Alejandro Huerta-Saquero
National Autonomous University of Mexico
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Publication
Featured researches published by Alejandro Huerta-Saquero.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2005
Arturo Calderón-Flores; Gisela Du Pont; Alejandro Huerta-Saquero; Horacio Merchant-Larios; Luis Servín-González; Socorro Durán
A Rhizobium etli Tn5 insertion mutant, LM01, was selected for its inability to use glutamine as the sole carbon and nitrogen source. The Tn5 insertion in LM01 was localized to the rsh gene, which encodes a member of the RelA/SpoT family of proteins. The LM01 mutant was affected in the ability to use amino acids and nitrate as nitrogen sources and was unable to accumulate (p)ppGpp when grown under carbon and nitrogen starvation, as opposed to the wild-type strain, which accumulated (p)ppGpp under these conditions. The R. etli rsh gene was found to restore (p)ppGpp accumulation to a DeltarelA DeltaspoT mutant of Escherichia coli. The R. etli Rsh protein consists of 744 amino acids, and the Tn5 insertion in LM01 results in the synthesis of a truncated protein of 329 amino acids; complementation experiments indicate that this truncated protein is still capable of (p)ppGpp hydrolysis. A second rsh mutant of R. etli, strain AC1, was constructed by inserting an Omega element at the beginning of the rsh gene, resulting in a null allele. Both AC1 and LM01 were affected in Nod factor production, which was constitutive in both strains, and in nodulation; nodules produced by the rsh mutants in Phaseolus vulgaris were smaller than those produced by the wild-type strain and did not fix nitrogen. In addition, electron microscopy revealed that the mutant bacteroids lacked poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate granules. These results indicate a central role for the stringent response in symbiosis.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2010
Rafael Jiménez; Sara B. Cruz-Migoni; Alejandro Huerta-Saquero; Víctor H. Bustamante; José L. Puente
Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) infections are characterized by the formation of attaching and effacing (A/E) lesions on the surfaces of infected epithelial cells. The genes required for the formation of A/E lesions are located within the locus of enterocyte effacement (LEE). Ler is the key regulatory factor controlling the expression of LEE genes. Expression of the ler gene is positively regulated by GrlA, which is encoded by the LEE. Here, we analyze the mechanism by which GrlA positively regulates ler expression and show that in the absence of H-NS, GrlA is no longer essential for ler activation, further confirming that GrlA acts in part as an H-NS antagonist on the ler promoter. Single-amino-acid mutants were constructed to test the functional significance of the putative helix-turn-helix (HTH) DNA binding motif found in the N-terminal half of GrlA, as well as at the C-terminal domain of the protein. Several mutations within the HTH motif, but not all, completely abolished GrlA activity, as well as specific binding to its target sequence downstream from position -54 in the ler regulatory region. Some of these mutants, albeit inactive, were still able to interact with the negative regulator GrlR, indicating that loss of activity was not a consequence of protein misfolding. Additional residues in the vicinity of the HTH domain, as well as at the end of the protein, were also shown to be important for GrlA activity as a transcriptional regulator, but not for its interaction with GrlR. In summary, GrlA consists of at least two functional domains, one involved in transcriptional activation and DNA binding and the other in heterodimerization with GrlR.
Biochemical Genetics | 1996
Socorro Durán; Luis Sánchez-Linares; Alejandro Huerta-Saquero; Gisela Du Pont; Alejandra Huerta-Zepeda; Jorge Calderón
We present evidence thatRhizobium etli has two glutaminases differentiated by their thermostability and electrophoretic mobility. The thermostable glutaminase (B) is constitutive, in contrast with the thermolabile glutaminase (A), which is positively regulated by glutamine and negatively regulated by ammonium and by the carbon source. In distinction to glutaminase A, glutaminase B plays a minor role in the utilization of glutamine as a carbon source, but it may play a role in maintaining the balance of glutamine and glutamate. By complementation of theRhizobium etli LM16 mutant that lacks glutaminase A, we have cloned the gene that codes for this enzyme.
Neuroscience Letters | 2006
Marina Martinez-Vargas; Ruben Gonzalez-Rivera; Maribel Soto-Nuñez; Marina Cisneros-Martinez; Alejandro Huerta-Saquero; Julio Morales-Gomez; Juan Molina-Guarneros; Luz Navarro
Many studies indicate that the hour of the day at which the onset of stroke occurs is very important in patient recovery. Furthermore, multiple studies have been conducted which show that ischemia in rats produces different magnitudes of injury depending on the hour of the day at which it was induced. Using a traumatic brain injury (TBI) model, we analyzed the effect of the time of day on the recovery of rats and obtained a higher survival rate if TBI was induced at 01:00 h as compared with TBI induced at 13:00 h. We also analyzed the effect of the protease inhibitor cystatin C (CC) on the recovery of rats from TBI and found that it increased mortality and bleeding, and that these effects were more pronounced at 13:00 h.
Toxicology Letters | 2016
Roberto Vazquez-Muñoz; Belen Borrego; Karla Juarez-Moreno; Maritza García-García; Josué D. Mota Morales; Nina Bogdanchikova; Alejandro Huerta-Saquero
Currently, nanomaterials are more frequently in our daily life, specifically in biomedicine, electronics, food, textiles and catalysis just to name a few. Although nanomaterials provide many benefits, recently their toxicity profiles have begun to be explored. In this work, the toxic effects of silver nanoparticles (35nm-average diameter and Polyvinyl-Pyrrolidone-coated) on biological systems of different levels of complexity was assessed in a comprehensive and comparatively way, through a variety of viability and toxicological assays. The studied organisms included viruses, bacteria, microalgae, fungi, animal and human cells (including cancer cell lines). It was found that biological systems of different taxonomical groups are inhibited at concentrations of silver nanoparticles within the same order of magnitude. Thus, the toxicity of nanomaterials on biological/living systems, constrained by their complexity, e.g. taxonomic groups, resulted contrary to the expected. The fact that cells and virus are inhibited with a concentration of silver nanoparticles within the same order of magnitude could be explained considering that silver nanoparticles affects very primitive cellular mechanisms by interacting with fundamental structures for cells and virus alike.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2012
Víctor A. García-Angulo; Verónica I. Martínez-Santos; Tomás Villaseñor; Francisco J. Santana; Alejandro Huerta-Saquero; Luary C. Martínez; Rafael Jiménez; Cristina Lara-Ochoa; Juan Téllez-Sosa; Víctor H. Bustamante; José L. Puente
Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli uses a type III secretion system (T3SS), encoded in the locus of enterocyte effacement (LEE) pathogenicity island, to translocate a wide repertoire of effector proteins into the host cell in order to subvert cell signaling cascades and promote bacterial colonization and survival. Genes encoding type III-secreted effectors are located in the LEE and scattered throughout the chromosome. While LEE gene regulation is better understood, the conditions and factors involved in the expression of effectors encoded outside the LEE are just starting to be elucidated. Here, we identified a highly conserved sequence containing a 13-bp inverted repeat (IR), located upstream of a subset of genes coding for different non-LEE-encoded effectors in A/E pathogens. Site-directed mutagenesis and deletion analysis of the nleH1 and nleB2 regulatory regions revealed that this IR is essential for the transcriptional activation of both genes. Growth conditions that favor the expression of LEE genes also facilitate the activation of nleH1 and nleB2; however, their expression is independent of the LEE-encoded positive regulators Ler and GrlA but is repressed by GrlR and the global regulator H-NS. In contrast, GrlA and Ler are required for nleA expression, while H-NS silences it. Consistent with their role in the regulation of nleA, purified Ler and H-NS bound to the regulatory region of nleA upstream of its promoter. This work shows that at least two modes of regulation control the expression of effector genes in attaching and effacing (A/E) pathogens, suggesting that a subset of effector functions may be coordinately expressed in a particular niche or time during infection.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1999
Jorge Calderón; Alejandro Huerta-Saquero; Gisela Du Pont; Socorro Durán
We sequenced a 2.1 kb fragment of DNA carrying the structural glsA gene, which codes for the Rhizobium etli thermolabile glutaminase (A). The glsA gene complements the R. etli LM16 mutant that lacks glutaminase A activity, and is expressed in the heterologous host Sinorhizobium meliloti. The deduced amino acid sequence consists of 309 residues, with a calculated molecular mass of 33 kDa. The amino acid sequence shares 53% and 43% identity with two hypothetical glutaminases of E. coli; 42% identity with liver-type; 38% identity with kidney-type glutaminase; 41% and 40% identity hypothetical glutaminases of Bacillus subtilis; and 41% and 37% identity with two putative glutaminases of Caenorhabditis elegans. The glsA gene represents the first glutaminase gene cloned and sequenced in prokaryotes.
Macromolecular Bioscience | 2017
Katrin Quester; Karla Juarez-Moreno; Isamel Secundino; Yvonne Roseinstein; Karla P. Alejo; Alejandro Huerta-Saquero; Rafael Vazquez-Duhalt
Cancer is still a growing public health problem, especially breast cancer that is one of the most important cancers in women. Chemotherapy, even though a successful treatment, is accompanied by severe side effects. Moreover, most of the drugs used for chemotherapy are administered as prodrugs and need to be transformed to the active form by cytochromes P450 (CYPs). In addition, increasing numbers of cancer tissues show lower CYP activity than the surrounding healthy tissues in which prodrugs are preferentially activated causing cytotoxicity. Here, the design of a functionalized cytochrome P450 bioconjugate is reported as nanovehicle for the enzyme direct delivery to the tumor tissue in order to improve the local drug activation. MCF-7 breast cancer cells are treated with CYP-polyethylene glycol bioconjugate functionalized folic acid, where it activates the prodrug tamoxifen and significantly reduces the dose of tamoxifen needed to kill the tumor cells. The CYP bioconjugate covered with polyethylene glycol shows no immunogenic activity. The advantages of increasing the site-specific CYP activity in tumor tissues are discussed.
Computational Biology and Chemistry | 2015
Silvia Tenorio-Salgado; Alejandro Huerta-Saquero; Yalbi Itzel Balderas-Martínez; Gabriel Moreno-Hagelsieb
Motivated by the experimental evidences accumulated in the last ten years and based on information deposited in RegulonDB, literature look up, and sequence analysis, we analyze the repertoire of 304 DNA-binding Transcription factors (TFs) in Escherichia coli K-12. These regulators were grouped in 78 evolutionary families and are regulating almost half of the total genes in this bacterium. In structural terms, 60% of TFs are composed by two-domains, 30% are monodomain, and 10% three- and four-structural domains. As previously noticed, the most abundant DNA-binding domain corresponds to the winged helix-turn-helix, with few alternative DNA-binding structures, resembling the hypothesis of successful protein structures with the emergence of new ones at low scales. In summary, we identified and described the characteristics associated to the DNA-binding TF in E. coli K-12. We also identified twelve functional modules based on a co-regulated gene matrix. Finally, diverse regulons were predicted based on direct associations between the TFs and potential regulated genes. This analysis should increase our knowledge about the gene regulation in the bacterium E. coli K-12, and provide more additional clues for comprehensive modelling of transcriptional regulatory networks in other bacteria.
Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2016
E. Lorena Hernández-López; Lucia Perezgasga; Alejandro Huerta-Saquero; Rosa Mouriño-Pérez; Rafael Vazquez-Duhalt
Neosartorya fischeri, an Aspergillaceae fungus, was evaluated in its capacity to transform high molecular weight polycyclic aromatics hydrocarbons (HMW-PAHs) and the recalcitrant fraction of petroleum, the asphaltenes. N. fischeri was able to grow in these compounds as sole carbon source. Coronene, benzo(g,h,i)perylene, and indeno(1,2,3-c,d)pyrene, together with the asphaltenes, were assayed for fungal biotransformation. The transformation of the asphaltenes and HMW-PAHs was confirmed by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), nano-LC mass spectrometry, and IR spectrometry. The formation of hydroxy and ketones groups on the PAH molecules suggest a biotransformation mediated by monooxygenases such as cytochrome P450 system (CYP). A comparative microarray with the complete genome from N. fischeri showed three CYP monooxygenases and one flavin monooxygenase genes upregulated. These findings, together with the internalization of aromatic substrates into fungal cells and the microsomal transformation of HMW-PAHs, strongly support the role of CYPs in the oxidation of these recalcitrant compounds.