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Dive into the research topics where Carmen Sanchez-Soto is active.

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Featured researches published by Carmen Sanchez-Soto.


PLOS ONE | 2006

Restructuring of Pancreatic Islets and Insulin Secretion in a Postnatal Critical Window

Cristina Aguayo-Mazzucato; Carmen Sanchez-Soto; Victoria Godinez-Puig; Gabriel Gutiérrez-Ospina; Marcia Hiriart

Function and structure of adult pancreatic islets are determined by early postnatal development, which in rats corresponds to the first month of life. We analyzed changes in blood glucose and hormones during this stage and their association with morphological and functional changes of alpha and beta cell populations during this period. At day 20 (d20), insulin and glucose plasma levels were two- and six-fold higher, respectively, as compared to d6. Interestingly, this period is characterized by physiological hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia, where peripheral insulin resistance and a high plasmatic concentration of glucagon are also observed. These functional changes were paralleled by reorganization of islet structure, cell mass and aggregate size of alpha and beta cells. Cultured beta cells from d20 secreted the same amount of insulin in 15.6 mM than in 5.6 mM glucose (basal conditions), and were characterized by a high basal insulin secretion. However, beta cells from d28 were already glucose sensitive. Understanding and establishing morphophysiological relationships in the developing endocrine pancreas may explain how events in early life are important in determining adult islet physiology and metabolism.


BMC Developmental Biology | 2009

Remodelling sympathetic innervation in rat pancreatic islets ontogeny

Siraam Cabrera-Vásquez; Víctor Navarro-Tableros; Carmen Sanchez-Soto; Gabriel Gutiérrez-Ospina; Marcia Hiriart

BackgroundPancreatic islets are not fully developed at birth and it is not clear how they are vascularised and innervated. Nerve Growth Factor (NGF) is required to guide sympathetic neurons that innervate peripheral organs and also in cardiovascular system and ovary angiogenesis. Pancreatic beta cells of a transgenic mouse that over-expressed NGF in attracts sympathetic hyper-innervation towards them. Moreover, we have previously demonstrated that adult beta cells synthesize and secrete NGF; however, we do not know how is NGF secreted during development, nor if it might be trophic for sympathetic innervation and survival in the pancreas.We analyzed sympathetic innervation and vasculature development in rat pancreatic islets at different developmental stages; foetal (F19), early postnatal (P1), weaning period (P20) and adults. We temporarily correlated these events to NGF secretion by islet cells.ResultsSympathetic fibres reached pancreatic islets in the early postnatal period, apparently following blood vessels. The maximal number of sympathetic fibres (TH immunopositive) in the periphery of the islets was observed at P20, and then fibres entered the islets and reached the core where beta cells are mainly located. The number of fibres decreased from that stage to adulthood. At all stages studied, islet cells secreted NGF and also expressed the high affinity receptor TrkA. Foetal and neonatal isolated islet cells secreted more NGF than adults. TrkA receptors were expressed at all stages in pancreatic sympathetic fibres and blood vessels. These last structures were NGF–immunoreactive only at early stages (foetal and P0).ConclusionThe results suggest that NGF signalling play an important role in the guidance of blood vessels and sympathetic fibres toward the islets during foetal and neonatal stages and could also preserve innervation at later stages of life.


Islets | 2012

Metabolic syndrome induces changes in KATP-channels and calcium currents in pancreatic β-cells

Myrian Velasco; Carlos Larqué; Gabriela Gutierrez-Reyes; Reynaldo Arredondo; Carmen Sanchez-Soto; Marcia Hiriart

Metabolic syndrome (MS) can be defined as a group of signs that increases the risk of developing type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM2). These signs include obesity, hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistance. We are interested in the mechanisms that trigger hyperinsulinemia as a step to understand how β cells fail in DM2. Pancreatic β cells secrete insulin in response to glucose variations in the extracellular medium. When they are chronically over-stimulated, hyperinsulinemia is observed; but then, with time, they become incapable of maintaining normal glucose levels, giving rise to DM2. A chronic high sucrose diet for two months induces MS in adult male Wistar rats. In the present article, we analyzed the effect of the internal environment of rats with MS, on the activity of ATP-sensitive potassium channels (KATP) and calcium currents of pancreatic β cells. After 24 weeks of treatment with 20% sucrose in their drinking water, rats showed central obesity, hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistance, and their systolic blood pressure and triglycerides plasma levels increased. These signs indicate the onset of MS. KATP channels in isolated patches of β cells from MS rats, had an increased sensitivity to ATP with respect to controls. Moreover, the macroscopic calcium currents, show increased variability compared with cells from control individuals. These results demonstrate that regardless of genetic background, a high sucrose diet leads to the development of MS. The observed changes in ionic channels can partially explain the increase in insulin secretion in MS rats. However, some β cells showed smaller calcium currents. These cells may represent a β cell subpopulation as it becomes exhausted by the long-term high sucrose diet.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 1997

Insulinotropic action of α-d-glucose pentaacetate: functional aspects

Willy Malaisse; Carmen Sanchez-Soto; M. Elena Larrieta; Marcia Hiriart; Hassan Jijakli; Concepción Viñambres; María Luisa Villanueva-Peñacarrillo; Isabel Valverde; Ole Kirk; Marcel Kadiata; Abdullah Sener

The functional determinants of the insulinotropic action of α-d-glucose pentaacetate were investigated in rat pancreatic islets. The ester mimicked the effect of nutrient secretagogues by recruiting individual B cells into an active secretory state, stimulating proinsulin biosynthesis, inhibiting86Rb outflow, and augmenting45Ca efflux from prelabeled islets. The secretory response to the ester was suppressed in the absence of Ca2+ and potentiated by theophylline or cytochalasin B. The generation of acetate from the ester apparently played a small role in its insulinotropic action. Thus acetate, methyl acetate, ethyl acetate, α-d-galactose pentaacetate, and β-d-galactose pentaacetate all failed to stimulate insulin release. The secretory response to α-d-glucose pentaacetate was reproduced by β-d-glucose pentaacetate and, to a lesser extent, by β-l-glucose pentaacetate. It differed from that evoked by unesterifiedd-glucose by its resistance to 3- O-methyl-d-glucose,d-mannoheptulose, and 2-deoxy-d-glucose. It is concluded that the insulinotropic action of α-d-glucose pentaacetate, although linked to the generation of the hexose from its ester, entails a coupling mechanism that is not identical to that currently implied in the process of glucose-induced insulin release.


The Journal of Membrane Biology | 2014

Role for the TRPV1 Channel in Insulin Secretion from Pancreatic Beta Cells

Carlos Manlio Diaz-Garcia; Sara L. Morales-Lázaro; Carmen Sanchez-Soto; Myrian Velasco; Tamara Rosenbaum; Marcia Hiriart

Transient receptor potential channels have been put forward as regulators of insulin secretion. A role for the TRPV1 ion channel in insulin secretion has been suggested in pancreatic beta cell lines. We explored whether TRPV1 is functionally expressed in RINm5F and primary beta cells from neonate and adult rats. We examined if capsaicin could activate cationic non-selective currents. Our results show that TRPV1 channels are not functional in insulin-secreting cells, since capsaicin did not produce current activation, not even under culture conditions known to induce the expression of other ion channels in these cells. Although TRPV1 channels seem to be irrelevant for the physiology of isolated beta cells, they may play a role in glucose homeostasis acting through the nerve fibers that regulate islet function. At the physiological level, we observed that Trpv1−/− mice presented lower fasting insulin levels than their wild-type littermates, however, we did not find differences between these experimental groups nor in the glucose tolerance test or in the insulin secretion. However, we did find that the Trpv1−/− mice exhibited a higher insulin sensitivity compared to their wild-type counterparts. Our results demonstrate that TRPV1 does not contribute to glucose-induced insulin secretion in beta cells as was previously thought, but it is possible that it may control insulin sensitivity.


Toxicon | 2012

Low molecular weight compounds from Zoanthus sociatus impair insulin secretion via Ca+2 influx blockade and cause glucose intolerance in vivo

Carlos Manlio Diaz-Garcia; Carmen Sanchez-Soto; Deyanira Fuentes-Silva; Carolina Leon-Pinzon; Dany Dominguez-Perez; Carlos Varela; Adela Rodríguez-Romero; Olga Castañeda; Marcia Hiriart

Cnidarians comprise a taxon with a high biodiversity of cytolitic, neurotoxic and cardiotoxic compounds, which have not been studied on insulin release. We tested the effect of a crude extract of Zoanthus sociatus (Ellis, 1767) and the low molecular weight fraction of this extract on insulin secretion in isolated rat β-cells and also in a glucose tolerance test in vivo. We observed that the extract inhibited insulin release by reducing the amount secreted by individual β-cells and also by silencing a fraction of the secreting population. This effect coincided with a diminished rise of intracellular Ca(+2) in response to high glucose and high K+ -induced depolarization. Moreover intraperitoneal administration of the low molecular weight fraction produced glucose intolerance in adult rats. The active fraction exhibited molecular weights similar to the neurotoxins described in the phylum. Our results broaden the toxic effects of cnidarian venoms and show evidence of potential modulators of voltage-gated Ca(+2) channels in this group.


Current Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Toxins from Physalia physalis (Cnidaria) Raise the Intracellular Ca 2+ of Beta-Cells and Promote Insulin Secretion

Carlos Manlio Diaz-Garcia; Deyanira Fuentes-Silva; Carmen Sanchez-Soto; Dany Dominguez-Perez; N. Garcia-Delgado; Carlos Varela; G. Mendoza-Hernandez; Adela Rodríguez-Romero; Olga Castañeda; Marcia Hiriart

Physalia physalis is a marine cnidarian from which high molecular weight toxins with hemolytic and neurotoxic effects have been isolated. In the present work, two novel toxins, PpV9.4 and PpV19.3 were purified from P. physalis by bioactive guideline isolation. It involved two steps of column chromatography, gel filtration and RP-HPLC. The molecular weights were 550.7 and 4720.9 Da for PpV9.4 and PpV19.3, respectively. In the light of the Edman sequencing results, the structure of these toxins included the presence of modified amino acids. Both toxins increased the percentage of insulin secreting beta-cells and induced cytosolic Ca2+ elevation. To date, this is the first report of low molecular weight toxins increasing insulin secretion purified from cnidarians, by constituting a new approach to the study of beta-cells physiology.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 1998

Insulinotropic action of β-l-glucose pentaacetate

Willy Malaisse; Leonard Best; André Herchuelz; Marcia Hiriart; Hassan Jijakli; Marcel Kadiata; Elena Larrieta-Carasco; Aouatif Laghmich; Karim Louchami; Dany Mercan; E. Olivares; Carmen Sanchez-Soto; Olivier Scruel; Abdullah Sener; Isabel Valverde; María Luisa Villanueva-Peñacarrillo; Concepción Viñambres; Walter S. Zawalich

The metabolism of β-l-glucose pentaacetate and its interference with the catabolism ofl-[U-14C]glutamine, [U-14C]palmitate,d-[U-14C]glucose, andd-[5-3H]glucose were examined in rat pancreatic islets. Likewise, attention was paid to the effects of this ester on the biosynthesis of islet peptides, the release of insulin from incubated or perifused islets, the functional behavior of individual B cells examined in a reverse hemolytic plaque assay of insulin secretion, adenylate cyclase activity in a membrane-enriched islet subcellular fraction, cAMP production by intact islets, tritiated inositol phosphate production by islets preincubated with myo-[2-3H]inositol, islet cell intracellular pH, 86Rb and 45Ca efflux from prelabeled perifused islets, and electrical activity in single isolated B cells. The results of these experiments were interpreted to indicate that the insulinotropic action of β-l-glucose pentaacetate is not attributable to any nutritional value of the ester but, instead, appears to result from a direct effect of the ester itself on a yet unidentified receptor system, resulting in a decrease in K+ conductance, plasma membrane depolarization, and induction of electrical activity.


Frontiers in Endocrinology | 2014

Hyperinsulinemia is Associated with Increased Soluble Insulin Receptors Release from Hepatocytes.

Marcia Hiriart; Carmen Sanchez-Soto; Carlos Manlio Diaz-Garcia; Diana T. Castanares; Morena Avitia; Myrian Velasco; Jaime Mas-Oliva; Marina Macías-Silva; Clicerio González-Villalpando; Blanca Delgado-Coello; Marcela Sosa-Garrocho; Román Vidaltamayo; Deyanira Fuentes-Silva

It has been generally assumed that insulin circulates freely in blood. However it can also interact with plasma proteins. Insulin receptors are located in the membrane of target cells and consist of an alpha and beta subunits with a tyrosine kinase cytoplasmic domain. The ectodomain, called soluble insulin receptor (SIR) has been found elevated in patients with diabetes mellitus. We explored if insulin binds to SIRs in circulation under physiological conditions and hypothesize that this SIR may be released by hepatocytes in response to high insulin concentrations. The presence of SIR in rat and human plasmas and the culture medium of hepatocytes was explored using Western blot analysis. A purification protocol was performed to isolated SIR using affinity, gel filtration, and ion exchange chromatographies. A modified reverse hemolytic plaque assay was used to measure SIR release from cultured hepatocytes. Incubation with 1 nmol l−1 insulin induces the release of the insulin receptor ectodomains from normal rat hepatocytes. This effect can be partially prevented by blocking protease activity. Furthermore, plasma levels of SIR were higher in a model of metabolic syndrome, where rats are hyperinsulinemic. We also found increased SIR levels in hyperinsulinemic humans. SIR may be an important regulator of the amount of free insulin in circulation. In hyperinsulinemia, the amount of this soluble receptor increases and this could lead to higher amounts of insulin bound to this receptor, rather than free insulin, which is the biologically active form of the hormone. This observation could enlighten the mechanisms of insulin resistance.


Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology | 2010

Toxins that Modulate Ionic Channels as Tools for Exploring Insulin Secretion

Carlos Manlio Diaz-Garcia; Carmen Sanchez-Soto; Marcia Hiriart

Glucose-induced insulin secretion is a cardinal process in glucose homeostasis and metabolic expenditure. Uncoupling of the insulin response to glucose variations may lead to type-2 diabetes mellitus. Thus the identification of more specific drugs to facilitate the study of insulin secretion mechanisms and to develop new pharmacological agents for therapeutics is fundamental. Venomous organisms possess a great diversity of toxic molecules and some of them are neurotoxins that affect membrane excitability. This article reviews properties of those toxins affecting ion channels pivotal for insulin secretion and the usefulness of such compounds in the study of pancreatic beta-cell physiology. Here we examine the major contributions of toxinology to the understanding of the ionic phase of insulin secretion, to the determination of ion channel composition in different insulin secreting cell-line models as well as from primary cultures of different mammal species. Finally, we present a summary of the many diverse toxins affecting insulin release and a brief discussion of the potential of novel toxins in therapeutics.

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Marcia Hiriart

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Carlos Manlio Diaz-Garcia

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Myrian Velasco

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Deyanira Fuentes-Silva

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Adela Rodríguez-Romero

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Carlos Larqué

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Willy Malaisse

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Carolina Leon-Pinzon

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Gabriel Gutiérrez-Ospina

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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