in the canine mammary gland, and its identification in different cell types of complex and mixed tumors of the mammary gland of the dog suggests a major histogenetic role for myoepithelial cells.


Veterinary Pathology | 2004

Immunohistochemical Expression of Estrogen Receptor β in Normal and Tumoral Canine Mammary Glands

J. Martín de las Mulas; J. Ordás; M. Y. Millán; F. Chacón; M. De Lara; A. Espinosa de los Monteros; C. Reymundo; A. Jover

To date, two isoforms of estrogen receptors (ER) have been identified, cloned, and characterized from several species, estrogen receptor-α (ERα) and estrogen receptor-β (ERβ). Although the presence of ERα has been demonstrated in normal and tumoral canine mammary tissues, the issue of ERβ expression has not been addressed in the dog. In this study, we have analyzed the expression of ERβ in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue samples of nonaltered mammary gland, 30 malignant (six complex carcinoma, 12 simple carcinoma, three carcinosarcoma, and nine carcinoma or sarcoma in benign tumor), and five benign (one fibroadenoma, one complex papilloma, one complex adenoma, and two benign mixed tumors) mammary tumors of the dog by using a polyclonal ERβ antibody and the avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex immunohistochemical technique. Our results show that high numbers of normal ductal and acinar epithelium and approximately one third of canine mammary tumors express ERβ. This expression was higher in benign than in malignant tumors. Furthermore, expression was higher in complex and mixed histologic subtypes of malignant tumors when compared with simple subtypes.


Veterinary Pathology | 1995

Immunohistochemical Distribution Pattern of Intermediate Filament Proteins in 50 Feline Neoplasms

J. Martín de las Mulas; A. Espinosa de los Monteros; L. Carrasco; M. van Niel; A. Fernández

Twenty-eight epithelial and 22 nonepithelial feline tumors were studied immunohistochemically. Epithelial tumors were 10 squamous cell carcinomas, two basal cell tumors, two sebaceous gland carcinomas, three apocrine gland carcinomas, three thyroid papillary carcinomas, one thyroid solid carcinoma, one renal clear cell carcinoma, one renal papillary carcinoma, one endometrial carcinoma, and four lung bronchioloalveolar carcinomas. Nonepithelial tumors were 10 fibrosarcomas, one liposarcoma, one leiomyosarcoma, one rhabdomyosarcoma, one hemangiosarcoma, two mast cell tumors, one osteosarcoma, three melanomas, and two lymphomas. Commercially available antibodies directed against high- and low-molecular-weight keratins (keratin, RCK-102, NCL-5D3), vimentin, desmin, glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), and neurofilament intermediate filament (IF) proteins were used in the avidin—biotin–peroxidase complex technique on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tumor tissue samples. All epithelial tumors except the endometrial carcinoma expressed some type of keratin protein. Squamous cell carcinomas expressed high-molecular-weight keratins exclusively. Coexpression of high- and low-molecular-weight keratins was observed in one basal cell tumor, sebaceous and apocrine adenocarcinomas, and thyroid, renal, and lung carcinomas. In addition to keratins, vimentin immunoreactivity was found in all basal cell tumors, all sebaceous gland, thyroid papillary, renal, and lung adenocarcinomas, and one of the apocrine gland adenocarcinomas. Immunoreactivity with GFAP antibody was found in one basal cell tumor and one sebaceous gland adenocarcinoma. The endometrial carcinoma did not react with any of the antibodies applied. Nonepithelial tumors analyzed expressed either vimentin (fibrosarcomas, liposarcoma, haemangiosarcoma, mast cell tumors, osteosarcomas, melanomas) or vimentin and desmin (leiomyosarcoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, one fibrosarcoma) IF proteins exclusively. Lymphomas did not react with any of the antibodies employed. These findings indicate that IF proteins antibodies can be included in diagnostic panels of antibodies for immunocharacterization of feline tumors. In addition, they can be used as a basis for the diagnoses of poorly differentiated or undifferentiated feline neoplasms.


Research in Veterinary Science | 2009

Correlating the immune response with the clinical–pathological course of persistent mastitis experimentally induced by Mycoplasma agalactiae in dairy goats

A. Castro-Alonso; F. Rodríguez; C. De la Fé; A. Espinosa de los Monteros; José B. Poveda; M. Andrada; P. Herráez

To correlate the clinical course of mycoplasma mastitis with its immune response, right mammary glands of 15 lactating goats were inoculating with 10(10) colony-forming units (cfu) of Mycoplasma agalactiae (Ma). Before sacrificing the animals at 5, 15 or 45 days post-inoculation (dpi), blood Ma antibody titres and milk mycoplasma colony and somatic cell counts were monitored. Ma colonised the mammary gland and milk counts increased to over 10(12)cfu/ml within 5 dpi. During this period, an innate immune response involving neutrophils and macrophages was observed, and Ma antigen appeared in the degenerated acinar epithelium. From 7 dpi, a specific antibody response coincided with reduced viable mycoplasmas in milk. The humoral immune response was limited; by 37 dpi, all animals scored negative for anti-Ma antibodies, and around 10(8)cfu/ml were shed. Results indicate an early immune response to Ma inoculation unable to control mycoplasmal invasion. An ensuing humoral response, despite reducing the mycoplasma burden, leads to chronic, persistent infection.


Journal of Comparative Pathology | 1994

Immunohistochemical distribution pattern of intermediate filament proteins and muscle actin in feline and human mammary carcinomas

J. Martín de las Mulas; A. Espinosa de los Monteros; M.J. Bautista; J.C. Gómez-Villamandos; C Morales

Thirty-seven feline and 38 human spontaneous mammary gland carcinomas were studied immunohistochemically. Commercially available antibodies directed against high and low molecular weight keratins (RCK-102 and NCL-5D3), vimentin, desmin, glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), neurofilament (NF) proteins and muscle actin (HHF35) were used in the avidin biotin peroxidase complex (ABC) technique on formalin-fixed paraffin wax-embedded tumour tissue samples. Healthy feline and human mammary gland tissue adjacent to the neoplasms was also examined. The distribution pattern of intermediate filament proteins and muscle actin was comparable in healthy mammary gland tissue of the two species: both RCK-102 and NCL-5D3 antibodies reacted with luminal epithelial cells of ducts and acini, but basal/myoepithelial cells were stained by RCK-102 exclusively. In addition, basal/myoepithelial cells expressed vimentin and muscle actin in both species, and GFAP was found in some feline basal/myoepithelial cells. No immunoreactivity to desmin and NF proteins was observed. Feline mammary gland carcinoma cells reacted with RCK-102 (89%), NCL-5D3 (62%), vimentin (76%) and GFAP (30%) antibodies, while human mammary gland carcinoma cells reacted with RCK-102 (95%), NCL-5D3 (100%) and vimentin (13%) antibodies. HHF35 immunoreactivity was observed in stromal cells only. These results indicate that mammary gland carcinomas of both species share a heterogeneous immunophenotype with respect to intermediate filament proteins, which adds to the list of known similarities between mammary gland carcinomas of both species.


Journal of Comparative Pathology | 1996

Caprine mastitis due to aspergillosis and zygomycosis: a pathological and immunohistochemical study

H. E. Jensen; A. Espinosa de los Monteros; L. Carrasco

Of 73 goats on a dairy farm, 27 developed mycotic mastitis in the post-partum period. Purulent mammary secretion, progressive induration of the affected glands, slight fever and weight loss were observed. As treatment produced no improvement within 2-3 weeks, all diseased animals were slaughtered. At post-mortem examination, widespread acute and chronic mycotic lesions were seen throughout the affected glands. Infection was thought to have spread through the milk ducts as an ascending infection resulting from prophylactic intramammary treatment with antibiotic before parturition. In all lesions, aspergillus hyphae were identified by indirect immunofluorescent labelling, which gave a strong and uniform reaction with polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies to Aspergillus fumigatus. In a single granulomatous lesion, zygomycotic hyphae were also identified immunohistochemically. At terminal swellings of aspergillus hyphae, yeast-like bodies were produced, a phenomenon which seems to be associated with special, but unknown, circumstances.


Veterinary and Comparative Oncology | 2004

Calponin expression and myoepithelial cell differentiation in canine, feline and human mammary simple carcinomas

J. Martín de las Mulas; C. Reymundo; A. Espinosa de los Monteros; Y. Millán; J. Ordás

Calponin is a 34-kDa smooth muscle-specific protein that has been shown to be a highly sensitive marker of myoepithelial cells in canine, feline and human mammary tissue and tumours. The expression of calponin was studied in 15 canine, 32 feline and 28 human simple mammary carcinomas using a monoclonal mouse antihuman calponin antibody and the avidin-biotin peroxidase complex (ABC) immunohistochemical technique. Calponin expression was compared with the expression of cytokeratin 14, a marker of normal mammary myoepithelial cells in the three species. Four different types of calponin-positive cells were identified: (1) Type 1: cytokeratin-14-positive pre-existing myoepithelial cells forming a continuous layer with images of focal disruptions; (2) Type 2: cytokeratin-14-positive isolated nests of fusiform, polygonal or round cells without atypia; (3) Type 3: cytokeratin-14-positive atypical cells indistinguishable from non-reactive atypical cells, which should have never been detected in haematoxylin and eosin-stained sections and (4) Type 4: cytokeratin-14-negative stromal fusiform cells around the neoplastic growth or cell nests, identified as myofibroblasts. Calponin-negative and cytokeratin-14-positive atypical neoplastic cells were observed in three canine, 28 feline and two human carcinomas. The latter were indicative of altered expression of high-molecular-weight cytokeratins in luminal epithelial-type simple carcinomas. Our findings show that calponin is a good marker of myoepithelial cell differentiation in feline, human and, particularly, canine simple carcinomas. The high number (six out of 15) of canine tumours with type 3 cells points to the need of both introducing calponin examination in the routine diagnostic schedule and performing further studies on its prognostic significance.


Journal of Comparative Pathology | 2003

Immunophenotypic characterization of hepatic inflammatory cell infiltrates in common dolphins (Delphinus delphis)

J. R. Jaber; J. Pérez; Manuel Arbelo; P. Herráez; A. Espinosa de los Monteros; F. Rodńguez; T. Fernández; A. Fernández

Of 14 common dolphins, 12 showed non-specific reactive hepatitis and three chronic parasitic cholangitis with lymphoid proliferation. Non-specific reactive hepatitis was shown immunohistochemically to be associated with small clusters of CD3(+) cells in portal areas and hepatic sinusoids. Polyclonal antibody against S100 protein reacted with a variable number of lymphocytes from portal areas and hepatic sinusoids, as well as with Kupffer cells and epithelial cells of the bile ducts. The majority of plasma cells observed in portal areas and hepatic sinusoids were IgG(+). In lymphonodular lesions of chronic parasitic cholangitis, the distribution of immunoreactive cells was similar to that found in the cortex of lymph nodes. The presence of stellate cells similar to follicular dendritic and interdigitating cells expressing S-100 protein and MHC class II antigen in lymphonodular lesions suggested that these were highly organized structures developed to enhance antigen presentation to B and T cells.


Veterinary Pathology | 2005

Expression of Maspin in Mammary Gland Tumors of the Dog

A. Espinosa de los Monteros; M. Y. Millán; G. A. Ramírez; J. Ordás; C. Reymundo; J. Martín de las Mulas

Maspin is a serine protease inhibitor that inhibits tumor invasion and metastasis in human breast cancer and is consistently expressed by mammary myoepithelial cells (MECs). To analyze the value of maspin as a marker of the MEC layer of the normal and tumoral canine mammary gland, the immunohistochemical expression of maspin was studied in formalin-fixed tissues from 55 benign and malignant tumors (40 tumors also contained the surrounding normal mammary gland) using a commercially available monoclonal antibody. Periacinar and periductal MECs of all 40 normal mammary glands were stained by the anti-human maspin monoclonal antibody, and immunoreactivity was observed in the nucleus and cytoplasm of these cells. In addition, maspin was found in 53 (98%) of the tumors studied, reacting with the MECs in 100% of benign tumors and 93% of malignant tumors and to the epithelial cells of 16% of benign and 73% of malignant tumors. In the MEC compartment, immunoreactivity was observed in the cytoplasm of hypertrophic MECs, fusiform MECs, stellate MECs, rounded (myoepithelial) cells, and chondroblasts. In the epithelial cell compartment, immunoreactivity was observed in the cytoplasm of cells with and without squamous differentiation. Stromal myofibroblasts were unreactive. Maspin appears to be a very sensitive marker of the normal and neoplastic myoepithelium that, contrary to smooth muscle differentiation markers, does not stain stromal myofibroblasts. In addition, a subset of neoplastic epithelial cells reacted with the maspin antibody. The relationship between maspin expression in different cellular compartments of canine mammary carcinomas and the biologic aggressiveness of the disease remains to be elucidated.

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P. Herráez

University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria

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M. Andrada

University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria

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G. A. Ramírez

University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria

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F. Rodríguez

University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria

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Manuel Arbelo

University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria

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Antonio Fernández

University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria

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J. R. Jaber

University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria

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Eva Sierra

University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria

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