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Dive into the research topics where Aroa Soriano is active.

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Featured researches published by Aroa Soriano.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Identification of Dopamine D1–D3 Receptor Heteromers: INDICATIONS FOR A ROLE OF SYNERGISTIC D1–D3 RECEPTOR INTERACTIONS IN THE STRIATUM*

Daniel Marcellino; Sergi Ferré; Vicent Casadó; Antonio Cortés; Bernard Le Foll; Carmen Mazzola; Filippo Drago; Oliver Saur; Holger Stark; Aroa Soriano; Chanel Barnes; Steven R. Goldberg; Carme Lluis; Kjell Fuxe; Rafael Franco

The function of dopamine D3 receptors present in the striatum has remained elusive. In the present study evidence is provided for the existence of dopamine D1–D3 receptor heteromers and for an intramembrane D1–D3 receptor cross-talk in living cells and in the striatum. The formation of D1–D3 receptor heteromers was demonstrated by fluorescence resonance energy transfer and bioluminescence resonance energy transfer techniques in transfected mammalian cells. In membrane preparations from these cells, a synergistic D1–D3 intramembrane receptor-receptor interaction was observed, by which D3 receptor stimulation enhances D1 receptor agonist affinity, indicating that the D1–D3 intramembrane receptor-receptor interaction is a biochemical characteristic of the D1–D3 receptor heteromer. The same biochemical characteristic was also observed in membrane preparations from brain striatum, demonstrating the striatal co-localization and heteromerization of D1 and D3 receptors. According to the synergistic D1–D3 intramembrane receptor-receptor interaction, experiments in reserpinized mice showed that D3 receptor stimulation potentiates D1 receptor-mediated behavioral effects by a different mechanism than D2 receptor stimulation. The present study shows that a main functional significance of the D3 receptor is to obtain a stronger dopaminergic response in the striatal neurons that co-express the two receptors.


FEBS Letters | 2008

Detection of higher-order G protein-coupled receptor oligomers by a combined BRET-BiFC technique.

Jorge Gandía; Jorge Galino; Olavo B. Amaral; Aroa Soriano; Carme Lluis; Rafael Franco; Francisco Ciruela

MINT‐6700472: A2A (uniprotkb:P29274), A2A (uniprotkb:P29274) and A2A (uniprotkb:P29274) physically interact (MI:0218) by bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (MI:0012) MINT‐6699330: A2A (uniprotkb:P29274) and A2A (uniprotkb:P29274) physically interact (MI:0218) by bimolecular fluorescence complementation (MI:0809) MINT‐6699346: A2A (uniprotkb:P29274) and A2A (uniprotkb:P29274) physically interact (MI:0218) by bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (MI:0012)


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Adenosine A2A Receptor-Antagonist/Dopamine D2 Receptor-Agonist Bivalent Ligands as Pharmacological Tools to Detect A2A-D2 Receptor Heteromers

Aroa Soriano; Rubén Ventura; Anabel Molero; Rob Hoen; Vicent Casadó; Antoni Cortés; Francesca Fanelli; Fernando Albericio; Carmen Lluis; Rafael Franco; Miriam Royo

Adenosine A(2A) (A(2A)R) and dopamine D(2) (D(2)R) receptors mediate the antagonism between adenosinergic and dopaminergic transmission in striatopallidal GABAergic neurons and are pharmacological targets for the treatment of Parkinsons disease. Here, a family of heterobivalent ligands containing a D(2)R agonist and an A(2A)R antagonist linked through a spacer of variable size was designed and synthesized to study A(2A)R-D(2)R heteromers. Bivalent ligands with shorter linkers bound to D(2)R or A(2A)R with higher affinity than the corresponding monovalent controls in membranes from brain striatum and from cells coexpressing both receptors. In contrast, no differences in affinity of bivalent versus monovalent ligands were detected in experiments using membranes from cells expressing only one receptor. These findings indicate the existence of A(2A)R-D(2)R heteromers and of a simultaneous interaction of heterobivalent ligands with both receptors. The cooperative effect derived from the simultaneous interaction suggests the occurrence of A(2A)R-D(2)R heteromers in cotransfected cells and in brain striatum. The dopamine/adenosine bivalent action could constitute a novel concept in Parkinsons disease pharmacotherapy.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2010

Adenosine receptors interacting proteins (ARIPs): Behind the biology of adenosine signaling

Francisco Ciruela; Catarina Albergaria; Aroa Soriano; Laura Cuffí; Lourdes Carbonell; Silvia Sánchez; Jorge Gandía; Víctor Fernández-Dueñas

Adenosine is a well known neuromodulator in the central nervous system. As a consequence, adenosine can be beneficial in certain disorders and adenosine receptors will be potential targets for therapy in a variety of diseases. Adenosine receptors are G protein-coupled receptors, and are also expressed in a large variety of cells and tissues. Using these receptors as a paradigm of G protein-coupled receptors, the present review focus on how protein-protein interactions might contribute to neurotransmitter/neuromodulator regulation, based on the fact that accessory proteins impinge on the receptor/G protein interaction and therefore modulate receptor functioning. Besides affecting receptor signaling, these accessory components also play a key role in receptor trafficking, internalization and desensitization, as it will be reviewed here. In conclusion, the finding of an increasing number of adenosine receptors interacting proteins, and specially the molecular and functional integration of these accessory proteins into receptorsomes, will open new perspectives in the understanding of particular disorders where these receptors have been proved to be involved.


Oncogene | 2016

BRG1/SMARCA4 is essential for neuroblastoma cell viability through modulation of cell death and survival pathways

Luz Jubierre; Aroa Soriano; Laura Planells-Ferrer; Laia París-Coderch; S P Tenbaum; O A Romero; Rana S. Moubarak; A Almazán-Moga; Carla Molist; Josep Roma; Samuel Navarro; R Noguera; M Sánchez-Céspedes; Joan X. Comella; H G Palmer; J. Sánchez de Toledo; Soledad Gallego; Miguel F. Segura

Neuroblastoma (NB) is a neoplasm of the sympathetic nervous system, and is the most common solid tumor of infancy. NBs are very heterogeneous, with a clinical course ranging from spontaneous regression to resistance to all current forms of treatment. High-risk patients need intense chemotherapy, and only 30–40% will be cured. Relapsed or metastatic tumors acquire multi-drug resistance, raising the need for alternative treatments. Owing to the diverse mechanisms that are responsible of NB chemoresistance, we aimed to target epigenetic factors that control multiple pathways to bypass therapy resistance. We found that the SWI/SNF-related, matrix-associated, actin-dependent regulator of chromatin, subfamily a, member 4 (SMARCA4/BRG1) was consistently upregulated in advanced stages of NB, with high BRG1 levels being indicative of poor outcome. Loss-of-function experiments in vitro and in vivo showed that BRG1 is essential for the proliferation of NB cells. Furthermore, whole-genome transcriptome analysis revealed that BRG1 controls the expression of key elements of oncogenic pathways such as PI3K/AKT and BCL2, which offers a promising new combination therapy for high-risk NB.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2010

A Hybrid Indoloquinolizidine Peptide as Allosteric Modulator of Dopamine D1 Receptors

Aroa Soriano; Marc Vendrell; Sergio Gonzalez; Josefa Mallol; Fernando Albericio; Miriam Royo; Carmen Lluis; Enric I. Canela; Rafael Franco; Antoni Cortés; Vicent Casadó

The indoloquinolizidine-peptide 28 [(3S,12bR)-N-((S)-1-((S)-1-((S)-2-carbamoylpyrrolidin-1-yl)-3-(4-fluorophenyl)-1-oxopropan-2-ylamino)-4-cyclohexyl-1-oxobutan-2-yl)-1,2,3,4,6,7,12, 12b-octahydroindolo[2,3-a]quinolizine-3-carboxamide], a trans-indoloquinolizidine-peptide hybrid obtained by a combinatorial approach, behaved as an orthosteric ligand of all dopamine D2-like receptors (D2, D3, and D4) and dopamine D5 receptors, but as a negative allosteric modulator of agonist and antagonist binding to striatal dopamine D1 receptors. Indoloquinolizidine-peptide 28 induced a concentration-dependent hyperbolic increase in the antagonist apparent equilibrium dissociation constant values and altered the dissociation kinetics of dopamine D1 receptor antagonists. The negative allosteric modulation was also found when agonist binding to D1 receptors was assayed. Indoloquinolizidine-peptide 28 was a weak ago-allosteric modulator but markedly led to a decreased potency without decreasing the maximum partial/full agonist-mediated effect on cAMP levels. Compounds able to decrease the potency while preserving the efficacy of D1 receptor agonists are promising for exploration in psychotic pathologies.


ChemMedChem | 2009

Indoloquinolizidine–Peptide Hybrids as Multiple Agonists for D1 and D2 Dopamine Receptors

Aroa Soriano; Vicent Casadó; José Luis Díaz; Rodolfo Lavilla; Enric I. Canela; Carme Lluis; Rafael Franco; Fernando Albericio; Miriam Royo

Multiple‐specificity ligands are considered promising pharmacological tools that may show higher efficacy in the treatment of diseases for which the modulation of a single target is therapeutically inadequate. We prepared a set of novel ligands for D1 and D2 dopamine receptors by combining two indolo[2,3‐a]quinolizidine scaffolds with various tripeptide moieties. The binding and functional properties of these molecules were determined by radioligand binding studies in brain striatum membranes and by intracellular cAMP production assays in cells expressing different dopamine receptor subtypes. Some indoloquinolizidine–peptide hybrids, mainly with the trans configuration, showed dual agonist activity at both D1 and D2 dopamine receptors and may therefore be useful for testing the therapeutic potential of multivalent drugs on these targets.


Cell Death and Disease | 2017

miR-99a reveals two novel oncogenic proteins E2F2 and EMR2 and represses stemness in lung cancer

Andrea Feliciano; Yoelsis Garcia-Mayea; Luz Jubierre; Cristina Mir; Manuela Hummel; Josep Castellví; Javier Hernández-Losa; Rosanna Paciucci; Irene Sansano; Yilin Sun; Santiago Ramón y Cajal; Hiroshi Kondon; Aroa Soriano; Miguel F. Segura; Alex Lyakhovich; Matilde E. Lleonart

Lung cancer is one of the most aggressive tumours with very low life expectancy. Altered microRNA expression is found in human tumours because it is involved in tumour growth, progression and metastasis. In this study, we analysed microRNA expression in 47 lung cancer biopsies. Among the most downregulated microRNAs we focussed on the miR-99a characterisation. In vitro experiments showed that miR-99a expression decreases the proliferation of H1650, H1975 and H1299 lung cancer cells causing cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. We identified two novel proteins, E2F2 (E2F transcription factor 2) and EMR2 (EGF-like module-containing, mucin-like, hormone receptor-like 2), downregulated by miR-99a by its direct binding to their 3′-UTR. Moreover, miR-99a expression prevented cancer cell epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and repressed the tumourigenic potential of the cancer stem cell (CSC) population in both these cell lines and mice tumours originated from H1975 cells. The expression of E2F2 and EMR2 at protein level was studied in 119 lung cancer biopsies. E2F2 and EMR2 are preferentially expressed in adenocarcinomas subtypes versus other tumour types (squamous and others). Interestingly, the expression of E2F2 correlates with the presence of vimentin and both E2F2 and EMR2 correlate with the presence of β-catenin. Moreover, miR-99a expression correlates inversely with E2F2 and directly with β-catenin expression in lung cancer biopsies. In conclusion, miR-99a reveals two novel targets E2F2 and EMR2 that play a key role in lung tumourigenesis. By inhibiting E2F2 and EMR2, miR-99a represses in vivo the transition of epithelial cells through an EMT process concomitantly with the inhibition of stemness features and consequently decreasing the CSC population.


Oncotarget | 2016

MicroRNA-497 impairs the growth of chemoresistant neuroblastoma cells by targeting cell cycle, survival and vascular permeability genes.

Aroa Soriano; Laia París-Coderch; Luz Jubierre; Alba Martínez; Xiangyu Zhou; Olga Piskareva; Isabella Bray; Isaac Vidal; Ana Almazán-Moga; Carla Molist; Josep Roma; Jose R. Bayascas; Oriol Casanovas; Raymond L. Stallings; José Sánchez de Toledo; Soledad Gallego; Miguel F. Segura

Despite multimodal therapies, a high percentage of high-risk neuroblastoma (NB) become refractory to current treatments, most of which interfere with cell cycle and DNA synthesis or function, activating the DNA damage response (DDR). In cancer, this process is frequently altered by deregulated expression or function of several genes which contribute to multidrug resistance (MDR). MicroRNAs are outstanding candidates for therapy since a single microRNA can modulate the expression of multiple genes of the same or different pathways, thus hindering the development of resistance mechanisms by the tumor. We found several genes implicated in the MDR to be overexpressed in high-risk NB which could be targeted by microRNAs simultaneously. Our functional screening identified several of those microRNAs that reduced proliferation of chemoresistant NB cell lines, the best of which was miR-497. Low expression of miR-497 correlated with poor patient outcome. The overexpression of miR-497 reduced the proliferation of multiple chemoresistant NB cell lines and induced apoptosis in MYCN-amplified cell lines. Moreover, the conditional expression of miR-497 in NB xenografts reduced tumor growth and inhibited vascular permeabilization. MiR-497 targets multiple genes related to the DDR, cell cycle, survival and angiogenesis, which renders this molecule a promising candidate for NB therapy.


Cell Death and Disease | 2014

MYCN repression of Lifeguard/FAIM2 enhances neuroblastoma aggressiveness

Laura Planells-Ferrer; Jorge Urresti; Aroa Soriano; Stéphanie Reix; D M Murphy; J C Ferreres; F Borràs; Soledad Gallego; Raymond L. Stallings; Rana S. Moubarak; Miguel F. Segura; Joan X. Comella

Neuroblastoma (NBL) is the most common solid tumor in infants and accounts for 15% of all pediatric cancer deaths. Several risk factors predict NBL outcome: age at the time of diagnosis, stage, chromosome alterations and MYCN (V-Myc Avian Myelocytomatosis Viral Oncogene Neuroblastoma-Derived Homolog) amplification, which characterizes the subset of the most aggressive NBLs with an overall survival below 30%. MYCN-amplified tumors develop exceptional chemoresistance and metastatic capacity. These properties have been linked to defects in the apoptotic machinery, either by silencing components of the extrinsic apoptotic pathway (e.g. caspase-8) or by overexpression of antiapoptotic regulators (e.g. Bcl-2, Mcl-1 or FLIP). Very little is known on the implication of death receptors and their antagonists in NBL. In this work, the expression levels of several death receptor antagonists were analyzed in multiple human NBL data sets. We report that Lifeguard (LFG/FAIM2 (Fas apoptosis inhibitory molecule 2)/NMP35) is downregulated in the most aggressive and undifferentiated tumors. Intringuingly, although LFG has been initially characterized as an antiapoptotic protein, we have found a new association with NBL differentiation. Moreover, LFG repression resulted in reduced cell adhesion, increased sphere growth and enhanced migration, thus conferring a higher metastatic capacity to NBL cells. Furthermore, LFG expression was found to be directly repressed by MYCN at the transcriptional level. Our data, which support a new functional role for a hitherto undiscovered MYCN target, provide a new link between MYCN overexpression and increased NBL metastatic properties.

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Miguel F. Segura

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Soledad Gallego

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Josep Roma

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Carla Molist

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Luz Jubierre

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Ana Almazán-Moga

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Isaac Vidal

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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José Sánchez de Toledo

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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