Esther Diaz-Rodriguez
University of Santiago de Compostela
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Featured researches published by Esther Diaz-Rodriguez.
PLOS ONE | 2009
Montse Garcia-Lavandeira; Victor Quereda; Ignacio Flores; Carmen Sáez; Esther Diaz-Rodriguez; Miguel A. Japón; Aymee K. Ryan; Maria A. Blasco; Carlos Dieguez; Marcos Malumbres; Clara V. Alvarez
Background The adult endocrine pituitary is known to host several hormone-producing cells regulating major physiological processes during life. Some candidates to progenitor/stem cells have been proposed. However, not much is known about pituitary cell renewal throughout life and its homeostatic regulation during specific physiological changes, such as puberty or pregnancy, or in pathological conditions such as tumor development. Principal Findings We have identified in rodents and humans a niche of non-endocrine cells characterized by the expression of GFRa2, a Ret co-receptor for Neurturin. These cells also express b-Catenin and E-cadherin in an oriented manner suggesting a planar polarity organization for the niche. In addition, cells in the niche uniquely express the pituitary-specific transcription factor Prop1, as well as known progenitor/stem markers such as Sox2, Sox9 and Oct4. Half of these GPS (GFRa2/Prop1/Stem) cells express S-100 whereas surrounding elongated cells in contact with GPS cells express Vimentin. GFRa2+-cells form non-endocrine spheroids in culture. These spheroids can be differentiated to hormone-producing cells or neurons outlining the neuroectoderm potential of these progenitors. In vivo, GPSs cells display slow proliferation after birth, retain BrdU label and show long telomeres in its nuclei, indicating progenitor/stem cell properties in vivo. Significance Our results suggest the presence in the adult pituitary of a specific niche of cells characterized by the expression of GFRa2, the pituitary-specific protein Prop1 and stem cell markers. These GPS cells are able to produce different hormone-producing and neuron-like cells and they may therefore contribute to postnatal pituitary homeostasis. Indeed, the relative abundance of GPS numbers is altered in Cdk4-deficient mice, a model of hypopituitarism induced by the lack of this cyclin-dependent kinase. Thus, GPS cells may display functional relevance in the physiological expansion of the pituitary gland throughout life as well as protection from pituitary disease.
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2012
Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira; Carmen Sáez; Esther Diaz-Rodriguez; Sihara Perez-Romero; Ana Senra; Carlos Dieguez; Miguel A. Japón; Clara V. Alvarez
CONTEXT Adult stem cells maintain some markers expressed by embryonic stem cells and express other specific markers depending on the organ where they reside. Recently, stem/progenitor cells in the rodent and human pituitary have been characterized as expressing GFRA2/RET, PROP1, and stem cell markers such as SOX2 and OCT4 (GPS cells). OBJECTIVE Our objective was to detect other specific markers of the pituitary stem cells and to investigate whether craniopharyngiomas (CRF), a tumor potentially derived from Rathkes pouch remnants, express similar markers as normal pituitary stem cells. DESIGN We conducted mRNA and Western blot studies in pituitary extracts, and immunohistochemistry and immunofluorescence on sections from normal rat and human pituitaries and 20 CRF (18 adamantinomatous and two papillary). RESULTS Normal pituitary GPS stem cells localized in the marginal zone (MZ) express three key embryonic stem cell markers, SOX2, OCT4, and KLF4, in addition to SOX9 and PROP1 and β-catenin overexpression. They express the RET receptor and its GFRA2 coreceptor but also express the coreceptor GFRA3 that could be detected in the MZ of paraffin pituitary sections. CRF maintain the expression of SOX2, OCT4, KLF4, SOX9, and β-catenin. However, RET and GFRA3 expression was altered in CRF. In 25% (five of 20), both RET and GFRA3 were detected but not colocalized in the same cells. The other 75% (15 of 20) lose the expression of RET, GFRA3, or both proteins simultaneously. CONCLUSIONS Human pituitary adult stem/progenitor cells (GPS) located in the MZ are characterized by expression of embryonic stem cell markers SOX2, OCT4, and KLF4 plus the specific pituitary embryonic factor PROP1 and the RET system. Redundancy in RET coreceptor expression (GFRA2 and GFRA3) suggest an important systematic function in their physiological behavior. CRF share the stem cell markers suggesting a common origin with GPS. However, the lack of expression of the RET/GFRA system could be related to the cell mislocation and deregulated growth of CRF.
Oncogene | 2012
Esther Diaz-Rodriguez; Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira; Sihara Perez-Romero; Ana Senra; C Cañibano; Ignacio Palmero; M G Borrello; Carlos Dieguez; Clara V. Alvarez
Somatotrophs produce growth hormone (GH) and are the most abundant secretory cells of the pituitary. Somatotrophs express the transcription factor Pit-1 and the dependence receptor RET, its co-receptor GFRa1 and ligand GDNF. Pit-1 is a transcription factor essential for somatotroph proliferation and differentiation and for GH expression. GDNF represses excess Pit-1 expression preventing excess GH. In the absence of GDNF, RET behaves as a dependence receptor, becomes intracellularly processed and induces strong Pit-1 expression leading to p53 accumulation and apoptosis. How accumulation of Pit-1 leads to p53 expression is unknown. We have unveiled the relationship of Pit-1 with the p19Arf gene. There is a parallel correlation of RET processing, Pit-1 increase and ARF protein and mRNA expression. Interfering the pathway with RET, Pit-1 or p19Arf siRNA blocked apoptosis. We have found a Pit-1 DNA-binding element within the ARF promoter. Pit-1 directly regulates the CDKN2A locus and binds to the p19Arft promoter inducing p19Arf gene expression. The Pit-1-binding element is conserved in rodents and humans. RET/Pit-1 induces p19Arf/p53 and apoptosis not only in a somatotroph cell line but also in primary cultures of pituitary somatotrophs, where ARF siRNA interference also blocks p53 and apoptosis. Analyses of the somatotrophs in whole pituitaries supported the above findings. Thus Pit-1, a differentiation factor, activates the oncogene-induced apoptosis (OIA) pathway as oncogenes exerting a tight control in somatotrophs to prevent the disease due to excess of GH (insulin-resistance, metabolic disease, acromegaly).
Neuroendocrinology | 2015
Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira; Esther Diaz-Rodriguez; Dilek Bahar; Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles; Joana S. Rodrigues; Carlos Dieguez; Clara V. Alvarez
The recent demonstration using genetic tracing that in the adult pituitary stem cells are normally recruited from the niche in the marginal zone and differentiate into secretory cells in the adenopituitary has elegantly confirmed the proposal made when the pituitary stem cell niche was first discovered 5 years ago. Some of the early controversies have also been resolved. However, many questions remain, such as which are the markers that make a pituitary stem cell truly unique and the exact mechanisms that trigger recruitment from the niche. Little is known about the processes of commitment and differentiation once a stem cell has left the niche. Moreover, the acceptance that pituitary cells are renewed by stem cells implies the existence of regulated mechanisms of cell death in differentiated cells which must themselves be explained. The demonstration of an apoptotic pathway mediated by RET/caspase 3/Pit-1/Arf/p53 in normal somatotrophs is therefore an important step towards understanding how pituitary cell number is regulated. Further work will elucidate how the rates of the three processes of cell renewal, differentiation and apoptosis are balanced in tissue homeostasis after birth, but altered in pituitary hyperplasia in response to physiological stimuli such as puberty and lactation. Thus, we can aim to understand the mechanisms underlying human disease due to insufficient (hypopituitarism) or excess (pituitary tumor) cell numbers.
Frontiers of Hormone Research | 2010
Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira; Esther Diaz-Rodriguez; María E.R. García-Rendueles; Joana S. Rodrigues; Sihara Perez-Romero; Susana B. Bravo; Clara V. Alvarez
The RET receptor is a tyrosine kinase receptor implicated in kidney and neural development. In the adenopituitary RET and the co-receptor GFRa1 are expressed exclusively in the somatotrophs secreting GH. RET is implicated in a clever pathway to maintain at physiological levels the number of somatotrophs and the GH production. Thus, in absence of its ligand GDNF, RET induces apoptosis through massive expression of Pit-1 leading to p53 accumulation. In the presence of the ligand GDNF, RET activates its tyrosine kinase and promotes survival at the expense of reducing Pit-1 expression and downregulating GH. Recent data suggest that RET can also have a second role in pituitary plasticity through a second co-receptor GFRa2.
Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2004
Sonia Eiras; Jesus P. Camiña; Esther Diaz-Rodriguez; Oreste Gualillo; Felipe F. Casanueva
Leptin communicates the status of body energy stores to the central nervous system, regulating appetite, metabolic rate, and neuroendocrine functions. These effects are mediated by leptin binding and activation of the cognate cell surface receptor, a member of type I cytokine receptor family, which lead to the activation of receptor‐associated kinases of the Janus family. In this work, we demonstrate that leptin inhibits the l‐α‐lysophosphatidic acid (LPA)‐induced intracellular calcium mobilization in a dose‐dependent manner in HEK‐293 cells stably expressing full‐length leptin receptor (OB‐Rb). This action appears to be selective, as it was not observed when other signaling families, such as VIP or EGF, were studied. Pretreatment with the phosphatidylinositol 3‐kinase (PI3K) inhibitor, wortmannin, reversed the effect of leptin, pointing to PI3K as an intermediate molecule involved in this process. An unspecific protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor, staurosporine, disrupted the inhibitory action of leptin. Furthermore, intracellular levels of phosphorylated PKCε and PKCδ rose to a maximum 5 min after leptin administration, suggesting that these atypical PKC isoforms are involved in the observed cross‐desensitization. To define the regions of the OB‐Rb intracellular domain required for the cross‐desensitization, a series of C‐terminal deletion mutants were transfected into HEK‐293 cells. C‐terminal truncation that removed the consensus Box 3 motif of OB‐Rb prevented leptin action, indicating that heterologous desensitization over LPA was exerted at the level of this intracellular motif. Our date demonstrate that leptin plays a key role in the regulation of the earliest signaling pathways activated by growth factors, such as LPA, through a signaling pathway involving PKCδ and PKCε coupled to Box 3 motif of the OB‐Rb through PI3K.
Endocrinology | 2014
Esther Diaz-Rodriguez; Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles; Alejandro Ibanez-Costa; Ester Gutiérrez-Pascual; Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira; Alfonso Leal; Miguel A. Japón; Alfonso Soto; Eva Venegas; Francisco J. Tinahones; Juan Garcia-Arnes; Pedro Benito; María Ángeles Gálvez; Luis Jiménez-Reina; Ignacio Bernabeu; Carlos Dieguez; Raúl M. Luque; Justo P. Castaño; Clara V. Alvarez
Acromegaly is caused by somatotroph cell adenomas (somatotropinomas [ACROs]), which secrete GH. Human and rodent somatotroph cells express the RET receptor. In rodents, when normal somatotrophs are deprived of the RET ligand, GDNF (Glial Cell Derived Neurotrophic Factor), RET is processed intracellularly to induce overexpression of Pit1 [Transcription factor (gene : POUF1) essential for transcription of Pituitary hormones GH, PRL and TSHb], which in turn leads to p19Arf/p53-dependent apoptosis. Our purpose was to ascertain whether human ACROs maintain the RET/Pit1/p14ARF/p53/apoptosis pathway, relative to nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas (NFPAs). Apoptosis in the absence and presence of GDNF was studied in primary cultures of 8 ACROs and 3 NFPAs. Parallel protein extracts were analyzed for expression of RET, Pit1, p19Arf, p53, and phospho-Akt. When GDNF deprived, ACRO cells, but not NFPAs, presented marked level of apoptosis that was prevented in the presence of GDNF. Apoptosis was accompanied by RET processing, Pit1 accumulation, and p14ARF and p53 induction. GDNF prevented all these effects via activation of phospho-AKT. Overexpression of human Pit1 (hPit1) directly induced p19Arf/p53 and apoptosis in a pituitary cell line. Using in silico studies, 2 CCAAT/enhancer binding protein alpha (cEBPα) consensus-binding sites were found to be 100% conserved in mouse, rat, and hPit1 promoters. Deletion of 1 cEBPα site prevented the RET-induced increase in hPit1 promoter expression. TaqMan qRT-PCR (real time RT-PCR) for RET, Pit1, Arf, TP53, GDNF, steroidogenic factor 1, and GH was performed in RNA from whole ACRO and NFPA tumors. ACRO but not NFPA adenomas express RET and Pit1. GDNF expression in the tumors was positively correlated with RET and negatively correlated with p53. In conclusion, ACROs maintain an active RET/Pit1/p14Arf/p53/apoptosis pathway that is inhibited by GDNF. Disruption of GDNFs survival function might constitute a new therapeutic route in acromegaly.
Endocrinology | 2016
Omar Al-Massadi; Begoña Porteiro; Doreen Kuhlow; Markus Köhler; María J. Gonzalez-Rellan; Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira; Esther Diaz-Rodriguez; Mar Quiñones; Ana Senra; Clara V. Alvarez; Miguel López; Carlos Dieguez; Tim J. Schulz; Ruben Nogueiras
p53 is a well-known tumor suppressor that plays multiple biological roles, including the capacity to modulate metabolism at different levels. However, its metabolic role in brown adipose tissue (BAT) remains largely unknown. Herein we sought to investigate the physiological role of endogenous p53 in BAT and its implication on BAT thermogenic activity and energy balance. To this end, we generated and characterized global p53-null mice and mice lacking p53 specifically in BAT. Additionally we performed gain-and-loss-of-function experiments in the BAT of adult mice using virogenetic and pharmacological approaches. BAT was collected and analyzed by immunohistochemistry, thermography, real-time PCR, and Western blot. p53-deficient mice were resistant to diet-induced obesity due to increased energy expenditure and BAT activity. However, the deletion of p53 in BAT using a Myf5-Cre driven p53 knockout did not show any changes in body weight or the expression of thermogenic markers. The acute inhibition of p53 in the BAT of adult mice slightly increased body weight and inhibited BAT thermogenesis, whereas its overexpression in the BAT of diet-induced obese mice reduced body weight and increased thermogenesis. On the other hand, pharmacological activation of p53 improves body weight gain due to increased BAT thermogenesis by sympathetic nervous system in obese adult wild-type mice but not in p53(-/-) animals. These results reveal that p53 regulates BAT metabolism by coordinating body weight and thermogenesis, but these metabolic actions are tissue specific and also dependent on the developmental stage.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Marta García; Raquel Barrio; Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira; Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles; Adela Escudero; Esther Diaz-Rodriguez; Darya Gorbenko del Blanco; Ana I. Fernández; Yolanda B. de Rijke; Elena Vallespín; Julián Nevado; Pablo Lapunzina; Vilborg Matre; Patricia M. Hinkle; Anita Hokken-Koelega; Maria P. De Miguel; José Cameselle-Teijeiro; Manuel Nistal; Clara V. Alvarez; José C. Moreno
IGSF1 (Immunoglobulin Superfamily 1) gene defects cause central hypothyroidism and macroorchidism. However, the pathogenic mechanisms of the disease remain unclear. Based on a patient with a full deletion of IGSF1 clinically followed from neonate to adulthood, we investigated a common pituitary origin for hypothyroidism and macroorchidism, and the role of IGSF1 as regulator of pituitary hormone secretion. The patient showed congenital central hypothyroidism with reduced TSH biopotency, over-secretion of FSH at neonatal minipuberty and macroorchidism from 3 years of age. His markedly elevated inhibin B was unable to inhibit FSH secretion, indicating a status of pituitary inhibin B resistance. We show here that IGSF1 is expressed both in thyrotropes and gonadotropes of the pituitary and in Leydig and germ cells in the testes, but at very low levels in Sertoli cells. Furthermore, IGSF1 stimulates transcription of the thyrotropin-releasing hormone receptor (TRHR) by negative modulation of the TGFβ1-Smad signaling pathway, and enhances the synthesis and biopotency of TSH, the hormone secreted by thyrotropes. By contrast, IGSF1 strongly down-regulates the activin-Smad pathway, leading to reduced expression of FSHB, the hormone secreted by gonadotropes. In conclusion, two relevant molecular mechanisms linked to central hypothyroidism and macroorchidism in IGSF1 deficiency are identified, revealing IGSF1 as an important regulator of TGFβ/Activin pathways in the pituitary.
FEBS Letters | 2005
Esther Diaz-Rodriguez; Antonio Piñeiro; Felipe F. Casanueva; Jesus P. Camiña
Human retinal pigmented epithelial cell (hRPE) proliferation plays a significant role in various proliferative diseases associated to the retina that leads to loss of vision, such as proliferative vitreoretinopathy. In the current study, the role of the bovine vitreous lipid factor (bVLF) in hRPE cell proliferation has been investigated. bVLF is a bioactive lipid isolated from the bovine vitreous body with strong Ca2+‐mobilizing activity in fibroblast. In the first approach, the effects of bVLF on Ca2+‐mobilizing activity were investigated in hRPE. The results showed that bVLF induced, in a dose‐dependent manner, a Ca2+ mobilization from PA‐sensitive intracellular stores [non‐Ins(1,4,5)P3‐sensitive stores], in which extracellular Ca2+ participated. The increase in intracellular Ca2+ was associated with a dose‐dependent inhibiting effect on cell proliferation. At a dose of 10 μg/mL, bVLF caused a 26% or a 44% inhibition in hRPE cell proliferation during the 3‐ or the 6‐day culture periods, respectively. These effects appear to be specific in hRPE cells, since EFGR‐T17 fibroblast cells treated with equivalent amounts of bVLF did not show any inhibiting effects. This inhibitory action was not associated to apoptotic/necrotic processes. Furthermore, bVLF inhibited EGF‐, bFGF‐, IGF‐I‐, PDGF‐, HGF‐ and VEGF‐induced proliferation of the hRPE cells. Moreover, this inhibitory response was also observed in FBS‐induced hRPE cell proliferation. bVLF, at a concentration of 10 μg/mL, induced 16% inhibition of proliferation during a culture period of 3 days. This inhibitory action was greater during the 6‐day culture period, exceeding 40%. With regard to this action, the results showed that bVLF has a potent inhibitory effect on ERK1/2 activation, and plays a key role in the control of hRPE cell proliferation. These observations contribute to the knowledge of inhibitory factors responsible for keeping antiproliferative environment that preserve the RPE‐associated activities in normal states. It advances the interesting possibility that this factor or a factor with characteristics common to bVLF might be involved in the pathogenesis of abnormal proliferative eye processes.