Angela Gomez-Niño
Spanish National Research Council
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Featured researches published by Angela Gomez-Niño.
Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology | 2002
C. Gonzalez; Gloria Sanz-Alfayate; M.Teresa Agapito; Angela Gomez-Niño; Asunción Rocher; Ana Obeso
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are oxygen-containing molecular entities which are more potent and effective oxidizing agents than is molecular oxygen itself. With the exception of phagocytic cells, where ROS play an important physiological role in defense reactions, ROS have classically been considered undesirable byproducts of cell metabolism, existing several cellular mechanisms aimed to dispose them. Recently, however, ROS have been considered important intracellular signaling molecules, which may act as mediators or second messengers in many cell functions. This is the proposed role for ROS in oxygen sensing in systems, such as carotid body chemoreceptor cells, pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells, and erythropoietin-producing cells. These unique cells comprise essential parts of homeostatic loops directed to maintain oxygen levels in multicellular organisms in situations of hypoxia. The present article examines the possible significance of ROS in these three cell systems, and proposes a set of criteria that ROS should satisfy for their consideration as mediators in hypoxic transduction cascades. In none of the three cell types do ROS satisfy these criteria, and thus it appears that alternative mechanisms are responsible for the transduction cascades linking hypoxia to the release of neurotransmitters in chemoreceptor cells, contraction in pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells and erythropoietin secretion in erythropoietin producing cells.
Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology | 2007
C. Gonzalez; M.T. Agapito; Asunción Rocher; M.C. Gonzalez-Martin; V. Vega-Agapito; Angela Gomez-Niño; R. Rigual; J. Castañeda; Ana Obeso
Superoxide anion is the most important reactive oxygen species (ROS) primarily generated in cells. The main cellular constituents with capabilities to generate superoxide anion are NADPH oxidases and mitochondrial respiratory chain. The emphasis of our article is centered in critically examining hypotheses proposing that ROS generated by NADPH oxidase and mitochondria are key elements in O(2)-sensing and hypoxic responses generation in carotid body chemoreceptor cells. Available data indicate that chemoreceptor cells express a specific isoform of NADPH oxidase that is activated by hypoxia; generated ROS acting as negative modulators of the carotid body (CB) hypoxic responses. Literature is also consistent in supporting that poisoned respiratory chain can produce high amounts of ROS, making mitochondrial ROS potential triggers-modulators of the CB activation elicited by mitochondrial venoms. However, most data favour the notion that levels of hypoxia, capable of strongly activating chemoreceptor cells, would not increase the rate of ROS production in mitochondria, making mitochondrial ROS unlikely triggers of hypoxic responses in the CB. Finally, we review recent literature on heme oxygenases from two perspectives, as potential O(2)-sensors in chemoreceptor cells and as generators of bilirubin which is considered to be a ROS scavenger of major quantitative importance in mammalian cells.
American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 1999
Ana Obeso; Angela Gomez-Niño; C. Gonzalez
The aim of the present work was to elucidate the role of NADPH oxidase in hypoxia sensing and transduction in the carotid body (CB) chemoreceptor cells. We have studied the effects of several inhibitors of NADPH oxidase on the normoxic and hypoxia-induced release of [3H]catecholamines (CA) in an in vitro preparation of intact CB of the rat and rabbit whose CA deposits have been labeled by prior incubation with the natural precursor [3H]tyrosine. It was found that diphenyleneiodonium (DPI; 0.2-25 μM), an inhibitor of NADPH oxidase, caused a dose-dependent release of [3H]CA from normoxic CB chemoreceptor cells. Contrary to hypoxia, DPI-evoked release was only partially Ca2+ dependent. Concentrations of DPI reported to produce full inhibition of NADPH oxidase in the rat CB did not prevent the hypoxic release response in the rat and rabbit CB chemoreceptor cells, as stimulation with hypoxia in the presence of DPI elicited a response equaling the sum of that produced by DPI and hypoxia applied separately. Neopterin (3-300 μM) and phenylarsine oxide (0.5-2 μM), other inhibitors of NADPH oxidase, did not promote release of [3H]CA in normoxic conditions or affect the response elicited by hypoxia. On the basis of effects of neopterin and phenylarsine oxide, it is concluded that NADPH oxidase does not appear to play a role in oxygen sensing or transduction in the rat and rabbit CB chemoreceptor cells in vitro and, in the context of the present study, that DPI effects are not related to NADPH oxidase inhibition.
Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology | 2010
C. Gonzalez; M.T. Agapito; Asunción Rocher; Angela Gomez-Niño; R. Rigual; J. Castañeda; Silvia V. Conde; Ana Obeso
Oxygen-sensing and transduction in purposeful responses in cells and organisms is of great physiological and medical interest. All animals, including humans, encounter in their lifespan many situations in which oxygen availability might be insufficient, whether acutely or chronically, physiologically or pathologically. Therefore to trace at the molecular level the sequence of events or steps connecting the oxygen deficit with the cell responses is of interest in itself as an achievement of science. In addition, it is also of great medical interest as such knowledge might facilitate the therapeutical approach to patients and to design strategies to minimize hypoxic damage. In our article we define the concepts of sensors and transducers, the steps of the hypoxic transduction cascade in the carotid body chemoreceptor cells and also discuss current models of oxygen- sensing (bioenergetic, biosynthetic and conformational) with their supportive and unsupportive data from updated literature. We envision oxygen-sensing in carotid body chemoreceptor cells as a process initiated at the level of plasma membrane and performed by a hemoprotein, which might be NOX4 or a hemoprotein not yet chemically identified. Upon oxygen-desaturation, the sensor would experience conformational changes allosterically transmitted to oxygen regulated K+ channels, the initial effectors in the transduction cascade. A decrease in their opening probability would produce cell depolarization, activation of voltage dependent calcium channels and release of neurotransmitters. Neurotransmitters would activate the nerve endings of the carotid body sensory nerve to convey the information of the hypoxic situation to the central nervous system that would command ventilation to fight hypoxia.
American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2009
Angela Gomez-Niño; Ana Obeso; Jose Antonio Baranda; Jaime Santo-Domingo; José R. López-López; C. Gonzalez
Hypoxia activates chemoreceptor cells of the carotid body (CB) promoting an increase in their normoxic release of neurotransmitters. Catecholamine (CA) release rate parallels the intensity of hypoxia. Coupling of hypoxia to CA release requires cell depolarization, produced by inhibition of O(2)-regulated K(+) channels, and Ca(2+) entering the cells via voltage-operated channels. In rat chemoreceptor cells hypoxia inhibits large-conductance, calcium-sensitive K channels (maxiK) and a two-pore domain weakly inward rectifying K(+) channel (TWIK)-like acid-sensitive K(+) channel (TASK)-like channel, but the significance of maxiK is controversial. A proposal envisions maxiK contributing to set the membrane potential (E(m)) and the hypoxic response, but the proposal is denied by authors finding that maxiK inhibition does not depolarize chemoreceptor cells or alters intracellular Ca(2+) concentration or CA release in normoxia or hypoxia. We found that maxiK channel blockers (tetraethylammonium and iberiotoxin) did not modify CA release in rat chemoreceptor cells, in either normoxia or hypoxia, and iberiotoxin did not alter the Ca(2+) transients elicited by hypoxia. On the contrary, both maxiK blockers increased the responses elicited by dinitrophenol, a stimulus we demonstrate does not affect maxiK channels in isolated patches of rat chemoreceptor cells. We conclude that in rat chemoreceptor cells maxiK channels do not contribute to the genesis of the E(m), and that their full inhibition by hypoxia, preclude further inhibition by maxiK channel blockers. We suggest that full inhibition of this channel is required to generate the spiking behavior of the cells in acute hypoxia.
American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2009
Maria Teresa Agapito; Gloria Sanz-Alfayate; Angela Gomez-Niño; C. Gonzalez; Ana Obeso
Carotid body (CB) chemoreceptor cells detect physiological levels of hypoxia and generate a hyperventilation, homeostatic in nature, aimed to minimize the deleterious effects of hypoxia. Intimate mechanisms involved in oxygen sensing in chemoreceptor cells remain largely unknown, but reactive oxygen species (ROS) had been proposed as mediators of this process. We have determined glutathione levels and calculated glutathione redox potential (E(GSH); indicator of the general redox environment of cells) in rat diaphragms incubated in the presence of oxidizing agents of two types: nonpermeating and permeating through cell membranes; in the latter group, unspecific oxidants and inhibitors of ROS-disposing enzymes were used. Selected concentrations of oxidizing agents were tested for their ability to modify the normoxic and hypoxic activity of chemoreceptor cells measured in vitro as their rate of release of neurotransmitters. Results evidence variable relationships between E(GSH) and the activity of chemoreceptor cells. The independence of chemoreceptor cell activity from the E(GSH) would imply that the ability of the CB to play its homeostatic role is largely preserved in any pathological or toxicological contingency causing oxidative stress. Consistent with this suggestion, it was also found that CB-mediated hypoxic hyperventilation was not altered by treatment of intact animals with agents that markedly decreased the E(GSH) in all tissues assayed.
Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology | 2009
Angela Gomez-Niño; M.T. Agapito; Ana Obeso; C. Gonzalez
Low oxygen sensing in chemoreceptor cells involves the inhibition of specific plasma membrane K(+) channels, suggesting that mitochondria-derived reactive oxygen species (ROS) link hypoxia to K(+) channel inhibition, subsequent cell depolarization and activation of neurotransmitter release. We have used several mitochondrial poisons, alone and in combination with the antioxidant N-acetylcysteine (NAC), and quantify their capacity to alter GSH/GSSG levels and glutathione redox potential (E(GSH)) in rat diaphragm. Selected concentrations of mitochondrial poisons with or without NAC were tested for their capacity to activate neurotransmitter release in chemoreceptor cells and to alter ATP levels in intact rat carotid body (CB). We found that rotenone (1 microM), antimycin A (0.2 microg/ml) and sodium azide (5mM) decreased E(GSH); NAC restored E(GSH) to control values. At those concentrations mitochondrial poisons activated neurotransmitter release from CB chemoreceptor cells and decreased CB ATP levels, NAC being ineffective to modify these responses. Additional experiments with 3-nitroprionate (5mM), lower concentrations of rotenone and dinitrophenol revealed variable relationships between E(GSH) and chemoreceptor cell neurotransmitter release responses and ATP levels. These findings indicate a lack of correlation between mitochondrial-generated modifications of E(GSH) and chemoreceptor cells activity. This lack of correlation renders unlikely that alteration of mitochondrial production of ROS is the physiological pathway chemoreceptor cells use to signal hypoxia.
The Journal of Physiology | 2015
Jesus Prieto-Lloret; Maria Ramirez; Elena Olea; Javier Moral-Sanz; Angel Cogolludo; Javier Castañeda; Sara Yubero; Teresa Agapito; Angela Gomez-Niño; Asunción Rocher; R. Rigual; Ana Obeso; Francisco Perez-Vizcaino; C. Gonzalez
Adult animals that have been perinatally exposed to oxygen‐rich atmospheres (hyperoxia), recalling those used for oxygen therapy in infants, exhibit a loss of hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction, whereas vasoconstriction elicited by depolarizing agents is maintained. Loss of pulmonary hypoxic vasoconstriction is not linked to alterations in oxygen‐sensitive K+ currents in pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells. Loss of hypoxic vasoconstriction is associated with early postnatal oxidative damage and corrected by an antioxidant diet. Perinatal hyperoxia damages carotid body chemoreceptor cell function and the antioxidant diet does not reverse it. The hypoxia‐elicited increase in erythropoietin plasma levels is not affected by perinatal hyperoxia. The potential clinical significance of the findings in clinical situations such as pneumonia, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or general anaesthesia is considered.
Archive | 2018
Angela Gomez-Niño; Inmaculada Docio; Jesus Prieto-Lloret; Maria Simarro; Miguel Angel de la Fuente; Asunción Rocher
The molecular mechanisms underlying O2-sensing by carotid body (CB) chemoreceptors remain undetermined. Mitochondria have been implicated, due to the sensitivity of CB response to electron transport chain (ETC) blockers. ETC is one of the major sources of reactive oxygen species, proposed as mediators in oxygen sensing. Fas-activated serine/threonine phosphoprotein is a sensor of mitochondrial stress that modulates protein translation to promote survival of cells exposed to adverse conditions. A translational variant of Fas-activated serine/threonine kinase (FASTK) is required for the biogenesis of ND6 mRNA, the mitochondrial encoded subunit 6 of the NADH dehydrogenase complex (Complex I). Ablating FASTK expression reduced Complex I activity in vivo by about 50%. We have tested the hypothesis of Complex I participation in O2-sensing structures by studying the effect of hypoxia in FASTK-/- knockout mice. Ventilatory response to acute hypoxia and hypercapnia tests showed similar sensitivity and CB catecholaminergic activity in knockout and wild type mice; hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction response also was similar. Pulmonary artery contractility in vitro, using small vessel myography, showed a significantly decreased relaxation to rotenone in knockout mice pre-constricted vessels with PGF2α. In conclusion, FASTK-/- knockout mice maintain respiratory chemoreflex under hypoxia and hypercapnia stress suggesting that completely functional Complex I ND6 protein is not required for these responses.
Archive | 2018
Elena Olea; Elvira Gonzalez-Obeso; Teresa Agapito; Ana Obeso; R. Rigual; Asunción Rocher; Angela Gomez-Niño
Guinea pigs (GP), originally from the Andes, have absence of hypoxia-driven carotid body (CB) reflex. Neonatal mammals have an immature CB chemo reflex and respond to hypoxia with metabolic changes arising from direct effects of hypoxia on adrenal medulla (AM). Our working hypothesis is that adult GP would mimic neonatal mammals. Plasma epinephrine (E) has an AM origin, while norepinephrine (NE) is mainly originated in sympathetic endings, implying that specific GP changes in plasma E/NE ratio, and in blood glucose and lactate levels during hypoxia would be observed. Experiments were performed on young adult GP and rats. Hypoxic ventilation (10% O2) increased E and NE plasma levels similarly in both species but PaO2 was lower in GP than in rats. Plasma E/NE ratio in GP was higher (≈1.0) than in rats (≈0.5). The hypoxia-evoked increases in blood glucose and lactate were smaller in GP than in the rat. The AM of both species contain comparable E content, but NE was four times lower in GP than in rats. GP superior cervical ganglion also had lower NE content than rats and an unusual high level of dopamine, a negative modulator of sympathetic transmission. Isolated AM from GP released half of E and one tenth of NE than the rat AM, and hypoxia did not alter the time course of CA outflow. These data indicate the absence of direct effects of hypoxia on AM in the GP, and a lower noradrenergic tone in this species. Pathways for hypoxic sympatho-adrenal system activation in GP are discussed.