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Featured researches published by A. Ruibal.


International Journal of Cancer | 2006

Estrogen and progesterone receptor gene polymorphisms and sporadic breast cancer risk: a Spanish case-control study.

Lara P. Fernández; Roger L. Milne; Eva Barroso; Marta Cuadros; José Ignacio Arias; A. Ruibal; Javier Benitez; Gloria Ribas

Estrogens, and to a lesser extent progesterones, influence the proliferation, differentiation and physiology of breast tissue as well as the development and progression of breast cancer. Genetic variants in the steroid hormone receptor genes ESR1 and PGR (belonging to the nuclear receptor superfamily) could therefore modify sporadic breast cancer susceptibility. Two studies have shown a protective effect associated with variants in ESR1 in 2 distinct populations. We studied 4 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in ESR1 and 4 in PGR in 550 consecutive and unrelated sporadic Spanish breast cancer patients and 564 healthy Spanish controls. We observed a dominant protective effect for the S10S variant in ESR1, with an estimated odds ratio (OR) of 0.75 (95% CI = 0.58–0.97; p = 0.03) although functional studies did not show changes in the RNA stability. A small subset of individuals carried a haplotype combination that corroborates this protection. No other SNP considered in either gene was found to be associated with sporadic breast cancer. Our results obtained in a European population confirm the protective role of the S10S variant in ESR1, previously reported in an Asian and a European–American population.


Journal of Oncology | 2012

Optical Imaging in Breast Cancer Diagnosis: The Next Evolution

Michel Herranz; A. Ruibal

Breast cancer is one of the most common cancers among the population of the Western world. Diagnostic methods include mammography, ultrasound, and magnetic resonance; meanwhile, nuclear medicine techniques have a secondary role, being useful in regional assessment and therapy followup. Optical imaging is a very promising imaging technique that uses near-infrared light to assess optical properties of tissues and is expected to play an important role in breast cancer detection. Optical breast imaging can be performed by intrinsic breast tissue contrast alone (hemoglobin, water, and lipid content) or with the use of exogenous fluorescent probes that target specific molecules for breast cancer. Major advantages of optical imaging are that it does not use any radioactive components, very high sensitivity, relatively inexpensive, easily accessible, and the potential to be combined in a multimodal approach with other technologies such as mammography, ultrasound, MRI, and positron emission tomography. Moreover, optical imaging agents could, potentially, be used as “theranostics,” combining the process of diagnosis and therapy.


International Journal of Cancer | 2004

THE VARIANT E233G OF THE RAD51D GENE COULD BE A LOW-PENETRANCE ALLELE IN HIGH-RISK BREAST CANCER FAMILIES WITHOUT BRCA1/2 MUTATIONS

Raquel Rodríguez-López; Ana Osorio; Gloria Ribas; Marina Pollán; Luis Sánchez-Pulido; Miguel de la Hoya; A. Ruibal; Pilar Zamora; José Ignacio Arias; Raquel Salazar; Ana Vega; José Ignacio Martínez; Eva Esteban-Cardeñosa; Carmen Alonso; Rocío Letón; Miguel Urioste Azcorra; Cristina Miner; M. Eugenia Armengod; Angel Carracedo; Rogelio González-Sarmiento; Trinidad Caldés; Orland Diez; Javier Benitez

Six SNPs have been detected in the DNA repair genes RAD51C and RAD51D, not previously characterized. The novel variant E233G in RAD51D is more highly represented in high‐risk, site‐specific, familial breast cancer cases that are not associated with the BRCA1/2 genes, with a frequency of 5.74% (n = 174) compared to a control population (n = 567) and another subset of breast cancer patients (n = 765) with a prevalence of around 2% only (comparison to controls, OR = 2.6, 95% CI 1.12–6.03; p < 0.021). We found that the immunohistochemical profile detected in available tumors from these patients differs slightly from those described in non‐BRCA1/2 tumors. Finally, the structural prediction of the putative functional consequence of this change indicates that it can diminish protein stability and structure. This suggests a role for E233G as a low‐penetrance susceptibility gene in the specific subgroup of high‐risk familial breast cancer cases that are not related to BRCA1/2.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2013

A new seipin-associated neurodegenerative syndrome

Encarna Guillén-Navarro; Sofía Sánchez-Iglesias; Rosario Domingo-Jiménez; Berta Victoria; Alejandro Ruiz-Riquelme; Alberto Rábano; Lourdes Loidi; Andrés Beiras; Blanca González-Méndez; Adriana Ramos; Vanesa López-González; María Juliana Ballesta-Martínez; Miguel Garrido-Pumar; Pablo Aguiar; A. Ruibal; Jesús R. Requena; David Araújo-Vilar

Background Seipin/BSCL2 mutations can cause type 2 congenital generalised lipodystrophy (BSCL) or dominant motor neurone diseases. Type 2 BSCL is frequently associated with some degree of intellectual impairment, but not to fatal neurodegeneration. In order to unveil the aetiology and pathogenetic mechanisms of a new neurodegenerative syndrome associated with a novel BSCL2 mutation, six children, four of them showing the BSCL features, were studied. Methods Mutational and splicing analyses of BSCL2 were performed. The brain of two of these children was examined postmortem. Relative expression of BSCL2 transcripts was analysed by real-time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in different tissues of the index case and controls. Overexpressed mutated seipin in HeLa cells was analysed by immunofluorescence and western blotting. Results Two patients carried a novel homozygous c.985C>T mutation, which appeared in the other four patients in compound heterozygosity. Splicing analysis showed that the c.985C>T mutation causes an aberrant splicing site leading to skipping of exon 7. Expression of exon 7-skipping transcripts was very high with respect to that of the non-skipped transcripts in all the analysed tissues of the index case. Neuropathological studies showed severe neurone loss, astrogliosis and intranuclear ubiquitin(+) aggregates in neurones from multiple cortical regions and in the caudate nucleus. Conclusions Our results suggest that exon 7 skipping in the BSCL2 gene due to the c.985C>T mutation is responsible for a novel early onset, fatal neurodegenerative syndrome involving cerebral cortex and basal ganglia.


BMC Genomics | 2013

A novel in silico reverse-transcriptomics-based identification and blood-based validation of a panel of sub-type specific biomarkers in lung cancer

Debmalya Barh; Neha Jain; Sandeep Tiwari; John K. Field; Elena Padin-Iruegas; A. Ruibal; Rafael López; Michel Herranz; Antaripa Bhattacharya; Lucky Juneja; Cedric Viero; Artur Silva; Anderson Miyoshi; Anil Kumar; Kenneth Blum; Vasco Azevedo; Preetam Ghosh; Triantafillos Liloglou

Lung cancer accounts for the highest number of cancer-related deaths worldwide. Early diagnosis significantly increases the disease-free survival rate and a large amount of effort has been expended in screening trials and the development of early molecular diagnostics. However, a gold standard diagnostic strategy is not yet available. Here, based on miRNA expression profile in lung cancer and using a novel in silico reverse-transcriptomics approach, followed by analysis of the interactome; we have identified potential transcription factor (TF) markers that would facilitate diagnosis of subtype specific lung cancer. A subset of seven TF markers has been used in a microarray screen and was then validated by blood-based qPCR using stage-II and IV non-small cell lung carcinomas (NSCLC). Our results suggest that overexpression of HMGA1, E2F6, IRF1, and TFDP1 and downregulation or no expression of SUV39H1, RBL1, and HNRPD in blood is suitable for diagnosis of lung adenocarcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma sub-types of NSCLC. Here, E2F6 was, for the first time, found to be upregulated in NSCLC blood samples. The miRNA-TF-miRNA interaction based molecular mechanisms of these seven markers in NSCLC revealed that HMGA1 and TFDP1 play vital roles in lung cancer tumorigenesis. The strategy developed in this work is applicable to any other cancer or disease and can assist in the identification of potential biomarkers.


Gynecologic Oncology | 2009

Evaluating new candidate SNPs as low penetrance risk factors in sporadic breast cancer: a two-stage Spanish case-control study.

Ana Vega; Antonio Salas; Roger L. Milne; Begoña Carracedo; Gloria Ribas; A. Ruibal; Antonio Cabrera de León; Ana González-Hernández; Javier Benitez; Angel Carracedo

OBJECTIVES A polygenic model has been proposed in order to explain the genetic susceptibility to sporadic breast cancer. According to this model, common population variants would be responsible for low to modest effects on the risk of developing the disease. We have carried out a high-throughput SNP genotyping project in order to shed some light on the complex genetic aetiology of non-familial breast cancer. METHODS Ninety-one genes have been selected because of their implications in several candidate cell pathways for breast cancer. A total of 640 SNPs in these genes were genotyped in a series of 450 consecutive cases and 448 controls from mainland Spain. Promising SNPs were then studied in an independent series of 294 cases and 299 controls from the Canary Islands. RESULTS In the first case-control series we identified 25 SNPs with P-values below 0.05 (under a 1 df Chi-square test), five of them with P-values below 0.01 (best=0.0008). In the stage 2 Canary Islands series, odd ratios (OR) for two SNPs in HUS1 were in a consistent direction. CONCLUSIONS SNPs located at the gene HUS1 are good candidates for further investigation in independent association studies and functional assays.


Medical Physics | 2014

Correction for FDG PET dose extravasations: Monte Carlo validation and quantitative evaluation of patient studies

Jesús Silva-Rodríguez; Pablo Aguiar; Manuel Sánchez; Javier Mosquera; Víctor Luna‐Vega; Julia Cortés; Miguel Garrido; Miguel Pombar; A. Ruibal

PURPOSE Current procedure guidelines for whole body [18F]fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (FDG)-positron emission tomography (PET) state that studies with visible dose extravasations should be rejected for quantification protocols. Our work is focused on the development and validation of methods for estimating extravasated doses in order to correct standard uptake value (SUV) values for this effect in clinical routine. METHODS One thousand three hundred sixty-seven consecutive whole body FDG-PET studies were visually inspected looking for extravasation cases. Two methods for estimating the extravasated dose were proposed and validated in different scenarios using Monte Carlo simulations. All visible extravasations were retrospectively evaluated using a manual ROI based method. In addition, the 50 patients with higher extravasated doses were also evaluated using a threshold-based method. RESULTS Simulation studies showed that the proposed methods for estimating extravasated doses allow us to compensate the impact of extravasations on SUV values with an error below 5%. The quantitative evaluation of patient studies revealed that paravenous injection is a relatively frequent effect (18%) with a small fraction of patients presenting considerable extravasations ranging from 1% to a maximum of 22% of the injected dose. A criterion based on the extravasated volume and maximum concentration was established in order to identify this fraction of patients that might be corrected for paravenous injection effect. CONCLUSIONS The authors propose the use of a manual ROI based method for estimating the effectively administered FDG dose and then correct SUV quantification in those patients fulfilling the proposed criterion.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2017

Positron Emission Tomography for the Development and Characterization of Corneal Permanence of Ophthalmic Pharmaceutical Formulations.

Anxo Fernández-Ferreiro; Jesús Silva-Rodríguez; F.J. Otero-Espinar; Miguel González-Barcia; María Jesús Lamas; A. Ruibal; Andrea Luaces-Rodríguez; Alba Vieites-Prado; Tomás Sobrino; Michel Herranz; Lara García-Varela; J. Blanco-Méndez; María Gil-Martínez; Maria Pardo; Alexis Moscoso; Santiago Medín-Aguerre; Juan Pardo-Montero; Pablo Aguiar

Purpose This work is aimed at describing the utility of positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) as a noninvasive tool for pharmacokinetic studies of biopermanence of topical ocular formulations. Methods The corneal biopermanence of a topical ophthalmic formulation containing gellan gum and kappa carragenan (0.82% wt/vol) labeled with 18Fluorine (18F) radiotracers (18F-FDG and 18F-NaF) was evaluated by using a dedicated small-animal PET/CT, and compared with the biopermanence of an aqueous solution labeled with the same compounds. Regions of interest (ROIs) were manually drawn on the reconstructed PET images for quantifying the radioactivity concentration in the eye. The biopermanence of the formulations was determined by measuring the radioactivity concentration at different times after topical application. Additionally, cellular and ex vivo safety assays were performed to assess the safety of the performed procedures. Results Differences were observed in the ocular pharmacokinetics of the two formulations. After 1.5 hours of contact, 90% of the hydrogel remained in the ocular surface, while only 69% of the control solution remained. Furthermore, it was observed that flickering had a very important role in the approach of the trial. The application of 18F-FDG in the eye was neither irritating nor cytotoxic for human corneal epithelial cells. Conclusions The use of small-animal PET and 18F radiotracers in ocular pharmacokinetics of ophthalmic formulations is feasible and could be a safe method for future ocular pharmacokinetic studies in humans.


International Journal of Biological Markers | 2003

Cytosolic levels of neuron-specific enolase in squamous cell carcinomas of the lung

A. Ruibal; M.I. Núñez; J. Rodríguez; L. Jimenez; M. C. Del Rio; J. Zapatero

To study the behavior and possible correlations of neuron-specific enolase (NSE) with other clinicobiological parameters, we measured the cytosolic levels of this marker by means of an immunoradiometric assay (IRMA) in 95 squamous cell lung carcinoma samples. We also analyzed the levels of pS2, tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA), hyaluronic acid (HA), free beta subunit of human chorionic gonadotropin (beta-HCG), CYFRA 21.1 and CA 125 in cytosol. On the cell surface we analyzed the concentrations of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), HA, erbB-2 oncoprotein, CD44s, CD44v5 and CD44v6. Other parameters considered were clinical stage, lymph node involvement, histological grade (HG), ploidy and the cellular S-phase fraction measured by flow cytometry on nuclei obtained from fresh tissues. In the 95 squamous cell carcinomas the cytosolic levels of NSE varied from 4.5 to 2235 ng/mg protein (median: 267) and were significantly higher (p < 0.001) than those observed in 38 samples of normal pulmonary tissue obtained from the same patients (range: 56-657; median: 141.5). When classifying tumors according to the different parameters analyzed, we observed that the levels of NSE were higher in aneuploid than in diploid cases (p = 0.046) and in those that were HG3 than in those that were HG2 (p < 0.001). Tumors with high NSE levels (> 422 ng/mg protein; 75th percentile) were more likely to have high S-phase values (p = 0.012) and were more frequently aneuploid (p = 0.038) and HG3 (p < 0.001) than those with low levels of NSE (< 180 ng/mg protein; 25th percentile). These results lead us to the following conclusions: 1) the cytosolic concentrations of NSE are significantly higher in squamous cell carcinomas than in healthy pulmonary tissue, and 2) the cytosolic concentrations of NSE are not correlated with clinical stage or nodal involvement. However, in our study higher levels of the enzyme were statistically correlated with aneuploidy, histological grade 3 and S-phase. This may explain its association with poorer outcome and progression, but also the more favorable response of tumors with elevated NSE to chemotherapy, as suggested by other groups.


European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics | 2017

In vivo eye surface residence determination by high-resolution scintigraphy of a novel ion-sensitive hydrogel based on gellan gum and kappa-carrageenan

Anxo Fernández-Ferreiro; Jesús Silva-Rodríguez; F.J. Otero-Espinar; Miguel González-Barcia; María Jesús Lamas; A. Ruibal; Andrea Luaces-Rodríguez; Alba Vieites-Prado; Isabel Lema; Michel Herranz; Noemí Gómez-Lado; J. Blanco-Méndez; María Gil-Martínez; Maria Pardo; Alexis Moscoso; Julia Cortés; María Sánchez-Martínez; Juan Pardo-Montero; Pablo Aguiar

&NA; In last years, sensitive hydrogels have become a breakthrough in ophthalmic pharmaceutical technology aimed at developing new strategies to increase the residence time of active substances. In a previous paper, we qualitatively demonstrated the capacity of a new ion sensitive hydrogel to increase the residence time. Nevertheless, the clearance of the gel from the ocular surface was not quantifiable with the used methodology. The aim of the present work was to use a well‐established approach based on scintigraphy to quantitatively estimate the residence time of the previously proposed hydrogel. The rat corneal residence time of a topic ophthalmic formulation containing gellan gum and kappa carragenan (0.82% w/v) labeled with 99mTc‐DTPA radiotracer was evaluated and compared with the residence of an aqueous solution. Ophthalmic safety studies such as eye irritation or passage through the cornea were also carried out. After 1.5 h of contact, 77% of the hydrogel remained in the ocular surface, presenting kinetics of disappearance one‐phase decay and a half time of 262 min. We conclude that the novel ophthalmic hydrogel developed with kappa carrageenan and gellan gum remains for long periods of time on the corneal surface, presenting a drop that fits an exponential decay. Graphical abstract Figure. No caption available.

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Pablo Aguiar

University of Santiago de Compostela

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M.I. Núñez

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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José Schneider

King Juan Carlos University

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Michel Herranz

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Anxo Fernández-Ferreiro

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Julia Cortés

University of Santiago de Compostela

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A. Sánchez Salmón

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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José Ignacio Arias

National Institutes of Health

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