Cecilia Castelao
Grupo México
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Publication
Featured researches published by Cecilia Castelao.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Arturo Roca-Rivada; Cecilia Castelao; Lucia L. Senin; María O. Landrove; Javier Baltar; Ana B. Crujeiras; Luisa M. Seoane; Felipe F. Casanueva; Maria Pardo
Exercise provides clear beneficial effects for the prevention of numerous diseases. However, many of the molecular events responsible for the curative and protective role of exercise remain elusive. The recent discovery of FNDC5/irisin protein that is liberated by muscle tissue in response to exercise might be an important finding with regard to this unsolved mechanism. The most striking aspect of this myokine is its alleged capacity to drive brown-fat development of white fat and thermogenesis. However, the nature and secretion form of this new protein is controversial. The present study reveals that rat skeletal muscle secretes a 25 kDa form of FNDC5, while the 12 kDa/irisin theoretical peptide was not detected. More importantly, this study is the first to reveal that white adipose tissue (WAT) also secretes FNDC5; hence, it may also behave as an adipokine. Our data using rat adipose tissue explants secretomes proves that visceral adipose tissue (VAT), and especially subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT), express and secrete FNDC5. We also show that short-term periods of endurance exercise training induced FNDC5 secretion by SAT and VAT. Moreover, we observed that WAT significantly reduced FNDC5 secretion in fasting animals. Interestingly, WAT of obese animals over-secreted this hormone, which might suggest a type of resistance. Because 72% of circulating FNDC5/irisin was previously attributed to muscle secretion, our findings suggest a muscle-adipose tissue crosstalk through a regulatory feedback mechanism.
Journal of Proteomics | 2011
Arturo Roca-Rivada; Jana Alonso; Omar Al-Massadi; Cecilia Castelao; Juan R. Peinado; Luisa M. Seoane; Felipe F. Casanueva; Maria Pardo
Obesity prevalence is reaching pandemic proportions becoming a major public health threat for many industrialized nations. It is especially worrying as it causes a higher risk of premature death due to associated diseases such as type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and some cancers. Current evidence shows biological and genetic differences between adipose tissues depending on its anatomical location. Particularly, upper body/visceral fat distribution in obesity is closely linked to metabolic complications. In this report, we characterize for the first time the secretome of rat adipose tissue explants from different anatomical localizations and its differential analysis. Visceral, subcutaneous, and gonadal fat specific secretomes and differentially secreted proteins among the three fat depots were analyzed by 2-DE and MS. Reference maps for location-specific adipose tissue secretomes are shown and the 45 most significant differences are listed. Identified proteins include classical adipokines and novel secreted proteins. Interestingly, our results show that the type of proteins and their role in different biological processes diverge significantly when comparing the set of proteins identified from visceral, subcutaneous and gonadal fat explants. This study emphasizes and supports the differential role of adipose tissue in accordance to its anatomical localization.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Lucia L. Senin; Omar Al-Massadi; Cintia Folgueira; Cecilia Castelao; Maria Pardo; Silvia Barja-Fernandez; Arturo Roca-Rivada; María Amil; Ana B. Crujeiras; Tomás García-Caballero; Enrico Gabellieri; Rosaura Leis; Carlos Dieguez; Uberto Pagotto; Felipe F. Casanueva; Luisa M. Seoane
Over the years, the knowledge regarding the relevance of the cannabinoid system to the regulation of metabolism has grown steadily. A central interaction between the cannabinoid system and ghrelin has been suggested to regulate food intake. Although the stomach is the main source of ghrelin and CB1 receptor expression in the stomach has been described, little information is available regarding the possible interaction between the gastric cannabinoid and ghrelin systems in the integrated control of energy homeostasis. The main objective of the present work was to assess the functional interaction between these two systems in terms of food intake using a combination of in vivo and in vitro approaches. The present work demonstrates that the peripheral blockade of the CB1 receptor by rimonabant treatment decreased food intake but only in food-deprived animals. This anorexigenic effect is likely a consequence of decreases in gastric ghrelin secretion induced by the activation of the mTOR/S6K1 intracellular pathway in the stomach following treatment with rimonabant. In support of this supposition, animals in which the mTOR/S6K1 intracellular pathway was blocked by chronic rapamycin treatment, rimonabant had no effect on ghrelin secretion. Vagal communication may also be involved because rimonabant treatment was no longer effective when administered to animals that had undergone surgical vagotomy. In conclusion, to the best of our knowledge, the present work is the first to describe a CB1 receptor-mediated mechanism that influences gastric ghrelin secretion and food intake through the mTOR pathway.
Journal of Proteomics | 2012
Arturo Roca-Rivada; Omar Al-Massadi; Cecilia Castelao; Lucia L. Senin; Jana Alonso; Luisa M. Seoane; Tomás García-Caballero; Felipe F. Casanueva; Maria Pardo
The notion that skeletal muscle is a secretory organ capable to release proteins that can act locally in an autocrine/paracrine manner or even in an endocrine manner to communicate with distant tissues has now been recognized. Under this context, a new paradigm has arisen implicating the muscle in metabolism regulation. Considering the evidences that give exercise a protective role against illnesses associated to physical inactivity, it becomes of especial relevance to characterize muscle secreted proteins. In the present study we show for the first time the secretome characterization and the comparative 2-DE secretome analysis among fast-glycolytic (gastrocnemius) and slow-oxidative (soleus) rat muscle explants and its variation after exercise intervention. We have identified 19 differently secreted proteins when comparing soleus and gastrocnemius secretomes, and 10 in gastrocnemius and 17 in soleus distinctive secreted proteins after 1 week of endurance exercise training. Among identified proteins, DJ-1 was found to be more abundant in fast-glycolytic fiber secretomes. On the contrary, FABP-3 was elevated in slow-oxidative fiber secretomes, although its secretion from gastrocnemius muscle increased in exercised animals. These and other secreted proteins identified in this work may be considered as potential myokines.
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2015
Silvia Barja-Fernandez; Cintia Folgueira; Luisa M. Seoane; Felipe F. Casanueva; Carlos Dieguez; Cecilia Castelao; Zaida Agüera; Rosa M. Baños; Cristina Botella; Rafael de la Torre; José Carlos Fernández-García; José Manuel Fernández-Real; Gema Frühbeck; Javier Gómez-Ambrosi; Susana Jiménez-Murcia; Francisco J. Tinahones; Xavier Estivill; Fernando Fernández-Aranda; Ruben Nogueiras
CONTEXT Betatrophin is produced primarily by liver and adipose tissue and has been recently reported as a novel hormone promoting β-cell proliferation and β-cell mass and improving glucose tolerance. OBJECTIVE Because it is markedly regulated by nutritional status, we hypothesized that circulating betatrophin levels might be affected by pathophysiological conditions altering body weight. SETTING AND PATIENTS We analyzed circulating betatrophin levels in 149 female patients, including 99 with extreme body mass index (30 anorexia nervosa, 24 obese, 45 morbid obese, and 50 healthy eating/weight controls). OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS Serum betatrophin levels and its correlations with different anthropometric and biochemical parameters were measured. RESULTS Plasma betatrophin levels were significantly elevated in anorexic patients, whereas its levels were reduced in morbidly obese women when compared with normal-weight women. Plasma betatrophin correlated negatively with weight, body mass index, fat percentage, glucose, insulin, and homeostatic model assessment index and positively correlated with high-density lipoprotein. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that metabolic status is an important regulator of circulating betatrophin levels.
Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 2015
Lucia L. Senin; Omar Al-Massadi; Silvia Barja-Fernandez; Cintia Folgueira; Cecilia Castelao; Sulay A. Tovar; Rosaura Leis; Francisca Lago; Javier Baltar; Ivan Baamonde; Carlos Dieguez; Felipe F. Casanueva; Luisa M. Seoane
Nesfatin-1, which is derived from the NEFA/nucleobindin 2 (NUCB2) precursor, was recently identified as an anorexigenic peptide that is produced in several tissues including the hypothalamus. Currently, no data exist regarding the regulation of NUCB2/nesfatin-1 production in peripheral tissues, such as gastric mucosa and adipose tissue, through different periods of development. The aim of the present work was to study the variations on circulating levels, mRNA expression and tissue content in gastric mucosa and adipose tissue of NUCB2/nesfatin-1 with age and specially in two clue periods of maturation, weaning and puberty. The weaning period affected NUCB2/nesfatin-1 production in gastric tissue. The testosterone changes associated with the initiation of puberty regulated NUCB2/nesfatin-1 production via adipose tissue and gastric NUCB2/nesfatin-1 production. In conclusion, the production of NUCB2/nesfatin-1 by the stomach and adipose tissue fluctuates with age to regulate energy homeostasis during different states of development.
Gastroenterology Research and Practice | 2015
Silvia Barja-Fernández; Cintia Folgueira; Cecilia Castelao; Rosaura Leis; Felipe F. Casanueva; Luisa M. Seoane
Obesity is nowadays a public health problem both in the industrialized world and developing countries. The different treatments to fight against obesity are not very successful with the exception of gastric surgery. The mechanism behind the achievement of this procedure remains unclear although the modifications in the pattern of gastrointestinal hormones production appear to be responsible for the beneficial effect. The gastrointestinal tract has emerged in the last time as an endocrine organ in charge of response to the different stimulus related to nutritional status by the modulation of more than 30 signals acting at central level to modulate food intake and body weight. The production of some of these gastric derived signals has been proved to be altered in obesity (ghrelin, CCK, and GLP-1). In fact, bariatric surgery modifies the production of both gastrointestinal and adipose tissue peripheral signals beyond the gut microbiota composition. Through this paper the main peripheral signals altered in obesity will be reviewed together with their modifications after bariatric surgery.
World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2017
Cintia Folgueira; Silvia Barja-Fernandez; Laura Prado; Omar Al-Massadi; Cecilia Castelao; Veronica Pena-Leon; Patricia Gonzalez-Saenz; Javier Baltar; Ivan Baamonde; Rosaura Leis; Carlos Dieguez; Uberto Pagotto; Felipe F. Casanueva; Sulay Tovar; Ruben Nogueiras; Luisa M. Seoane
AIM To determine whether Nucb2/nesfatin1 production is regulated by the cannabinoid system through the intracellular mTOR pathway in the stomach. METHODS Sprague Dawley rats were treated with vehicle, rimonabant, rapamycin or rapamycin+rimonabant. Gastric tissue obtained from the animals was used for biochemical assays: Nucb2 mRNA measurement by real time PCR, gastric Nucb2/nesfatin protein content by western blot, and gastric explants to obtain gastric secretomes. Nucb2/nesfatin levels were measured in gastric secretomes and plasma using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. RESULTS The inhibition of cannabinoid receptor 1 (CB1) by the peripheral injection of an inverse agonist, namely rimonabant, decreases food intake and increases the gastric secretion and circulating levels of Nucb2/nesfatin-1. In addition, rimonabant treatment activates mTOR pathway in the stomach as showed by the increase in pmTOR/mTOR expression in gastric tissue obtained from rimonabant treated animals. These effects were confirmed by the use of a CB1 antagonist, AM281. When the intracellular pathway mTOR/S6k was inactivated by chronic treatment with rapamycin, rimonabant treatment was no longer able to stimulate the gastric secretion of Nucb2/nesfatin-1. CONCLUSION The peripheral cannabinoid system regulates food intake through a mechanism that implies gastric production and release of Nucb2/Nesfatin-1, which is mediated by the mTOR/S6k pathway.
Progress in Molecular Biology and Translational Science | 2016
Silvia Barja-Fernandez; Cintia Folgueira; Cecilia Castelao; Rosaura Leis; Ana B. Crujeiras; Felipe F. Casanueva; Luisa M. Seoane
The regulation of growth hormone (GH) was traditionally thought to be under the control of two main hypothalamic neuropeptides; GH-releasing hormone and somatostatin. In 1999, with the isolation of ghrelin, as a gastric-derived peptide with potent GH-releasing activity, concept of regulation of the somatotropic axis completely changed. In addition to its GH-releasing activity, ghrelin exhibited the capacity to modulate food intake and body weight. The role of this splanchnic factor in regulating GH as a nexus of energy balance control and GH are explored in this chapter. From a physiological standpoint, a novel mechanism of GH regulation mediated by ghrelin exists, implicating the peripheral modulation of the cannabinoid receptor.
Molecular Nutrition & Food Research | 2018
Silvia Barja-Fernandez; José María Moreno-Navarrete; Cintia Folgueira; Mònica Sabater; Cecilia Castelao; Johan Fernø; Rosaura Leis; Carlos Dieguez; Felipe F. Casanueva; Wifredo Ricart; Luisa M. Seoane; José Manuel Fernández-Real; Ruben Nogueiras
SCOPE Angiopoietin-like protein 4 (ANGPTL-4) regulates plasma lipoprotein levels, but its relevance in human obesity and type 2 diabetes (T2D) is largely unknown. We aim to investigate the regulation of circulating ANGPTL-4 levels in obesity, T2D, and after changes in body weight. METHODS AND RESULTS Circulating ANGPTL-4 levels were measured in two different cohorts. First, in a cross-sectional study, we evaluated ANGPTL-4 levels in lean and obese patients with normoglycemia or with altered glucose tolerance (AGT; n = 282). Second, in a longitudinal intervention study, 51 obese participants were evaluated. A hypocaloric diet was prescribed, with follow-up 2 years later. ANGPTL-4 levels were significantly increased in obese patients with AGT compared to lean participants. Moreover, ANGPTL-4 was positively correlated with BMI, waist circumference, fat mass, HbA1c, HOMA-IR, fasting triglycerides, and with inflammatory markers. Participants gaining weight after the follow-up showed increased ANGPTL-4 levels in parallel to increased BMI, fat mass, and fasting glucose, while ANGPTL-4 levels were reduced in participants losing weight. CONCLUSION Our data support a relevant role of ANGPTL-4 in human obesity and its involvement in long-term body weight changes.