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Dive into the research topics where Carlos Cespedes is active.

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Featured researches published by Carlos Cespedes.


Hypertension | 1997

Renal Identification of Cyclooxygenase-2 in a Subset of Thick Ascending Limb Cells

Carlos P. Vio; Carlos Cespedes; Pedro Gallardo; Jaime L. Masferrer

The prostaglandin G2/H2 synthase (cyclooxygenase, COX) is a key regulatory enzyme of prostanoid synthesis pathway. The message-encoding COX isoenzymes (constitutive COX-1 and inducible COX-2) have been described in the rat kidney. However, there is scarce information on the localization of COX-2 in the kidney, although it has been recently reported to be localized in the macula densa. The present study was designed to evaluate the localization of COX-2 in adult rat kidneys. Normal rat kidneys (n=10) were fixed in Bouin and were immunostained with specific antibodies against COX-2 by the peroxidase method. The cellular origin of COX-2 was assessed by the immunostaining of serial consecutive sections with antibodies against Na-K-ATPase, Tamm-Horsfall glycoprotein, H-K-ATPase, kallikrein, and macrophages. COX-2 was consistently observed in a subset of tubular cells located in the cortex and in the outer medulla. The staining of serial sections showed that the COX-2+ cells contained both Na-K-ATPase and Tamm-Horsfall, indicating that they corresponded to thick ascending limb (TAL) cells. They were observed at a considerable distance from the corresponding macula densa, although occasionally they were observed close to glomeruli. The COX-2 staining in the TAL cells was not abolished by dexamethasone treatment (1 to 20 mg/kg), suggesting its constitutive expression in normal kidneys. The presence of COX-2 in TAL (a tubular segment postulated to be devoid of COX-1) may contribute to the handling of ions through local production of prostaglandins.


Clinical Science | 2011

Mesenchymal stem cell injection ameliorates chronic renal failure in a rat model.

Sandra Villanueva; Ernesto Ewertz; Flavio Carrión; Andrés Tapia; César Vergara; Carlos Cespedes; Pablo J. Sáez; Patricia Luz; Carlos E. Irarrazabal; Juan E. Carreño; Fernando Figueroa; Carlos P. Vio

CKD (chronic kidney disease) has become a public health problem. The therapeutic approaches have been able to reduce proteinuria, but have not been successful in limiting disease progression. In this setting, cell therapies associated with regenerative effects are attracting increasing interest. We evaluated the effect of MSC (mesenchymal stem cells) on the progression of CKD and the expression of molecular biomarkers associated with regenerative effects. Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats subjected to 5/6 NPX (nephrectomy) received a single intravenous infusion of 0.5×106 MSC or culture medium. A sham group subjected to the same injection was used as the control. Rats were killed 5 weeks after MSC infusion. Dye tracking of MSC was followed by immunofluorescence analysis. Kidney function was evaluated using plasma creatinine. Structural damage was evaluated by H&E (haematoxylin and eosin) staining, ED-1 abundance (macrophages) and interstitial α-SMA (α-smooth muscle actin). Repairing processes were evaluated by functional and structural analyses and angiogenic/epitheliogenic protein expression. MSC could be detected in kidney tissues from NPX animals treated with intravenous cell infusion. This group presented a marked reduction in plasma creatinine levels and damage markers ED-1 and α-SMA (P<0.05). In addition, treated rats exhibited a significant induction in epitheliogenic [Pax-2, bFGF (basic fibroblast growth factor) and BMP-7 (bone morphogenetic protein-7)] and angiogenic [VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) and Tie-2] proteins. The expression of these biomarkers of regeneration was significantly related to the increase in renal function. Many aspects of the cell therapy in CKD remain to be investigated in more detail: for example, its safety, low cost and the possible need for repeated cell injections over time. Beyond the undeniable importance of these issues, what still needs to be clarified is whether MSC administration has a real effect on the treatment of this pathology. It is precisely to this point that the present study aims to contribute.


Clinical Science | 2013

Human mesenchymal stem cells derived from adipose tissue reduce functional and tissue damage in a rat model of chronic renal failure

Sandra Villanueva; Juan E. Carreño; Lorena Salazar; César Vergara; Rocío Strodthoff; Francisca Fajre; Carlos Cespedes; Pablo J. Sáez; Carlos E. Irarrazabal; Jorge Bartolucci; Fernando Figueroa; Carlos P. Vio

Therapeutic approaches for CKD (chronic kidney disease) have been able to reduce proteinuria, but not diminish the disease progression. We have demonstrated beneficial effects by injection of BM (bone marrow)-derived MSCs (mesenchymal stem cells) from healthy donors in a rat model with CKD. However, it has recently been reported that BM-MSCs derived from uraemic patients failed to confer functional protection in a similar model. This suggests that autologous BM-MSCs are not suitable for the treatment of CKD. In the present study, we have explored the potential of MSCs derived from adipose tissue (AD-MSCs) as an alternative source of MSCs for the treatment of CKD. We have isolated AD-MSCs and evaluated their effect on the progression of CKD. Adult male SD (Sprague-Dawley) rats subjected to 5/6 NPX (nephrectomy) received a single intravenous infusion of 0.5×10(6) AD-MSCs or MSC culture medium alone. The therapeutic effect was evaluated by plasma creatinine measurement, structural analysis and angiogenic/epitheliogenic protein expression. AD-MSCs were detected in kidney tissues from NPX animals. This group had a significant reduction in plasma creatinine levels and a lower expression of damage markers ED-1 and α-SMA (α-smooth muscle actin) (P<0.05). In addition, treated rats exhibited a higher level of epitheliogenic [Pax-2 and BMP-7 (bone morphogenetic protein 7)] and angiogenic [VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor)] proteins. The expression of these biomarkers of regeneration was significantly related to the improvement in renal function. Although many aspects of the cell therapy for CKD remain to be investigated, we provide evidence that AD-MSCs, a less invasive and highly available source of MSCs, exert an important therapeutic effect in this pathology.


Cell and Tissue Research | 2013

Inhibition of the angiotensin-converting enzyme decreases skeletal muscle fibrosis in dystrophic mice by a diminution in the expression and activity of connective tissue growth factor (CTGF/CCN-2)

María Gabriela Morales; Daniel Cabrera; Carlos Cespedes; Carlos P. Vio; Yaneisi Vazquez; Enrique Brandan; Claudio Cabello-Verrugio

The renin-angiotensin system (RAS), through angiotensin II and the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE), is involved in the genesis and progression of fibrotic diseases characterized by the replacement of normal tissue by an accumulation of an extracellular matrix (ECM). Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) presents fibrosis and a decrease in muscle strength produced by chronic damage. The mdx mouse is a murine model of DMD and develops the same characteristics as dystrophic patients when subjected to chronic exercise. The connective tissue growth factor (CTGF/CCN2) and transforming growth factor type beta (TGF-β), which are overexpressed in muscular dystrophies, play a major role in many progressive scarring conditions. We have tested the hypothesis that ACE inhibition decreases fibrosis in dystrophic skeletal muscle by treatment of mdx mice with the ACE inhibitor enalapril. Both sedentary and exercised mdx mice treated with enalapril showed improvement in gastrocnemius muscle strength explained by a reduction in both muscle damage and ECM accumulation. ACE inhibition decreased CTGF expression in sedentary or exercised mdx mice and diminished CTGF-induced pro-fibrotic activity in a model of CTGF overexpression by adenoviral infection. Enalapril did not have an effect on TGF-β1 expression or its signaling activity in sedentary or exercised dystrophic mice. Thus, ACE inhibition might improve muscle strength and decrease fibrosis by diminishing specifically CTGF expression and activity without affecting TGF-β1 signaling. Our data provide insights into the pathogenic events in dystrophic muscle. We propose ACE as a target for developing therapies for DMD and related diseases.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Megalin/LRP2 Expression Is Induced by Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor -Alpha and -Gamma: Implications for PPARs' Roles in Renal Function

Felipe Cabezas; Jonathan Lagos; Carlos Cespedes; Carlos P. Vio; Miguel Bronfman; Maria-Paz Marzolo

Background Megalin is a large endocytic receptor with relevant functions during development and adult life. It is expressed at the apical surface of several epithelial cell types, including proximal tubule cells (PTCs) in the kidney, where it internalizes apolipoproteins, vitamins and hormones with their corresponding carrier proteins and signaling molecules. Despite the important physiological roles of megalin little is known about the regulation of its expression. By analyzing the human megalin promoter, we found three response elements for the peroxisomal proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR). The objective of this study was to test whether megalin expression is regulated by the PPARs. Methodology/Principal Findings Treatment of epithelial cell lines with PPARα or PPARγ ligands increased megalin mRNA and protein expression. The stimulation of megalin mRNA expression was blocked by the addition of specific PPARα or PPARγ antagonists. Furthermore, PPAR bound to three PPAR response elements located in the megalin promoter, as shown by EMSA, and PPARα and its agonist activated a luciferase construct containing a portion of the megalin promoter and the first response element. Accordingly, the activation of PPARα and PPARγ enhanced megalin expression in mouse kidney. As previously observed, high concentrations of bovine serum albumin (BSA) decreased megalin in PTCs in vitro; however, PTCs pretreated with PPARα and PPARγ agonists avoided this BSA-mediated reduction of megalin expression. Finally, we found that megalin expression was significantly inhibited in the PTCs of rats that were injected with BSA to induce tubulointerstitial damage and proteinuria. Treatment of these rats with PPARγ agonists counteracted the reduction in megalin expression and the proteinuria induced by BSA. Conclusions PPARα/γ and their agonists positively control megalin expression. This regulation could have an important impact on several megalin-mediated physiological processes and on pathophysiologies such as chronic kidney disease associated with diabetes and hypertension, in which megalin expression is impaired.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2008

Inhibition of bFGF-receptor type 2 increases kidney damage and suppresses nephrogenic protein expression after ischemic acute renal failure.

Sandra Villanueva; Carlos Cespedes; Alexis A. Gonzalez; Eric Roessler; Carlos P. Vio

Recovery from acute renal failure (ARF) requires the replacement of injured cells by new cells that are able to restore tubule epithelial integrity. We have recently described the expression of nephrogenic proteins [Vimentin, neural cell adhesion molecule, basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), Pax-2, bone morphogen protein-7, Noggin, Smad 1-5-8, p-Smad, hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha, vascular endothelial growth factor], in a time frame similar to that observed in kidney development, after ischemic ARF induced in an ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) model. Furthermore, we show that bFGF, a morphogen involved in mesenchyme/epithelial transition in kidney development, induces a reexpression of morphogenic proteins in an earlier time frame and accelerates the recovery process after renal damage. Herein, we confirm that renal morphogenes are modulated by bFGF and hypothesized that a decrease in bFGF receptor 2 (bFGFR2) levels by the use of antisense oligonucleotides diminishes the expression of morphogenes. Male Sprague-Dawley rats submitted to ischemic injury were injected with 112 microg/kg bFGFR2 antisense oligonucleotide (bFGFR2-ASO) followed by reperfusion. Rats were killed, and the expression of nephrogenic proteins and renal marker damage was analyzed by immunohistochemistry and immunoblot. Animals subjected to I/R treated with bFGFR2-ASO showed a significant reduction in morphogen levels (P < 0.05). In addition, we observed an increase in markers of renal damage: macrophages (ED-1) and interstitial alpha-smooth muscle actin. These results confirm that bFGF participates in the recovery process and that treatment with bFGFR2-ASO induces an altered expression of morphogen proteins.


Journal of Hypertension | 1996

Regression of left ventricular hypertrophy in experimental renovascular hypertension: diastolic dysfunction depends more on myocardial collagen than it does on myocardial mass.

Gastón Dussaillant; Hernan Gonzalez; Carlos Cespedes; Jorge Jalil

Objective To evaluate regression of experimental left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) in terms of its effects both on myocardial collagen levels and on diastolic stiffness. Methods Two-kidney, one clip Goldblatt hypertensive rats were left untreated for 4 weeks (HT4W, n=12) or 12 weeks (HT12W, n=11) and compared with rats the treatment of which was started after 4 weeks of hypertension with 30mg/kg per day losartan for 8 weeks (LOS, n=12), or 50mg/l enalapril for 8 weeks (ENA, n=11). A group of sham-operated rats served as controls (SHAM, n=9). Results The blood pressure of the rats increased significantly and LVH developed both after 4 and after 12 weeks of hypertension. Treatment with losartan or enalapril significantly decreased blood pressure and induced complete regression of LVH. Myocardial hydroxyproline concentrations increased in groups HT4W and HT12W (530 ± 153 and 581 ±111 µg/g, respectively) relative to that in the SHAM group (421 ± 22 µ/g). None of the treatments induced regression of increased myocardial collagen levels. The slopes of the end-diastolic stress-strain relationships in the isolated beating hearts were significantly higher in HT4W, in HT12W and in both treated groups compared with those in the SHAM group, indicating increased diastolic myocardial stiffness. Conclusion Losartan and enalapril treatments decreased blood pressure and induced complete regression of LVH in this model of renovascular hypertension. In contrast, none of the treatments induced regression of increased myocardial collagen levels or reduced the abnormal left ventricular diastolic stiffness. These data suggest that diastolic dysfunction depends more on increased myocardial collagen levels than it does on myocardial mass in this model of pathological LVH.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2009

E Prostanoid-1 receptor regulates renal medullary αENaC in rats infused with angiotensin II

Alexis A. González; Carlos Cespedes; Sandra Villanueva; Luis Michea; Carlos P. Vio

E Prostanoid (EP) receptors play an important role in urinary Na(+) excretion. In the kidney, the epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) is the rate-limiting-step for Na(+) reabsorption. We hypothesized that activation of EP1/EP3 regulates the expression of ENaC in the face of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone-system (RAAS) activation. In primary cultures of inner medullary collecting duct (IMCD) cells, sulprostone (EP1>EP3 agonist, 1 microM) and 17 Phenyl trinor (17 Pt, EP1 agonist, 10 microM) prevented the up-regulation of alphaENaC mRNA induced by aldosterone (10 nM). In Sprague-Dawley rats infused with angiotensin II (0.4 microg/kg/min), alphaENaC expression was up-regulated in renal cortex and medulla coincidently with high plasma aldosterone levels. Sulprostone and/or 17 Pt prevented this effect in renal medulla but not in cortex. Immunocytochemistry demonstrated that IMCD cells express EP1. Our results suggest that specific activation of EP1 receptor during RAAS activation antagonizes the action of aldosterone on alphaENaC expression in the renal medulla.


Immunopharmacology | 1999

Postnatal development of cyclooxygenase-2 in the rat kidney.

Carlos P. Vio; Claudia Balestrini; Monica P Recabarren; Carlos Cespedes

Prostaglandins are local mediators/modulators of kinin effects in the kidney. The prostaglandin G2/H2 synthase (cyclooxygenase, COX) is the key regulatory enzyme of prostanoid synthesis pathway. Two COX isoenzymes (constitutive or COX-1 and inducible or COX-2) have been described in the rat kidney. We have demonstrated the presence of COX-2 in a subset of thick ascending limb of Henle (TAL) cells in normal adult rats [Vio, C.P., Cespedes, C., Gallardo, P., Masferrer, J.L., 1997. Renal identification of cyclooxygenase-2 in a subset of thick ascending limb cells. Hypertension 30, 687-692]. The present work was designed to evaluate COX-2 during the postnatal development of the rat kidney. Kidneys from Sprague-Dawley rats were studied during postnatal days 5, 10, 15 days and adult (60 days) (n = 8 each group). Renal tissue was immunostained with specific antibodies against COX-2. COX-2 was observed exclusively in TAL. A small number of COX-2 cells were observed during early postnatal life, increasing from day 5 to 15, and decreasing thereafter to reach adult levels. During maximal expression, near 20% of TAL were COX-2 positive whereas in early postnatal period and adults, only 2% of TAL cells contain COX-2. This transient induction of COX-2 during development suggest that the enzyme is necessary for the postnatal development of the kidney. This change in COX-2 seems to correspond to a derepression of COX-2 gene expression secondary to low levels of glucocorticoids.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2014

Basic fibroblast growth factor reduces functional and structural damage in chronic kidney disease.

Sandra Villanueva; Felipe Contreras; Andrés Tapia; Juan E. Carreño; César Vergara; Ernesto Ewertz; Carlos Cespedes; Carlos E. Irarrazabal; Mauricio Sandoval; Victoria Velarde; Carlos P. Vio

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is characterized by loss of renal function. The pathological processes involved in the progression of this condition are already known, but the molecular mechanisms have not been completely explained. Recent reports have shown the intrinsic capacity of the kidney to undergo repair after acute injury through the reexpression of repairing proteins (Villanueva S, Cespedes C, Vio CP. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 290: R861-R870, 2006). Stimulation with basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) could accelerate this process. However, it is not known whether bFGF can induce this phenomenon in kidney cells affected by CKD. Our aim was to study the evolution of renal damage in animals with CKD treated with bFGF and to relate the amount of repairing proteins with renal damage progression. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were subjected to 5/6 nephrectomy (NPX) and treated with bFGF (30 μg/kg, NPX+bFGF); a control NPX group was treated with saline (NPX+S). Animals were euthanized 35 days after bFGF administration. Functional effects were assessed based on serum creatinine levels; morphological damage was assessed by the presence of macrophages (ED-1), interstitial α-smooth muscle actin (α-SMA), and interstitial collagen through Sirius red staining. The angiogenic factors VEGF and Tie-2 and the epithelial/tubular factors Ncam, bFGF, Pax-2, bone morphogenic protein-7, Noggin, Lim-1, Wnt-4, and Smads were analyzed. Renal stem cells were evaluated by Oct-4. We observed a significant reduction in serum creatinine levels, ED-1, α-SMA, and Sirius red as well as an important induction of Oct-4, angiogenic factors, and repairing proteins in NPX+bFGF animals compared with NPX+S animals. These results open new perspectives toward reducing damage progression in CKD.

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Dive into the Carlos Cespedes's collaboration.

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Carlos P. Vio

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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Sandra Villanueva

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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Mariana Quiroz-Munoz

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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Jorge Jalil

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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Shoujin Hao

New York Medical College

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Alexis A. González

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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Enrique Brandan

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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Gastón Dussaillant

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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