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Dive into the research topics where Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles is active.

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Featured researches published by Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles.


Neuroendocrinology | 2015

Pituitary Cell Turnover: From Adult Stem Cell Recruitment through Differentiation to Death

Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira; Esther Diaz-Rodriguez; Dilek Bahar; Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles; Joana S. Rodrigues; Carlos Dieguez; Clara V. Alvarez

The recent demonstration using genetic tracing that in the adult pituitary stem cells are normally recruited from the niche in the marginal zone and differentiate into secretory cells in the adenopituitary has elegantly confirmed the proposal made when the pituitary stem cell niche was first discovered 5 years ago. Some of the early controversies have also been resolved. However, many questions remain, such as which are the markers that make a pituitary stem cell truly unique and the exact mechanisms that trigger recruitment from the niche. Little is known about the processes of commitment and differentiation once a stem cell has left the niche. Moreover, the acceptance that pituitary cells are renewed by stem cells implies the existence of regulated mechanisms of cell death in differentiated cells which must themselves be explained. The demonstration of an apoptotic pathway mediated by RET/caspase 3/Pit-1/Arf/p53 in normal somatotrophs is therefore an important step towards understanding how pituitary cell number is regulated. Further work will elucidate how the rates of the three processes of cell renewal, differentiation and apoptosis are balanced in tissue homeostasis after birth, but altered in pituitary hyperplasia in response to physiological stimuli such as puberty and lactation. Thus, we can aim to understand the mechanisms underlying human disease due to insufficient (hypopituitarism) or excess (pituitary tumor) cell numbers.


Endocrinology | 2014

Somatotropinomas, But Not Nonfunctioning Pituitary Adenomas, Maintain a Functional Apoptotic RET/Pit1/ARF/p53 Pathway That Is Blocked by Excess GDNF

Esther Diaz-Rodriguez; Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles; Alejandro Ibanez-Costa; Ester Gutiérrez-Pascual; Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira; Alfonso Leal; Miguel A. Japón; Alfonso Soto; Eva Venegas; Francisco J. Tinahones; Juan Garcia-Arnes; Pedro Benito; María Ángeles Gálvez; Luis Jiménez-Reina; Ignacio Bernabeu; Carlos Dieguez; Raúl M. Luque; Justo P. Castaño; Clara V. Alvarez

Acromegaly is caused by somatotroph cell adenomas (somatotropinomas [ACROs]), which secrete GH. Human and rodent somatotroph cells express the RET receptor. In rodents, when normal somatotrophs are deprived of the RET ligand, GDNF (Glial Cell Derived Neurotrophic Factor), RET is processed intracellularly to induce overexpression of Pit1 [Transcription factor (gene : POUF1) essential for transcription of Pituitary hormones GH, PRL and TSHb], which in turn leads to p19Arf/p53-dependent apoptosis. Our purpose was to ascertain whether human ACROs maintain the RET/Pit1/p14ARF/p53/apoptosis pathway, relative to nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas (NFPAs). Apoptosis in the absence and presence of GDNF was studied in primary cultures of 8 ACROs and 3 NFPAs. Parallel protein extracts were analyzed for expression of RET, Pit1, p19Arf, p53, and phospho-Akt. When GDNF deprived, ACRO cells, but not NFPAs, presented marked level of apoptosis that was prevented in the presence of GDNF. Apoptosis was accompanied by RET processing, Pit1 accumulation, and p14ARF and p53 induction. GDNF prevented all these effects via activation of phospho-AKT. Overexpression of human Pit1 (hPit1) directly induced p19Arf/p53 and apoptosis in a pituitary cell line. Using in silico studies, 2 CCAAT/enhancer binding protein alpha (cEBPα) consensus-binding sites were found to be 100% conserved in mouse, rat, and hPit1 promoters. Deletion of 1 cEBPα site prevented the RET-induced increase in hPit1 promoter expression. TaqMan qRT-PCR (real time RT-PCR) for RET, Pit1, Arf, TP53, GDNF, steroidogenic factor 1, and GH was performed in RNA from whole ACRO and NFPA tumors. ACRO but not NFPA adenomas express RET and Pit1. GDNF expression in the tumors was positively correlated with RET and negatively correlated with p53. In conclusion, ACROs maintain an active RET/Pit1/p14Arf/p53/apoptosis pathway that is inhibited by GDNF. Disruption of GDNFs survival function might constitute a new therapeutic route in acromegaly.


Scientific Reports | 2017

The syndrome of central hypothyroidism and macroorchidism: IGSF1 controls TRHR and FSHB expression by differential modulation of pituitary TGFβ and Activin pathways

Marta García; Raquel Barrio; Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira; Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles; Adela Escudero; Esther Diaz-Rodriguez; Darya Gorbenko del Blanco; Ana I. Fernández; Yolanda B. de Rijke; Elena Vallespín; Julián Nevado; Pablo Lapunzina; Vilborg Matre; Patricia M. Hinkle; Anita Hokken-Koelega; Maria P. De Miguel; José Cameselle-Teijeiro; Manuel Nistal; Clara V. Alvarez; José C. Moreno

IGSF1 (Immunoglobulin Superfamily 1) gene defects cause central hypothyroidism and macroorchidism. However, the pathogenic mechanisms of the disease remain unclear. Based on a patient with a full deletion of IGSF1 clinically followed from neonate to adulthood, we investigated a common pituitary origin for hypothyroidism and macroorchidism, and the role of IGSF1 as regulator of pituitary hormone secretion. The patient showed congenital central hypothyroidism with reduced TSH biopotency, over-secretion of FSH at neonatal minipuberty and macroorchidism from 3 years of age. His markedly elevated inhibin B was unable to inhibit FSH secretion, indicating a status of pituitary inhibin B resistance. We show here that IGSF1 is expressed both in thyrotropes and gonadotropes of the pituitary and in Leydig and germ cells in the testes, but at very low levels in Sertoli cells. Furthermore, IGSF1 stimulates transcription of the thyrotropin-releasing hormone receptor (TRHR) by negative modulation of the TGFβ1-Smad signaling pathway, and enhances the synthesis and biopotency of TSH, the hormone secreted by thyrotropes. By contrast, IGSF1 strongly down-regulates the activin-Smad pathway, leading to reduced expression of FSHB, the hormone secreted by gonadotropes. In conclusion, two relevant molecular mechanisms linked to central hypothyroidism and macroorchidism in IGSF1 deficiency are identified, revealing IGSF1 as an important regulator of TGFβ/Activin pathways in the pituitary.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2013

Humanized Medium (h7H) Allows Long-Term Primary Follicular Thyroid Cultures From Human Normal Thyroid, Benign Neoplasm, and Cancer

Susana B. Bravo; María E.R. García-Rendueles; Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles; Joana S. Rodrigues; Sihara Perez-Romero; Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira; Maria Suarez-Fariña; Francisco Barreiro; Barbara Czarnocka; Ana Senra; Maria V. Lareu; Javier Rodríguez-García; José Cameselle-Teijeiro; Clara V. Alvarez

CONTEXT Mechanisms of thyroid physiology and cancer are principally studied in follicular cell lines. However, human thyroid cancer lines were found to be heavily contaminated by other sources, and only one supposedly normal-thyroid cell line, immortalized with SV40 antigen, is available. In primary culture, human follicular cultures lose their phenotype after passage. We hypothesized that the loss of the thyroid phenotype could be related to culture conditions in which human cells are grown in medium optimized for rodent culture, including hormones with marked differences in its affinity for the relevant rodent/human receptor. OBJECTIVE The objective of the study was to define conditions that allow the proliferation of primary human follicular thyrocytes for many passages without losing phenotype. METHODS Concentrations of hormones, transferrin, iodine, oligoelements, antioxidants, metabolites, and ethanol were adjusted within normal homeostatic human serum ranges. Single cultures were identified by short tandem repeats. Human-rodent interspecies contamination was assessed. RESULTS We defined an humanized 7 homeostatic additives medium enabling growth of human thyroid cultures for more than 20 passages maintaining thyrocyte phenotype. Thyrocytes proliferated and were grouped as follicle-like structures; expressed Na+/I- symporter, pendrin, cytokeratins, thyroglobulin, and thyroperoxidase showed iodine-uptake and secreted thyroglobulin and free T3. Using these conditions, we generated a bank of thyroid tumors in culture from normal thyroids, Graves hyperplasias, benign neoplasms (goiter, adenomas), and carcinomas. CONCLUSIONS Using appropriate culture conditions is essential for phenotype maintenance in human thyrocytes. The bank of thyroid tumors in culture generated under humanized humanized 7 homeostatic additives culture conditions will provide a much-needed tool to compare similarly growing cells from normal vs pathological origins and thus to elucidate the molecular basis of thyroid disease.


Oncogene | 2017

Rewiring of the apoptotic TGF-β-SMAD/NFκB pathway through an oncogenic function of p27 in human papillary thyroid cancer

Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles; J S Rodrigues; M E R Garcia-Rendueles; M Suarez-Fariña; Sihara Perez-Romero; Francisco Barreiro; I Bernabeu; J Rodriguez-Garcia; L Fugazzola; T Sakai; F Liu; José Cameselle-Teijeiro; Susana B. Bravo; Clara V. Alvarez

Papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC), the most frequent thyroid cancer, is characterized by low proliferation but no apoptosis, presenting frequent lymph-node metastasis. Papillary thyroid carcinoma overexpress transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-β). In human cells, TGF-β has two opposing actions: antitumoral through pro-apoptotic and cytostatic activities, and pro-tumoral promoting growth and metastasis. The switch converting TGF-β from a tumor-suppressor to tumor-promoter has not been identified. In the current study, we have quantified a parallel upregulation of TGF-β and nuclear p27, a CDK2 inhibitor, in samples from PTC. We established primary cultures from follicular epithelium in human homeostatic conditions (h7H medium). TGF-β-dependent cytostasis occurred in normal and cancer cells through p15/CDKN2B induction. However, TGF-β induced apoptosis in normal and benign but not in carcinoma cultures. In normal thyroid cells, TGF-β/SMAD repressed the p27/CDKN1B gene, activating CDK2-dependent SMAD3 phosphorylation to induce p50 NFκB-dependent BAX upregulation and apoptosis. In thyroid cancer cells, oncogene activation prevented TGF-β/SMAD-dependent p27 repression, and CDK2/SMAD3 phosphorylation, leading to p65 NFκB upregulation which repressed BAX, induced cyclin D1 and promoted TGF-β-dependent growth. In PTC samples from patients, upregulation of TGF-β, p27, p65 and cyclin D1 mRNA were significantly correlated, while the expression of the isoform BAX-β, exclusively transcribed in apoptotic cells, was negatively correlated. Additionally, combined ERK and p65 NFκB inhibitors reduced p27 expression and potentiated apoptosis in thyroid cancer cells while not affecting survival in normal thyroid cells. Our results therefore suggest that the oncoprotein p27 reorganizes the effects of TGF-β in thyroid cancer, explaining the slow proliferation but lack of apoptosis and metastatic behavior of PTC.


Journal of Molecular Endocrinology | 2012

Defining stem cell types: understanding the therapeutic potential of ESCs, ASCs, and iPS cells

Clara V. Alvarez; Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira; María E.R. García-Rendueles; Esther Diaz-Rodriguez; Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles; Sihara Perez-Romero; Tania Vila Vila; Joana S. Rodrigues; Pamela Virginia Lear; Susana B. Bravo


20th European Congress of Endocrinology | 2018

Pituitary cell activation and recruitment in hipothyroidism

Fernando Oroz; Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira; Sihara Perez-Romero; Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles; Clara V. Alvarez


ESE Basic Endocrinology Course on Endocrine and Neuroendocrine Cancer 2016 | 2016

A new chemotherapy combination (U0126+SN50) potentiates apoptosis in thyroid cancer but induced survival in normal thyroid

Joana S. Rodrigues; Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles; María E.R. García-Rendueles; María Suárez Fariña; Sihara Perez-Romero; Ignacio Bernabeu; Javier Rodríguez-García; Laura Fugazzola; Toshiyuki Sakai; Fang Liu; José Cameselle-Teijeiro; Susana B. Bravo; Clara V. Alvarez


ESE Basic Endocrinology Course on Endocrine and Neuroendocrine Cancer 2016 | 2016

Stem cells in pituitary... and in pituitary tumours

Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles; Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira; F Oroz; J S Fernandes; E Aliyev; M Suarez-Farina; Sihara Perez-Romero; Clara V Alvarez


Proteómica: revista de la Sociedad Española de Proteómica | 2012

Aplicación de proteómica a la búsqueda de nuevos mecanismos tumorales en cáncer de tiroides

Joana S. Rodrigues; Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles; María E.R. García-Rendueles; Sihara Pérez; Francisco Barreiro; José Cameselle-Teijeiro; Clara V. Alvarez; Susana B. Bravo

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Clara V. Alvarez

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Sihara Perez-Romero

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Joana S. Rodrigues

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Susana B. Bravo

University of Santiago de Compostela

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José Cameselle-Teijeiro

University of Santiago de Compostela

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María E.R. García-Rendueles

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Esther Diaz-Rodriguez

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Francisco Barreiro

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Carlos Dieguez

University of Santiago de Compostela

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