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Dive into the research topics where Cristina Martín-Castellanos is active.

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Featured researches published by Cristina Martín-Castellanos.


Cancer Research | 2006

Cross-Talk between Nucleotide Excision and Homologous Recombination DNA Repair Pathways in the Mechanism of Action of Antitumor Trabectedin

Ana B. Herrero; Cristina Martín-Castellanos; Esther Marco; Federico Gago; Sergio Moreno

Trabectedin (Yondelis) is a potent antitumor drug that has the unique characteristic of killing cells by poisoning the DNA nucleotide excision repair (NER) machinery. The basis for the NER-dependent toxicity has not yet been elucidated but it has been proposed as the major determinant for the drugs cytotoxicity. To study the in vivo mode of action of trabectedin and to explore the role of NER in its cytotoxicity, we used the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe as a model system. Treatment of S. pombe wild-type cells with trabectedin led to cell cycle delay and activation of the DNA damage checkpoint, indicating that the drug causes DNA damage in vivo. DNA damage induced by the drug is mostly caused by the NER protein, Rad13 (the fission yeast orthologue to human XPG), and is mainly repaired by homologous recombination. By constructing different rad13 mutants, we show that the DNA damage induced by trabectedin depends on a 46-amino acid region of Rad13 that is homologous to a DNA-binding region of human nuclease FEN-1. More specifically, an arginine residue in Rad13 (Arg961), conserved in FEN1 (Arg314), was found to be crucial for the drugs cytotoxicity. These results lead us to propose a model for the action of trabectedin in eukaryotic cells in which the formation of a Rad13/DNA-trabectedin ternary complex, stabilized by Arg961, results in cell death.


Current Biology | 2005

A Large-Scale Screen in S. pombe Identifies Seven Novel Genes Required for Critical Meiotic Events

Cristina Martín-Castellanos; Miguel A. Blanco; Ana E. Rozalén; Livia Pérez-Hidalgo; Ana García; Francisco Conde; Juan Mata; Chad Ellermeier; Luther Davis; Pedro A. San-Segundo; Gerald R. Smith; Sergio Moreno

Meiosis is a specialized form of cell division by which sexually reproducing diploid organisms generate haploid gametes. During a long prophase, telomeres cluster into the bouquet configuration to aid chromosome pairing, and DNA replication is followed by high levels of recombination between homologous chromosomes (homologs). This recombination is important for the reductional segregation of homologs at the first meiotic division; without further replication, a second meiotic division yields haploid nuclei. In the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, we have deleted 175 meiotically upregulated genes and found seven genes not previously reported to be critical for meiotic events. Three mutants (rec24, rec25, and rec27) had strongly reduced meiosis-specific DNA double-strand breakage and recombination. One mutant (tht2) was deficient in karyogamy, and two (bqt1 and bqt2) were deficient in telomere clustering, explaining their defects in recombination and segregation. The moa1 mutant was delayed in premeiotic S phase progression and nuclear divisions. Further analysis of these mutants will help elucidate the complex machinery governing the special behavior of meiotic chromosomes.


Current Biology | 2008

Rec25 and Rec27, Novel Linear-Element Components, Link Cohesin to Meiotic DNA Breakage and Recombination

Luther Davis; Ana E. Rozalén; Sergio Moreno; Gerald R. Smith; Cristina Martín-Castellanos

Meiosis is a specialized nuclear division by which sexually reproducing diploid organisms generate haploid gametes. Recombination between homologous chromosomes facilitates accurate meiotic chromosome segregation and is initiated by DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) made by the conserved topoisomerase-like protein Spo11 (Rec12 in fission yeast), but DSBs are not evenly distributed across the genome. In Schizosaccharomyces pombe, proteinaceous structures known as linear elements (LinEs) are formed during meiotic prophase. The meiosis-specific cohesin subunits Rec8 and Rec11 are essential for DSB formation in some regions of the genome, as well as for formation of LinEs or the related synaptonemal complex (SC) in other eukaryotes. Proteins required for DSB formation decorate LinEs, and mutants lacking Rec10, a major component of LinEs, are completely defective for recombination. Although recombination may occur in the context of LinEs, it is not well understood how Rec10 is loaded onto chromosomes. We describe two novel components of LinEs in fission yeast, Rec25 and Rec27. Comparisons of rec25Delta, rec27Delta, and rec10Delta mutants suggest multiple pathways to load Rec10. In the major pathway, Rec10 is loaded, together with Rec25 and Rec27, in a Rec8-dependent manner with subsequent region-specific effects on recombination.


Molecular Cell | 2013

Protein Determinants of Meiotic DNA Break Hot Spots

Kyle R. Fowler; Susana Gutiérrez-Velasco; Cristina Martín-Castellanos; Gerald R. Smith

Meiotic recombination, crucial for proper chromosome segregation and genome evolution, is initiated by programmed DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) in yeasts and likely all sexually reproducing species. In fission yeast, DSBs occur up to hundreds of times more frequently at special sites, called hot spots, than in other regions of the genome. What distinguishes hot spots from cold regions is an unsolved problem, although transcription factors determine some hot spots. We report the discovery that three coiled-coil proteins-Rec25, Rec27, and Mug20-bind essentially all hot spots with great specificity even without DSB formation. These small proteins are components of linear elements, are related to synaptonemal complex proteins, and are essential for nearly all DSBs at most hot spots. Our results indicate these hot spot determinants activate or stabilize the DSB-forming protein Rec12 (Spo11 homolog) rather than promote its binding to hot spots. We propose a paradigm for hot spot determination and crossover control by linear element proteins.


Journal of Cell Science | 2008

Slk1 is a meiosis-specific Sid2-related kinase that coordinates meiotic nuclear division with growth of the forespore membrane

Livia Pérez-Hidalgo; Ana E. Rozalén; Cristina Martín-Castellanos; Sergio Moreno

Septation and spore formation in fission yeast are compartmentalization processes that occur during the mitotic and meiotic cycles, and that are regulated by the septation initiation network (SIN). In mitosis, activation of Sid2 protein kinase transduces the signal from the spindle pole body (SPB) to the middle of the cell in order to promote the constriction of the actomyosin ring. Concomitant with ring contraction, membrane vesicles are added at the cleavage site to enable the necessary expansion of the cell membrane. In meiosis, the forespore membrane is synthesized from the outer layers of the SPB by vesicle fusion. This membrane grows and eventually engulfs each of the four haploid nuclei. The molecular mechanism that connects the SIN pathway with synthesis of the forespore membrane is poorly understood. Here, we describe a meiosis-specific Sid2-like kinase (Slk1), which is important for the coordination of the growth of the forespore membrane with the meiotic nuclear divisions. Slk1 and Sid2 are required for forespore membrane biosynthesis and seem to be the final output of the SIN pathway in meiosis.


Progress in cell cycle research | 1996

Regulation of G1 progression in fission yeast by the rum1+ gene product.

Cristina Martín-Castellanos; Sergio Moreno

Recently it has been found that B-type cyclins in fission yeast regulate the activation of the cdc2 kinase to promote the onset of both DNA replication and mitosis. cig2 is the major G1 cyclin while cdc13 is the principal mitotic cyclin. cdc13 also has an additional function in G2 phase, preventing more than one round of DNA replication per cell cycle. In opposition to these cyclins the rum1 inhibitor, a protein present exclusively in G1, prevents premature activation of the cdc2/cig2 and the cdc2/cdc13 complexes until cells have reached the critical cell size required to pass Start and initiate a new cell cycle.


Journal of Cell Science | 2011

Functional interactions of Rec24, the fission yeast ortholog of mouse Mei4, with the meiotic recombination–initiation complex

Sandrine Bonfils; Ana E. Rozalén; Gerald R. Smith; Sergio Moreno; Cristina Martín-Castellanos

A physical connection between each pair of homologous chromosomes is crucial for reductional chromosome segregation during the first meiotic division and therefore for successful meiosis. Connection is provided by recombination (crossing over) initiated by programmed DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). Although the topoisomerase-like protein Spo11 makes DSBs and is evolutionarily conserved, how Spo11 (Rec12 in fission yeast) is regulated to form DSBs at the proper time and place is poorly understood. Several additional (accessory) proteins for DSB formation have been inferred in different species from yeast to mice. Here, we show that Rec24 is a bona fide accessory protein in Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Rec24 is required genome-wide for crossing-over and is recruited to meiotic chromosomes during prophase in a Rec12-independent manner forming foci on linear elements (LinEs), structurally related to the synaptonemal complex of other eukaryotes. Stabilization of Rec24 on LinEs depends on another accessory protein, Rec7, with which Rec24 forms complexes in vivo. We propose that Rec24 marks LinE-associated recombination sites, that stabilization of its binding by Rec7 facilitates the loading or activation of Rec12, and that only stabilized complexes containing Rec24 and Rec7 promote DSB formation. Based on the recent report of Rec24 and Rec7 conservation, interaction between Rec24 and Rec7 might be widely conserved in DSB formation.


Archive | 2007

Modified Cell Cycle Regulation in Meiosis

Livia Pérez-Hidalgo; Sergio Moreno; Cristina Martín-Castellanos

The study of meiosis regulation has always been carried out in parallel with mitotic cell cycle discoveries. The basic cell cycle machinery that regulates mitosis, based on fluctuations in the activity of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs), is responsible for the main transitions that occur during meiosis. However, the special characteristics of meiosis (e.g., the absence of an S-phase between meiosis I and meiosis II, a long prophase in which homologous recombination events occur, etc.) require specific regulation, and cells respond to this challenging situation in different ways. In some cases, mitotic regulators carry out the new functions or change their relative importance in a particular process, while in other cases novel meiosis-specific regulators emerge.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Functional organization of protein determinants of meiotic DNA break hotspots

Lijuan Ma; Kyle R. Fowler; Cristina Martín-Castellanos; Gerald R. Smith

During Schizosaccharomyces pombe meiotic prophase, homologous chromosomes are co-aligned by linear elements (LinEs) analogous to the axial elements of the synaptonemal complex (SC) in other organisms. LinE proteins also promote the formation of meiotic DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs), the precursors of cross-overs. Rec10 is required for essentially all DSBs and recombination, and three others (Rec25, Rec27, and Mug20) are protein determinants of DSB hotspots – they bind DSB hotspots with high specificity and are required for DSB formation there. These four LinE proteins co-localize in the nucleus in an interdependent way, suggesting they form a complex. We used random mutagenesis to uncover recombination-deficient missense mutants with novel properties. Some missense mutations changed essential residues conserved among Schizosaccharomyces species. DSB formation, gene conversion, and crossing-over were coordinately reduced in the mutants tested. Based on our mutant analysis, we revised the rec27 open reading frame: the new start codon is in the previously annotated first intron. Genetic and fluorescence-microscopy assays indicated that the Rec10 N- and C-terminal regions have complex interactions with Rec25. These mutants are a valuable resource to elucidate further how LinE proteins and the related SCs of other species regulate meiotic DSB formation to form crossovers crucial for meiosis.


Cell Cycle | 2013

Making chromosomes hot for breakage.

Cristina Martín-Castellanos; Kyle R. Fowler; Gerald R. Smith

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Gerald R. Smith

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Kyle R. Fowler

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Luther Davis

University of Washington

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Chad Ellermeier

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Lijuan Ma

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Scott Keeney

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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