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Dive into the research topics where Gabriel Bretones is active.

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Featured researches published by Gabriel Bretones.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2015

Myc and cell cycle control

Gabriel Bretones; M. Dolores Delgado; Javier León

Soon after the discovery of the Myc gene (c-Myc), it became clear that Myc expression levels tightly correlate to cell proliferation. The entry in cell cycle of quiescent cells upon Myc enforced expression has been described in many models. Also, the downregulation or inactivation of Myc results in the impairment of cell cycle progression. Given the frequent deregulation of Myc oncogene in human cancer it is important to dissect out the mechanisms underlying the role of Myc on cell cycle control. Several parallel mechanisms account for Myc-mediated stimulation of the cell cycle. First, most of the critical positive cell cycle regulators are encoded by genes induced by Myc. These Myc target genes include Cdks, cyclins and E2F transcription factors. Apart from its direct effects on the transcription, Myc is able to hyperactivate cyclin/Cdk complexes through the induction of Cdk activating kinase (CAK) and Cdc25 phosphatases. Moreover, Myc antagonizes the activity of cell cycle inhibitors as p21 and p27 through different mechanisms. Thus, Myc is able to block p21 transcription or to induce Skp2, a protein involved in p27 degradation. Finally, Myc induces DNA replication by binding to replication origins and by upregulating genes encoding proteins required for replication initiation. Myc also regulates genes involved in the mitotic control. A promising approach to treat tumors with deregulated Myc is the synthetic lethality based on the inhibition of Cdks. Thus, the knowledge of the Myc-dependent cell cycle regulatory mechanisms will help to discover new therapeutic approaches directed against malignancies with deregulated Myc. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Myc proteins in cell biology and pathology.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

SKP2 Oncogene Is a Direct MYC Target Gene and MYC Down-regulates p27KIP1 through SKP2 in Human Leukemia Cells

Gabriel Bretones; Juan C. Acosta; Juan M. Caraballo; Nuria Ferrándiz; M. Teresa Gomez-Casares; Marta Albajar; Rosa M. Blanco; Paula Ruiz; Wen-Chun Hung; M. Pilar Albero; Ignacio Pérez-Roger; Javier León

SKP2 is the ubiquitin ligase subunit that targets p27KIP1 (p27) for degradation. SKP2 is induced in the G1-S transit of the cell cycle, is frequently overexpressed in human cancer, and displays transformation activity in experimental models. Here we show that MYC induces SKP2 expression at the mRNA and protein levels in human myeloid leukemia K562 cells with conditional MYC expression. Importantly, in these systems, induction of MYC did not activate cell proliferation, ruling out SKP2 up-regulation as a consequence of cell cycle entry. MYC-dependent SKP2 expression was also detected in other cell types such as lymphoid, fibroblastic, and epithelial cell lines. MYC induced SKP2 mRNA expression in the absence of protein synthesis and activated the SKP2 promoter in luciferase reporter assays. With chromatin immunoprecipitation assays, MYC was detected bound to a region of human SKP2 gene promoter that includes E-boxes. The K562 cell line derives from human chronic myeloid leukemia. In a cohort of chronic myeloid leukemia bone marrow samples, we found a correlation between MYC and SKP2 mRNA levels. Analysis of cancer expression databases also indicated a correlation between MYC and SKP2 expression in lymphoma. Finally, MYC-induced SKP2 expression resulted in a decrease in p27 protein in K562 cells. Moreover, silencing of SKP2 abrogated the MYC-mediated down-regulation of p27. Our data show that SKP2 is a direct MYC target gene and that MYC-mediated SKP2 induction leads to reduced p27 levels. The results suggest the induction of SKP2 oncogene as a new mechanism for MYC-dependent transformation.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2008

Myc Inhibits p27-Induced Erythroid Differentiation of Leukemia Cells by Repressing Erythroid Master Genes without Reversing p27-Mediated Cell Cycle Arrest

Juan C. Acosta; Nuria Ferrándiz; Gabriel Bretones; Verónica Torrano; Rosa M. Blanco; Carlos Richard; Brenda C. O'Connell; John M. Sedivy; M. Dolores Delgado; Javier León

ABSTRACT Inhibition of differentiation has been proposed as an important mechanism for Myc-induced tumorigenesis, but the mechanisms involved are unclear. We have established a genetically defined differentiation model in human leukemia K562 cells by conditional expression of the cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk) inhibitor p27 (inducible by Zn2+) and Myc (activatable by 4-hydroxy-tamoxifen). Induction of p27 resulted in erythroid differentiation, accompanied by Cdk inhibition and G1 arrest. Interestingly, activation of Myc inhibited p27-mediated erythroid differentiation without affecting p27-mediated proliferation arrest. Microarray-based gene expression indicated that, in the presence of p27, Myc blocked the upregulation of several erythroid-cell-specific genes, including NFE2, JUNB, and GATA1 (transcription factors with a pivotal role in erythropoiesis). Moreover, Myc also blocked the upregulation of Mad1, a transcriptional antagonist of Myc that is able to induce erythroid differentiation. Cotransfection experiments demonstrated that Myc-mediated inhibition of differentiation is partly dependent on the repression of Mad1 and GATA1. In conclusion, this model demonstrates that Myc-mediated inhibition of differentiation depends on the regulation of a specific gene program, whereas it is independent of p27-mediated cell cycle arrest. Our results support the hypothesis that differentiation inhibition is an important Myc tumorigenic mechanism that is independent of cell proliferation.


Archive | 2013

MYC antagonizes imatinib-induced differentiation in chronic myeloid leukemia cells through downregulation of p27KIP1

Eva García-Alegría; Nuria Ferrándiz; Rosa M. Blanco; Dolors Vaqué; Gabriel Bretones; Juan M. Caraballo; María Pilar Sánchez-Bailón; M. Dolores Delgado; Jorge Martín-Pérez; Javier León

Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) progresses from a chronic to a blastic phase where the leukemic cells are proliferative and undifferentiated. The CML is nowadays successfully treated with BCR-ABL kinase inhibitors as imatinib and dasatinib. In the CML-derived K562 cell line, low concentrations of imatinib induce proliferative arrest and erythroid differentiation. We found that imatinib upregulated the cell cycle inhibitor p27KIP1 (p27) in a time- and -concentration dependent manner, and that the extent of imatinib-mediated differentiation was severely decreased in cells with depleted p27. MYC (c-Myc) is a transcription factor frequently deregulated in human cancer. MYC is overexpressed in untreated CML and is associated to poor response to imatinib. Using K562 sublines with conditional MYC expression (induced by Zn2+ or activated by 4-hydroxy-tamoxifen) we show that MYC prevented the erythroid differentiation induced by imatinib and dasatinib. The differentiation inhibition is not due to increased proliferation of MYC-expressing clones or enhanced apoptosis of differentiated cells. As p27 overexpression is reported to induce erythroid differentiation in K562, we explored the effect of MYC on imatinib-dependent induction of p27. We show that MYC abrogated the imatinib-induced upregulation of p27 concomitantly with the differentiation inhibition, suggesting that MYC inhibits differentiation by antagonizing the imatinib-mediated upregulation of p27. This effect occurs mainly by p27 protein destabilization. This was in part due to MYC-dependent induction of SKP2, a component of the ubiquitin ligase complex that targets p27 for degradation. The results suggest that, although MYC deregulation does not directly confer resistance to imatinib, it might be a factor that contributes to progression of CML through the inhibition of differentiation.


Molecular Cancer Research | 2008

c-Myc inhibits Ras-mediated differentiation of pheochromocytoma cells by blocking c-Jun up-regulation.

José P. Vaqué; Belén Fernández-Garcı́a; Pablo García-Sanz; Nuria Ferrándiz; Gabriel Bretones; Fernando Calvo; Piero Crespo; Maria Carmen Marin; Javier León

Although mutant Ras proteins were originally described as transforming oncoproteins, they induce growth arrest, senescence, and/or differentiation in many cell types. c-Myc is an oncogenic transcription factor that cooperates with Ras in cellular transformation and oncogenesis. However, the Myc-Ras relationship in cellular differentiation is largely unknown. Here, we have analyzed the effects of c-Myc on PC12-derived cells (UR61 cell line), harboring an inducible N-Ras oncogene. In these cells, Ras activation induces neuronal-like differentiation by a process involving c-Jun activation. We found that c-Myc inhibited Ras-mediated differentiation by a mechanism that involves the blockade of c-Jun induction in response to Ras signal. Accordingly, ectopically expressed c-Jun could bypass c-Myc impediment of Ras-induced differentiation and activator protein 1 activation. Interestingly, it did not rescue the proliferative arrest elicited by Ras and did not enhance the differentiation-associated apoptosis. The blockade of Ras-mediated induction of c-Jun takes place at the level of c-Jun proximal promoter. Mutational analysis revealed that c-Myc regions involved in DNA binding and transactivation are required to block differentiation and c-Jun induction. c-Myc does not seem to require Miz-1 to inhibit differentiation and block c-Jun induction. Furthermore, Max is not required for c-Myc activity, as UR61 cells lack a functional Max gene. c-Myc–inhibitory effect on the Ras/c-Jun connection is not restricted to UR61 cells as it can occur in other cell types as K562 or HEK293. In conclusion, we describe a novel interplay between c-Myc and c-Jun that controls the ability of Ras to trigger the differentiation program of pheochromocytoma cells. (Mol Cancer Res 2008;6(2):325–39)


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Transcription Factors Sp1 and p73 Control the Expression of the Proapoptotic Protein NOXA in the Response of Testicular Embryonal Carcinoma Cells to Cisplatin

Lara Grande; Gabriel Bretones; Manuel Rosa-Garrido; Eva M. Garrido-Martin; Teresa Hernández; Susana Fraile; Luisa María Botella; Enrique de Alava; August Vidal; Xavier Garcia del Muro; Alberto Villanueva; M. Dolores Delgado; Jose L. Fernandez-Luna

Background: There is little understanding of the mechanisms that explain why testicular germ cell tumors respond so well to chemotherapy. Results: Noxa is transcriptionally activated by KLF6 and TAp73 and repressed by Sp1 and ΔNp73, and its protein levels correlate with clinical prognosis. Conclusion: p73 isoforms and Sp1-like factors form a cisplatin-induced transcriptional network that regulate proapoptotic Noxa. Significance: This might help understand the transcriptional pathways of chemosensitivity. Testicular germ cell tumors (TGCTs) are highly responsive to and curable by cisplatin-based chemotherapy even in advanced stages. We have studied the molecular mechanisms involved in the induction of apoptosis in response to cisplatin, and found that proapoptotic Noxa is transcriptionally up-regulated following cisplatin exposure, even in the absence of p53, in NTERA2 cisplatin-sensitive cells but not in 1411HP-resistant cells. Blockade of Noxa reduced the apoptotic response of embryonal carcinoma (EC) NTERA2 cells to cisplatin. A detailed analysis of the Noxa promoter revealed that p73 and Sp1-like factors, Sp1 and KLF6, played key roles in the transcriptional control of this gene. Overexpression of TAp73 induced Noxa whereas the dominant negative isoform ΔNp73, reduced the levels of Noxa after cisplatin exposure in NTERA2 and 2102EP. Interestingly, down-regulation of Sp1 increased Noxa expression in response to cisplatin. However, blockade of KLF6 decreased cisplatin-induced up-regulation of Noxa in EC cell lines. In addition, tissue microarray analyses of TGCTs revealed that expression of Noxa correlates with good clinical prognosis in patients with embryonal carcinoma. Thus, our data show the transcriptional network that regulates Noxa in EC cells, which is key for their apoptotic response to cisplatin-based chemotherapy, and propose Noxa as a predictive factor of therapeutic response.


PLOS ONE | 2012

P21 as a transcriptional co-repressor of S-phase and mitotic control genes

Nuria Ferrándiz; Juan M. Caraballo; Lucía García-Gutiérrez; Vikram Devgan; Manuel Rodríguez-Paredes; M. Carmen Lafita; Gabriel Bretones; Andrea Quintanilla; M. Jose Muñoz-Alonso; Rosa M. Blanco; José C. Reyes; Neus Agell; M. Dolores Delgado; G. Paolo Dotto; Javier León

It has been previously described that p21 functions not only as a CDK inhibitor but also as a transcriptional co-repressor in some systems. To investigate the roles of p21 in transcriptional control, we studied the gene expression changes in two human cell systems. Using a human leukemia cell line (K562) with inducible p21 expression and human primary keratinocytes with adenoviral-mediated p21 expression, we carried out microarray-based gene expression profiling. We found that p21 rapidly and strongly repressed the mRNA levels of a number of genes involved in cell cycle and mitosis. One of the most strongly down-regulated genes was CCNE2 (cyclin E2 gene). Mutational analysis in K562 cells showed that the N-terminal region of p21 is required for repression of gene expression of CCNE2 and other genes. Chromatin immunoprecipitation assays indicated that p21 was bound to human CCNE2 and other p21-repressed genes gene in the vicinity of the transcription start site. Moreover, p21 repressed human CCNE2 promoter-luciferase constructs in K562 cells. Bioinformatic analysis revealed that the CDE motif is present in most of the promoters of the p21-regulated genes. Altogether, the results suggest that p21 exerts a repressive effect on a relevant number of genes controlling S phase and mitosis. Thus, p21 activity as inhibitor of cell cycle progression would be mediated not only by the inhibition of CDKs but also by the transcriptional down-regulation of key genes.


International Immunology | 2016

CD3ε recruits Numb to promote TCR degradation

Nadia Martín-Blanco; Daniel Jiménez Teja; Gabriel Bretones; Aldo Borroto; Michael Caraballo; Isabella Screpanti; Javier León; Balbino Alarcón; Matilde Canelles

Modulation of TCR signaling upon ligand binding is achieved by changes in the equilibrium between TCR degradation, recycling and synthesis; surprisingly, the molecular mechanism of such an important process is not fully understood. Here, we describe the role of a new player in the mediation of TCR degradation: the endocytic adaptor Numb. Our data show that Numb inhibition leads to abnormal intracellular distribution and defective TCR degradation in mature T lymphocytes. In addition, we find that Numb simultaneously binds to both Cbl and a site within CD3ε that overlaps with the Nck binding site. As a result, Cbl couples specifically to the CD3ε chain to mediate TCR degradation. The present study unveils a novel role of Numb that lies at the heart of TCR signaling initiation and termination.


European Journal of Cancer | 2014

304: Myc mediates the phosphorylation and degradation of p27 through activation of Cyclin A/CDK1

Lucía García-Gutiérrez; Gabriel Bretones; Ignacio Arechaga; David Santamaría; Mariano Barbacid; Javier León

Resumen del poster presentado en el 23rd Biennial Congress of the European Association for Cancer Research, celebrado del 5 al 8 de julio de 2014 en Munich (Alemania). Abstract publicado en: European Journal of Cancer 50(Suppl. 5): S72 (2014). ISSN: 0959-8049 DOI: 10.1016/S0959-8049(14)50270-5


Oncotarget | 2014

High p27 protein levels in chronic lymphocytic leukemia are associated to low Myc and Skp2 expression, confer resistance to apoptosis and antagonize Myc effects on cell cycle.

Juan M. Caraballo; Juan Carlos Acosta; Miguel A Cortés; Marta Albajar; M. Teresa Gomez-Casares; Ana Batlle-López; M Angeles Cuadrado; Arantza Onaindia; Gabriel Bretones; Javier Llorca; Miguel A. Piris; Dolors Colomer; Javier León

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Javier León

Spanish National Research Council

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Nuria Ferrándiz

Spanish National Research Council

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M. Dolores Delgado

Spanish National Research Council

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Rosa M. Blanco

Spanish National Research Council

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Juan M. Caraballo

Spanish National Research Council

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Lucía García-Gutiérrez

Spanish National Research Council

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