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Featured researches published by Concepción Borja.


American Journal of Reproductive Immunology | 1995

Constitutive Secretion of Interleukin-6 by Human Decidual Stromal Cells in Culture. Regulatory Effect of Progesterone

M. José Montes; Carmen G. Tortosa; Concepción Borja; Ana C. Abadía; Francisco González-Gómez; Concepción Ruiz; Enrique G. Olivares

PROBLEM: Although several studies have demonstrated that decidual stromal cells (DSC) can secrete cytokines in culture, none of these studies documented the purity of the cultures. Since other cells of the decidua, such as macrophages and epithelial cells, also produce cytokines, it is important to ensure purity of the culture so that cytokine production can be ascribed with confidence to DSC.


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 1997

Immunospecificity of albumin detected in 1.6 million-year-old fossils from Venta Micena in Orce, Granada, Spain

Concepción Borja; Marcos García-Pacheco; Enrique G. Olivares; Gary Scheuenstuhl; Jerold M. Lowenstein

The Orce skull fragment from southern Spain, dated at 1.6 Myr, has been a subject of heated controversy since it was first discovered in 1982. If it is hominid, as its discoverers contend, it is by far the oldest fossil hominid yet found in western Europe and implies that human populations settled this region much earlier than was previously realized. Numerous stone artifacts found at the Orce sites provide evidence that hominids were indeed present there in the Lower Pleistocene. Some paleontologists maintain that the 8 cm diameter occipital fragment is from a horse, not a hominid. Two independent investigations of the residual proteins in the skull were undertaken, one at the University of Granada in Spain, the other at the University of California, San Francisco. Two immunological methods of comparable sensitivity were employed for detection and species attribution of protein extracted from fossil bone: the Granada team used an enzyme-linked-immunosorbent assay (ELISA), and the UCSF team used a radioimmunoassay (RIA). Both teams obtained reactions characteristic of human albumin in the Orce skull and horse albumin in some of the horse fossils. These results support the lithic evidence that hominids were living in Andalusia 1.6 million years ago.


Journal of Reproductive Immunology | 1996

Cultured human decidual stromal cells express antigens associated with hematopoietic cells

María José Montes; Pilar Alemán; Carmen García-Tortosa; Concepción Borja; Concepción Ruiz; Enrique García-Olivares

Although decidual stromal cells (DSC) have classically been considered to play a nutritional role during pregnancy, several reports have demonstrated that they can also exert different immune activities. Furthermore, some authors have occasionally found antigens on DSC normally expressed by immune cells. In this study, we isolated and cultured 12 human DSC lines and studied them with immunocytochemistry and flow cytometry using monoclonal antibodies against antigens associated with hematopoietic cells. Decidual stromal cells exhibited a constant phenotype: they were CALLA (CD10)-positive and DR-positive, although the expression of CD45, the leukocyte common antigen, was found to be very weak or negative. We also detected myelomonocytic antigens CD11b (CR3), CD13, CD16 (Fc gamma RIII) and CD36, although DSC lacked CD14, CD15 and CD33. B cell antigens CD20, CD21 (CR3), CD23 (Fc epsilon RII) and CD24 were expressed. DRC-1, an antigen detected on follicular dendritic cells (FDC), was also observed on DSC. When these cells were cultured in the presence of progesterone, they expressed desmin and prolactin (PRL), findings that confirmed their identity as DSC. The phenotype described, together with the immune activities reportedly carried out by DSC, suggest that DSC may play a role in the maternal-fetal immune relationship.


Human Evolution | 1999

Spanish late Pliocene and early Pleistocene hominid, palaeolithic and faunal finds from Orce (Granada) and Cueva Victoria (Murcia)

J. Gibert; D. Campillo; V. Eisenmann; Enrique García-Olivares; Assumpció Malgosa; D. A. Roe; Michael J. Walker; Concepción Borja; F. Sánchez; F. Ribot; Ll. Gibert; S. Albadalejo; A. Iglesias; C. Ferrández; E. Maestro

In SE Spain, recent excavations in the Orce basin and at Cueva Victoria indicate presence of both hominids and hominid activity from the Plio-Pleistocene boundary and early Lower Pleistocene.


Human Evolution | 1999

Species-specific albumin in fossil bones from Orce, Granada, Spain

J. Lowenstein; Concepción Borja; Enrique García-Olivares

A skull fragment (VM-0) from Orce, Granada, Spain, dated palaeomagnetically at about 1.6 Myr, is thought by some palaeontologist to be hominid, while others maintain it is equid. If hominid, it would be by far the oldest evidence ofHomo in Europe. Immunological studies on residual albumin in this fossil were carried out independently, and with different immunological methods, at the University of California, San Francisco (radioimmunoassay), and at the University of Granada, Spain (enzyme immunoassay). Other fossils attributed to hominids also studied wereVM1960 from Venta Micena, andCV-1 from Cueva Victoria, Murcia, Spain. Undisputed equid and bovid fossils from the same deposits and dated to a similar period as the Orce skull were also analyzed. Our results showed that species-specific albumin can be detected in 1.6 Myr-old hominid, equid and bovid fossils. The albumin from the Orce skull fragment and fromVM-1960 was immunologically closer to human albumin. These findings support the contention that theVM-0 andVM-1960 are hominid and that members of the genusHomo occupied southern Spain 1.6 Myr ago.


Journal of Human Evolution | 1998

Hominid Status of the Orce Cranial Fragment Reasserted

J. Gibert; D. Campillo; J.M. Arqués; Enrique García-Olivares; Concepción Borja; J. Lowenstein


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2002

Immunoglobulin G in 1.6 million-year-old fossil bones from Venta Micena (Granada, Spain)

Jesús M. Torres; Concepción Borja; Enrique G. Olivares


Jahrbuch des Römisch-Germanischen Zentralmuseums Mainz | 2016

Contribution à l’etude des premiers peuplements de l’Europe occidentale: L’apport des recherches sur le Plio-Pleistocene d’Orce et de Cueva Victoria (Espagne)

J. Gibert; Domenec Campillo; Enrique García-Olivares; Michaeil Walker; Carles Ferrandez; Concepción Borja; Asumpeió Malgosa; Florentina Sánchez; Francese Ribot; L. Gibert; Silvia Albaldejo; Alfredo Iglesias; Patso Gibert


Los homínidos y su entorno en el pleistoceno inferior y medio de Eurasia : actas del Congreso Internacional de Paleontología Humana, Orce 1995, 1999, ISBN 84-8416-938-3, págs. 45-48 | 1999

Ancient proteins in fossils from Venta Micena and Cueva Victoria

Concepción Borja; Enrique García Olivares


Human Evolution | 1999

Spanish late Pliocene and early Pleistocene hominid, palaeolithic and faunal finds from Orce (Granad

J. Gibert; D. Campillo; Vera Eisenmann; Enrique García-Olivares; Assumpció Malgosa; Daniel A. Roe; Michael J. Walker; Concepción Borja; Fernando Sanchez; Francesc Ribot; Ll. Gibert; S. Albadalejo; Antonio H. Iglesias; Cleofe Ferrandez; Eva Maestro

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Assumpció Malgosa

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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D. Campillo

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Ll. Gibert

Polytechnic University of Catalonia

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J. Lowenstein

University of California

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