Diego Megías
Instituto de Salud Carlos III
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Publication
Featured researches published by Diego Megías.
Journal of Cell Science | 2006
Ester Martín-Villar; Diego Megías; Susanna Castel; María M. Yurrita; Senén Vilaró; Miguel Quintanilla
Podoplanin is a small membrane mucin expressed in tumors associated with malignant progression. It is enriched at cell-surface protrusions where it colocalizes with members of the ERM (ezrin, radixin, moesin) protein family. Here, we found that human podoplanin directly interacts with ezrin (and moesin) in vitro and in vivo through a cluster of basic amino acids within its cytoplasmic tail, mainly through a juxtamembrane dipeptide RK. Podoplanin induced an epithelial-mesenchymal transition in MDCK cells linked to the activation of RhoA and increased cell migration and invasiveness. Fluorescence time-lapse video observations in migrating cells indicate that podoplanin might be involved in ruffling activity as well as in retractive processes. By using mutant podoplanin constructs fused to green fluorescent protein we show that association of the cytoplasmic tail with ERM proteins is required for upregulation of RhoA activity and epithelial-mesenchymal transition. Furthermore, expression of either a dominant-negative truncated variant of ezrin or a dominant-negative mutant form of RhoA blocked podoplanin-induced RhoA activation and epithelial-mesenchymal transition. These results provide a mechanistic basis to understand the role of podoplanin in cell migration or invasiveness.
Nature | 2013
Maria Alba Abad; Lluc Mosteiro; Cristina Pantoja; Marta Cañamero; Teresa Rayon; Inmaculada Ors; Osvaldo Graña; Diego Megías; Orlando Domínguez; Dolores Martínez; Miguel Manzanares; Sagrario Ortega; Manuel Serrano
Reprogramming of adult cells to generate induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS cells) has opened new therapeutic opportunities; however, little is known about the possibility of in vivo reprogramming within tissues. Here we show that transitory induction of the four factors Oct4, Sox2, Klf4 and c-Myc in mice results in teratomas emerging from multiple organs, implying that full reprogramming can occur in vivo. Analyses of the stomach, intestine, pancreas and kidney reveal groups of dedifferentiated cells that express the pluripotency marker NANOG, indicative of in situ reprogramming. By bone marrow transplantation, we demonstrate that haematopoietic cells can also be reprogrammed in vivo. Notably, reprogrammable mice present circulating iPS cells in the blood and, at the transcriptome level, these in vivo generated iPS cells are closer to embryonic stem cells (ES cells) than standard in vitro generated iPS cells. Moreover, in vivo iPS cells efficiently contribute to the trophectoderm lineage, suggesting that they achieve a more plastic or primitive state than ES cells. Finally, intraperitoneal injection of in vivo iPS cells generates embryo-like structures that express embryonic and extraembryonic markers. We conclude that reprogramming in vivo is feasible and confers totipotency features absent in standard iPS or ES cells. These discoveries could be relevant for future applications of reprogramming in regenerative medicine.
The EMBO Journal | 2007
Jose Javier Bravo-Cordero; Raquel Marrero-Diaz; Diego Megías; Laura Genís; Aranzazu García-Grande; María A García; Alicia G. Arroyo; María C. Montoya
MT1‐matrix metalloproteinase (MT1‐MMP) is one of the most critical factors in the invasion machinery of tumor cells. Subcellular localization to invasive structures is key for MT1‐MMP proinvasive activity. However, the mechanism driving this polarized distribution remains obscure. We now report that polarized exocytosis of MT1‐MMP occurs during MDA‐MB‐231 adenocarcinoma cell migration into collagen type I three‐dimensional matrices. Polarized trafficking of MT1‐MMP is triggered by β1 integrin‐mediated adhesion to collagen, and is required for protease localization at invasive structures. Localization of MT1‐MMP within VSV‐G/Rab8‐positive vesicles, but not in Rab11/Tf/TfRc‐positive compartment in invasive cells, suggests the involvement of the exocytic traffic pathway. Furthermore, constitutively active Rab8 mutants induce MT1‐MMP exocytic traffic, collagen degradation and invasion, whereas Rab8‐ but not Rab11‐knockdown inhibited these processes. Altogether, these data reveal a novel pathway of MT1‐MMP redistribution to invasive structures, exocytic vesicle trafficking, which is crucial for its role in tumor cell invasiveness. Mechanistically, MT1‐MMP delivery to invasive structures, and therefore its proinvasive activity, is regulated by Rab8 GTPase.
Cancer Research | 2004
Ana Ramírez de Molina; Mónica Báñez-Coronel; Ruth Gutiérrez; Agustin Rodriguez-Gonzalez; David Olmeda; Diego Megías; Juan Carlos Lacal
Breast cancer is still one of the most important tumors among women in industrialized countries. Improvement in both understanding the molecular events associated with the disease and the development of new additional treatments is still an important goal to be achieved. Choline kinase (ChoK) is increased in human mammary tumors with high incidence, and this activation is associated with clinical variable indicators of greater malignancy. Here, we have investigated the role of ChoK in the development of breast cancer and found that ChoK is both necessary and sufficient for growth factor-induced proliferation in primary human mammary epithelial cells and an absolute requirement for the specific mitogenic response to heregulin in breast tumor-derived cells. These results demonstrate that ChoK plays an essential role in both normal human mammary epithelial cell proliferation and breast tumor progression. Furthermore, inhibition of ChoK shows a strong in vivo antitumor activity against human breast cancer xenografts. Thus, ChoK constitutes a novel bona fide molecular target for the treatment of breast cancer patients.
Blood | 2008
María Yáñez-Mo; Olga Barreiro; Pilar Gonzalo; Alicia Batista; Diego Megías; Laura Genís; Norman Sachs; Mónica Sala-Valdés; Miguel A. Alonso; María C. Montoya; Arnoud Sonnenberg; Alicia G. Arroyo; Francisco Sánchez-Madrid
MT1-MMP plays a key role in endothelial function, as underscored by the angiogenic defects found in MT1-MMP deficient mice. We have studied the molecular interactions that underlie the functional regulation of MT1-MMP. At lateral endothelial cell junctions, MT1-MMP colocalizes with tetraspanin CD151 (Tspan 24) and its associated partner alpha3beta1 integrin. Biochemical and FRET analyses show that MT1-MMP, through its hemopexin domain, associates tightly with CD151, thus forming alpha3beta1 integrin/CD151/MT1-MMP ternary complexes. siRNA knockdown of HUVEC CD151 expression enhanced MT1-MMP-mediated activation of MMP2, and the same activation was seen in ex vivo lung endothelial cells isolated from CD151-deficient mice. However, analysis of collagen degradation in these experimental models revealed a diminished MT1-MMP enzymatic activity in confined areas around the cell periphery. CD151 knockdown affected both MT1-MMP subcellular localization and its inclusion into detergent-resistant membrane domains, and prevented biochemical association of the metalloproteinase with the integrin alpha3beta1. These data provide evidence for a novel regulatory role of tetraspanin microdomains on the collagenolytic activity of MT1-MMP and indicate that CD151 is a key regulator of MT1-MMP in endothelial homeostasis.
Fertility and Sterility | 2008
Mónica Martínez-Burgos; Leyre Herrero; Diego Megías; Rubén Salvanes; María C. Montoya; Ana Cobo; Juan A. Garcia-Velasco
To assess possible effects on subcellular organization after cryopreservation, we compared vitrified and slowly frozen oocytes in terms of their post-warm/thaw morphology, meiotic spindle configuration, and DNA integrity. DNA integrity of cryopreserved oocytes was not altered after the procedures, but vitrification was more effective than slow cooling, as shown by higher survival rate and spindle assessment despite a higher misalignment between meiotic spindle and polar body.
Nature Methods | 2014
Irene Miranda-Lorenzo; Jorge Dorado; Enza Lonardo; Sonia Alcala; Alicia G. Serrano; Jenifer Clausell-Tormos; Michele Cioffi; Diego Megías; Sladjana Zagorac; Anamaria Balic; Manuel Hidalgo; Mert Erkan; Joerg Kleeff; Aldo Scarpa; Bruno Sainz; Christopher Heeschen
Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are thought to drive tumor growth, metastasis and chemoresistance. Although surface markers such as CD133 and CD44 have been successfully used to isolate CSCs, their expression is not exclusively linked to the CSC phenotype and is prone to environmental alteration. We identified cells with an autofluorescent subcellular compartment that exclusively showed CSC features across different human tumor types. Primary tumor–derived autofluorescent cells did not overlap with side-population (SP) cells, were enriched in sphere culture and during chemotherapy, strongly expressed pluripotency-associated genes, were highly metastatic and showed long-term in vivo tumorigenicity, even at the single-cell level. Autofluorescence was due to riboflavin accumulation in membrane-bounded cytoplasmic structures bearing ATP-dependent ABCG2 transporters. In summary, we identified and characterized an intrinsic autofluorescent phenotype in CSCs of diverse epithelial cancers and used this marker to isolate and characterize these cells.
Blood | 2012
María Angeles Abéngozar; Sergio de Frutos; Sergio Ferreiro; Joaquim Soriano; Manuel Pérez-Martínez; David Olmeda; Marco Marenchino; Marta Cañamero; Sagrario Ortega; Diego Megías; Antonio Rodríguez; Jorge Luis Martínez-Torrecuadrada
Membrane-anchored ephrinB2 and its receptor EphB4 are involved in the formation of blood and lymphatic vessels in normal and pathologic conditions. Eph/ephrin activation requires cell-cell interactions and leads to bidirectional signaling pathways in both ligand- and receptor-expressing cells. To investigate the functional consequences of blocking ephrinB2 activity, 2 highly specific human single-chain Fv (scFv) Ab fragments against ephrinB2 were generated and characterized. Both Ab fragments suppressed endothelial cell migration and tube formation in vitro in response to VEGF and provoked abnormal cell motility and actin cytoskeleton alterations in isolated endothelial cells. As only one of them (B11) competed for binding of ephrinB2 to EphB4, these data suggest an EphB-receptor-independent blocking mechanism. Anti-ephrinB2 therapy reduced VEGF-induced neovascularization in a mouse Matrigel plug assay. Moreover, systemic administration of ephrinB2-blocking Abs caused a drastic reduction in the number of blood and lymphatic vessels in xenografted mice and a concomitant reduction in tumor growth. Our results show for the first time that specific Ab-based ephrinB2 targeting may represent an effective therapeutic strategy to be used as an alternative or in combination with existing antiangiogenic drugs for treating patients with cancer and other angiogenesis-related diseases.
Nature Cell Biology | 2015
Elena Doménech; Carolina Maestre; Lorena Esteban-Martínez; David Partida; Rosa Pascual; Gonzalo Fernández-Miranda; Esther Seco; Ramón Campos-Olivas; Manuel Perez; Diego Megías; Katherine Allen; Miguel López; Asish K. Saha; Guillermo Velasco; Eduardo Rial; Raúl Méndez; Patricia Boya; María Salazar-Roa; Marcos Malumbres
Blocking mitotic progression has been proposed as an attractive therapeutic strategy to impair proliferation of tumour cells. However, how cells survive during prolonged mitotic arrest is not well understood. We show here that survival during mitotic arrest is affected by the special energetic requirements of mitotic cells. Prolonged mitotic arrest results in mitophagy-dependent loss of mitochondria, accompanied by reduced ATP levels and the activation of AMPK. Oxidative respiration is replaced by glycolysis owing to AMPK-dependent phosphorylation of PFKFB3 and increased production of this protein as a consequence of mitotic-specific translational activation of its mRNA. Induction of autophagy or inhibition of AMPK or PFKFB3 results in enhanced cell death in mitosis and improves the anti-tumoral efficiency of microtubule poisons in breast cancer cells. Thus, survival of mitotic-arrested cells is limited by their metabolic requirements, a feature with potential implications in cancer therapies aimed to impair mitosis or metabolism in tumour cells.
Cancer Cell | 2014
Direna Alonso-Curbelo; Erica Riveiro-Falkenbach; Metehan Cifdaloz; Panagiotis Karras; Lisa Osterloh; Diego Megías; Estela Cañón; Tonantzin G. Calvo; David Olmeda; Gonzalo Gómez-López; Osvaldo Graña; Víctor Javier Sánchez-Arévalo Lobo; David G. Pisano; Hao-Wei Wang; Pablo L. Ortiz-Romero; Damia Tormo; Keith Hoek; José Luis Rodríguez-Peralto; Johanna A. Joyce; Maria S. Soengas
Although common cancer hallmarks are well established, lineage-restricted oncogenes remain less understood. Here, we report an inherent dependency of melanoma cells on the small GTPase RAB7, identified within a lysosomal gene cluster that distinguishes this malignancy from over 35 tumor types. Analyses in human cells, clinical specimens, and mouse models demonstrated that RAB7 is an early-induced melanoma driver whose levels can be tuned to favor tumor invasion, ultimately defining metastatic risk. Importantly, RAB7 levels and function were independent of MITF, the best-characterized melanocyte lineage-specific transcription factor. Instead, we describe the neuroectodermal master modulator SOX10 and the oncogene MYC as RAB7 regulators. These results reveal a unique wiring of the lysosomal pathway that melanomas exploit to foster tumor progression.