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Dive into the research topics where Eva María Camacho is active.

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Featured researches published by Eva María Camacho.


Nature Methods | 2007

In vivo gene regulation in Salmonella spp. by a salicylate-dependent control circuit

José Luis Royo; Pablo D. Becker; Eva María Camacho; Angel Cebolla; Claudia Link; Eduardo Santero; Carlos A. Guzmán

Systems allowing tightly regulated expression of prokaryotic genes in vivo are important for performing functional studies of bacterial genes in host-pathogen interactions and establishing bacteria-based therapies. We integrated a regulatory control circuit activated by acetyl salicylic acid (ASA) in attenuated Salmonella enterica that carries an expression module with a gene of interest under control of the XylS2-dependent Pm promoter. This resulted in 20–150-fold induction ex vivo. The regulatory circuit was also efficiently induced by ASA when the bacteria resided in eukaryotic cells, both in vitro and in vivo. To validate the circuit, we administered Salmonella spp., carrying an expression module encoding the 5-fluorocytosine–converting enzyme cytosine deaminase in the bacterial chromosome or in a plasmid, to mice with tumors. Induction with ASA before 5-fluorocytosine administration resulted in a significant reduction of tumor growth. These results demonstrate the usefulness of the regulatory control circuit to selectively switch on gene expression during bacterial infection.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Improved Expression Systems for Regulated Expression in Salmonella Infecting Eukaryotic Cells

Carlos Medina; Eva María Camacho; Amando Flores; Beatriz Mesa-Pereira; Eduardo Santero

In this work we describe a series of improvements to the Salmonella-based salicylate-inducible cascade expression system comprised of a plasmid-borne expression module, where target gene expression is driven by the Pm promoter governed by the XylS2 regulator, and a genome-integrated regulatory module controlled by the nahR/Psal system. We have constructed a set of high and low-copy number plasmids bearing modified versions of the expression module with a more versatile multiple cloning site and different combinations of the following elements: (i) the nasF transcriptional attenuator, which reduces basal expression levels, (ii) a strong ribosome binding site, and (iii) the Type III Secretion System (TTSS) signal peptide from the effector protein SspH2 to deliver proteins directly to the eukaryotic cytosol following bacterial infection of animal cells. We show that different expression module versions can be used to direct a broad range of protein production levels. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the efficient reduction of basal expression by the nasF attenuator allows the cloning of genes encoding highly cytotoxic proteins such as colicin E3 even in the absence of its immunity protein. Additionally, we show that the Salmonella TTSS is able to translocate most of the protein produced by this regulatory cascade to the cytoplasm of infected HeLa cells. Our results indicate that these vectors represent useful tools for the regulated overproduction of heterologous proteins in bacterial culture or in animal cells, for the cloning and expression of genes encoding toxic proteins and for pathogenesis studies.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Novel tools to analyze the function of Salmonella effectors show that SvpB ectopic expression induces cell cycle arrest in tumor cells.

Beatriz Mesa-Pereira; Carlos Medina; Eva María Camacho; Amando Flores; Eduardo Santero

In order to further characterize its role in pathogenesis and to establish whether its overproduction can lead to eukaryotic tumor cell death, Salmonella strains able to express its virulence factor SpvB (an ADP-ribosyl transferase enzyme) in a salicylate-inducible way have been constructed and analyzed in different eukaryotic tumor cell lines. To do so, the bacterial strains bearing the expression system have been constructed in a ∆purD background, which allows control of bacterial proliferation inside the eukaryotic cell. In the absence of bacterial proliferation, salicylate-induced SpvB production resulted in activation of caspases 3 and 7 and apoptotic cell death. The results clearly indicated that controlled SpvB production leads to F-actin depolimerization and either G1/S or G2/M phase arrest in all cell lines tested, thus shedding light on the function of SpvB in Salmonella pathogenesis. In the first place, the combined control of protein production by salicylate regulated vectors and bacterial growth by adenine concentration offers the possibility to study the role of Salmonella effectors during eukaryotic cells infection. In the second place, the salicylate-controlled expression of SpvB by the bacterium provides a way to evaluate the potential of other homologous or heterologous proteins as antitumor agents, and, eventually to construct novel potential tools for cancer therapy, given that Salmonella preferentially proliferates in tumors.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Engineering Salmonella as intracellular factory for effective killing of tumour cells

Eva María Camacho; Beatriz Mesa-Pereira; Carlos Medina; Amando Flores; Eduardo Santero

Salmonella have many desirable properties as antitumour-agent due to its ability to proliferate inside tumours and induce tumour regression. Additionally, this bacterium can be genetically engineered to deliver therapeutic proteins intratumourally. The main limitation of this approach is the efficient release of therapeutic molecules from intratumoural bacteria. Here we have developed an inducible autolysis system based in the lysis operon of the lambda phage that, in response to anhydrotetracycline, lysates Salmonella thus releasing its content. The system was combined with a salicylate cascade system that allows efficient production of therapeutic molecules in response to aspirin and with a sifA mutation that liberates bacteria from the vacuoles to a cytosolic location. The combination of these three elements makes this strain a putative powerful instrument in cancer treatment. We have used this engineered strain for the intracellular production and delivery of Cp53 peptide. The engineered strain is able to sequentially produce and release the cytotoxic peptide while proliferating inside tumour cells, thus inducing host cell death. Our results show that temporal separation of protein production from protein release is essential to efficiently kill tumour cells. The combined system is a further step in the engineering of more efficient bacteria for cancer therapy.


Microbial Biotechnology | 2015

Improved cytotoxic effects of Salmonella-producing cytosine deaminase in tumour cells

Beatriz Mesa-Pereira; Carlos Medina; Eva María Camacho; Amando Flores; Eduardo Santero

In order to increase the cytotoxic activity of a Salmonella strain carrying a salicylate‐inducible expression system that controls cytosine deaminase production, we have modified both, the vector and the producer bacterium. First, the translation rates of the expression module containing the Escherichia coli codA gene cloned under the control of the Pm promoter have been improved by using the T7 phage gene 10 ribosome binding site sequence and replacing the original GUG start codon by AUG. Second, to increase the time span in which cytosine deaminase may be produced by the bacteria in the presence of 5‐fluorocytosine, a 5‐fluorouracyl resistant Salmonella strain has been constructed by deleting its upp gene sequence. This new Salmonella strain shows increased cytosine deaminase activity and, after infecting tumour cell cultures, increased cytotoxic and bystander effects under standard induction conditions. In addition, we have generated a purD mutation in the producer strain to control its intracellular proliferation by the presence of adenine and avoid the intrinsic Salmonella cell death induction. This strategy allows the analysis and comparison of the cytotoxic effects of cytosine deaminase produced by different Salmonella strains in tumour cell cultures.


Archive | 2018

Molecular Methods to Analyze the Effect of Proteins Expressed by Salmonella During Its Intracellular Stage

Carlos Medina; Beatriz Mesa-Pereira; Eva María Camacho; Amando Flores; Eduardo Santero

Salmonella is probably the intracellular pathogen most extensively studied. Once inside the cell, this bacterium produces different proteins involved in the infection process known as effectors that translocate through its own secretion systems to the eukaryotic cytosol exerting diverse effects on the cell. Additionally, Salmonella can be engineered to include a protein expression system that, upon the addition of an inducer molecule, can produce heterologous proteins at a specific time during the course of the infection. The effect of such proteins on the eukaryotic (i.e., tumoral) cells can be detected following distinct approaches, which converts Salmonella in an effective tool to produce proteins inside eukaryotic cells with different purposes, such as killing tumoral cells. Here, we present diverse technics currently used to produce proteins by Salmonella inside tumoral cells and analyze its cytotoxic effect.


Biosaia: Revista de los másteres de Biotecnología Sanitaria y Biotecnología Ambiental, Industrial y Alimentaria | 2018

Regulation of gene expression and control of protein synthesis in different biotechnological process: Theory and Reality

Carlos Medina; Eva María Camacho; Amando Flores; Eduardo Santero


Archive | 2017

Implementation of an autolysis systems as a tool for functional metagenomics analysis

J. Cárcel Márquez; Eva María Camacho; Amando Flores; Eduardo Santero


Archive | 2017

En busca de bacterias degradadoras de medicamentos

Eva María Camacho; M. Aulestia; A. Andújar; Amando Flores; Carlos Medina; Eduardo Santero


Archive | 2016

Biodegradation of pharmaceuticals: Searching for bacteria and pathways

Amando Flores; Eva María Camacho; Carlos Medina; Eduardo Santero

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Eduardo Santero

Spanish National Research Council

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Amando Flores

Pablo de Olavide University

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Carlos Medina

Spanish National Research Council

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B. Mesa

Pablo de Olavide University

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José Luis Royo

Spanish National Research Council

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María Gallego

Spanish National Research Council

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Angel Cebolla

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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