Elena Campos-Sanchez
Spanish National Research Council
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Featured researches published by Elena Campos-Sanchez.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Carolina Vicente-Dueñas; Lorena Fontan; Inés González-Herrero; Isabel Romero-Camarero; Victor Segura; M. Angela Aznar; Esther Alonso-Escudero; Elena Campos-Sanchez; Lucía Ruiz-Roca; Marcos Barajas-Diego; Ainara Sagardoy; Jose I. Martinez-Ferrandis; Fernando Abollo-Jimenez; Cristina Bertolo; Iván Peñuelas; Francisco Javier García-Criado; María Begoña García-Cenador; Thomas Tousseyn; Xabier Agirre; Felipe Prosper; Federico Garcia-Bragado; Ellen D. McPhail; Izidore S. Lossos; Ming-Qing Du; Teresa Flores; Jesús María Hernández-Rivas; Marcos González; Antonio Salar; Beatriz Bellosillo; Eulogio Conde
Chromosomal translocations involving the MALT1 gene are hallmarks of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma. To date, targeting these translocations to mouse B cells has failed to reproduce human disease. Here, we induced MALT1 expression in mouse Sca1+Lin− hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells, which showed NF-κB activation and early lymphoid priming, being selectively skewed toward B-cell differentiation. These cells accumulated in extranodal tissues and gave rise to clonal tumors recapitulating the principal clinical, biological, and molecular genetic features of MALT lymphoma. Deletion of p53 gene accelerated tumor onset and induced transformation of MALT lymphoma to activated B-cell diffuse large-cell lymphoma (ABC-DLBCL). Treatment of MALT1-induced lymphomas with a specific inhibitor of MALT1 proteolytic activity decreased cell viability, indicating that endogenous Malt1 signaling was required for tumor cell survival. Our study shows that human-like lymphomas can be modeled in mice by targeting MALT1 expression to hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells, demonstrating the oncogenic role of MALT1 in lymphomagenesis. Furthermore, this work establishes a molecular link between MALT lymphoma and ABC-DLBCL, and provides mouse models to test MALT1 inhibitors. Finally, our results suggest that hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells may be involved in the pathogenesis of human mature B-cell lymphomas.
Nature Communications | 2013
Isabel Romero-Camarero; Xiaoyu Jiang; Yasodha Natkunam; Xiaoqing Lu; Carolina Vicente-Dueñas; Inés González-Herrero; Teresa Flores; Juan L. García; George McNamara; Christian A. Kunder; Shuchun Zhao; Victor Segura; Lorena Fontan; Jose A. Martinez-Climent; Francisco Javier García-Criado; Jason D. Theis; Ahmet Dogan; Elena Campos-Sanchez; Michael R. Green; Ash A. Alizadeh; César Cobaleda; Isidro Sánchez-García; Izidore S. Lossos
The human germinal centre associated lymphoma (HGAL) gene is specifically expressed in germinal centre B-lymphocytes and germinal centre-derived B-cell lymphomas, but its function is largely unknown. Here we demonstrate that HGAL directly binds Syk in B-cells, increases its kinase activity upon B-cell receptor stimulation and leads to enhanced activation of Syk downstream effectors. To further investigate these findings in vivo, HGAL transgenic mice were generated. Starting from 12 months of age these mice developed polyclonal B-cell lymphoid hyperplasia, hypergammaglobulinemia and systemic reactive AA amyloidosis, leading to shortened survival. The lymphoid hyperplasia in the HGAL transgenic mice are likely attributable to enhanced B-cell receptor signalling as shown by increased Syk phosphorylation, ex vivo B-cell proliferation and increased RhoA activation. Overall, our study shows for the first time that the germinal centre protein HGAL regulates B-cell receptor signalling in B-lymphocytes which, without appropriate control, may lead to B-cell lymphoproliferation.
Cell Cycle | 2011
Elena Campos-Sanchez; Amparo Toboso-Navasa; Isabel Romero-Camarero; Marcos Barajas-Diego; Isidro Sánchez-García; César Cobaleda
The latest scientific findings in the field of cancer research are redefining our understanding of the molecular and cellular basis of the disease, moving the emphasis toward the study of the mechanisms underlying the alteration of the normal processes of cellular differentiation. The concepts best exemplifying this new vision are those of cancer stem cells and tumoral reprogramming. The study of the biology of acute lymphoblastic leukemias (ALLs) has provided seminal experimental evidence supporting these new points of view. Furthermore, in the case of B cells, it has been shown that all the stages of their normal development show a tremendous degree of plasticity, allowing them to be reprogrammed to other cellular types, either normal or leukemic. Here we revise the most recent discoveries in the fields of B-cell developmental plasticity and B-ALL research and discuss their interrelationships and their implications for our understanding of the biology of the disease.
Nature Communications | 2016
Eloy F. Robles; Maria Mena-Varas; Laura Barrio; Sara V. Merino-Cortes; Péter Balogh; Ming-Qing Du; Takashi Akasaka; Anton Parker; Sergio Roa; Carlos Panizo; Idoia Martin-Guerrero; Reiner Siebert; Victor Segura; Xabier Agirre; Laura Macri-Pellizeri; Beatriz Aldaz; Amaia Vilas-Zornoza; Shaowei Zhang; Sarah Moody; María José Calasanz; Thomas Tousseyn; Cyril Broccardo; Pierre Brousset; Elena Campos-Sanchez; Cesar Cobaleda; Isidro Sánchez-García; Jose Luis Fernandez-Luna; Ricardo García-Muñoz; Esther Pena; Beatriz Bellosillo
NKX2 homeobox family proteins have a role in cancer development. Here we show that NKX2-3 is overexpressed in tumour cells from a subset of patients with marginal-zone lymphomas, but not with other B-cell malignancies. While Nkx2-3-deficient mice exhibit the absence of marginal-zone B cells, transgenic mice with expression of NKX2-3 in B cells show marginal-zone expansion that leads to the development of tumours, faithfully recapitulating the principal clinical and biological features of human marginal-zone lymphomas. NKX2-3 induces B-cell receptor signalling by phosphorylating Lyn/Syk kinases, which in turn activate multiple integrins (LFA-1, VLA-4), adhesion molecules (ICAM-1, MadCAM-1) and the chemokine receptor CXCR4. These molecules enhance migration, polarization and homing of B cells to splenic and extranodal tissues, eventually driving malignant transformation through triggering NF-κB and PI3K-AKT pathways. This study implicates oncogenic NKX2-3 in lymphomagenesis, and provides a valid experimental mouse model for studying the biology and therapy of human marginal-zone B-cell lymphomas.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2015
Elena Campos-Sanchez; César Cobaleda
Cellular plasticity is the capacity that cells have to change their fate and adopt a new identity. Plasticity is essential for normal development and for tissue regeneration and, in an experimental setting, for the induction of pluripotency. All these processes involve a reprogramming of the cellular identity, mediated by signals from the environment and/or by internal changes at the transcriptional and epigenetic levels. Tumorigenesis is a process in which normal cells acquire a new malignant identity and give rise to a clonal aberrant population. This is only possible if the initiating cell has the necessary plasticity to undergo such changes, and if the oncogenic event(s) initiating cancer has the essential reprogramming capacity so as to be able to lead a change in cellular identity. The molecular mechanisms underlying tumoral reprogramming are the pathological counterparts of the normal processes regulating developmental plasticity or experimentally-induced reprogramming. In this review we will first revise the main features of non-pathological examples of reprogramming, and then we will describe the parallelisms with tumoral reprogramming, and we will also delineate how the precise knowledge of the reprogramming mechanisms offers the potential for the development of new therapeutical interventions. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Stress as a fundamental theme in cell plasticity.
Cell Cycle | 2014
Fernando Abollo-Jiménez; Elena Campos-Sanchez; Amparo Toboso-Navasa; Carolina Vicente-Dueñas; Inés González-Herrero; Esther Alonso-Escudero; Marcos González; Victor Segura; Oscar Blanco; Jose A. Martinez-Climent; Isidro Sánchez-García; César Cobaleda
In hematopoietic malignancies, oncogenic alterations interfere with cellular differentiation and lead to tumoral development. Identification of the proteins regulating differentiation is essential to understand how they are altered in malignancies. Chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) is a biphasic disease initiated by an alteration taking place in hematopoietic stem cells. CML progresses to a blast crisis (BC) due to a secondary differentiation block in any of the hematopoietic lineages. However, the molecular mechanisms of CML evolution to T-cell BC remain unclear. Here, we have profiled the changes in DNA methylation patterns in human samples from BC-CML, in order to identify genes whose expression is epigenetically silenced during progression to T-cell lineage-specific BC. We have found that the CpG-island of the ENGRAILED-2 (EN2) gene becomes methylated in this progression. Afterwards, we demonstrate that En2 is expressed during T-cell development in mice and humans. Finally, we further show that genetic deletion of En2 in a CML transgenic mouse model induces a T-cell lineage BC that recapitulates human disease. These results identify En2 as a new regulator of T-cell differentiation whose disruption induces a malignant T-cell fate in CML progression, and validate the strategy used to identify new developmental regulators of hematopoiesis.
Archive | 2013
Carolina Vicente-Dueñas; Elena Campos-Sanchez; Juan de Dios Hourcade; Isabel Romero-Camarero; Isidro Sánchez-García; César Cobaleda
The complexity of cancer biology cannot be understood in all its depth solely with the study of human patients and the samples derived from them. These types of studies are undeniably essential, but the heterogeneity among human patients, together with the long latency of the disease and its usually delayed diagnosis, make it difficult to recapitulate all the phases of the disease from human studies. In this context, genetically engineered mouse models (GEMMs) of human cancer are essential tools for our understanding of the processes leading to the disease. The sophistication of the techniques allowing us to model cancer in mice has increased enormously over the last years, to the extent that we can now induce, study and manipulate the disease, its evolution and its response to treatment in a way that is not possible in humans. The identification of cancer stem cells (CSCs) as the only cells within the tumor with the capacity of propagating and maintaining the disease has added a new layer of complexity to our understanding of cancer. However, most of GEMMs generated and characterized to date have not being designed to take into account the existence of CSCs and their role in the disease generation, evolution and response to treatment. In this chapter we briefly revise the major milestones in the history of the generation of mouse models of cancer, and propose new strategies for the future, taking into consideration what we nowadays know about the hierarchical nature of tumors.
Atlas of genetics and cytogenetics in oncology and haematology | 2012
Elena Campos-Sanchez; Isidro Sánchez-García; César Cobaleda
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 France Licence.
Nature Communications | 2014
Michael R. Green; Carolina Vicente-Dueñas; Isabel Romero-Camarero; Chih Long Liu; Bo Dai; Inés González-Herrero; Idoia García-Ramírez; Esther Alonso-Escudero; Javeed Iqbal; Wing C. Chan; Elena Campos-Sanchez; Alberto Orfao; Belén Pintado; Teresa Flores; Oscar Blanco; Rafael Jiménez; Jose A. Martinez-Climent; Francisco Javier García Criado; María Begoña García Cenador; Shuchun Zhao; Yasodha Natkunam; Izidore S. Lossos; Ravindra Majeti; Ari Melnick; César Cobaleda; Ash A. Alizadeh; Isidro Sánchez-García
Blood | 2011
Eloy F. Robles; Beatriz Aldaz; Takashi Akasaka; Laura Macri Pellizzeri; Eduardo Martínez-Ansó; Xavier Aguirre; Felipe Prosper; Idoia Martin-Guerrero; Victor Segura; María José Calasanz; Isidro Sánchez-García; Elena Campos-Sanchez; César Cobaleda; Charlotte Cresson; Cyril Broccardo; Reiner Siebert; Xavier Sagaert; Martin J. S. Dyer; Jose A. Martinez-Climent