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Dive into the research topics where Estefanía Batalla-Solís is active.

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Featured researches published by Estefanía Batalla-Solís.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Resistance to Bleomycin-Induced Lung Fibrosis in MMP-8 Deficient Mice Is Mediated by Interleukin-10

Emilio García-Prieto; Adrián González-López; Sandra Cabrera; Aurora Astudillo; Ana Gutiérrez-Fernández; Miriam Fanjul-Fernández; Estefanía Batalla-Solís; Xose S. Puente; Antonio Fueyo; Carlos López-Otín; Guillermo M. Albaiceta

Background Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) may have pro and antifibrotic roles within the lungs, due to its ability to modulate collagen turnover and immune mediators. MMP-8 is a collagenase that also cleaves a number of cytokines and chemokines. Methodology and Principal Findings To evaluate its relevance in lung fibrosis, wildtype and Mmp8−/− mice were treated with either intratracheal bleomycin or saline, and lungs were harvested at different time points. Fibrosis, collagen, collagenases, gelatinases, TGFβ and IL-10 were measured in lung tissue. Mmp8−/− mice developed less fibrosis than their wildtype counterparts. This was related to an increase in lung inflammatory cells, MMP-9 and IL-10 levels in these mutant animals. In vitro experiments showed that MMP-8 cleaves murine and human IL-10, and tissue from knockout animals showed decreased IL-10 processing. Additionally, lung fibroblasts from these mice were cultured in the presence of bleomycin and collagen, IL-10 and STAT3 activation (downstream signal in response to IL-10) measured by western blotting. In cell cultures, bleomycin increased collagen synthesis only in wildtype mice. Fibroblasts from knockout mice did not show increased collagen synthesis, but increased levels of unprocessed IL-10 and STAT3 phosphorylation. Blockade of IL-10 reverted this phenotype, increasing collagen in cultures. Conclusions According to these results, we conclude that the absence of MMP-8 has an antifibrotic effect by increasing IL-10 and propose that this metalloprotease could be a relevant modulator of IL-10 metabolism in vivo.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2011

Inflammation and matrix remodeling during repair of ventilator-induced lung injury

Adrián González-López; Aurora Astudillo; Emilio García-Prieto; María Soledad Fernández-García; Antonio López-Vázquez; Estefanía Batalla-Solís; Francisco Taboada; Antonio Fueyo; Guillermo M. Albaiceta

High-pressure ventilation triggers different inflammatory and matrix remodeling responses within the lung. Although some of them may cause injury, the involvement of these mediators in repair is largely unknown. To identify mechanisms of repair after ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI), mice were randomly assigned to baseline conditions (no ventilation), injury [90 min of high-pressure ventilation without positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP)], repair (injury followed by 4 h of low-pressure ventilation with PEEP), and ventilated controls (low-pressure ventilation with PEEP for 90 and 330 min). Histological injury and lung permeability increased during injury, but were partially reverted in the repair group. This was accompanied by a proinflammatory response, together with increases in TNF-α and IFN-γ, which returned to baseline during repair, and a decrease in IL-10. However, macrophage inflammatory protein-2 (MIP-2) and matrix metalloproteinases (MMP)-2 and -9 increased after injury and persisted in being elevated during repair. Mortality in the repair phase was 50%. Survivors showed increased cell proliferation, lower levels of collagen, and higher levels of MIP-2 and MMP-2. Pan-MMP or specific MMP-2 inhibition (but not MIP-2, TNF-α, or IL-4 inhibition) delayed epithelial repair in an in vitro wound model using murine or human alveolar cells cultured in the presence of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from mice during the repair phase or from patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome, respectively. Similarly, MMP inhibition with doxycycline impaired lung repair after VILI in vivo. In conclusion, VILI can be reverted by normalizing ventilation pressures. An adequate inflammatory response and extracellular matrix remodeling are essential for recovery. MMP-2 could play a key role in epithelial repair after VILI and acute respiratory distress syndrome.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2013

Impairment of autophagy decreases ventilator-induced lung injury by blockade of the NF-κB pathway

Inés López-Alonso; Alina Aguirre; Adrián González-López; Álvaro F. Fernández; Laura Amado-Rodríguez; Aurora Astudillo; Estefanía Batalla-Solís; Guillermo M. Albaiceta

Excessive lung stretch triggers lung inflammation by activation of the NF-κB pathway. This route can be modulated by autophagy, an intracellular proteolytic system. Our objective was to study the impact of the absence of autophagy in a model of ventilator-induced lung injury. Mice lacking Autophagin-1/ATG4B (Atg4b-/-), a critical protease in the autophagic pathway, and their wild-type counterparts were studied in baseline conditions and after mechanical ventilation. Lung injury, markers of autophagy, and activation of the inflammatory response were evaluated after ventilation. Mechanical ventilation increased autophagy and induced lung injury in wild-type mice. Atg4b-/- animals showed a decreased lung injury after ventilation, with less neutrophilic infiltration than their wild-type counterparts. As expected, autophagy was absent in mutant animals, resulting in the accumulation of p62 and ubiquitinated proteins. Activation of the canonical NF-κB pathway was present in ventilated wild-type, but not Atg4b-deficient, animals. Moreover, these mutant mice showed an accumulation of ubiquitinated IκB. High-pressure ventilation partially restored the autophagic response in Atg4b-/- mice and abolished the differences between genotypes. In conclusion, impairment of autophagy results in an ameliorated inflammatory response to mechanical ventilation and decreases lung injury. The accumulation of ubiquitinated IκB may be responsible for this effect.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2013

Mechanical ventilation triggers hippocampal apoptosis by vagal and dopaminergic pathways.

Adrián González-López; Inés López-Alonso; Alina Aguirre; Laura Amado-Rodríguez; Estefanía Batalla-Solís; Aurora Astudillo; Cristina Tomás-Zapico; Antonio Fueyo; Claudia C. dos Santos; Konrad Talbot; Guillermo M. Albaiceta

RATIONALE Critically ill patients frequently develop neuropsychological disturbances including acute delirium or memory impairment. The need for mechanical ventilation is a risk factor for these adverse events, but a mechanism that links lung stretch and brain injury has not been identified. OBJECTIVES To identify the mechanisms that lead to brain dysfunction during mechanical ventilation. METHODS Brains from mechanically ventilated mice were harvested, and signals of apoptosis and alterations in the Akt survival pathway were studied. These measurements were repeated in vagotomized or haloperidol-treated mice, and in animals intracerebroventricularly injected with selective dopamine-receptor blockers. Hippocampal slices were cultured and treated with micromolar concentrations of dopamine, with or without dopamine receptor blockers. Last, levels of dysbindin, a regulator of the membrane availability of dopamine receptors, were assessed in the experimental model and in brain samples from ventilated patients. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Mechanical ventilation triggers hippocampal apoptosis as a result of type 2 dopamine receptor activation in response to vagal signaling. Activation of these receptors blocks the Akt/GSK3β prosurvival pathway and activates the apoptotic cascade, as demonstrated in vivo and in vitro. Vagotomy, systemic haloperidol, or intracerebroventricular raclopride (a type 2 dopamine receptor blocker) ameliorated this effect. Moreover, ventilation induced a concomitant change in the expression of dysbindin-1C. These results were confirmed in brain samples from ventilated patients. CONCLUSIONS These results prove the existence of a pathogenic mechanism of lung stretch-induced hippocampal apoptosis that could explain the neurological changes in ventilated patients and may help to identify novel therapeutic approaches.


Journal of Molecular Medicine | 2014

Defective autophagy impairs ATF3 activity and worsens lung injury during endotoxemia.

Alina Aguirre; Inés López-Alonso; Adrián González-López; Laura Amado-Rodríguez; Estefanía Batalla-Solís; Aurora Astudillo; Jorge Blázquez-Prieto; Álvaro F. Fernández; José A. Galván; Claudia C. dos Santos; Guillermo M. Albaiceta

Autophagy has emerged as a key regulator of the inflammatory response. To examine the role of autophagy in the development of organ dysfunction during endotoxemia, wild-type and autophagy-deficient (Atg4b-null) mice were challenged with lipopolysaccharide. Animals lacking Atg4b showed increased mortality after endotoxemia. Among the different organs studied, only the lungs showed significant differences between genotypes, with increased damage in mutant animals. Autophagy was activated in lungs from wild-type, LPS-treated mice. Similarly, human bronchial cells show an increased autophagy when exposed to serum from septic patients. We found an increased inflammatory response (increased neutrophilic infiltration, higher levels of Il6, Il12p40, and Cxcl2) in the lungs from knockout mice and identified perinuclear sequestration of the anti-inflammatory transcription factor ATF3 as the putative mechanism responsible for the differences between genotypes. Finally, induction of autophagy by starvation before LPS exposure resulted in a dampened pulmonary response to LPS in wild-type, but not knockout, mice. Similar results were found in human bronchial cells exposed to LPS. Our results demonstrate the central role of autophagy in the regulation of the lung response to endotoxemia and sepsis and its potential modulation by nutrition.Key messagesEndotoxemia and sepsis trigger autophagy in lung tissue.Defective autophagy increases mortality and lung inflammation after endotoxemia.Impairment of autophagy results is perinuclear ATF3 sequestration.Starvation ameliorates lung injury by an autophagy-dependent mechanism.


PLOS ONE | 2012

MMP-8 deficiency increases TLR/RAGE ligands S100A8 and S100A9 and exacerbates lung inflammation during endotoxemia.

Adrián González-López; Alina Aguirre; Inés López-Alonso; Laura Amado; Aurora Astudillo; María Soledad Fernández-García; María F. Suárez; Estefanía Batalla-Solís; Enrique Colado; Guillermo M. Albaiceta

Matrix metalloproteinase-8, released mainly from neutrophils, is a critical regulator of the inflammatory response by its ability to cleave multiple mediators. Herein, we report the results of a model of endotoxemia after intraperitoneal LPS injection in mice lacking MMP-8 and their wildtype counterparts. Control, saline-treated animals showed no differences between genotypes. However, there was an increased lung inflammatory response, with a prominent neutrophilic infiltration in mutant animals after LPS treatment. Using a proteomic approach, we identify alarmins S100A8 and S100A9 as two of the main differences between genotypes. Mice lacking MMP-8 showed a significant increase in these two molecules in lung homogenates, but not in spleen and serum. Mice lacking MMP-8 also showed an increase in MIP-1α levels and a marked activation of the non-canonical NF-κB pathway, with no differences in CXC-chemokines such as MIP-2 or LIX. These results show that MMP-8 can modulate the levels of S100A8 and S100A9 and its absence promotes the lung inflammatory response during endotoxemia.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2015

Exposure to mechanical ventilation promotes tolerance to ventilator-induced lung injury by Ccl3 downregulation

Jorge Blázquez-Prieto; Inés López-Alonso; Laura Amado-Rodríguez; Estefanía Batalla-Solís; Adrián González-López; Guillermo M. Albaiceta

Inflammation plays a key role in the development of ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI). Preconditioning with a previous exposure can damp the subsequent inflammatory response. Our objectives were to demonstrate that tolerance to VILI can be induced by previous low-pressure ventilation, and to identify the molecular mechanisms responsible for this phenomenon. Intact 8- to 12-wk-old male CD1 mice were preconditioned with 90 min of noninjurious ventilation [peak pressure 17 cmH2O, positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) 2 cmH2O] and extubated. Seven days later, preconditioned mice and intact controls were submitted to injurious ventilation (peak pressure 20 cmH2O, PEEP 0 cmH2O) for 2 h to induce VILI. Preconditioned mice showed lower histological lung injury scores, bronchoalveolar lavage albumin content, and lung neutrophilic infiltration after injurious ventilation, with no differences in Il6 or Il10 expression. Microarray analyses revealed a downregulation of Calcb, Hspa1b, and Ccl3, three genes related to tolerance phenomena, in preconditioned animals. Among the previously identified genes, only Ccl3, which encodes the macrophage inflammatory protein 1 alpha (MIP-1α), showed significant differences between intact and preconditioned mice after high-pressure ventilation. In separate, nonconditioned animals, treatment with BX471, a specific blocker of CCR1 (the main receptor for MIP-1α), decreased lung damage and neutrophilic infiltration caused by high-pressure ventilation. We conclude that previous exposure to noninjurious ventilation induces a state of tolerance to VILI. Downregulation of the chemokine gene Ccl3 could be the mechanism responsible for this effect.


Journal of Molecular Medicine | 2017

Matrix metalloproteinase-14 triggers an anti-inflammatory proteolytic cascade in endotoxemia

Alina Aguirre; Jorge Blázquez-Prieto; Inés López-Alonso; Estefanía Batalla-Solís; Adrián González-López; Moisés Sánchez-Pérez; Carlos Mayoral-Garcia; Ana Gutiérrez-Fernández; Guillermo M. Albaiceta

AbstractᅟMatrix metalloproteinases can modulate the inflammatory response through processing of cyto- and chemokines. Among them, MMP-14 is a non-dispensable collagenase responsible for the activation of other enzymes, triggering a proteolytic cascade. To identify the role of MMP-14 during the pro-inflammatory response, wildtype and Mmp14−/− mice were challenged with lipopolysaccharide. MMP-14 levels decreased after endotoxemia. Mutant animals showed 100% mortality, compared to 50% in wildtype mice. The increased mortality was related to a more severe lung injury, an impaired lung MMP-2 activation, and increased levels of the alarmin S100A9. There were no differences in the expression of other mediators including Il6, Cxcl2, Tgfb, Il10, or S100a8. A similar result was observed in lung explants of both genotypes cultured in presence of lipopolysaccharide. In this ex vivo model, exogenous activated MMP-2 ameliorated the observed increase in alarmins. Samples from septic patients showed a decrease in serum MMP-14 and activated MMP-2 compared to non-septic critically ill patients. These results demonstrate that the MMP-14-MMP-2 axis is downregulated during sepsis, leading to a proinflammatory response involving S100A9 and a more severe lung injury. This anti-inflammatory role of MMP-14 could have a therapeutic value in sepsis.Key messages• MMP-14 levels decrease in lungs from endotoxemic mice and serum from septic patients.• Mmp14−/− mice show increased lung injury and mortality following endotoxemia.• Absence of Mmp14 decreases activated MMP-2 and increases S100A9 levels in lung tissue.• MMP-14 ameliorates inflammation by promoting S100A9 cleavage by activated MMP-2.


Intensive Care Medicine | 2012

Lung strain and biological response in mechanically ventilated patients

Adrián González-López; Emilio García-Prieto; Estefanía Batalla-Solís; Laura Amado-Rodríguez; Noelia Avello; Lluis Blanch; Guillermo M. Albaiceta


Respiratory Research | 2013

Anti-inflammatory effects of clarithromycin in ventilator-induced lung injury.

Laura Amado-Rodríguez; Adrián González-López; Inés López-Alonso; Alina Aguirre; Aurora Astudillo; Estefanía Batalla-Solís; Jorge Blázquez-Prieto; Emilio García-Prieto; Guillermo M. Albaiceta

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Alina Aguirre

Universidad de las Américas Puebla

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