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Dive into the research topics where Estefanía Núñez is active.

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Featured researches published by Estefanía Núñez.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2011

A robust method for quantitative high-throughput analysis of proteomes by 18O labeling

Elena Bonzón-Kulichenko; Daniel Pérez-Hernández; Estefanía Núñez; Pablo Martínez-Acedo; Pedro Navarro; Marco Trevisan-Herraz; María del Carmen Ramos; Saleta Sierra; Sara Martínez-Martínez; Marisol Ruiz-Meana; Elizabeth Miró-Casas; David Garcia-Dorado; Juan Miguel Redondo; Javier S. Burgos; Jesús Vázquez

MS-based quantitative proteomics plays an increasingly important role in biological and medical research and the development of these techniques remains one of the most important challenges in mass spectrometry. Numerous stable isotope labeling approaches have been proposed. However, and particularly in the case of 18O-labeling, a standard protocol of general applicability is still lacking, and statistical issues associated to these methods remain to be investigated. In this work we present an improved high-throughput quantitative proteomics method based on whole proteome concentration by SDS-PAGE, optimized in-gel digestion, peptide 18O-labeling, and separation by off-gel isoelectric focusing followed by liquid chromatography-LIT-MS. We demonstrate that the off-gel technique is fully compatible with 18O peptide labeling in any pH range. A recently developed statistical model indicated that partial digestions and methionine oxidation do not alter protein quantification and that variances at the scan, peptide, and protein levels are stable and reproducible in a variety of proteomes of different origin. We have also analyzed the dynamic range of quantification and demonstrated the practical utility of the method by detecting expression changes in a model of activation of Jurkat T-cells. Our protocol provides a general approach to perform quantitative proteomics by 18O-labeling in high-throughput studies, with the added value that it has a validated statistical model for the null hypothesis. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report where a general protocol for stable isotope labeling is tested in practice using a collection of samples and analyzed at this degree of statistical detail.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2009

Statistical Model to Analyze Quantitative Proteomics Data Obtained by 18O/16O Labeling and Linear Ion Trap Mass Spectrometry Application to the Study of Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor-induced Angiogenesis in Endothelial Cells

Inmaculada Jorge; Pedro Navarro; Pablo Martínez-Acedo; Estefanía Núñez; Horacio Serrano; Arantzazu Alfranca; Juan Miguel Redondo; Jesús Vázquez

Statistical models for the analysis of protein expression changes by stable isotope labeling are still poorly developed, particularly for data obtained by 16O/18O labeling. Besides large scale test experiments to validate the null hypothesis are lacking. Although the study of mechanisms underlying biological actions promoted by vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) on endothelial cells is of considerable interest, quantitative proteomics studies on this subject are scarce and have been performed after exposing cells to the factor for long periods of time. In this work we present the largest quantitative proteomics study to date on the short term effects of VEGF on human umbilical vein endothelial cells by 18O/16O labeling. Current statistical models based on normality and variance homogeneity were found unsuitable to describe the null hypothesis in a large scale test experiment performed on these cells, producing false expression changes. A random effects model was developed including four different sources of variance at the spectrum-fitting, scan, peptide, and protein levels. With the new model the number of outliers at scan and peptide levels was negligible in three large scale experiments, and only one false protein expression change was observed in the test experiment among more than 1000 proteins. The new model allowed the detection of significant protein expression changes upon VEGF stimulation for 4 and 8 h. The consistency of the changes observed at 4 h was confirmed by a replica at a smaller scale and further validated by Western blot analysis of some proteins. Most of the observed changes have not been described previously and are consistent with a pattern of protein expression that dynamically changes over time following the evolution of the angiogenic response. With this statistical model the 18O labeling approach emerges as a very promising and robust alternative to perform quantitative proteomics studies at a depth of several thousand proteins.


Cell Reports | 2016

The CoQH2/CoQ Ratio Serves as a Sensor of Respiratory Chain Efficiency

Adela Guarás; Ester Perales-Clemente; Enrique Calvo; Rebeca Acín-Pérez; Marta Loureiro-Lopez; Claire Pujol; Isabel Martínez-Carrascoso; Estefanía Núñez; Fernando García-Marqués; M. A. C. Rodríguez-Hernández; Ana Cortés; Francisca Diaz; Acisclo Pérez-Martos; Carlos T. Moraes; Patricio Fernández-Silva; Aleksandra Trifunovic; Plácido Navas; Jesús Vázquez; José Antonio Enríquez

Electrons feed into the mitochondrial electron transport chain (mETC) from NAD- or FAD-dependent enzymes. A shift from glucose to fatty acids increases electron flux through FAD, which can saturate the oxidation capacity of the dedicated coenzyme Q (CoQ) pool and result in the generation of reactive oxygen species. To prevent this, the mETC superstructure can be reconfigured through the degradation of respiratory complex I, liberating associated complex III to increase electron flux via FAD at the expense of NAD. Here, we demonstrate that this adaptation is driven by the ratio of reduced to oxidized CoQ. Saturation of CoQ oxidation capacity induces reverse electron transport from reduced CoQ to complex I, and the resulting local generation of superoxide oxidizes specific complex I proteins, triggering their degradation and the disintegration of the complex. Thus, CoQ redox status acts as a metabolic sensor that fine-tunes mETC configuration in order to match the prevailing substrate profile.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2014

General statistical framework for quantitative proteomics by stable isotope labeling

Pedro Navarro; Marco Trevisan-Herraz; Elena Bonzón-Kulichenko; Estefanía Núñez; Pablo Martínez-Acedo; Daniel Pérez-Hernández; Inmaculada Jorge; Raquel Mesa; Enrique Calvo; Montserrat Carrascal; María Luisa Hernáez; Fernando García; José Antonio Bárcena; Keith Ashman; Joaquín Abián; Concha Gil; Juan Miguel Redondo; Jesús Vázquez

The combination of stable isotope labeling (SIL) with mass spectrometry (MS) allows comparison of the abundance of thousands of proteins in complex mixtures. However, interpretation of the large data sets generated by these techniques remains a challenge because appropriate statistical standards are lacking. Here, we present a generally applicable model that accurately explains the behavior of data obtained using current SIL approaches, including (18)O, iTRAQ, and SILAC labeling, and different MS instruments. The model decomposes the total technical variance into the spectral, peptide, and protein variance components, and its general validity was demonstrated by confronting 48 experimental distributions against 18 different null hypotheses. In addition to its general applicability, the performance of the algorithm was at least similar than that of other existing methods. The model also provides a general framework to integrate quantitative and error information fully, allowing a comparative analysis of the results obtained from different SIL experiments. The model was applied to the global analysis of protein alterations induced by low H₂O₂ concentrations in yeast, demonstrating the increased statistical power that may be achieved by rigorous data integration. Our results highlight the importance of establishing an adequate and validated statistical framework for the analysis of high-throughput data.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2012

A Novel Strategy for Global Analysis of the Dynamic Thiol Redox Proteome

Pablo Martínez-Acedo; Estefanía Núñez; Francisco J. Sánchez Gómez; Margoth Moreno; Elena Ramos; Alicia Izquierdo-Álvarez; Elisabet Miro-Casas; Raquel Mesa; Patricia Rodríguez; Antonio Martínez-Ruiz; David García Dorado; Santiago Lamas; Jesús Vázquez

Nitroxidative stress in cells occurs mainly through the action of reactive nitrogen and oxygen species (RNOS) on protein thiol groups. Reactive nitrogen and oxygen species-mediated protein modifications are associated with pathophysiological states, but can also convey physiological signals. Identification of Cys residues that are modified by oxidative stimuli still poses technical challenges and these changes have never been statistically analyzed from a proteome-wide perspective. Here we show that GELSILOX, a method that combines a robust proteomics protocol with a new computational approach that analyzes variance at the peptide level, allows a simultaneous analysis of dynamic alterations in the redox state of Cys sites and of protein abundance. GELSILOX permits the characterization of the major endothelial redox targets of hydrogen peroxide in endothelial cells and reveals that hypoxia induces a significant increase in the status of oxidized thiols. GELSILOX also detected thiols that are redox-modified by ischemia-reperfusion in heart mitochondria and demonstrated that these alterations are abolished in ischemia-preconditioned animals.


Cell Death and Disease | 2014

Defective sarcoplasmic reticulum-mitochondria calcium exchange in aged mouse myocardium.

Celia Fernandez-Sanz; Marisol Ruiz-Meana; Elisabet Miro-Casas; Estefanía Núñez; Jose M. Castellano; Marta Loureiro; Ignasi Barba; M Poncelas; Antonio Rodríguez-Sinovas; Jesús Vázquez; David Garcia-Dorado

Mitochondrial alterations are critically involved in increased vulnerability to disease during aging. We investigated the contribution of mitochondria–sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) communication in cardiomyocyte functional alterations during aging. Heart function (echocardiography) and ATP/phosphocreatine (NMR spectroscopy) were preserved in hearts from old mice (>20 months) with respect to young mice (5–6 months). Mitochondrial membrane potential and resting O2 consumption were similar in mitochondria from young and old hearts. However, maximal ADP-stimulated O2 consumption was specifically reduced in interfibrillar mitochondria from aged hearts. Second generation proteomics disclosed an increased mitochondrial protein oxidation in advanced age. Because energy production and oxidative status are regulated by mitochondrial Ca2+, we investigated the effect of age on mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake. Although no age-dependent differences were found in Ca2+ uptake kinetics in isolated mitochondria, mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake secondary to SR Ca2+ release was significantly reduced in cardiomyocytes from old hearts, and this effect was associated with decreased NAD(P)H regeneration and increased mitochondrial ROS upon increased contractile activity. Immunofluorescence and proximity ligation assay identified the defective communication between mitochondrial voltage-dependent anion channel and SR ryanodine receptor (RyR) in cardiomyocytes from aged hearts associated with altered Ca2+ handling. Age-dependent alterations in SR Ca2+ transfer to mitochondria and in Ca2+ handling could be reproduced in cardiomyoctes from young hearts after interorganelle disruption with colchicine, at concentrations that had no effect in aged cardiomyocytes or isolated mitochondria. Thus, defective SR–mitochondria communication underlies inefficient interorganelle Ca2+ exchange that contributes to energy demand/supply mistmach and oxidative stress in the aged heart.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

Na+/K+-ATPase Is a New Interacting Partner for the Neuronal Glycine Transporter GlyT2 That Downregulates Its Expression In Vitro and In Vivo

J. de Juan-Sanz; Estefanía Núñez; L. Villarejo-Lopez; Daniel Pérez-Hernández; A.E. Rodriguez-Fraticelli; Beatriz López-Corcuera; Jesús Vázquez; Carmen Aragón

The neuronal glycine transporter GlyT2 plays a fundamental role in the glycinergic neurotransmission by recycling the neurotransmitter to the presynaptic terminal. GlyT2 is the main supplier of glycine for vesicle refilling, a process that is absolutely necessary to preserve quantal glycine content in synaptic vesicles. Alterations in GlyT2 activity modify glycinergic neurotransmission and may underlie several neuromuscular disorders, such as hyperekplexia, myoclonus, dystonia, and epilepsy. Indeed, mutations in the gene encoding GlyT2 are the main presynaptic cause of hyperekplexia in humans and produce congenital muscular dystonia type 2 (CMD2) in Belgian Blue cattle. GlyT2 function is strictly coupled to the sodium electrochemical gradient actively generated by the Na+/K+-ATPase (NKA). GlyT2 cotransports 3Na+/Cl−/glycine generating large rises of Na+ inside the presynaptic terminal that must be efficiently reduced by the NKA to preserve Na+ homeostasis. In this work, we have used high-throughput mass spectrometry to identify proteins interacting with GlyT2 in the CNS. NKA was detected as a putative candidate and through reciprocal coimmunoprecipitations and immunocytochemistry analyses the association between GlyT2 and NKA was confirmed. NKA mainly interacts with the raft-associated active pool of GlyT2, and low and high levels of the specific NKA ligand ouabain modulate the endocytosis and total expression of GlyT2 in neurons. The ouabain-mediated downregulation of GlyT2 also occurs in vivo in two different systems: zebrafish embryos and adult rats, indicating that this NKA-mediated regulatory mechanism is evolutionarily conserved and may play a relevant role in the physiological control of inhibitory glycinergic neurotransmission.


Proteomics | 2011

Quantitative proteomics by 2‐DE, 16O/18O labelling and linear ion trap mass spectrometry analysis of lymph nodes from piglets inoculated by porcine circovirus type 2

M. Ramírez-Boo; Estefanía Núñez; Inmaculada Jorge; Pedro Navarro; Lana T. Fernandes; Joaquim Segalés; Juan J. Garrido; Jesús Vázquez; Angela Moreno

Porcine circovirus type 2 (PCV2) has been identified as the essential causal agent of postweaning multisystemic wasting syndrome. However, little is known regarding the mechanism(s) underlying the pathogenesis of PCV2‐induced disease and the interaction of the virus with the host immune system. Here, we present a proteomics study on inguinal lymph nodes of piglets inoculated with PCV2, in order to better understand the pathogenesis of postweaning multisystemic wasting syndrome and the pathways might be affected after infection. We used two proteomics strategies, 2‐DE and 1‐DE followed by 16O/18O peptide labelling and peptide identification and quantification by MS. More than 100 proteins were found to be differentially regulated and the results obtained by the two strategies were fairly concordant but also complementary, the 18O labelling approach being a more robust alternative. Analysis of these proteins by systems biology tools revealed the implication of acute phase response and NrF2‐mediated oxidative stress, suggesting a putative role for these pathways in the pig immune response. Besides, CD81 was found to be up‐regulated, suggesting a possible role in the internalization of the virus. The use of proteomics technologies together with biology analysis systems opens up the way to gain more exhaustive and systematic knowledge of virus–pathogen interactions.


Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine | 2016

New protein–protein interactions of mitochondrial connexin 43 in mouse heart

Amanda Denuc; Estefanía Núñez; Enrique Calvo; Marta Loureiro; Elisabet Miro-Casas; Adela Guarás; Jesús Vázquez; David Garcia-Dorado

Connexin 43 (Cx43), the gap junction protein involved in cell‐to‐cell coupling in the heart, is also present in the subsarcolemmal fraction of cardiomyocyte mitochondria. It has been described to regulate mitochondrial potassium influx and respiration and to be important for ischaemic preconditioning protection, although the molecular effectors involved are not fully characterized. In this study, we looked for potential partners of mitochondrial Cx43 in an attempt to identify new molecular pathways for cardioprotection. Mass spectrometry analysis of native immunoprecipitated mitochondrial extracts showed that Cx43 interacts with several proteins related with mitochondrial function and metabolism. Among them, we selected for further analysis only those present in the subsarcolemmal mitochondrial fraction and known to be related with the respiratory chain. Apoptosis‐inducing factor (AIF) and the beta‐subunit of the electron‐transfer protein (ETFB), two proteins unrelated to date with Cx43, fulfilled these conditions, and their interaction with Cx43 was proven by direct and reverse co‐immunoprecipitation. Furthermore, a previously unknown molecular interaction between AIF and ETFB was established, and protein content and sub‐cellular localization appeared to be independent from the presence of Cx43. Our results identify new protein–protein interactions between AIF‐Cx43, ETFB‐Cx43 and AIF‐ETFB as possible players in the regulation of the mitochondrial redox state.


Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2015

Altered FoF1 ATP synthase and susceptibility to mitochondrial permeability transition pore during ischaemia and reperfusion in aging cardiomyocytes

Celia Fernandez-Sanz; Marisol Ruiz-Meana; Jose M. Castellano; Elisabet Miro-Casas; Estefanía Núñez; Javier Inserte; Jesús Vázquez; David Garcia-Dorado

Aging is a major determinant of the incidence and severity of ischaemic heart disease. Preclinical information suggests the existence of intrinsic cellular alterations that contribute to ischaemic susceptibility in senescent myocardium, by mechanisms not well established. We investigated the role of altered mitochondrial function in the adverse effect of aging. Isolated perfused hearts from old mice (> 20 months) displayed increased ischaemia-reperfusion injury as compared to hearts from adult mice (6 months) despite delayed onset of ischaemic rigor contracture. In cardiomyocytes from aging hearts there was a more rapid decline of mitochondrial membrane potential (Δψm) as compared to young ones, but ischaemic rigor shortening was also delayed. Transient recovery of Δψm observed during ischaemia, secondary to the reversal of mitochondrial FoF1 ATP synthase to ATPase mode, was markedly reduced in aging cardiomyocytes. Proteomic analysis demonstrated increased oxidation of different subunits of ATP synthase. Altered bionergetics in aging cells was associated with reduced mitochondrial calcium uptake and more severe cytosolic calcium overload during ischaemia-reperfusion. Despite attenuated ROS burst and mitochondrial calcium overload, mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mPTP) opening and cell death was increased in reperfused aged cells. In vitro studies demonstrated a significantly reduced calcium retention capacity in interfibrillar mitochondria from aging hearts. Our results identify altered FoF1 ATP synthase and increased sensitivity of mitochondria to undergo mPTP opening as important determinants of the reduced tolerance to ischaemia-reperfusion in aging hearts. Because ATP synthase has been proposed to conform mPTP, it is tempting to hypothesise that oxidation of ATP synthase underlie both phenomena.

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Jesús Vázquez

Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares

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Pablo Martínez-Acedo

Spanish National Research Council

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Daniel Pérez-Hernández

Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares

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Inmaculada Jorge

Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares

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David Garcia-Dorado

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Elisabet Miro-Casas

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Elena Bonzón-Kulichenko

Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares

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Marisol Ruiz-Meana

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Juan Miguel Redondo

Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares

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