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Featured researches published by Carolina Lavoz.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Statins inhibit angiotensin II/Smad pathway and related vascular fibrosis, by a TGF-β-independent process.

Raúl Rodrigues Díez; Raquel Rodrigues-Díez; Carolina Lavoz; Sandra Rayego-Mateos; Esther Civantos; Juan Rodríguez-Vita; Sergio Mezzano; Alberto Ortiz; Jesús Egido; Marta Ruiz-Ortega

We have recently described that in an experimental model of atherosclerosis and in vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) statins increased the activation of the Smad pathway by transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β), leading to an increase in TGF-β-dependent matrix accumulation and plaque stabilization. Angiotensin II (AngII) activates the Smad pathway and contributes to vascular fibrosis, although the in vivo contribution of TGF-β has not been completely elucidated. Our aim was to further investigate the mechanisms involved in AngII-induced Smad activation in the vasculature, and to clarify the beneficial effects of statins on AngII-induced vascular fibrosis. Infusion of AngII into rats for 3 days activates the Smad pathway and increases fibrotic-related factors, independently of TGF-β, in rat aorta. Treatment with atorvastatin or simvastatin inhibited AngII-induced Smad activation and related-fibrosis. In cultured rat VSMCs, direct AngII/Smad pathway activation was mediated by p38 MAPK and ROCK activation. Preincubation of VSMCs with statins inhibited AngII-induced Smad activation at all time points studied (from 20 minutes to 24 hours). All these data show that statins inhibited several AngII-activated intracellular signaling systems, including p38-MAPK and ROCK, which regulates the AngII/Smad pathway and related profibrotic factors and matrix proteins, independently of TGF-β responses. The inhibitory effect of statins on the AngII/Smad pathway could explain, at least in part, their beneficial effects on hypertension-induced vascular damage.


Journal of Molecular Cell Biology | 2013

Connective tissue growth factor is a new ligand of epidermal growth factor receptor

Sandra Rayego-Mateos; Raquel Rodrigues-Díez; José Luis Morgado-Pascual; Raúl Rodrigues Díez; Sebastian Mas; Carolina Lavoz; Matilde Alique; János Pató; György Kéri; Alberto Ortiz; Jesús Egido; Marta Ruiz-Ortega

Chronic kidney disease is reaching epidemic proportions worldwide and there is no effective treatment. Connective tissue growth factor (CCN2) has been suggested as a risk biomarker and a potential therapeutic target for renal diseases, but its specific receptor has not been identified. Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) participates in kidney damage, but whether CCN2 activates the EGFR pathway is unknown. Here, we show that CCN2 is a novel EGFR ligand. CCN2 binding to EGFR extracellular domain was demonstrated by surface plasmon resonance. CCN2 contains four distinct structural modules. The carboxyl-terminal module (CCN2(IV)) showed a clear interaction with soluble EGFR, suggesting that EGFR-binding site is located in this module. Injection of CCN2(IV) in mice increased EGFR phosphorylation in the kidney, mainly in tubular epithelial cells. EGFR kinase inhibition decreased CCN2(IV)-induced renal changes (ERK activation and inflammation). Studies in cultured tubular epithelial cells showed that CCN2(IV) binds to EGFR leading to ERK activation and proinflammatory factors overexpression. CCN2 interacts with the neurotrophin receptor TrkA, and EGFR/TrkA receptor crosstalk was found in response to CCN2(IV) stimulation. Moreover, endogenous CCN2 blockade inhibited TGF-β-induced EGFR activation. These findings indicate that CCN2 is a novel EGFR ligand that contributes to renal damage through EGFR signalling.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Angiotensin II Contributes to Renal Fibrosis Independently of Notch Pathway Activation

Carolina Lavoz; Raquel Rodrigues-Díez; Alberto Benito-Martin; Sandra Rayego-Mateos; Raúl R. Rodrigues-Diez; Matilde Alique; Alberto Ortiz; Sergio Mezzano; Jesús Egido; Marta Ruiz-Ortega

Recent studies have described that the Notch signaling pathway is activated in a wide range of renal diseases. Angiotensin II (AngII) plays a key role in the progression of kidney diseases. AngII contributes to renal fibrosis by upregulation of profibrotic factors, induction of epithelial mesenchymal transition and accumulation of extracellular matrix proteins. In cultured human tubular epithelial cells the Notch activation by transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1) has been involved in epithelial mesenchymal transition. AngII mimics many profibrotic actions of TGF-β1. For these reasons, our aim was to investigate whether AngII could regulate the Notch/Jagged system in the kidney, and its potential role in AngII-induced responses. In cultured human tubular epithelial cells, TGF-β1, but not AngII, increased the Notch pathway-related gene expression, Jagged-1 synthesis, and caused nuclear translocation of the activated Notch. In podocytes and renal fibroblasts, AngII did not modulate the Notch pathway. In tubular epithelial cells, pharmacological Notch inhibition did not modify AngII-induced changes in epithelial mesenchymal markers, profibrotic factors and extracellular matrix proteins. Systemic infusion of AngII into rats for 2 weeks caused tubulointerstitial fibrosis, but did not upregulate renal expression of activated Notch-1 or Jagged-1, as observed in spontaneously hypertensive rats. Moreover, the Notch/Jagged system was not modulated by AngII type I receptor blockade in the model of unilateral ureteral obstruction in mice. These data clearly indicate that AngII does not regulate the Notch/Jagged signaling system in the kidney, in vivo and in vitro. Our findings showing that the Notch pathway is not involved in AngII-induced fibrosis could provide important information to understand the complex role of Notch system in the regulation of renal regeneration vs damage progression.


Laboratory Investigation | 2013

The C-terminal module IV of connective tissue growth factor is a novel immune modulator of the Th17 response

Raquel Rodrigues-Díez; Raúl R. Rodrigues-Diez; Sandra Rayego-Mateos; Beatriz Suarez-Alvarez; Carolina Lavoz; Luiz S. Aroeira; Elsa Sánchez-López; Macarena Orejudo; Matilde Alique; Carlos López-Larrea; Alberto Ortiz; Jesús Egido; Marta Ruiz-Ortega

Connective tissue growth factor (CTGF/CCN2) is a matricellular protein susceptible to proteolytic degradation. CCN2 levels have been suggested as a potential risk biomarker in several chronic diseases. In body fluids, CCN2 full-length and its degradation fragments can be found; however, their in vivo effects are far from being elucidated. CCN2 was described as a profibrotic mediator, but this concept is changing to a proinflammatory cytokine. In vitro, CCN2 full-length and its C-terminal module IV (CCN2(IV)) exert proinflammatory properties. Emerging evidence suggest that Th17 cells, and its effector cytokine IL-17A, participate in chronic inflammatory diseases. Our aim was to explore whether CCN2(IV) could regulate the Th17 response. In vitro, stimulation of human naive CD4+ T lymphocytes with CCN2(IV) resulted in differentiation to Th17 phenotype. The in vivo effects of CCN2(IV) were studied in C57BL/6 mice. Intraperitoneal administration of recombinant CCN2(IV) did not change serum IL-17A levels, but caused an activation of the Th17 response in the kidney, characterized by interstitial infiltration of Th17 (IL17A+/CD4+) cells and upregulation of proinflammatory mediators. In CCN2(IV)-injected mice, elevated renal levels of Th17-related factors (IL-17A, IL-6, STAT3 and RORγt) were found, whereas Th1/Th2 cytokines or Treg-related factors (TGF-β and Foxp-3) were not modified. Treatment with an anti-IL-17A neutralizing antibody diminished CCN2(IV)-induced renal inflammation. Our findings unveil that the C-terminal module of CCN2 induces the Th17 differentiation of human Th17 cells and causes a renal Th17 inflammatory response. Furthermore, these data bear out that IL-17A targeting is a promising tool for chronic inflammatory diseases, including renal pathologies.


Clinical Science | 2014

Integrin-linked kinase plays a key role in the regulation of angiotensin II-induced renal inflammation

Matilde Alique; Esther Civantos; Elsa Sánchez-López; Carolina Lavoz; Sandra Rayego-Mateos; Raquel Rodrigues-Díez; Ana Belén García-Redondo; Jesús Egido; Alberto Ortiz; Diego Rodríguez-Puyol; Manuel Rodríguez-Puyol; Marta Ruiz-Ortega

ILK (integrin-linked kinase) is an intracellular serine/threonine kinase involved in cell-matrix interactions. ILK dysregulation has been described in chronic renal disease and modulates podocyte function and fibrosis, whereas data about its role in inflammation are scarce. AngII (angiotensin II) is a pro-inflammatory cytokine that promotes renal inflammation. AngII blockers are renoprotective and down-regulate ILK in experimental kidney disease, but the involvement of ILK in the actions of AngII in the kidney has not been addressed. Therefore we have investigated whether ILK signalling modulates the kidney response to systemic AngII infusion in wild-type and ILK-conditional knockout mice. In wild-type mice, AngII induced an inflammatory response, characterized by infiltration of monocytes/macrophages and lymphocytes, and up-regulation of pro-inflammatory factors (chemokines, adhesion molecules and cytokines). AngII activated several intracellular signalling mechanisms, such as the NF-κB (nuclear factor κB) transcription factor, Akt and production of ROS (reactive oxygen species). All these responses were prevented in AngII-infused ILK-deficient mice. In vitro studies characterized further the mechanisms regulating the inflammatory response modulated by ILK. In cultured tubular epithelial cells ILK blockade, by siRNA, inhibited AngII-induced NF-κB subunit p65 phosphorylation and its nuclear translocation. Moreover, ILK gene silencing prevented NF-κB-related pro-inflammatory gene up-regulation. The results of the present study demonstrate that ILK plays a key role in the regulation of renal inflammation by modulating the canonical NF-κB pathway, and suggest a potential therapeutic target for inflammatory renal diseases.


Nephron Experimental Nephrology | 2012

Gremlin Is a Downstream Profibrotic Mediator of Transforming Growth Factor-Beta in Cultured Renal Cells

Raquel Rodrigues-Díez; Carolina Lavoz; Gisselle Carvajal; Sandra Rayego-Mateos; Raúl Rodrigues Díez; Alberto Ortiz; Jesús Egido; Sergio Mezzano; Marta Ruiz-Ortega

Background/Aims: Chronic kidney disease is characterized by accumulation of extracellular matrix in the tubulointerstitial area. Fibroblasts are the main matrix-producing cells. One source of activated fibroblasts is the epithelial mesenchymal transition (EMT). In cultured tubular epithelial cells, transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β1) induced Gremlin production associated with EMT phenotypic changes, and therefore Gremlin has been proposed as a downstream TGF-β1 mediator. Gremlin is a developmental gene upregulated in chronic kidney diseases associated with matrix accumulation, but its direct role in the modulation of renal fibrosis and its relation with TGF-β has not been investigated. Methods: Murine renal fibroblasts and human tubular epithelial cells were studied. Renal fibrosis was determined by evaluation of key profibrotic factors, extracellular matrix proteins (ECM) and EMT markers by Western blot/confocal microscopy or real-time PCR. Endogenous Gremlin was targeted with small interfering RNA. Results: In murine fibroblasts, stimulation with recombinant Gremlin upregulated profibrotic genes, such as TGF-β1, and augmented the production of ECM proteins, including type I collagen. The blockade of endogenous Gremlin with small interfering RNA inhibited TGF-β1-induced ECM upregulation. In tubular epithelial cells Gremlin also increased profibrotic genes and caused EMT changes: phenotypic modulation to myofibroblast-like morphology, loss of epithelial markers and in-duction of mesenchymal markers. Moreover, Gremlin gene silencing inhibited TGF-β1-induced EMT changes. Conclusions: Gremlin directly activates profibrotic events in cul-tured renal fibroblasts and tubular epithelial cells. Moreover, endogenous Gremlin blockade inhibited TGF-β-mediated matrix production and EMT, suggesting that Gremlin could be a novel therapeutic target for renal fibrosis.


BioMed Research International | 2014

Gremlin Activates the Smad Pathway Linked to Epithelial Mesenchymal Transdifferentiation in Cultured Tubular Epithelial Cells

Raquel Rodrigues-Díez; Raúl R. Rodrigues-Diez; Carolina Lavoz; Gisselle Carvajal; Alejandra Droguett; Ana B. García-Redondo; Isabel Rodríguez; Alberto Ortiz; Jesús Egido; Sergio Mezzano; Marta Ruiz-Ortega

Gremlin is a developmental gene upregulated in human chronic kidney disease and in renal cells in response to transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β). Epithelial mesenchymal transition (EMT) is one process involved in renal fibrosis. In tubular epithelial cells we have recently described that Gremlin induces EMT and acts as a downstream TGF-β mediator. Our aim was to investigate whether Gremlin participates in EMT by the regulation of the Smad pathway. Stimulation of human tubular epithelial cells (HK2) with Gremlin caused an early activation of the Smad signaling pathway (Smad 2/3 phosphorylation, nuclear translocation, and Smad-dependent gene transcription). The blockade of TGF-β, by a neutralizing antibody against active TGF-β, did not modify Gremlin-induced early Smad activation. These data show that Gremlin directly, by a TGF-β independent process, activates the Smad pathway. In tubular epithelial cells long-term incubation with Gremlin increased TGF-β production and caused a sustained Smad activation and a phenotype conversion into myofibroblasts-like cells. Smad 7 overexpression, which blocks Smad 2/3 activation, diminished EMT changes observed in Gremlin-transfected tubuloepithelial cells. TGF-β neutralization also diminished Gremlin-induced EMT changes. In conclusion, we propose that Gremlin could participate in renal fibrosis by inducing EMT in tubular epithelial cells through activation of Smad pathway and induction of TGF-β.


The Journal of Pathology | 2015

Gremlin regulates renal inflammation via the vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2 pathway

Carolina Lavoz; Matilde Alique; Raquel Rodrigues-Díez; János Pató; György Kéri; Sergio Mezzano; Jesús Egido; Marta Ruiz-Ortega

Inflammation is a main feature of progressive kidney disease. Gremlin binds to bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs), acting as an antagonist and regulating nephrogenesis and fibrosis among other processes. Gremlin also binds to vascular endothelial growth factor receptor‐2 (VEGFR2) in endothelial cells to induce angiogenesis. In renal cells, gremlin regulates proliferation and fibrosis, but there are no data about inflammatory‐related events. We have investigated the direct effects of gremlin in the kidney, evaluating whether VEGFR2 is a functional gremlin receptor. Administration of recombinant gremlin to murine kidneys induced rapid and sustained activation of VEGFR2 signalling, located in proximal tubular epithelial cells. Gremlin bound to VEGFR2 in these cells in vitro, activating this signalling pathway independently of its action as an antagonist of BMPs. In vivo, gremlin caused early renal damage, characterized by activation of the nuclear factor (NF)‐κB pathway linked to up‐regulation of pro‐inflammatory factors and infiltration of immune inflammatory cells. VEGFR2 blockade diminished gremlin‐induced renal inflammatory responses. The link between gremlin/VEGFR2 and NF‐κB/inflammation was confirmed in vitro. Gremlin overexpression was associated with VEGFR2 activation in human renal disease and in the unilateral ureteral obstruction experimental model, where VEGFR2 kinase inhibition diminished renal inflammation. Our data show that a gremlin/VEGFR2 axis participates in renal inflammation and could be a novel target for kidney disease. Copyright


Archive | 2010

Regulation of Vascular and Renal Cells by Common Mediators in Health and Disease: Role of the Renin-Angiotensin System in the Pathophysiology of Hypertension and Cardiovascular Disease

Marta Ruiz-Ortega; Raquel Rodrigues-Díez; Sandra Rayego; Raúl R. Rodrigues-Diez; Carolina Lavoz; Esther Civantos; Gisselle Carvajal; Sergio Mezzano; Alberto Ortiz; Jesús Egido

In the classic view of the renin angiotensin system (RAS), angiotensin II (AngII) is the main effector peptide. Circulating RAS regulates physiological responses, whereas the local RAS is activated during tissue injury and contributes to pathological processes, including cell proliferation/apoptosis, fibrosis, and inflammation. AngII has direct effects on these processes through activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPKs) and Smad and nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB) transcription factors. In addition, AngII recruits important secondary mediators, such as transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β), connective tissue growth factor (CTGF), and chemokines. AngII binds to the angiotensin type 1 and 2 (AT1 and AT2) receptors mediating different cellular responses. Both angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and AngII receptor antagonists (ARA II, targeting the AT1 receptor) have demonstrated their therapeutic efficacy in protecting the cardiovascular system and kidneys in humans. Some AngII degradation peptides are also biologically active. Aminopeptidases promote the generation of AngIII and AngIV, two N-terminal degradation products, whereas ACE-2 catalyzes generation of Ang-(1–7). AngIV has been reported to bind to the AngIV-binding-site insulinregulated aminopeptidase (IRAP) and to promote inflammation in vascular cells. Ang-(1–7) activation of the Mas receptor may be beneficial in vascular injury but increases kidney inflammation.


Nefrologia | 2014

Estudio traslacional de la vía Notch en nefropatía hipertensiva

Carolina Lavoz; Alejandra Droguett; M. Eugenia Burgos; Daniel Carpio; Alberto Ortiz; Jesús Egido; Sergio Mezzano; Marta Ruiz-Ortega

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Jesús Egido

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Marta Ruiz-Ortega

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Raquel Rodrigues-Díez

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Alberto Ortiz

University of Pennsylvania

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Sergio Mezzano

Austral University of Chile

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Sandra Rayego-Mateos

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Raúl Rodrigues Díez

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Esther Civantos

Autonomous University of Madrid

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