Carlos Rodríguez-Caso
University of Málaga
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Featured researches published by Carlos Rodríguez-Caso.
Critical Reviews in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2003
Miguel Ángel Medina; José Luis Urdiales; Carlos Rodríguez-Caso; F.J. Ramírez; Francisca Sánchez-Jiménez
Biogenic amines are organic polycations derived from aromatic or cationic amino acids. All of them have one or more positive charges and a hydrophobic skeleton. Nature has evolved these molecules to play different physiological roles in mammals, but maintains similar patterns for their metabolic and intracellular handling. As deduced from this review, many questions still remain to be solved around their biochemistry and molecular biology, blocking our aims to control the relevant pathologies in which they are involved (cancer and immunological, neurological, and gastrointestinal diseases). Advances in this knowledge are dispersed among groups working on different biomedical areas. In these pages, we put together the most relevant information to remark how fruitful it can be to learn from Nature and to take advantage of the biochemical similarities (keyprotein structures and their regulation data on metabolic interplays and binding properties) to generate new hypothesis and develop different biomedical strategies based on biochemistry and molecular biology of these compounds.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006
Carlos Rodríguez-Caso; Raúl Montañez; Marta Cascante; Francisca Sánchez-Jiménez; Miguel Ángel Medina
Polyamines are considered as essential compounds in living cells, since they are involved in cell proliferation, transcription, and translation processes. Furthermore, polyamine homeostasis is necessary to cell survival, and its deregulation is involved in relevant processes, such as cancer and neurodegenerative disorders. Great efforts have been made to elucidate the nature of polyamine homeostasis, giving rise to relevant information concerning the behavior of the different components of polyamine metabolism, and a great amount of information has been generated. However, a complex regulation at transcriptional, translational, and metabolic levels as well as the strong relationship between polyamines and essential cell processes make it difficult to discriminate the role of polyamine regulation itself from the whole cell response when an experimental approach is given in vivo. To overcome this limitation, a bottom-up approach to model mathematically metabolic pathways could allow us to elucidate the systemic behavior from individual kinetic and molecular properties. In this paper, we propose a mathematical model of polyamine metabolism from kinetic constants and both metabolite and enzyme levels extracted from bibliographic sources. This model captures the tendencies observed in transgenic mice for the so-called key enzymes of polyamine metabolism, ornithine decarboxylase, S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase and spermine spermidine N-acetyl transferase. Furthermore, the model shows a relevant role of S-adenosylmethionine and acetyl-CoA availability in polyamine homeostasis, which are not usually considered in systemic experimental studies.
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2003
Carlos Rodríguez-Caso; Daniel Rodriguez-Agudo; Francisca Sánchez-Jiménez; Miguel Ángel Medina
Abstract(–)-Epigallocatechin-3-gallate, an antiproliferative and antiangiogenic component of green tea, has been reported to inhibit dopa decarboxylase. In this report, we show that this compound also inhibits histidine decarboxylase, the enzymic activity responsible for histamine biosynthesis. This inhibition was proved by a double approach, activity measurements and UV-Vis spectra of enzyme-bound pyridoxal-5′-phosphate. At 0.1mM (–)-epigallocatechin-3-gallate, histidine decarboxylase activity was inhibited by more than 60% and the typical spectrum of the internal aldimine form shifted to a stable major maximum at 345nm, suggesting that the compound causes a stable change in the structure of the holoenzyme. Since histamine release is one of the primary events in many inflammatory responses, a new potential application of (–)-epigallocatechin-3-gallate in prevention or treatment of inflammatory processes is suggested by these data.
Amino Acids | 2008
Raúl Montañez; Carlos Rodríguez-Caso; Francisca Sánchez-Jiménez; Miguel Ángel Medina
Summary.We use a modeling and simulation approach to carry out an in silico analysis of the metabolic pathways involving arginine as a precursor of nitric oxide or polyamines in aorta endothelial cells. Our model predicts conditions of physiological steady state, as well as the response of the system to changes in the control parameter, external arginine concentration. Metabolic flux control analysis allowed us to predict the values of flux control coefficients for all the transporters and enzymes included in the model. This analysis fulfills the flux control coefficient summation theorem and shows that both the low affinity transporter and arginase share the control of the fluxes through these metabolic pathways.
Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine | 2005
Miguel Ángel Medina; Carlos Rodríguez-Caso; Francisca Sánchez-Jiménez
Polyamines and histamine are biogenic amines with multiple biological roles. In spite of the evidence for the involvement of both polyamines and histamine metabolism impairment in several highly prevalent pathological conditions multiple questions concerning the molecular processes behind these effects remain to be elucidated. More comprehensive and systemic studies intergrating molecular biology, biophysical and bioinformatics tools could contribute to accelerate the advances in this research area. This review is designed to underscore the main questions to be answered in polyamine and histamine research and how these new systemic approaches could help to find these answers.
Plant Physiology | 2009
Fernando de la Torre; Aurelio A. Moya-García; María-Fernanda Suárez; Carlos Rodríguez-Caso; Rafael A. Cañas; Francisca Sánchez-Jiménez; Francisco M. Cánovas
We recently reported that aspartate (Asp) biosynthesis in plant chloroplasts is catalyzed by two different Asp aminotransferases (AAT): a previously characterized eukaryote type and a prokaryote type (PT-AAT) similar to bacterial and archaebacterial enzymes. The available molecular and kinetic data suggest that the eukaryote-type AAT is involved in the shuttling of reducing equivalents through the plastidic membrane, whereas the PT-AAT could be involved in the biosynthesis of the Asp-derived amino acids inside the organelle. In this work, a comparative modeling of the PT-AAT enzyme from Pinus pinaster (PpAAT) was performed using x-ray structures of a bacterial AAT (Thermus thermophilus; Protein Data Bank accession nos. 1BJW and 1BKG) as templates. We computed a three-dimensional folding model of this plant homodimeric enzyme that has been used to investigate the functional importance of key amino acid residues in its active center. The overall structure of the model is similar to the one described for other AAT enzymes, from eukaryotic and prokaryotic sources, with two equivalent active sites each formed by residues of both subunits of the homodimer. Moreover, PpAAT monomers folded into one large and one small domain. However, PpAAT enzyme showed unique structural and functional characteristics that have been specifically described in the AATs from the prokaryotes Phormidium lapideum and T. thermophilus, such as those involved in the recognition of the substrate side chain or the “open-to-closed” transition following substrate binding. These predicted characteristics have been substantiated by site-direct mutagenesis analyses, and several critical residues (valine-206, serine-207, glutamine-346, glutamate-210, and phenylalanine-450) were identified and functionally characterized. The reported data represent a valuable resource to understand the function of this enzyme in plant amino acid metabolism.
Biochemical Society Transactions | 2007
Francisca Sánchez-Jiménez; Raúl Montañez; F. Correa-Fiz; P. Chaves; Carlos Rodríguez-Caso; José Luis Urdiales; José F. Aldana; Miguel Ángel Medina
Evidence is growing in favour of a relationship between cancer and chronic inflammation, and particularly of the role of a polyamine and histamine metabolic interplay involved in these physiopathological problems, which are indeed highly complex biological systems. Decodification of the complex inter- and intra-cellular signalling mechanisms that control these effects is not an easy task, which must be helped by systems biology technologies, including new tools for location and integration of database-stored information and predictive mathematical models, as well as functional genomics and other experimental molecular approaches necessary for hypothesis validation. We review the state of the art and present our latest efforts in this area, focused on the amine metabolism field.
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education | 2002
Carlos Rodríguez-Caso; Francisca Sánchez-Jiménez; Miguel Ángel Medina
Metabolic control analysis has contributed to the rapid advance in our understanding of metabolic regulation. However, up to now this topic has not been covered properly in biochemistry courses. This work reports the development and implementation of a practical lesson on metabolic control analysis using modeling and simulation.
FEBS Journal | 2003
Carlos Rodríguez-Caso; Daniel Rodriguez-Agudo; Aurelio A. Moya-García; Ignacio Fajardo; Miguel Ángel Medina; Vinod Subramaniam; Francisca Sánchez-Jiménez
Molecular Pharmacology | 2005
Anna Torrent; David Moreno-Delgado; Jordi Gómez-Ramírez; Daniel Rodriguez-Agudo; Carlos Rodríguez-Caso; Francisca Sánchez-Jiménez; Isaac Blanco; Jordi Ortiz