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Dive into the research topics where Beatriz San Román is active.

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Featured researches published by Beatriz San Román.


Archive | 2013

Non-typhoidal Salmonellosis

Beatriz San Román; Victoria Garrido; María-Jesús Grilló

Salmonella is a ubiquitous Gram-negative bacterium belonging to the Enterobacteriaceae family that can infect animals and humans, with gastroenteric and systemic symptomatology from moderate to severe. Animals can act as asymptomatic carriers that excrete Salmonella spp. intermittently in faeces and contaminate carcasses. At present, poultry and swine are recognised as the main sources of infection for humans. Control of human salmonellosis is based on sustainable biosafety and hygienic measures “from farm to folk” but efficient vaccines would contribute to avoid animal infections. Since no commercial vaccines are available, a wide variety of experimental work is carried out to test both non-living and live attenuated vaccines in animal models, using either subcellular components of Salmonella administered with adjuvants or live genetically modified bacteria lacking structural elements, essential metabolites or virulence genes. A special effort should be conducted to design effective vaccines antigenically tagged to allow distinguishing between infected and vaccinated animals.


BMC Veterinary Research | 2012

Study of compartmentalization in the visna clinical form of small ruminant lentivirus infection in sheep

Hugo Ramírez; Ramsés Reina; Luigi Bertolotti; Amaia Cenoz; Mirna-Margarita Hernández; Beatriz San Román; Idoia Glaria; Ximena de Andrés; Helena Crespo; Paula Jáuregui; Julio Benavides; Laura Polledo; Valentín Pérez Pérez; J.F. García-Marín; Sergio Rosati; B. Amorena; Damián de Andrés

BackgroundA central nervous system (CNS) disease outbreak caused by small ruminant lentiviruses (SRLV) has triggered interest in Spain due to the rapid onset of clinical signs and relevant production losses. In a previous study on this outbreak, the role of LTR in tropism was unclear and env encoded sequences, likely involved in tropism, were not investigated. This study aimed to analyze heterogeneity of SRLV Env regions - TM amino terminal and SU V4, C4 and V5 segments - in order to assess virus compartmentalization in CNS.ResultsEight Visna (neurologically) affected sheep of the outbreak were used. Of the 350 clones obtained after PCR amplification, 142 corresponded to CNS samples (spinal cord and choroid plexus) and the remaining to mammary gland, blood cells, bronchoalveolar lavage cells and/or lung. The diversity of the env sequences from CNS was 11.1-16.1% between animals and 0.35-11.6% within each animal, except in one animal presenting two sequence types (30% diversity) in the CNS (one grouping with those of the outbreak), indicative of CNS virus sequence heterogeneity. Outbreak sequences were of genotype A, clustering per animal and compartmentalizing in the animal tissues. No CNS specific signature patterns were found.ConclusionsBayesian approach inferences suggested that proviruses from broncoalveolar lavage cells and peripheral blood mononuclear cells represented the common ancestors (infecting viruses) in the animal and that neuroinvasion in the outbreak involved microevolution after initial infection with an A-type strain. This study demonstrates virus compartmentalization in the CNS and other body tissues in sheep presenting the neurological form of SRLV infection.


Vaccine | 2012

The extradomain A of fibronectin (EDA) combined with poly(I:C) enhances the immune response to HIV-1 p24 protein and the protection against recombinant Listeria monocytogenes-Gag infection in the mouse model.

Beatriz San Román; Ximena de Andrés; P. M. Muñoz; Patricia Obregón; Aaron-C. Asensio; Victoria Garrido; Cristina Mansilla; Laura Arribillaga; Juan José Lasarte; Damián de Andrés; B. Amorena; María-Jesús Grilló

The development of effective vaccines against HIV-1 infection constitutes one of the major challenges in viral immunology. One of the protein candidates in vaccination against this virus is p24, since it is a conserved HIV antigen that has cytotoxic and helper T cell epitopes as well as B cell epitopes that may jointly confer enhanced protection against infection when used in immunization-challenge approaches. In this context, the adjuvant effect of EDA (used as EDAp24 fusion protein) and poly(I:C), as agonists of TLR4 and TLR3, respectively, was assessed in p24 immunizations using a recombinant Listeria monocytogenes HIV-1 Gag proteins (Lm-Gag, where p24 is the major antigen) for challenge in mice. Immunization with EDAp24 fusion protein together with poly(I:C) adjuvant induced a specific p24 IFN-γ production (Th1 profile) as well as protection against a Lm-Gag challenge, suggesting an additive or synergistic effect between both adjuvants. The combination of EDA (as a fusion protein with the antigen, which may favor antigen targeting to dendritic cells through TLR4) and poly(I:C) could thus be a good adjuvant candidate to enhance the immune response against HIV-1 proteins and its use may open new ways in vaccine investigations on this virus.


Veterinary Research | 2014

Mutants in the lipopolysaccharide of Brucella ovis are attenuated and protect against B. ovis infection in mice

Pedro Soler-Lloréns; Yolanda Gil-Ramírez; Ana Zabalza-Baranguá; Maite Iriarte; Raquel Conde-Álvarez; Amaia Zúñiga-Ripa; Beatriz San Román; Michel S. Zygmunt; Nieves Vizcaíno; Axel Cloeckaert; María-Jesús Grilló; Ignacio Moriyón; Ignacio López-Goñi

Brucella spp. are Gram-negative bacteria that behave as facultative intracellular parasites of a variety of mammals. This genus includes smooth (S) and rough (R) species that carry S and R lipopolysaccharides (LPS), respectively. S-LPS is a virulence factor, and mutants affected in the S-LPS O-polysaccharide (R mutants), core oligosaccharide or both show attenuation. However, B. ovis is naturally R and is virulent in sheep. We studied the role of B. ovis LPS in virulence by mutating the orthologues of wadA, wadB and wadC, three genes known to encode LPS core glycosyltransferases in S brucellae. When mapped with antibodies to outer membrane proteins (Omps) and R-LPS, wadB and wadC mutants displayed defects in LPS structure and outer membrane topology but inactivation of wadA had little or no effect. Consistent with these observations, the wadB and wadC but not the wadA mutants were attenuated in mice. When tested as vaccines, the wadB and wadC mutants protected mice against B. ovis challenge. The results demonstrate that the LPS core is a structure essential for survival in vivo not only of S brucellae but also of a naturally R Brucella pathogenic species, and they confirm our previous hypothesis that the Brucella LPS core is a target for vaccine development. Since vaccine B. melitensis Rev 1 is S and thus interferes in serological testing for S brucellae, wadB mutant represents a candidate vaccine to be evaluated against B. ovis infection of sheep suitable for areas free of B. melitensis.


BMC Veterinary Research | 2014

Simultaneous infections by different Salmonella strains in mesenteric lymph nodes of finishing pigs

Victoria Garrido; S. Sánchez; Beatriz San Román; Ana Zabalza-Baranguá; Yasmin Díaz-Tendero; Cristina de Frutos; Raúl-Carlos Mainar-Jaime; María-Jesús Grilló

BackgroundSalmonellosis is a major worldwide zoonosis, and Salmonella-infected finishing pigs are considered one of the major sources of human infections in developed countries. Baseline studies on salmonellosis prevalence in fattening pigs in Europe are based on direct pathogen isolation from mesenteric lymph nodes (MLN). This procedure is considered the most reliable for diagnosing salmonellosis in apparently healthy pigs. The presence of simultaneous infections by different Salmonella strains in the same animal has never been reported and could have important epidemiological implications.ResultsFourteen finishing pigs belonging to 14 farms that showed high salmonellosis prevalence and a variety of circulating Salmonella strains, were found infected by Salmonella spp, and 7 of them were simultaneously infected with strains of 2 or 3 different serotypes. Typhimurium isolates showing resistance to several antimicrobials and carrying mobile integrons were the most frequently identified in the colonized MLN. Four animals were found infected by Salmonella spp. of a single serotype (Rissen or Derby) but showing 2 or 3 different antimicrobial resistance profiles, without evidence of mobile genetic element exchange in vivo.ConclusionThis is the first report clearly demonstrating that pigs naturally infected by Salmonella may harbour different Salmonella strains simultaneously. This may have implications in the interpretation of results from baseline studies, and also help to better understand human salmonellosis outbreaks and the horizontal transmission of antimicrobial resistance genes.


Veterinary Research | 2012

The extradomain A of fibronectin enhances the efficacy of lipopolysaccharide defective Salmonella bacterins as vaccines in mice

Beatriz San Román; Victoria Garrido; P. M. Muñoz; Laura Arribillaga; Begoña García; Ximena de Andrés; Virginia Zabaleta; Cristina Mansilla; Inmaculada Farran; Iñigo Lasa; Damián de Andrés; B. Amorena; Juan José Lasarte; María-Jesús Grilló

The Extradomain A from fibronectin (EDA) has an immunomodulatory role as fusion protein with viral and tumor antigens, but its effect when administered with bacteria has not been assessed. Here, we investigated the adjuvant effect of EDA in mice immunizations against Salmonella enterica subspecies enterica serovar Enteritidis (Salmonella Enteritidis). Since lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is a major virulence factor and the LPS O-polysaccharide (O-PS) is the immunodominant antigen in serological diagnostic tests, Salmonella mutants lacking O-PS (rough mutants) represent an interesting approach for developing new vaccines and diagnostic tests to differentiate infected and vaccinated animals (DIVA tests). Here, antigenic preparations (hot-saline extracts and formalin-inactivated bacterins) from two Salmonella Enteritidis rough mutants, carrying either intact (SEΔwaaL) or deep-defective (SEΔgal) LPS-Core, were used in combination with EDA. Biotinylated bacterins, in particular SEΔwaaL bacterin, decorated with EDAvidin (EDA and streptavidin fusion protein) improved the protection conferred by hot-saline or bacterins alone and prevented significantly the virulent infection at least to the levels of live attenuated rough mutants. These findings demonstrate the adjuvant effect of EDAvidin when administered with biotinylated bacterins from Salmonella Enteritidis lacking O-PS and the usefulness of BEDA-SEΔwaaL as non-live vaccine in the mouse model.


Journal of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2014

Co-Encapsulated CpG Oligodeoxynucleotides and Ovalbumin in PLGA Microparticles; An in vitro and in vivo Study

Beatriz San Román; Sara Gómez; Juan M. Irache; Socorro Espuelas


Veterinary Research | 2014

Mutants in the lipopolysaccharide of

Pedro Soler-Lloréns; Yolanda Gil-Ramírez; Ana Zabalza-Baranguá; Maite Iriarte; Raquel Conde-Álvarez; Amaia Zúñiga-Ripa; Beatriz San Román; Michel S. Zygmunt; Nieves Vizcaíno; Axel Cloeckaert; María-Jesús Grilló; Ignacio Moriyón; Ignacio López-Goñi


Archive | 2013

Desarrollo de pruebas serológicas para la identificación de ovinos inmunizados con vacunas-GFP

Ana Zabalza Baranguá; Beatriz San Román; Pilar María Muñoz Alvaro; José María Blasco Martínez; María Jesús Grilló Dolset


Archive | 2013

Brucella membrane lipids and their role in antimicrobial peptide resistance

Leyre Palacios Chaves; Raquel Conde Álvarez; Amaia Zúñiga Ripa; Beatriz San Román; Maite Iriarte; Ignacio Moriyón; María-Jesús Grilló; Thomas Gutsmann

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María-Jesús Grilló

Spanish National Research Council

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Victoria Garrido

Spanish National Research Council

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Ana Zabalza-Baranguá

Universidad Pública de Navarra

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B. Amorena

Spanish National Research Council

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Damián de Andrés

Spanish National Research Council

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S. Sánchez

Spanish National Research Council

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Ximena de Andrés

Spanish National Research Council

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