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Dive into the research topics where Ana M. Tormos is active.

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Featured researches published by Ana M. Tormos.


Free Radical Research | 2013

p38 MAPK: A dual role in hepatocyte proliferation through reactive oxygen species

Ana M. Tormos; Raquel Taléns-Visconti; A. R. Nebreda; Juan Sastre

Abstract p38 MAPKs are important mediators of signal transduction that respond to a wide range of extracellular stressors such as UV radiation, osmotic shock, hypoxia, pro-inflammatory cytokines, and oxidative stress. The most abundant family member is p38α, which helps to couple cell proliferation and growth in response to certain damaging stimuli. In fact, increased proliferation and impaired differentiation are hallmarks of p38α-deficient cells. It has been reported that reactive oxygen species (ROS) play a critical role in cytokine-induced p38α activation. Under physiological conditions, p38α can function as a mediator of ROS signaling and either activate or suppress cell cycle progression depending on the activation stimulus. The interplay between cell proliferation, p38 MAPK activation, and ROS production plays an important role in hepatocytes. In fact, low levels of ROS seem to be needed to activate several signaling pathways in response to hepatectomy and to orchestrate liver regeneration. p38 MAPK works as a sensor of oxidative stress and cells that have developed mechanisms to uncouple p38 MAPK activation from oxidative stress are more likely to become tumorigenic. So far, p38α influences the redox balance, determining cell survival, terminal differentiation, proliferation, and senescence. Further studies would be necessary in order to clarify the precise role of p38 MAPK signaling as a redox therapeutical target.


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2011

Mitochondrial biogenesis fails in secondary biliary cirrhosis in rats leading to mitochondrial DNA depletion and deletions

Alessandro Arduini; Gaetano Serviddio; Javier Escobar; Ana M. Tormos; Francesco Bellanti; Jose Viña; María Monsalve; Juan Sastre

Chronic cholestasis is characterized by mitochondrial dysfunction, associated with loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, decreased activities of respiratory chain complexes, and ATP production. Our aim was to determine the molecular mechanisms that link long-term cholestasis to mitochondrial dysfunction. We studied a model of chronic cholestasis induced by bile duct ligation in rats. Key sensors and regulators of the energetic state and mitochondrial biogenesis, mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA)-to-nuclear DNA (nDNA) ratio (mtDNA/nDNA) relative copy number, mtDNA deletions, and indexes of apoptosis (BAX, BCL-2, and cleaved caspase 3) and cell proliferation (PCNA) were evaluated. Our results show that long-term cholestasis is associated with absence of activation of key sensors of the energetic state, evidenced by decreased SIRT1 and pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase levels and lack of AMPK activation. Key mitochondrial biogenesis regulators (PGC-1α and GABP-α) decreased and NRF-1 was not transcriptionally active. Mitochondrial transcription factor A (TFAM) protein levels increased transiently in liver mitochondria at 2 wk after bile duct ligation, but they dramatically decreased at 4 wk. Reduced TFAM levels at this stage were mirrored by a marked decrease (65%) in mtDNA/nDNA relative copy number. The blockade of mitochondrial biogenesis should not be ascribed to activation of apoptosis or inhibition of cell proliferation. Impaired mitochondrial turnover and loss of the DNA stabilizing effect of TFAM are likely the causative event involved in the genetic instability evidenced by accumulation of mtDNA deletions. In conclusion, the lack of stimulation of mitochondrial biogenesis leads to mtDNA severe depletion and deletions in long-term cholestasis. Hence, long-term cholestasis should be considered a secondary mitochondrial hepatopathy.


Frontiers in Bioscience | 2012

Mitochondrial dysfunction in cholestatic liver diseases

Alessandro Arduini; Gaetano Serviddio; Ana M. Tormos; María Monsalve; Juan Sastre

Cholestatic liver diseases are characterized by blockade of bile flow from the liver to the intestine, and accumulation of hydrophobic bile acids in the liver and plasma. As a consequence an inflammatory response evolves associated with increased apoptosis, oxidative stress, and eventually fibrosis. Cholestasis is associated with profound metabolic changes, alterations in the mitochondrial function, decreased fatty acid oxidation, and increased glycolisis. Mitochondria play a central role in the development of this liver disease because they mediate death receptor signaling - triggered by inflammatory cytokines or bile acids - and contribute to oxidative damage, metabolic disorder, and onset of fibrosis. During the pathogenesis of biliary cirrhosis mitochondrias need for renewal is hampered by a blunted mitochondrial biogenesis. Lack of stimulation of mitochondrial renewal helps to explain mitochondrial impairment in long-term cholestasis. The marked depletion of mitochondrial DNA and occurrence of mitochondrial DNA deletions are probably relevant contributors to the progression of this severe disease. All these findings certainly support the consideration of long-term cholestasis as a secondary mitochondrial hepatopathy.


Hepatology | 2013

Liver-specific p38α deficiency causes reduced cell growth and cytokinesis failure during chronic biliary cirrhosis in mice†

Ana M. Tormos; Alessandro Arduini; Raquel Taléns-Visconti; Ivan del Barco Barrantes; Angel R. Nebreda; Juan Sastre

p38α mitogen‐activated protein kinases (MAPK) may be essential in the up‐regulation of proinflammatory cytokines and can be activated by transforming growth factor β, tumor necrosis factor‐α, interleukin‐1β, and oxidative stress. p38 MAPK activation results in hepatocyte growth arrest, whereas increased proliferation has been considered a hallmark of p38α‐deficient cells. Our aim was to assess the role of p38α in the progression of biliary cirrhosis induced by chronic cholestasis as an experimental model of chronic inflammation associated with hepatocyte proliferation, apoptosis, oxidative stress, and fibrogenesis. Cholestasis was induced in wildtype and liver‐specific p38α knockout mice by bile duct ligation and animals were sacrificed at 12 and 28 days. p38α knockout mice exhibited a 50% decrease in mean life‐span after cholestasis induction. MK2 phosphorylation was markedly reduced in liver of p38α‐deficient mice upon chronic cholestasis. Hepatocyte growth was reduced and hepatomegaly was absent in p38α‐deficient mice during chronic cholestasis through down‐regulation of both AKT and mammalian target of rapamycin. Cyclin D1 and cyclin B1 were up‐regulated in liver of p38α‐deficient mice upon chronic cholestasis, but unexpectedly proliferating cell nuclear antigen was down‐regulated at 12 days after cholestasis induction and the mitotic index was very high upon cholestasis in p38α‐deficient mice. p38α‐knockout hepatocytes exhibited cytokinesis failure evidenced by an enhanced binucleation rate. As chronic cholestasis evolved the binucleation rate decreased in wildtype animals, whereas it remained high in p38α‐deficient mice. Conclusion: Our results highlight a key role of p38α in hepatocyte proliferation, in the development of hepatomegaly, and in survival during chronic inflammation such as biliary cirrhosis. (HEPATOLOGY 2013)


Free Radical Research | 2015

Oxidative stress triggers cytokinesis failure in hepatocytes upon isolation

Ana M. Tormos; Raquel Taléns-Visconti; Ana Bonora-Centelles; Salvador Pérez; Juan Sastre

Abstract Primary hepatocytes are highly differentiated cells and proliferatively quiescent. However, the stress produced during liver digestion seems to activate cell cycle entry by proliferative/dedifferentiation programs that still remain unclear. The aim of this work was to assess whether the oxidative stress associated with hepatocyte isolation affects cell cycle and particularly cytokinesis, the final step of mitosis. Hepatocytes were isolated from C57BL/6 mice by collagenase perfusion in the absence and presence of N-acetyl cysteine (NAC). Polyploidy, cell cycle, and reactive oxygen species (ROS) were studied by flow cytometry (DNA, phospho-histone 3, and CellROX® Deep Red) and Western blotting (cyclins B1 and D1, and proliferating cell nuclear antigen). mRNA expression of cyclins A1, B1, B2, D1, and F by reverse transcription (RT)-PCR was also assessed. Glutathione levels were measured by mass spectrometry. Here we show that hepatocyte isolation enhanced cell cycle entry, increased hepatocyte binucleation, and caused marked glutathione oxidation. Addition of 5 mM NAC to the hepatocyte isolation media prevented glutathione depletion, partially blocked ROS production and cell cycle entry of hepatocytes, and avoided the blockade of mitosis progression, abrogating defective cytokinesis and diminishing the formation of binucleated hepatocytes during isolation. Therefore, addition of NAC to the isolation media decreased the generation of polyploid hepatocytes confirming that oxidative stress occurs during hepatocyte isolation and it is responsible, at least in part, for cytokinesis failure and hepatocyte binucleation.


Critical Reviews in Clinical Laboratory Sciences | 2015

Regulation of cytokinesis and its clinical significance

Ana M. Tormos; Raquel Taléns-Visconti; Juan Sastre

Abstract Dysregulation of the cell cycle leads to polyploid cells, which are classified into mononuclear or binuclear polyploid cells depending on the number of nuclei. Polyploidy is common in plants and in animals. Physiologically, polyploidy and binucleation are differentiation markers and also features of the aging process. In fact, although they provide multiple copies of genes required for survival, a negative correlation between growth capacity and polyploidy has been reported, and thus, suppression or reversal of this phenomenon may be a growth advantage. On the other hand, unscheduled polyploidization may cause genomic instability that might lead to neoplastic aneuploidy. The aim of this review is to analyze the mechanisms that lead to polyploidy, and particularly binucleation, and highlight the potential of ploidy as a marker of illness severity or the success of the adaptive response for an injury, with special emphasis in the liver under physiological and pathological conditions. Hepatocyte binucleation occurs in late fetal development and postnatal maturation, especially after weaning via phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K)-protein kinase B (Akt). It also increases upon aging of the liver as well as in liver cirrhosis and cancer. Liver binucleation mainly indicates the severity of the damage. Furthermore, the eventual increase in hepatocyte binucleation points out compensatory proliferation associated with liver injury. Ploidy conveyor would also permit hepatocyte adaptation to xenobiotic or nutritional injury. In contrast, polyploidy is a feature of many human cancers, and it may predispose to genomic instability and generation of aneuploidization that play a major role in carcinogenesis. Finally, a better understanding of the polyploidization process is needed in order to approach clinical research but also, to get deeper knowledge of cell cycle control. The fascinating regulation of cell cycle in liver and the generation and reversal of ploidies will provide more clues for the mystery of liver regeneration.


PLOS ONE | 2017

p38α regulates actin cytoskeleton and cytokinesis in hepatocytes during development and aging.

Ana M. Tormos; Sergio Rius-Pérez; María Jorques; Lorena Ramírez; Ángela M. Valverde; Ángel R. Nebreda; Juan Sastre; Raquel Taléns-Visconti

Background Hepatocyte poliploidization is an age-dependent process, being cytokinesis failure the main mechanism of polyploid hepatocyte formation. Our aim was to study the role of p38α MAPK in the regulation of actin cytoskeleton and cytokinesis in hepatocytes during development and aging. Methods Wild type and p38α liver-specific knock out mice at different ages (after weaning, adults and old) were used. Results We show that p38α MAPK deficiency induces actin disassembly upon aging and also cytokinesis failure leading to enhanced binucleation. Although the steady state levels of cyclin D1 in wild type and p38α knock out old livers remained unaffected, cyclin B1- a marker for G2/M transition- was significantly overexpressed in p38α knock out mice. Our findings suggest that hepatocytes do enter into S phase but they do not complete cell division upon p38α deficiency leading to cytokinesis failure and binucleation. Moreover, old liver-specific p38α MAPK knock out mice exhibited reduced F-actin polymerization and a dramatic loss of actin cytoskeleton. This was associated with abnormal hyperactivation of RhoA and Cdc42 GTPases. Long-term p38α deficiency drives to inactivation of HSP27, which seems to account for the impairment in actin cytoskeleton as Hsp27-silencing decreased the number and length of actin filaments in isolated hepatocytes. Conclusions p38α MAPK is essential for actin dynamics with age in hepatocytes.


Redox biology | 2018

Age-dependent regulation of antioxidant genes by p38α MAPK in the liver

Salvador Pérez; Sergio Rius-Pérez; Ana M. Tormos; Isabela Finamor; Angel R. Nebreda; Raquel Taléns-Visconti; Juan Sastre

p38α is a redox sensitive MAPK activated by pro-inflammatory cytokines and environmental, genotoxic and endoplasmic reticulum stresses. The aim of this work was to assess whether p38α controls the antioxidant defense in the liver, and if so, to elucidate the mechanism(s) involved and the age-related changes. For this purpose, we used liver-specific p38α-deficient mice at two different ages: young-mice (4 months-old) and old-mice (24 months-old). The liver of young p38α knock-out mice exhibited a decrease in GSH levels and an increase in GSSG/GSH ratio and malondialdehyde levels. However, old mice deficient in p38α had higher hepatic GSH levels and lower GSSG/GSH ratio than young p38α knock-out mice. Liver-specific p38α deficiency triggered a dramatic down-regulation of the mRNAs of the key antioxidant enzymes glutamate cysteine ligase, superoxide dismutase 1, superoxide dismutase 2, and catalase in young mice, which seems mediated by the lack of p65 recruitment to their promoters. Nrf-2 nuclear levels did not change significantly in the liver of young mice upon p38α deficiency, but nuclear levels of phospho-p65 and PGC-1α decreased in these mice. p38α-dependent activation of NF-κB seems to occur through classical IκB Kinase and via ribosomal S6 kinase1 and AKT in young mice. However, unexpectedly the long-term deficiency in p38α triggers a compensatory up-regulation of antioxidant enzymes via NF-κB activation and recruitment of p65 to their promoters. In conclusion, p38α MAPK maintains the expression of antioxidant genes in liver of young animals via NF-κΒ under basal conditions, whereas its long-term deficiency triggers compensatory up-regulation of antioxidant enzymes through NF-κΒ.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2014

Long term p38-a deficiency up-regulates antioxidant enzymes through compensatory NF-?B activation.

Ana M. Tormos; Salvador Pérez-Garrido; Raquel Taléns-Visconti; Angel R. Nebreda; Juan Sastre

p38a MAPK may function as a mediator of reactive oxygen species signaling and thus p38a is considered a sensor of oxidative stress. In liver-specific p38a knock-out (KO) adult mice we previously found glutathione depletion and down-regulation of antioxidant enzymes. Our aim was to assess the influence of long-term p38a deficiency on oxidative stress and on the regulation of antioxidant enzymes in liver of old mice. To this end, wild type or liver-specific KO mice after weaning, at 4-6 months of age, or at 24 months of age were used. Reduced glutathione (GSH) and oxidized glutathione levels were determined by mass spectrometry, gene expression of antioxidant enzymes was determined by RT-PCR, and induction of NRF-2 and PGC-1a as well as activation of NF-?B were assessed by western blotting. We report that GSH levels decreased upon aging only in liver of wild-type mice, but not in p38a KO mice. The mRNA expression of glutathione peroxidase, Cu-Zn superoxide dismutase, Mn-superoxide dismutase, and glutamate cysteine ligase was up-regulated in adult wild-type in comparison with mice after weaning, but their gene expression was down-regulated in old wild-type mice. Although the mRNA expression of glutathione peroxidase, Cu-Zn superoxide dismutase, Mn-superoxide dismutase, and glutamate cysteine ligase was down-regulated in adult KO mice vs KO mice after weaning, their gene expression was up-regulated in old KO mice. This up-regulation was not associated with nuclear translocation of NRF-2, which decreased upon aging in KO mice, nor with up-regulation of PGC-1a. However, phosphorylation of p65 was markedly increased in old KO mice as an index of NF-?B activation. In conclusion, long term deficiency of p38a in the liver causes compensatory activation of NF?B that is likely to be responsible for the up-regulation of antioxidant enzymes upon aging, independently of Nrf-2 and PGC-1a.


Neurologia | 2017

Vascular pathology: Cause or effect in Alzheimer disease?

Sergio Rius-Pérez; Ana M. Tormos; Salvador Pérez; Raquel Taléns-Visconti

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Juan Sastre

University of Valencia

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María Monsalve

Spanish National Research Council

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