Daniel Herranz
Columbia University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Daniel Herranz.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Paul T. Pfluger; Daniel Herranz; Susana Velasco-Miguel; Manuel Serrano; Matthias H. Tschöp
The identification of new pharmacological approaches to effectively prevent, treat, and cure the metabolic syndrome is of crucial importance. Excessive exposure to dietary lipids causes inflammatory responses, deranges the homeostasis of cellular metabolism, and is believed to constitute a key initiator of the metabolic syndrome. Mammalian Sirt1 is a protein deacetylase that has been involved in resveratrol-mediated protection from high-fat diet-induced metabolic damage, but direct proof for the implication of Sirt1 has remained elusive. Here, we report that mice with moderate overexpression of Sirt1 under the control of its natural promoter exhibit fat mass gain similar to wild-type controls when exposed to a high-fat diet. Higher energy expenditure appears to be compensated by a parallel increase in food intake. Interestingly, transgenic Sirt1 mice under a high-fat diet show lower lipid-induced inflammation along with better glucose tolerance, and are almost entirely protected from hepatic steatosis. We present data indicating that such beneficial effects of Sirt1 are due to at least two mechanisms: induction of antioxidant proteins MnSOD and Nrf1, possibly via stimulation of PGC1α, and lower activation of proinflammatory cytokines, such as TNFα and IL-6, via down-modulation of NFκB activity. Together, these results provide direct proof of the protective potential of Sirt1 against the metabolic consequences of chronic exposure to a high-fat diet.
Nature Communications | 2010
Daniel Herranz; Maribel Muñoz-Martin; Marta Cañamero; Francisca Mulero; Barbara Martinez-Pastor; Oscar Fernandez-Capetillo; Manuel Serrano
Genetic overexpression of protein deacetylase Sir2 increases longevity in a variety of lower organisms, and this has prompted interest in the effects of its closest mammalian homologue, Sirt1, on ageing and cancer. We have generated transgenic mice moderately overexpressing Sirt1 under its own regulatory elements (Sirt1-tg). Old Sirt1-tg mice present lower levels of DNA damage, decreased expression of the ageing-associated gene p16(Ink4a), a better general health and fewer spontaneous carcinomas and sarcomas. These effects, however, were not sufficiently potent to affect longevity. To further extend these observations, we developed a metabolic syndrome-associated liver cancer model in which wild-type mice develop multiple carcinomas. Sirt1-tg mice show a reduced susceptibility to liver cancer and exhibit improved hepatic protection from both DNA damage and metabolic damage. Together, these results provide direct proof of the anti-ageing activity of Sirt1 in mammals and of its tumour suppression activity in ageing- and metabolic syndrome-associated cancer.
Nature Reviews Cancer | 2010
Daniel Herranz; Manuel Serrano
The family of protein deacetylases represented by yeast Sir2 has been the focus of intense investigation because of the longevity activity of Sir2 in yeast, worms and flies. Research in mammals has mainly focused on SIRT1, the closest homologue of Sir2. Emerging evidence from mouse models is yielding a sharper picture, in which SIRT1 is a potent protector from ageing-associated pathologies, such as diabetes, liver steatosis, cardiovascular disease, neurodegeneration and, importantly, various types of cancer.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2010
Jose Alejandro Palacios; Daniel Herranz; Maria Luigia De Bonis; Susana Velasco; Manuel Serrano; Maria A. Blasco
SIRT1 is a positive regulator of telomere length and attenuates age-associated telomere shortening.
Diabetes | 2014
Daniel Beiroa; Monica Imbernon; Rosalía Gallego; Ana Senra; Daniel Herranz; Francesc Villarroya; Manuel Serrano; Johan Fernø; Javier Salvador; Javier Escalada; Carlos Dieguez; Miguel López; Gema Frühbeck; Ruben Nogueiras
GLP-1 receptor (GLP-1R) is widely located throughout the brain, but the precise molecular mechanisms mediating the actions of GLP-1 and its long-acting analogs on adipose tissue as well as the brain areas responsible for these interactions remain largely unknown. We found that central injection of a clinically used GLP-1R agonist, liraglutide, in mice stimulates brown adipose tissue (BAT) thermogenesis and adipocyte browning independent of nutrient intake. The mechanism controlling these actions is located in the hypothalamic ventromedial nucleus (VMH), and the activation of AMPK in this area is sufficient to blunt both central liraglutide-induced thermogenesis and adipocyte browning. The decreased body weight caused by the central injection of liraglutide in other hypothalamic sites was sufficiently explained by the suppression of food intake. In a longitudinal study involving obese type 2 diabetic patients treated for 1 year with GLP-1R agonists, both exenatide and liraglutide increased energy expenditure. Although the results do not exclude the possibility that extrahypothalamic areas are also modulating the effects of GLP-1R agonists, the data indicate that long-acting GLP-1R agonists influence body weight by regulating either food intake or energy expenditure through various hypothalamic sites and that these mechanisms might be clinically relevant.
Nature Medicine | 2014
Daniel Herranz; Alberto Ambesi-Impiombato; Teresa Palomero; Stephanie A. Schnell; Laura Belver; Agnieszka A. Wendorff; Luyao Xu; Mireia Castillo-Martin; David Llobet-Navas; Carlos Cordon-Cardo; Emmanuelle Clappier; Jean Soulier; Adolfo A. Ferrando
Efforts to identify and annotate cancer driver genetic lesions have been focused primarily on the analysis of protein-coding genes; however, most genetic abnormalities found in human cancer are located in intergenic regions. Here we identify a new long range–acting MYC enhancer controlled by NOTCH1 that is targeted by recurrent chromosomal duplications in human T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL). This highly conserved regulatory element, hereby named N-Me for NOTCH MYC enhancer, is located within a broad super-enhancer region +1.47 Mb from the MYC transcription initiating site, interacts with the MYC proximal promoter and induces orientation-independent MYC expression in reporter assays. Moreover, analysis of N-Me knockout mice demonstrates a selective and essential role of this regulatory element during thymocyte development and in NOTCH1-induced T-ALL. Together these results identify N-Me as a long-range oncogenic enhancer implicated directly in the pathogenesis of human leukemia and highlight the importance of the NOTCH1-MYC regulatory axis in T cell transformation and as a therapeutic target in T-ALL.Efforts to identify and annotate cancer driver genetic lesions have been almost exclusively focused on the analysis of protein coding genes. Here we identify a new long-range acting MYC enhancer controlled by NOTCH1, targeted by recurrent chromosomal duplications in human T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL). This highly conserved regulatory element, hereby named N-Me for NOTCH MYC enhancer, is located within a broad super-enhancer region +1.47 Mb from the MYC transcription initiating site, interacts with the MYC proximal promoter and induces orientation-independent MYC expression in reporter assays. Moreover, analysis of N-Me knockout mice demonstrates a selective and essential role of this regulatory element during thymocyte development and in NOTCH1-induced T-ALL. Altogether, these results identify N-Me as a long range oncogenic enhancer directly implicated in the pathogenesis of human leukemia and highlight the fundamental importance of the NOTCH1-MYC regulatory axis in T-cell transformation and as therapeutic target in T-ALL.
Cancer Cell | 2013
Erich Piovan; Jiyang Yu; Valeria Tosello; Daniel Herranz; Alberto Ambesi-Impiombato; Ana Carolina Da Silva; Marta Sanchez-Martin; Arianne Perez-Garcia; Isaura Rigo; Mireia Castillo; Stefano Indraccolo; Justin R. Cross; Elisa de Stanchina; Elisabeth Paietta; Janis Racevskis; Jacob M. Rowe; Martin S. Tallman; Giuseppe Basso; Jules P.P. Meijerink; Carlos Cordon-Cardo; Adolfo A. Ferrando
Glucocorticoid resistance is a major driver of therapeutic failure in T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL). Here, we identify the AKT1 kinase as a major negative regulator of the NR3C1 glucocorticoid receptor protein activity driving glucocorticoid resistance in T-ALL. Mechanistically, AKT1 impairs glucocorticoid-induced gene expression by direct phosphorylation of NR3C1 at position S134 and blocking glucocorticoid-induced NR3C1 translocation to the nucleus. Moreover, we demonstrate that loss of PTEN and consequent AKT1 activation can effectively block glucocorticoid-induced apoptosis and induce resistance to glucocorticoid therapy. Conversely, pharmacologic inhibition of AKT with MK2206 effectively restores glucocorticoid-induced NR3C1 translocation to the nucleus, increases the response of T-ALL cells to glucocorticoid therapy, and effectively reverses glucocorticoid resistance in vitro and in vivo.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010
Vincenzo Calvanese; Ester Lara; Beatriz Suarez-Alvarez; Raed Abu Dawud; Mercedes Vazquez-Chantada; María Luz Martínez-Chantar; Nieves Embade; Pilar Lopez-Nieva; Angélica Horrillo; Abdelkrim Hmadcha; Bernat Soria; Daniela Piazzolla; Daniel Herranz; Manuel Serrano; José M. Mato; Peter W. Andrews; Carlos López-Larrea; Manel Esteller; Mario F. Fraga
The longevity-promoting NAD+–dependent class III histone deacetylase Sirtuin 1 (SIRT1) is involved in stem cell function by controlling cell fate decision and/or by regulating the p53-dependent expression of NANOG. We show that SIRT1 is down-regulated precisely during human embryonic stem cell differentiation at both mRNA and protein levels and that the decrease in Sirt1 mRNA is mediated by a molecular pathway that involves the RNA-binding protein HuR and the arginine methyltransferase coactivator-associated arginine methyltransferase 1 (CARM1). SIRT1 down-regulation leads to reactivation of key developmental genes such as the neuroretinal morphogenesis effectors DLL4, TBX3, and PAX6, which are epigenetically repressed by this histone deacetylase in pluripotent human embryonic stem cells. Our results indicate that SIRT1 is regulated during stem cell differentiation in the context of a yet-unknown epigenetic pathway that controls specific developmental genes in embryonic stem cells.
Nature | 2006
Alejo Efeyan; Isabel Garcia-Cao; Daniel Herranz; Susana Velasco-Miguel; Manuel Serrano
The tumour-suppressor protein p53 provides the most important genetic defence against cancer and is activated in response to DNA damage and to oncogenic signalling, both of which occur almost universally in malignant tumours. But the relative contribution of these two pathways in inducing p53-dependent protection against cancer is unclear. Here we show that p53-dependent protection against cancer is lost in mice that have been genetically manipulated so that their p53 is activated in response to DNA damage but not to oncogenic signalling. We conclude that oncogenic signalling is the critical event that elicits p53-dependent protection and that the DNA-damage stimulus is less important.
Cancer Research | 2007
Alejo Efeyan; Ana Ortega-Molina; Susana Velasco-Miguel; Daniel Herranz; Lyubomir T. Vassilev; Manuel Serrano
Cellular senescence is emerging as an important in vivo anticancer response elicited by multiple stresses, including currently used chemotherapeutic drugs. Nutlin-3a is a recently discovered small-molecule antagonist of the p53-destabilizing protein murine double minute-2 (MDM2) that induces cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in cancer cells with functional p53. Here, we report that nutlin-3a induces cellular senescence in murine primary fibroblasts, oncogenically transformed fibroblasts, and fibrosarcoma cell lines. No evidence of drug-induced apoptosis was observed in any case. Nutlin-induced senescence was strictly dependent on the presence of functional p53 as revealed by the fact that cells lacking p53 were completely insensitive to the drug, whereas cells lacking the tumor suppressor alternative reading frame product of the CDKN2A locus underwent irreversible cell cycle arrest. Interestingly, irreversibility was achieved in neoplastic cells faster than in their corresponding parental primary cells, suggesting that nutlin-3a and oncogenic signaling cooperate in activating p53. Our current results suggest that senescence could be a major cellular outcome of cancer therapy by antagonists of the p53-MDM2 interaction, such as nutlin-3a.