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Dive into the research topics where Andrés Stutzin is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrés Stutzin.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 1999

Separate taurine and chloride efflux pathways activated during regulatory volume decrease

Andrés Stutzin; Rubén Torres; Macarena Oporto; Patricio Pacheco; Ana Luisa Eguiguren; L. Pablo Cid; Francisco Sepulveda

Organic osmolyte and halide permeability pathways activated in epithelial HeLa cells by cell swelling were studied by radiotracer efflux techniques and single-cell volume measurements. The replacement of extracellular Cl- by anions that are more permeant through the volume-activated Cl- channel, as indicated by electrophysiological measurements, significantly decreased taurine efflux. In the presence of less-permeant anions, an increase in taurine efflux was observed. Simultaneous measurement of the 125I, used as a tracer for Cl-, and [3H]taurine efflux showed that the time courses for the two effluxes differed. In Cl--rich medium the increase in I- efflux was transient, whereas that for taurine was sustained. Osmosensitive Cl- conductance, assessed by measuring changes in cell volume, increased rapidly after hypotonic shock. The influx of taurine was able to counteract Cl- conductance-dependent cell shrinkage but only approximately 4 min after triggering cell swelling. This taurine-induced effect was blocked by DIDS. Differences in anion sensitivity, the time course of activation, and sensitivity to DIDS suggest that the main cell swelling-activated permeability pathways for taurine and Cl- are separate.Organic osmolyte and halide permeability pathways activated in epithelial HeLa cells by cell swelling were studied by radiotracer efflux techniques and single-cell volume measurements. The replacement of extracellular Cl- by anions that are more permeant through the volume-activated Cl- channel, as indicated by electrophysiological measurements, significantly decreased taurine efflux. In the presence of less-permeant anions, an increase in taurine efflux was observed. Simultaneous measurement of the125I, used as a tracer for Cl-, and [3H]taurine efflux showed that the time courses for the two effluxes differed. In Cl--rich medium the increase in I- efflux was transient, whereas that for taurine was sustained. Osmosensitive Cl- conductance, assessed by measuring changes in cell volume, increased rapidly after hypotonic shock. The influx of taurine was able to counteract Cl- conductance-dependent cell shrinkage but only ∼4 min after triggering cell swelling. This taurine-induced effect was blocked by DIDS. Differences in anion sensitivity, the time course of activation, and sensitivity to DIDS suggest that the main cell swelling-activated permeability pathways for taurine and Cl- are separate.


Current Molecular Medicine | 2008

Cell Death by Necrosis, a Regulated Way to Go

Mauricio Henriquez; Ricardo Armisen; Andrés Stutzin; Andrew F.G. Quest

Apoptosis is a programmed form of cell death with well-defined morphological traits that are often associated with activation of caspases. More recently evidence has become available demonstrating that upon caspase inhibition alternative programs of cell death are executed, including ones with features characteristic of necrosis. These findings have changed our view of necrosis as a passive and essentially accidental form of cell death to that of an active, regulated and controllable process. Also necrosis has now been observed in parallel with, rather than as an alternative pathway to, apoptosis. Thus, cell death responses are extremely flexible despite being programmed. In this review, some of the hallmarks of different programmed cell death modes have been highlighted before focusing the discussion on necrosis. Obligatory events associated with this form of cell death include uncompensated cell swelling and related changes at the plasma membrane. In this context, representatives of the transient receptor channel family and their regulation are discussed. Also mechanisms that lead to execution of the necrotic cell death program are highlighted. Emphasis is laid on summarizing our understanding of events that permit switching between cell death modes and how they connect to necrosis. Finally, potential implications for the treatment of some disease states are mentioned.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Prion protein misfolding affects calcium homeostasis and sensitizes cells to endoplasmic reticulum stress.

Mauricio Torres; Karen Castillo; Ricardo Armisen; Andrés Stutzin; Claudio Soto; Claudio Hetz

Prion-related disorders (PrDs) are fatal neurodegenerative disorders characterized by progressive neuronal impairment as well as the accumulation of an abnormally folded and protease resistant form of the cellular prion protein, termed PrPRES. Altered endoplasmic reticulum (ER) homeostasis is associated with the occurrence of neurodegeneration in sporadic, infectious and familial forms of PrDs. The ER operates as a major intracellular calcium store, playing a crucial role in pathological events related to neuronal dysfunction and death. Here we investigated the possible impact of PrP misfolding on ER calcium homeostasis in infectious and familial models of PrDs. Neuro2A cells chronically infected with scrapie prions showed decreased ER-calcium content that correlated with a stronger upregulation of UPR-inducible chaperones, and a higher sensitivity to ER stress-induced cell death. Overexpression of the calcium pump SERCA stimulated calcium release and increased the neurotoxicity observed after exposure of cells to brain-derived infectious PrPRES. Furthermore, expression of PrP mutants that cause hereditary Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease or fatal familial insomnia led to accumulation of PrPRES and their partial retention at the ER, associated with a drastic decrease of ER calcium content and higher susceptibility to ER stress. Finally, similar results were observed when a transmembrane form of PrP was expressed, which is proposed as a neurotoxic intermediate. Our results suggest that alterations in calcium homeostasis and increased susceptibility to ER stress are common pathological features of both infectious and familial PrD models.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2008

Ceramide-induced formation of ROS and ATP depletion trigger necrosis in lymphoid cells

Joan Villena; Mauricio Henriquez; Vicente A. Torres; Francisco Moraga; Jessica Díaz-Elizondo; Cristian Arredondo; Mario Chiong; Claudio Olea-Azar; Andrés Stutzin; Sergio Lavandero; Andrew F.G. Quest

In lymphocytes, Fas activation leads to both apoptosis and necrosis, whereby the latter form of cell death is linked to delayed production of endogenous ceramide and is mimicked by exogenous administration of long- and short-chain ceramides. Here molecular events associated with noncanonical necrotic cell death downstream of ceramide were investigated in A20 B lymphoma and Jurkat T cells. Cell-permeable, C6-ceramide (C6), but not dihydro-C6-ceramide (DH-C6), induced necrosis in a time- and dose-dependent fashion. Rapid formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) within 30 min of C6 addition detected by a dihydrorhodamine fluorescence assay, as well as by electron spin resonance, was accompanied by loss of mitochondrial membrane potential. The presence of N-acetylcysteine or ROS scavengers like Tiron, but not Trolox, attenuated ceramide-induced necrosis. Alternatively, adenovirus-mediated expression of catalase in A20 cells also attenuated cell necrosis but not apoptosis. Necrotic cell death observed following C6 exposure was associated with a pronounced decrease in ATP levels and Tiron significantly delayed ATP depletion in both A20 and Jurkat cells. Thus, apoptotic and necrotic death induced by ceramide in lymphocytes occurs via distinct mechanisms. Furthermore, ceramide-induced necrotic cell death is linked here to loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, production of ROS, and intracellular ATP depletion.


The Journal of Physiology | 2000

Characterisation of a cell swelling‐activated K+‐selective conductance of Ehrlich mouse ascites tumour cells

María Isabel Niemeyer; Charlotte Ørsted Hougaard; Else K. Hoffmann; Finn Jørgensen; Andrés Stutzin; Francisco Sepulveda

1 The K+ and Cl− currents activated by hypotonic cell swelling were studied in Ehrlich ascites tumour cells using the whole‐cell recording mode of the patch‐clamp technique. 2 Currents were measured in the absence of added intracellular Ca2+ and with strong buffering of Ca2+. K+ current activated by cell swelling was measured as outward current at the Cl− equilibrium potential (ECl) under quasi‐physiological gradients. It could be abolished by replacing extracellular Na+ with K+, thereby cancelling the driving force. Replacement with other cations suggested a selectivity sequence of K+ > Rb+ > NH4≈ Na+≈ Li+; Cs+ appeared to be inhibitory. 3 The current‐voltage relationship of the volume‐sensitive K+ current was well fitted with the Goldman‐Hodgkin‐Katz current equation between ‐130 and +20 mV with a permeability coefficient of around 10−6 cm s−1 with both physiological and high‐K+ extracellular solutions. 4 The class III antiarrhythmic drug clofilium blocked the volume‐sensitive K+ current in a voltage‐independent manner with an IC50 of 32 μM. Clofilium was also found to be a strong inhibitor of the regulatory volume decrease response of Ehrlich cells. 5 Cell swelling‐activated K+ currents of Ehrlich cells are voltage and calcium insensitive and are resistant to a range of K+ channel inhibitors. These characteristics are similar to those of the so‐called background K+ channels. 6 Noise analysis of whole‐cell current was consistent with a unitary conductance of 5.5 pS for the single channels underlying the K+ current evoked by cell swelling, measured at 0 mV under a quasi‐physiological K+ gradient.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2012

TMBIM3/GRINA is a novel unfolded protein response (UPR) target gene that controls apoptosis through the modulation of ER calcium homeostasis.

Diego Rojas-Rivera; Ricardo Armisen; Alicia Colombo; Gabriela Martínez; A L Eguiguren; A Díaz; Santeri Kiviluoto; Diego A. Rodriguez; M Patron; Rosario Rizzuto; Geert Bultynck; Miguel L. Concha; J Sierralta; Andrés Stutzin; Claudio Hetz

Transmembrane BAX inhibitor motif-containing (TMBIM)-6, also known as BAX-inhibitor 1 (BI-1), is an anti-apoptotic protein that belongs to a putative family of highly conserved and poorly characterized genes. Here we report the function of TMBIM3/GRINA in the control of cell death by endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress. Tmbim3 mRNA levels are strongly upregulated in cellular and animal models of ER stress, controlled by the PERK signaling branch of the unfolded protein response. TMBIM3/GRINA synergies with TMBIM6/BI-1 in the modulation of ER calcium homeostasis and apoptosis, associated with physical interactions with inositol trisphosphate receptors. Loss-of-function studies in D. melanogaster demonstrated that TMBIM3/GRINA and TMBIM6/BI-1 have synergistic activities against ER stress in vivo. Similarly, manipulation of TMBIM3/GRINA levels in zebrafish embryos revealed an essential role in the control of apoptosis during neuronal development and in experimental models of ER stress. These findings suggest the existence of a conserved group of functionally related cell death regulators across species beyond the BCL-2 family of proteins operating at the ER membrane.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Hydrogen Peroxide Removes TRPM4 Current Desensitization Conferring Increased Vulnerability to Necrotic Cell Death

Felipe Simon; Elías Leiva-Salcedo; Ricardo Armisen; Ana Riveros; Oscar Cerda; Diego Varela; Ana Luisa Eguiguren; Pablo Olivero; Andrés Stutzin

Necrosis is associated with an increase in plasma membrane permeability, cell swelling, and loss of membrane integrity with subsequent release of cytoplasmic constituents. Severe redox imbalance by overproduction of reactive oxygen species is one of the main causes of necrosis. Here we demonstrate that H2O2 induces a sustained activity of TRPM4, a Ca2+-activated, Ca2+-impermeant nonselective cation channel resulting in an increased vulnerability to cell death. In HEK 293 cells overexpressing TRPM4, H2O2 was found to eliminate in a dose-dependent manner TRPM4 desensitization. Site-directed mutagenesis experiments revealed that the Cys1093 residue is crucial for the H2O2-mediated loss of desensitization. In HeLa cells, which endogenously express TRPM4, H2O2 elicited necrosis as well as apoptosis. H2O2-mediated necrosis but not apoptosis was abolished by replacement of external Na+ ions with sucrose or the non-permeant cation N-methyl-d-glucamine and by knocking down TRPM4 with a shRNA directed against TRPM4. Conversely, transient overexpression of TRPM4 in HeLa cells in which TRPM4 was previously silenced re-established vulnerability to H2O2-induced necrotic cell death. In addition, HeLa cells exposed to H2O2 displayed an irreversible loss of membrane potential, which was prevented by TRPM4 knockdown.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2011

TRPM4 enhances cell proliferation through up‐regulation of the β‐catenin signaling pathway

Ricardo Armisen; Katherine Marcelain; Felipe Simon; Julio C. Tapia; Jessica Toro; Andrew F.G. Quest; Andrés Stutzin

Altered expression of some members of the TRP ion channel superfamily has been associated with the development of pathologies like cancer. In particular, TRPM4 levels are reportedly elevated in diffuse large B‐cell non‐Hodgkin lymphoma, prostate, and cervical cancer. However, whether such changes in TRPM4 expression may be relevant to genesis or progression of cancer remains unknown. Here we show that reducing TRPM4 expression decreases proliferation of HeLa cells, a cervical cancer‐derived cell line. In this cell line, constitutive TRPM4 silencing promoted GSK‐3β‐dependent degradation of β‐catenin and reduced β‐catenin/Tcf/Lef‐dependent transcription. Conversely, overexpression of TRPM4 in T‐REx 293 cells (a HEK293‐derived cell line) increased cell proliferation and β‐catenin levels. Our results identify TRPM4 as an important, unanticipated regulator of the β‐catenin pathway, where aberrant signaling is frequently associated with cancer. J. Cell. Physiol. 226: 103–109, 2010.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1987

Effect of synexin on aggregation and fusion of chromaffin granule ghosts at pH 6.

Shlomo Nir; Andrés Stutzin; Harvey B. Pollard

Fusion of chromaffin granule ghosts was induced by synexin at pH 6, 37 degrees C, in the presence of 10(-7) M Ca2+. To study the kinetics and extent of this fusion process we employed two assays that monitored continuously mixing of aqueous contents or membrane mixing by fluorescence intensity increases. In both assays chromaffin granule ghosts were either labeled on the membrane or in the included aqueous phase. The ratios of blank to labeled chromaffin granule ghosts were varied from 1 to 10. The results were analyzed in terms of a mass action kinetic model, which views the overall fusion reaction as a sequence of a second-order process of aggregation followed by a first-order fusion reaction. The model calculations gave fare simulations and predictions of the experimental results. The rate constants describing membrane mixing are more than 2-fold larger than those for volume mixing. The analysis also indicated that the initial aggregation and fusion processes, up to dimer formation, were extremely fast. The rate constant of aggregation was close to the limit in diffusion-controlled processes, whereas the fusion rate constant was about the same as found in fastest virus-liposome fusion events at pH 5. A small increase in volume was found to accompany the fusion between chromaffin granule ghosts. Using ratios of synexin to chromaffin granule ghost protein of 0.13, 0.41 and 1.15 indicated that the overall fusion rate was larger for the intermediate (0.41) case. The analysis showed that the main activity of synexin was an enhancement of the rate of aggregation. At intermediate or excessive synexin concentrations it, respectively, promoted moderately, or inhibited the actual fusion step.


Cellular Physiology and Biochemistry | 2007

Activation of H2O2-Induced VSOR Cl- Currents in HTC Cells Require Phospholipase Cγ1 Phosphorylation and Ca2+ Mobilisation

Diego Varela; Felipe Simon; Pablo Olivero; Ricardo Armisen; Elías Leiva-Salcedo; Finn Jørgensen; Francisco Sala; Andrés Stutzin

Volume-sensitive outwardly rectifying (VSOR) Cl<sup>-</sup> channels participate in several physiological processes such as regulatory volume decrease, cell cycle regulation, proliferation and apoptosis. Recent evidence points to a significant role of hydrogen peroxide (H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>) in VSOR Cl<sup>-</sup> channel activation. The aim of this study was to determine the signalling pathways responsible for H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>-induced VSOR Cl<sup>-</sup> channel activation. In rat hepatoma (HTC) cells, H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> elicited a transient increase in tyrosine phosphorylation of phospholipase Cγ1 (PLCγ1) that was blocked by PP2, a Src-family protein kinases inhibitor. Also, H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> triggered an increase in cytosolic [Ca<sup>2+</sup>] that paralleled the time course of PLCγ1 phosphorylation. The H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>-induced [Ca<sup>2+</sup>]<sub>i</sub> rise was prevented by the generic phospholipase C (PLC) inhibitor U73122 and the inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate-receptor (IP<sub>3</sub>R) blocker 2-APB. In line with these results, manoeuvres that prevented PLCγ1 activation and/or [Ca<sup>2+</sup>]<sub>i</sub> rise, abolished H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>-induced VSOR Cl<sup>-</sup> currents. Furthermore, in cells that overexpress a phosphorylation-defective dominant mutant of PLCγ1, H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> did not induce activation of VSOR Cl<sup>-</sup> currents. All these H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>-induced effects were independent of extracellular Ca<sup>2+</sup>. Our findings suggest that activation of PLCγ1 and subsequent Ca<sup>2+</sup><sub>i</sub> mobilisation mediate H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>-induced VSOR Cl<sup>-</sup> currents, indicating that H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> operates via redox-sensitive signalling pathways akin to those activated by osmotic challenges.

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