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Dive into the research topics where Eloy F. Robles is active.

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Featured researches published by Eloy F. Robles.


Blood | 2010

Reversion of epigenetically mediated BIM silencing overcomes chemoresistance in Burkitt lymphoma

Jose A. Richter-Larrea; Eloy F. Robles; Vicente Fresquet; Elena Beltran; Antonio J. Rullan; Xabier Agirre; María José Calasanz; Carlos Panizo; José A. Richter; Jesús Hernández; Jose Roman-Gomez; Felipe Prosper; Jose A. Martinez-Climent

In Burkitt lymphoma/leukemia (BL), achievement of complete remission with first-line chemotherapy remains a challenging issue, as most patients who respond remain disease-free, whereas those refractory have few options of being rescued with salvage therapies. The mechanisms underlying BL chemoresistance and how it can be circumvented remain undetermined. We previously reported the frequent inactivation of the proapoptotic BIM gene in B-cell lymphomas. Here we show that BIM epigenetic silencing by concurrent promoter hypermethylation and deacetylation occurs frequently in primary BL samples and BL-derived cell lines. Remarkably, patients with BL with hypermethylated BIM presented lower complete remission rate (24% vs 79%; P = .002) and shorter overall survival (P = .007) than those with BIM-expressing lymphomas, indicating that BIM transcriptional repression may mediate tumor chemoresistance. Accordingly, by combining in vitro and in vivo studies of human BL-xenografts grown in immunodeficient RAG2(-/-)γc(-/-) mice and of murine B220(+)IgM(+) B-cell lymphomas generated in Eμ-MYC and Eμ-MYC-BIM(+/-) transgenes, we demonstrate that lymphoma chemoresistance is dictated by BIM gene dosage and is reversible on BIM reactivation by genetic manipulation or after treatment with histone-deacetylase inhibitors. We suggest that the combination of histone-deacetylase inhibitors and high-dose chemotherapy may overcome chemoresistance, achieve durable remission, and improve survival of patients with BL.


Blood | 2013

Downregulation of FOXP1 is required during germinal center B-cell function.

Ainara Sagardoy; Jose I. Martinez-Ferrandis; Sergio Roa; Karen L. Bunting; María Ángela Aznar; Olivier Elemento; Rita Shaknovich; Lorena Fontan; Vicente Fresquet; Ignacio Perez-Roger; Eloy F. Robles; Linde De Smedt; Xavier Sagaert; Ari Melnick; Jose A. Martinez-Climent

B-cell maturation and germinal center (GC) formation are dependent on the interplay between BCL6 and other transcriptional regulators. FOXP1 is a transcription factor that regulates early B-cell development, but whether it plays a role in mature B cells is unknown. Analysis of human tonsillar B-cell subpopulations revealed that FOXP1 shows the opposite expression pattern to BCL6, suggesting that FOXP1 regulates the transition from resting follicular B cell to activated GC B cell. Chromatin immunoprecipitation-on-chip and gene expression assays on B cells indicated that FOXP1 acts as a transcriptional activator and repressor of genes involved in the GC reaction, half of which are also BCL6 targets. To study FOXP1 function in vivo, we developed transgenic mice expressing human FOXP1 in lymphoid cells. These mice exhibited irregular formation of splenic GCs, showing a modest increase in naïve and marginal-zone B cells and a significant decrease in GC B cells. Furthermore, aberrant expression of FOXP1 impaired transcription of noncoding γ1 germline transcripts and inhibited efficient class switching to the immunoglobulin G1 isotype. These studies show that FOXP1 is physiologically downregulated in GC B cells and that aberrant expression of FOXP1 impairs mechanisms triggered by B-cell activation, potentially contributing to B-cell lymphomagenesis.


web science | 2012

High‐throughput sequencing analysis of the chromosome 7q32 deletion reveals IRF5 as a potential tumour suppressor in splenic marginal‐zone lymphoma

Vicente Fresquet; Eloy F. Robles; Anton Parker; Javier Martinez-Useros; Maria Mena; Raquel Malumbres; Xabier Agirre; Susana Catarino; David Arteta; Lourdes Osaba; Manuela Mollejo; Jesús María Hernández-Rivas; María José Calasanz; Masanori Daibata; Martin J. S. Dyer; Felipe Prosper; Esperanza Vizcarra; Miguel-Ángel Piris; David Oscier; Jose A. Martinez-Climent

Using high‐resolution genomic microarray analysis, a distinct genomic profile was defined in 114 samples from patients with splenic marginal zone lymphoma (SMZL). Deletion or uniparental disomy of chromosome 7q were detected in 42 of 114 (37%) SMZLs but in only nine of 170 (5%) mature B‐cell lymphomas (P < 0·00001). The presence of unmutated IGHV, genomic complexity, 17p13‐TP53 deletion and 8q‐MYC gain, but not 7q deletion, correlated with shorter overall survival of SMZL patients. Mapping studies narrowed down a commonly deleted region of 2·7 Mb in 7q32.1‐q32.2 spanning a region between the SND1 and COPG2 genes. High‐throughput sequencing analysis of the 7q32‐deleted segment did not identify biallelic deletions/insertions or clear pathogenic gene mutations, but detected six nucleotide changes in IRF5 (n = 2), TMEM209 (n = 2), CALU (n = 1) and ZC3HC1 (n = 1) not found in healthy individuals. Comparative expression analysis found a fourfold down‐regulation of IRF5 gene in lymphomas with 7q32 deletion versus non‐deleted tumours (P = 0·032). Ectopic expression of IRF5 in marginal‐zone lymphoma cells decreased proliferation and increased apoptosis in vitro, and impaired lymphoma development in vivo. These results show that cryptic deletions, insertions and/or point mutations inactivating genes within 7q32 are not common in SMZL, and suggest that IRF5 may be a haploinsufficient tumour suppressor in this lymphoma entity.


Blood | 2015

DNA methylation-profiling identifies two splenic marginal zone lymphoma subgroups with different clinical and genetic features

Alberto Arribas; Andrea Rinaldi; Afua A. Mensah; Ivo Kwee; Luciano Cascione; Eloy F. Robles; Jose A. Martinez-Climent; David Oscier; Luca Arcaini; Luca Baldini; Roberto Marasca; Catherine Thieblemont; Josette Briere; Francesco Forconi; Alberto Zamò; Massimiliano Bonifacio; Manuela Mollejo; Fabio Facchetti; Stephan Dirnhofer; Maurilio Ponzoni; Govind Bhagat; Miguel A. Piris; Gianluca Gaidano; Emanuele Zucca; Davide Rossi; Francesco Bertoni

Splenic marginal zone lymphoma is a rare lymphoma. Loss of 7q31 and somatic mutations affecting the NOTCH2 and KLF2 genes are the commonest genomic aberrations. Epigenetic changes can be pharmacologically reverted; therefore, identification of groups of patients with specific epigenomic alterations might have therapeutic relevance. Here we integrated genome-wide DNA-promoter methylation profiling with gene expression profiling, and clinical and biological variables. An unsupervised clustering analysis of a test series of 98 samples identified 2 clusters with different degrees of promoter methylation. The cluster comprising samples with higher-promoter methylation (High-M) had a poorer overall survival compared with the lower (Low-M) cluster. The prognostic relevance of the High-M phenotype was confirmed in an independent validation set of 36 patients. In the whole series, the High-M phenotype was associated with IGHV1-02 usage, mutations of NOTCH2 gene, 7q31-32 loss, and histologic transformation. In the High-M set, a number of tumor-suppressor genes were methylated and repressed. PRC2 subunit genes and several prosurvival lymphoma genes were unmethylated and overexpressed. A model based on the methylation of 3 genes (CACNB2, HTRA1, KLF4) identified a poorer-outcome patient subset. Exposure of splenic marginal zone lymphoma cell lines to a demethylating agent caused partial reversion of the High-M phenotype and inhibition of proliferation.


Haematologica | 2011

LMO2 expression reflects the different stages of blast maturation and genetic features in B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia and predicts clinical outcome

Raquel Malumbres; Vicente Fresquet; Jose Roman-Gomez; Miriam Bobadilla; Eloy F. Robles; Giovanna Giuseppina Altobelli; M. Jose Calasanz; Erlend B. Smeland; María Ángela Aznar; Xabier Agirre; Vanesa Martín-Palanco; Felipe Prosper; Izidore S. Lossos; Jose A. Martinez-Climent

Background LMO2 is highly expressed at the most immature stages of lymphopoiesis. In T-lymphocytes, aberrant LMO2 expression beyond those stages leads to T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia, while in B cells LMO2 is also expressed in germinal center lymphocytes and diffuse large B-cell lymphomas, where it predicts better clinical outcome. The implication of LMO2 in B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia must still be explored. Design and Methods We measured LMO2 expression by real time RT-PCR in 247 acute lymphoblastic leukemia patient samples with cytogenetic data (144 of them also with survival and immunophenotypical data) and in normal hematopoietic and lymphoid cells. Results B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia cases expressed variable levels of LMO2 depending on immunophenotypical and cytogenetic features. Thus, the most immature subtype, pro-B cells, displayed three-fold higher LMO2 expression than pre-B cells, common-CD10+ or mature subtypes. Additionally, cases with TEL-AML1 or MLL rearrangements exhibited two-fold higher LMO2 expression compared to cases with BCR-ABL rearrangements or hyperdyploid karyotype. Clinically, high LMO2 expression correlated with better overall survival in adult patients (5-year survival rate 64.8% (42.5%–87.1%) vs. 25.8% (10.9%–40.7%), P= 0.001) and constituted a favorable independent prognostic factor in B-ALL with normal karyotype: 5-year survival rate 80.3% (66.4%–94.2%) vs. 63.0% (46.1%–79.9%) (P= 0.043). Conclusions Our data indicate that LMO2 expression depends on the molecular features and the differentiation stage of B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells. Furthermore, assessment of LMO2 expression in adult patients with a normal karyotype, a group which lacks molecular prognostic factors, could be of clinical relevance.


British Journal of Haematology | 2013

LITAF, a BCL6 target gene, regulates autophagy in mature B-cell lymphomas

Cristina Bertolo; Sergio Roa; Ainara Sagardoy; Maria Mena-Varas; Eloy F. Robles; Jose I. Martinez-Ferrandis; Xavier Sagaert; Thomas Tousseyn; Alberto Orta; Izidore S. Lossos; Salomon Amar; Yasodha Natkunam; Javier Briones; Ari Melnick; Raquel Malumbres; Jose A. Martinez-Climent

We have previously reported that LITAF is silenced by promoter hypermethylation in germinal centre‐derived B‐cell lymphomas, but beyond these data the regulation and function of lipopolysaccharide‐induced tumour necrosis factor (TNF) factor (LITAF) in B cells are unknown. Gene expression and immunohistochemical studies revealed that LITAF and BCL6 show opposite expression in tonsil B‐cell subpopulations and B‐cell lymphomas, suggesting that BCL6 may regulate LITAF expression. Accordingly, BCL6 silencing increased LITAF expression, and chromatin immunoprecipitation and luciferase reporter assays demonstrated a direct transcriptional repression of LITAF by BCL6. Gain‐ and loss‐of‐function experiments in different B‐cell lymphoma cell lines revealed that, in contrast to its function in monocytes, LITAF does not induce lipopolysaccharide‐mediated TNF secretion in B cells. However, gene expression microarrays defined a LITAF‐related transcriptional signature containing genes regulating autophagy, including MAP1LC3B (LC3B). In addition, immunofluorescence analysis co‐localized LITAF with autophagosomes, further suggesting a possible role in autophagy modulation. Accordingly, ectopic LITAF expression in B‐cell lymphoma cells enhanced autophagy responses to starvation, which were impaired upon LITAF silencing. Our results indicate that the BCL6‐mediated transcriptional repression of LITAF may inhibit autophagy in B cells during the germinal centre reaction, and suggest that the constitutive repression of autophagy responses in BCL6‐driven lymphomas may contribute to lymphomagenesis.


Nature Communications | 2016

Homeobox NKX2-3 promotes marginal-zone lymphomagenesis by activating B-cell receptor signalling and shaping lymphocyte dynamics

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.


International Reviews of Immunology | 2016

Divergence of Vascular Specification in Visceral Lymphoid Organs—Genetic Determinants and Differentiation Checkpoints

Zoltán Kellermayer; Haruko Hayasaka; Béla Kajtár; Diána Simon; Eloy F. Robles; Jose A. Martinez-Climent; Péter Balogh

Abstract Despite their functional similarities, peripheral lymphoid tissues are remarkably different according to their developmental properties and structural characteristics, including their specified vasculature. Access of leukocytes to these organs critically depends on their interactions with the local endothelium, where endothelial cells are patterned to display a restricted set of adhesion molecules and other regulatory compounds necessary for extravasation. Recent advances in high throughput analyses of highly purified endothelial subsets in various lymphoid tissues as well as the expansion of various transgenic animal models have shed new light on the transcriptional complexities of lymphoid tissue vascular endothelium. This review is aimed at providing a comprehensive analysis linking the functional competence of spleen and intestinal lymphoid tissues with the developmental programming and functional divergence of their vascular specification, with particular emphasis on the transcriptional control of endothelial cells exerted by Nkx2.3 homeodomain transcription factor.


Cell Reports | 2013

C/EBPα Induces Highly Efficient Macrophage Transdifferentiation of B Lymphoma and Leukemia Cell Lines and Impairs Their Tumorigenicity

Francesca Rapino; Eloy F. Robles; Jose A. Richter-Larrea; Eric M. Kallin; Jose A. Martinez-Climent; Thomas Graf


Blood | 2011

Homeobox NKX2-3 Is Over-Expressed in Human B-Cell Lymphomas and Drives Marginal Zone B-Cell Lymphomagenesis in Mice

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

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Xavier Sagaert

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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