Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Adrián Millán is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Adrián Millán.


Genetics | 2009

Identification of the Major Sex-Determining Region of Turbot ( Scophthalmus maximus )

Paulino Martínez; Carmen Bouza; Miguel Hermida; Jesús Rodríguez Fernández; Miguel A. Toro; Manuel Vera; Belén G. Pardo; Adrián Millán; Carlos Fernández; Román Vilas; Ana Viñas; Laura Sánchez; Alicia Felip; Francesc Piferrer; Isabel Ferreiro; Santiago Cabaleiro

Sex determination in fish is a labile character in evolutionary terms. The sex-determining (SD) master gene can differ even between closely related fish species. This group is an interesting model for studying the evolution of the SD region and the gonadal differentiation pathway. The turbot (Scophthalmus maximus) is a flatfish of great commercial value, where a strong sexual dimorphism exists for growth rate. Following a QTL and marker association approach in five families and a natural population, we identified the main SD region of turbot at the proximal end of linkage group (LG) 5, close to the SmaUSC-E30 marker. The refined map of this region suggested that this marker would be 2.6 cM and 1.4 Mb from the putative SD gene. This region appeared mostly undifferentiated between males and females, and no relevant recombination frequency differences were detected between sexes. Comparative genomics of LG5 marker sequences against five model species showed no similarity of this chromosome to the sex chromosomes of medaka, stickleback, and fugu, but suggested a similarity to a sex-associated QTL from Oreochromis spp. The segregation analysis of the closest markers to the SD region demonstrated a ZW/ZZ model of sex determination in turbot. A small proportion of families did not fit perfectly with this model, which suggests that other minor genetic and/or environmental factors are involved in sex determination in this species.


BMC Veterinary Research | 2008

Expressed sequence tags (ESTs) from immune tissues of turbot (Scophthalmus maximus) challenged with pathogens

Belén G. Pardo; Carlos Fernández; Adrián Millán; Carmen Bouza; Araceli Vázquez-López; Manuel Vera; José Antonio Álvarez-Dios; Manuel Calaza; Antonio Gómez-Tato; María Vázquez; Santiago Cabaleiro; Beatriz Magariños; Manuel L. Lemos; José Leiro; Paulino Martínez

BackgroundThe turbot (Scophthalmus maximus; Scophthalmidae; Pleuronectiformes) is a flatfish species of great relevance for marine aquaculture in Europe. In contrast to other cultured flatfish, very few genomic resources are available in this species. Aeromonas salmonicida and Philasterides dicentrarchi are two pathogens that affect turbot culture causing serious economic losses to the turbot industry. Little is known about the molecular mechanisms for disease resistance and host-pathogen interactions in this species. In this work, thousands of ESTs for functional genomic studies and potential markers linked to ESTs for mapping (microsatellites and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs)) are provided. This information enabled us to obtain a preliminary view of regulated genes in response to these pathogens and it constitutes the basis for subsequent and more accurate microarray analysis.ResultsA total of 12584 cDNAs partially sequenced from three different cDNA libraries of turbot (Scophthalmus maximus) infected with Aeromonas salmonicida, Philasterides dicentrarchi and from healthy fish were analyzed. Three immune-relevant tissues (liver, spleen and head kidney) were sampled at several time points in the infection process for library construction. The sequences were processed into 9256 high-quality sequences, which constituted the source for the turbot EST database. Clustering and assembly of these sequences, revealed 3482 different putative transcripts, 1073 contigs and 2409 singletons. BLAST searches with public databases detected significant similarity (e-value ≤ 1e-5) in 1766 (50.7%) sequences and 816 of them (23.4%) could be functionally annotated. Two hundred three of these genes (24.9%), encoding for defence/immune-related proteins, were mostly identified for the first time in turbot. Some ESTs showed significant differences in the number of transcripts when comparing the three libraries, suggesting regulation in response to these pathogens. A total of 191 microsatellites, with 104 having sufficient flanking sequences for primer design, and 1158 putative SNPs were identified from these EST resources in turbot.ConclusionA collection of 9256 high-quality ESTs was generated representing 3482 unique turbot sequences. A large proportion of defence/immune-related genes were identified, many of them regulated in response to specific pathogens. Putative microsatellites and SNPs were identified. These genome resources constitute the basis to develop a microarray for functional genomics studies and marker validation for genetic linkage and QTL analysis in turbot.


Cellular Signalling | 2014

Yessotoxin induces ER-stress followed by autophagic cell death in glioma cells mediated by mTOR and BNIP3.

Juan A. Rubiolo; Henar López-Alonso; Paulino Martínez; Adrián Millán; Eva Cagide; Mercedes R. Vieytes; Félix V. Vega; Luis M. Botana

Yessotoxin at nanomolar concentrations can induce programmed cell death in different model systems. Paraptosis-like cell death induced by YTX in BC3H1 cells, which are insensitive to several caspase inhibitors, has also been reported. This makes yessotoxin of interest in the search of molecules that target cancer cells vulnerabilities when resistance to apoptosis is observed. To better understand the effect of this molecule at the molecular level on tumor cells, we conducted a transcriptomic analysis using 3 human glioma cell lines with different sensitivities to yessotoxin. We show that the toxin induces a deregulation of the lipid metabolism in glioma cells as a consequence of induction of endoplasmic reticulum stress. The endoplasmic reticulum stress in turn arrests the cell cycle and inhibits the protein synthesis. In the three cell lines used we show that YTX induces autophagy, which is involved in cell death. The sensibility of the cell lines used towards autophagic cell death was related to their doubling time, being more resistant the cell line with the lowest proliferation rate. The involvement of mTOR and BNIP3 in the autophagy induction was also determined.


Animal Genetics | 2008

Characterization of EST‐derived microsatellites for gene mapping and evolutionary genomics in turbot

Carmen Bouza; Miguel Hermida; Adrián Millán; Román Vilas; Manuel Vera; Carlos Fernández; Manuel Calaza; Belén G. Pardo; Paulino Martínez

The detection of microsatellite sequences within expressed sequence tags (ESTs) connects potential markers with specific genes, generating type I markers. We have developed and mapped by linkage analysis a set of EST-derived microsatellites in the turbot, Scophthalmus maximus. One hundred and ninety-one microsatellites were identified from 9256 turbot ESTs. Primer design was possible with 98 microsatellites. After genotyping 25 wild turbot and the parents of two reference families for linkage analysis, 43 EST-derived microsatellites were selected because they met technical and polymorphism criteria. A final set of 31 EST-derived microsatellites could be mapped to 17 linkage groups of the turbot consensus map based on 242 anonymous microsatellites. Twenty-four microsatellite-containing ESTs were functionally annotated, confirming them as type I markers. Nineteen were mapped in the turbot consensus map. These EST-derived microsatellites constitute useful tools for genome scanning of turbot populations, marker-assisted selection programmes and comparative mapping.


Marine Biotechnology | 2012

Gene Expression Profiles of Spleen, Liver, and Head Kidney in Turbot ( Scophthalmus maximus ) Along the Infection Process with Philasterides dicentrarchi Using an Immune-Enriched Oligo-Microarray

Belén G. Pardo; Adrián Millán; Antonio Gómez-Tato; Carlos Fernández; Carmen Bouza; José Antonio Álvarez-Dios; Santiago Cabaleiro; Jesús Lamas; José Leiro; Paulino Martínez

We evaluated the expression profiles of turbot in spleen, liver, and head kidney across five temporal points of the Philasterides dicentrarchi infection process using an 8x15K Agilent oligo-microarray. The microarray included 2,176 different fivefold replicated gene probes designed from a turbot 3′ sequenced EST database. We were able to identify 221 differentially expressed (DE) genes (8.1% of the whole microarray), 113 in spleen, 83 in liver, and 90 in head kidney, in at least 1 of the 5 temporal points sampled for each organ. Most of these genes could be annotated (83.0%) and functionally categorized using GO terms (69.1%) after the additional sequencing of DE genes from the 5′ end. Many DE genes were related to innate and acquired immune functions. A high proportion of DE genes were organ-specific (70.6%), although their associated GO functions showed notable similarities in the three organs. The most striking difference in functional distribution was observed between the up- and downregulated gene groups. Upregulated genes were mostly associated to immune functions, while downregulated ones mainly involved metabolism-related genes. Genetic response appeared clustered in a few groups of genes with similar expression profiles along the temporal series. The information obtained will aid to understand the turbot immune response and will specifically be valuable to develop strategies of defense to P. dicentrarchi to achieve more resistant broodstocks for turbot industry.


International Immunopharmacology | 2013

Microarray analysis of the inflammatory and immune responses in head kidney turbot leucocytes treated with resveratrol

B. Domínguez; Belén G. Pardo; Manuel Noia; Adrián Millán; Antonio Gómez-Tato; Paulino Martínez; José Leiro; Jesús Lamas

A DNA oligo-microarray enriched in genes and involved in inflammatory and immune responses was used to evaluate the effects of resveratrol on gene expression in turbot head kidney leucocytes. Leucocytes were cultured for 3, 6 and 24 h, in the presence or absence of resveratrol, or were stimulated with the membrane fraction of the parasite Philasterides dicentrarchi or with the membrane plus resveratrol. Gene expression changed considerably in control cells, and several of the regulated genes were related to inflammatory and immune responses and to the cytoskeleton. Similar changes in gene expression occurred in control cells and in cells stimulated with P. dicentrarchi membrane fraction. Treatment with resveratrol induced changes in the expression (mostly down-regulation) of several genes involved in immune responses and inflammation. Thus, the down-regulation of the transcription factor PU.1, pentraxin-multidomain protein, heme oxygenase 1, S100 calcium-binding protein A-16 (S100A16) and the signal transducer and activator of transcription 4 was observed after all three incubation times. The down-regulation of the suppressor of cytokine signalling 3a, LPS-induced tumour necrosis alpha, hepcidin, metallothionein, TLR8 and the calcium dependent lectin A was observed after 3 and 6 h. Resveratrol also decreased the expression of CCL20, IL-8, apolipoprotein E and glutathione S-transferase after incubation for 6 and 24 h, and of TNF-α after incubation for 3 and 24 h. Resveratrol also induced strong regulation of several cytoskeleton-related genes. The use of the turbot oligo-microarray enabled us to discover genes whose expression was not previously suspected of being modulated by this polyphenol.


Aquaculture | 2011

Validation of single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers from an immune Expressed Sequence Tag (EST) turbot, Scophthalmus maximus, database

Manuel Vera; José Antonio Álvarez-Dios; Adrián Millán; Belén G. Pardo; Carmen Bouza; Miguel Hermida; Carlos Fernández; Roberto de la Herrán; M. J. Molina-Luzón; Paulino Martínez


Marine Biotechnology | 2010

Design and Performance of a Turbot ( Scophthalmus maximus ) Oligo-microarray Based on ESTs from Immune Tissues

Adrián Millán; Antonio Gómez-Tato; Carlos Fernández; Belén G. Pardo; José Antonio Álvarez-Dios; Manuel Calaza; Carmen Bouza; María Vázquez; Santiago Cabaleiro; Paulino Martínez


Marine Biotechnology | 2011

Gene Expression Profiles of the Spleen, Liver, and Head Kidney in Turbot ( Scophthalmus maximus ) Along the Infection Process with Aeromonas salmonicida Using an Immune-Enriched Oligo-microarray

Adrián Millán; Antonio Gómez-Tato; Belén G. Pardo; Carlos Fernández; Carmen Bouza; Manuel Vera; José Antonio Álvarez-Dios; Santiago Cabaleiro; Jesús Lamas; Manuel L. Lemos; Paulino Martínez


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2010

Variation in anonymous and EST-microsatellites suggests adaptive population divergence in turbot

Román Vilas; Carmen Bouza; Manuel Vera; Adrián Millán; Paulino Martínez

Collaboration


Dive into the Adrián Millán's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Paulino Martínez

University of Santiago de Compostela

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Belén G. Pardo

University of Santiago de Compostela

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Carmen Bouza

University of Santiago de Compostela

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Carlos Fernández

University of Santiago de Compostela

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Antonio Gómez-Tato

University of Santiago de Compostela

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Manuel Vera

University of Santiago de Compostela

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Santiago Cabaleiro

University of Santiago de Compostela

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

José Antonio Álvarez-Dios

University of Santiago de Compostela

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jesús Lamas

University of Santiago de Compostela

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

José Leiro

University of Santiago de Compostela

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge