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Dive into the research topics where Galileo Escobedo is active.

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Featured researches published by Galileo Escobedo.


Journal of Parasitology | 2004

MOLECULAR MECHANISMS INVOLVED IN THE DIFFERENTIAL EFFECTS OF SEX STEROIDS ON THE REPRODUCTION AND INFECTIVITY OF TAENIA CRASSICEPS

Galileo Escobedo; Carlos Larralde; Anahí Chavarría; Marco Cerbón; Jorge Morales-Montor

The in vitro exposure of Taenia crassiceps cysticerci to 17-β estradiol (E2) and progesterone (P4) stimulated their reproduction and infectivity. Testosterone (T4) and dihydrotestosterone (DHT) inhibited their reproduction and reduced their motility and infectivity. E2 and P4 increased, whereas T4 and DHT reduced, the expression of parasite c-fos and c-jun and DNA synthesis. In vitro exposure of cysticerci to sex steroids before their inoculation into recipient noninfected mice resulted in large parasite loads when pretreated with E2 and P4 and in smaller loads when pretreated with T4 and DHT. To determine the possible molecular mechanisms by which sex steroids affect T. crassiceps, sex steroid receptors were amplified. Taenia crassiceps expressed estrogen receptors (both α and β isoforms) and androgen receptors but no P4 receptors. These results demonstrate that sex steroids act directly on parasite reproduction by binding to a classic and specific sex steroid receptor on the parasite. The differential response of cysticerci to sex steroids may also be involved in their ability to grow faster in the murine female or feminized male host. This is the first report of direct sex steroid effects on the parasite possibly through sex steroid receptors in the cysticerci.


Mediators of Inflammation | 2013

Serum IL-12 Is Increased in Mexican Obese Subjects and Associated with Low-Grade Inflammation and Obesity-Related Parameters

K. Suárez-Álvarez; L. Solís-Lozano; Sonia León-Cabrera; A. González-Chávez; G. Gómez-Hernández; M. S. Quiñones-Álvarez; A. E. Serralde-Zúñiga; Joselín Hernández-Ruiz; J. Ramírez-Velásquez; F. J. Galindo-González; J. C. Zavala-Castillo; M. A. De León-Nava; G. Robles-Díaz; Galileo Escobedo

Interleukin-(IL-) 12 has been recently suggested to participate during development of insulin resistance in obese mice. Nevertheless, serum IL-12 levels have not been accurately determined in overweight and obese humans. We thus studied serum concentrations of IL-12 in Mexican adult individuals, examining their relationship with low-grade inflammation and obesity-related parameters. A total of 147 healthy individuals, 43 normal weight, 61 overweight, and 43 obese subjects participated in the study. Circulating levels of IL-12, tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), leptin, insulin, glucose, total cholesterol, and triglyceride were measured after overnight fasting in all of the study subjects. Waist circumference and body fat percentage were recorded for all the participants. Serum IL-12 was significantly higher in overweight and obese individuals than in normal weight controls. Besides being strongly related with body mass index (r = 0.5154), serum IL-12 exhibited a significant relationship with abdominal obesity (r = 0.4481), body fat percentage (r = 0.5625), serum glucose (r = 0.3158), triglyceride (r = 0.3714), and TNF-α (r = 0.4717). Thus, serum levels of IL-12 are increased in overweight and obese individuals and show a strong relationship with markers of low-grade inflammation and obesity in the Mexican adult population. Further research is needed to understand the role of IL-12 in developing obesity-associated alterations in humans.


Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience | 2013

Hyperleptinemia is associated with parameters of low-grade systemic inflammation and metabolic dysfunction in obese human beings

Sonia Leon-Cabrera; Lourdes Solís-Lozano; Karina Suárez-Álvarez; Antonio González-Chávez; Yadira Lilián Béjar; Guillermo Robles-Díaz; Galileo Escobedo

Leptin is an adipose tissue-derived hormone that has been involved in hypothalamic and systemic inflammation, altered food-intake patterns, and metabolic dysfunction in obese mice. However, it remains unclear whether leptin has a relationship with parameters of systemic inflammation and metabolic dysfunction in humans. We thus evaluated in a cross-sectional study the circulating levels of leptin in 40 non-obese and 41 obese Mexican individuals, examining their relationship with tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), interleukin (IL) 12, IL-10, central obesity, serum glucose and insulin levels, and serum triglyceride and cholesterol concentrations. Circulating levels of leptin, TNF-α, IL-12, IL-10, and insulin were measured by ELISA, while concentrations of glucose, triglyceride, and cholesterol were determined by enzymatic assays. As expected, serum levels of leptin exhibited a significant elevation in obese individuals as compared to non-obese subjects, showing a clear association with increased body mass index (r = 0.4173), central obesity (r = 0.4678), and body fat percentage (r = 0.3583). Furthermore, leptin also showed a strong relationship with serum TNF-α (r = 0.6989), IL-12 (r = 0.3093), and IL-10 (r = −0.5691). Interestingly, leptin was also significantly related with high concentrations of fasting glucose (r = 0.5227) and insulin (r = 0.2229), as well as elevated levels of insulin resistance (r = 0.3611) and circulating triglyceride (r = 0.4135). These results suggest that hyperleptinemia is strongly associated with the occurrence of low-grade systemic inflammation and metabolic alteration in obese subjects. Further clinical research is still needed to determine whether hyperleptinemia may be a potential marker for recognizing the advent of obesity-related metabolic disorders in human beings.


Immunology Letters | 2016

Human monocytes and macrophages undergo M1-type inflammatory polarization in response to high levels of glucose

Israel Torres-Castro; Úrsula D. Arroyo-Camarena; Camilo P. Martínez-Reyes; Angélica Y. Gómez-Arauz; Yareth Dueñas-Andrade; Joselín Hernández-Ruiz; Yadira L. Béjar; Verónica Zaga-Clavellina; Jorge Morales-Montor; Luis I. Terrazas; Julia Kzhyshkowska; Galileo Escobedo

Emerging data suggest that elevated glucose may promote inflammatory activation of monocytic lineage cells with the ability to injure vascular endothelial tissue of diabetic patients, however evidence in primary human monocytes and macrophages is still insufficient. We investigated the effect of high glucose concentration on the inflammatory capacity of human macrophages in vitro and examined whether similar responses were detectable in circulating monocytes from prediabetic patients. Primary monocytes were isolated from healthy blood donors and differentiated into macrophages. Differentiated macrophages were exposed to normal levels of glucose (NG), high glucose (HG) or high mannitol as osmotic pressure control (OP) for three days. Using PCR, ELISA and flow cytometry, we found that HG macrophages showed overexpression of CD11c and inducible nitric oxide synthase as well as down-regulation of arginase-1 and interleukin (IL)-10 with respect to NG and OP macrophages. Consistent with in vitro results, circulating monocytes from hyperglycemic patients exhibited higher levels of CD11c and lower expression of CD206 than monocytes from normoglycemic controls. In subjects with hyperglycemia, elevation in CD11c(+) monocytes was associated with increased obesity, insulin resistance, and triglyceridemia as well as low serum IL-10. Our data suggest that human monocytes and macrophages undergo M1-like inflammatory polarization when exposed to high levels of glucose on in vitro culture conditions and in patients with hyperglycemia. These results demonstrate that excess glucose has direct effects on macrophage activation though the molecular mechanisms mediating such a response remain to be elucidated.


BioMed Research International | 2010

Progesterone induces scolex evagination of the human parasite Taenia solium: evolutionary implications to the host-parasite relationship.

Galileo Escobedo; Ignacio Camacho-Arroyo; Olivia Tania Hernández-Hernández; Pedro Ostoa-Saloma; Martín García-Varela; Jorge Morales-Montor

Taenia solium cysticercosis is a health problem in underdeveloped and developed countries. Sex hormones are involved in cysticercosis prevalence in female and male pigs. Here, we evaluated the effects of progesterone and its antagonist RU486 on scolex evagination, which is the initial step in the development of the adult worm. Interestingly, progesterone increased T. solium scolex evagination and worm growth, in a concentration-independent pattern. Progesterone effects could be mediated by a novel T. solium progesterone receptor (TsPR), since RU486 inhibits both scolex evagination and worm development induced by progesterone. Using RT-PCR and western blot, sequences related to progesterone receptor were detected in the parasite. A phylogenetic analysis reveals that TsPR is highly related to fish and amphibian progesterone receptors, whereas it has a distant relation with birds and mammals. Conclusively, progesterone directly acts upon T. solium cysticerci, possibly through its binding to a progesterone receptor synthesized by the parasite.


Neuroimmunomodulation | 2009

Neuroimmunoendocrine Modulation in the Host by Helminth Parasites: A Novel Form of Host-Parasite Coevolution?

Galileo Escobedo; Lorena López-Griego; Jorge Morales-Montor

Helminth parasites have evolved diverse molecular mechanisms that facilitate their establishment, growth and reproduction inside an immunologically hostile environment. Thus, the physiological interactions during the course of the immune response to helminths are complex. Infection induces antigen-specific recognition by the immune system, which is consequently charged with the responsibility of marshalling the appropriate effector responses necessary to destroy the parasite, or at the very least inhibit its progression. Obviously, the immune system should accomplish this task while minimizing collateral damage to the host. As our understanding of the neuroendocrine system grows, it has become increasingly clear that this complex network of neurotransmitters, hormones, and cytokines plays an important role in mediating immunity. Helminths present an especially complex relationship between pathogen and these physiological systems, with hormonally dependent host factors such as sex and age correlated with parasite success. On top of the effect that this particular type of parasites may have on the invaded host, recent experimental evidence suggests that helminth parasites not only actively evade immune response, but are also able to exploit the hormonal microenvironment within their host to favor their establishment, growth and reproduction. This complex strategy of host-parasite relationship is much better exemplified by two helminth parasites: the trematode Schistosoma mansoni andthe cestode Taenia crassiceps that respond to adrenal steroids and sexual steroids, respectively. Understanding how the host endocrine system can under certain circumstances favor the establishment of a parasitic infection opens interesting perspectives into the host-parasite relationship field.


Journal of Parasitology | 2007

TAMOXIFEN TREATMENT INDUCES PROTECTION IN MURINE CYSTICERCOSIS

J. Antonio Vargas-Villavicencio; Carlos Larralde; Marco A. De León-Nava; Galileo Escobedo; Jorge Morales-Montor

Administration of tamoxifen (an antiestrogen) produced an 80% parasite load reduction in female mice, and a weaker effect of 50% in male mice. This protective effect was associated in both sexes, with an increase in the mRNA levels of interleukin (IL)-2 (a cytokine associated with protection against cysticerci) and IL-4 (no effect on infection). tamoxifen treatment modified 17-β estradiol production in females, whereas serum testosterone was not affected. However, the expression of the 2 types of estrogen receptor (ER), i.e., ER-α and ER-β, in the spleen of infected mice of both sexes, was decreased by tamoxifen treatment. In vitro, treatment of Taenia crassiceps with tamoxifen reduced reproduction and loss of motility. These results indicate that tamoxifen treatment is a new therapeutic possibility to treat cysticercosis, because it can act at both ends of the host–parasite relationship, i.e., by increasing the cellular immune response protective against the parasite and by directly affecting the parasites reproduction and survival.


Steroids | 2011

A helminth cestode parasite express an estrogen-binding protein resembling a classic nuclear estrogen receptor

Elizabeth G. Ibarra-Coronado; Galileo Escobedo; Karen Nava-Castro; Chávez-Rios Jesús Ramses; Romel Hernández-Bello; Martín García-Varela; Javier R. Ambrosio; Olivia Reynoso-Ducoing; Rocío Fonseca-Liñán; Guadalupe Ortega-Pierres; Lenin Pavón; María Eugenia Hernández; Jorge Morales-Montor

The role of an estrogen-binding protein similar to a known mammalian estrogen receptor (ER) is described in the estradiol-dependent reproduction of the helminth parasite Taenia crassiceps. Previous results have shown that 17-β-estradiol induces a concentration-dependent increase in bud number of in vitro cultured cysticerci. This effect is inhibited when parasites are also incubated in the presence of an ER binding-inhibitor (tamoxifen). RT-PCR assays using specific oligonucleotides of the most conserved ER sequences, showed expression by the parasite of a mRNA band of molecular weight and sequence corresponding to an ER. Western blot assays revealed reactivity with a 66 kDa protein corresponding to the parasite ER protein. Tamoxifen treatment strongly reduced the production of the T. crassiceps ER-like protein. Antibody specificity was demonstrated by immunoprecipitating the total parasite protein extract with anti-ER-antibodies. Cross-contamination by host cells was discarded by flow cytometry analysis. ER was specifically detected on cells expressing paramyosin, a specific helminth cell marker. Parasite cells expressing the ER-like protein were located by confocal microscopy in the subtegumental tissue exclusively. Analysis of the ER-like protein by bidimensional electrophoresis and immunoblot identified a specific protein of molecular weight and isoelectric point similar to a vertebrates ER. Sequencing of the spot produced a small fragment of protein similar to the mammalian nuclear ER. Together these results show that T. crassiceps expresses an ER-like protein which activates the budding of T. crassiceps cysticerci in vitro. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of an ER-like protein in parasites. This finding may have strong implications in the fields of host-parasite co-evolution as well as in sex-associated susceptibility to this infection, and could be an important target for the design of new drugs.


Mediators of Inflammation | 2015

Reduced Systemic Levels of IL-10 Are Associated with the Severity of Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Insulin Resistance in Morbidly Obese Humans

Sonia Leon-Cabrera; Yoaly Arana-Lechuga; Enrique Esqueda-Leon; Guadalupe Terán-Pérez; Antonio González-Chávez; Galileo Escobedo; Javier Velázquez Moctezuma

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) has been related to elevation of inflammatory cytokines and development of insulin resistance in morbidly obese (MO) subjects. However, it is still unclear whether the systemic concentration of anti-inflammatory mediators is also affected in MO subjects directly related to the severity of OSA and level of insulin resistance. Normal weight and MO subjects were subjected to overnight polysomnography in order to establish the severity of OSA, according to the apnea-hypopnea index (AHI). Blood samples were obtained for estimation of total cholesterol and triglycerides, insulin, glucose, insulin resistance, tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), interleukin 12 (IL12), and interleukin 10 (IL-10). Serum levels of IL-10 were significantly lower in MO subjects with OSA than in MO and control individuals without OSA. Besides being inversely associated with serum TNF-α and IL-12, decreased IL-10 levels were significantly related to increased AHI, hyperinsulinemia, and insulin resistance. Serum IL-10 is significantly reduced in morbidly obese subjects with severe OSA while also showing a clear relationship with a state of hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistance probably regardless of obesity in the present sample. It may be of potential clinical interest to identify the stimulatory mechanisms of IL-10 in obese individuals with OSA.


Parasite Immunology | 2010

Immunoendocrine host-parasite interactions during helminth infections: from the basic knowledge to its possible therapeutic applications.

Romel Hernández-Bello; Galileo Escobedo; Carolina Guzmán; Elizabeth G. Ibarra-Coronado; Lorena López-Griego; Jorge Morales-Montor

Most of the current research on parasitic infections that affect humans and domestic animals has been focused on vaccines, diagnostic methods, epidemiology, new drug design, and recently, with the advancement of genomics and proteomics, on the evolutionary origins of parasites. However, the basic biology of many parasites of medical and veterinary importance has not been intensively studied. Some efforts have been made to obtain information on the parasite–host relationship; however, knowledge of the intricate neuroimmunoendocrine interactions of the host–parasite network, the consequences of this interaction on the host and parasite physiology, and its possible applications needs further investigation. We review here the literature, our own studies on the host–parasite neuroimmunoendocrine network, and how this basic knowledge can be used to design new treatments, by way of using hormones, antihormones, and hormone analogues as a possible novel therapy during parasitic diseases, with special emphasis on helminth parasites. Besides the biological interest, these investigations may contribute to the future identification of alternative treatments for several parasitic diseases. This complicated neuroimmunoendocrine network management during parasitic infections, and its physiological and behavioural consequences upon the host, may be operative in other mammalian infections. Such complexity may also help to explain the often conflicting results, observed between infections with respect to the role of the host sex and age, and hints to other avenues of research and strategies for their treatment and control.

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Jorge Morales-Montor

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Joselín Hernández-Ruiz

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Carolina Guzmán

Hospital General de México

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David Kershenobich

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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José Manuel Fragoso

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Karen Nava-Castro

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Camilo P. Martínez-Reyes

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Sonia León-Cabrera

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Elizabeth G. Ibarra-Coronado

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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