Gerardo Perera-Marín
National Autonomous University of Mexico
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Featured researches published by Gerardo Perera-Marín.
General and Comparative Endocrinology | 2010
Aleida Olivares; Juan Pablo Méndez; Elena Zambrano; Mario Cárdenas; Armando R. Tovar; Gerardo Perera-Marín; Alfredo Ulloa-Aguirre
Obesity causes complex metabolic and endocrine changes that may lead to adverse outcomes, including hypogonadism. We herein studied the reproductive axis function in male rats under a high-fat diet and analyzed the impact of changes in glycosylation of pituitary LH on the bioactivity of this gonadotropin. Rats were fed with a diet enriched in saturated fat (20% of total calories) and euthanized on days 90 or 180 of diet. Long-term (180 days), high-fat feeding rats exhibited a metabolic profile compatible with insulin resistance and metabolic syndrome; they concomitantly showed decreased intrapituitary and serum LH concentrations, low serum testosterone levels, and elevated serum 17beta-estradiol concentrations. A fall in biological to immunological ratio of intrapituitary LH was detected in 180 days control diet-treated rats but not in high-fat-fed animals, as assessed by a homologous in vitro bioassay. Chromatofocusing of pituitary extracts yielded multiple LH charge isoforms; a trend towards decreased abundance of more basic isoforms (pH 9.99-9.0) was apparent in rats fed with the control diet for 180 days but not in those that were fed the diet enriched in saturated fat. It is concluded that long-term high-fat feeding alters the function of the pituitary-testicular axis, resulting in hypogonadotropic hypogonadism. The alterations in LH function found in these animals might be subserved by changes in hypothalamic GnRH output and/or sustained gonadotrope exposure to an altered sex steroid hormone milieu, representing a distinctly different regulatory mechanism whereby the pituitary attempts to counterbalance the effects of long-term obesity on reproductive function.
General and Comparative Endocrinology | 2009
Aleida Olivares; Juan Pablo Méndez; Mario Cárdenas; Norma Oviedo; Miguel Ángel Palomino; Isis Santos; Gerardo Perera-Marín; Rubén Gutiérrez-Sagal; Alfredo Ulloa-Aguirre
Men with insulinopenic diabetes mellitus frequently present hypogonadism and exhibit circulating luteinizing hormone (LH) molecules with increased biological activity. To further study this latter issue, we analyzed the pattern of isoform distribution and the impact of changes in terminal glycosylation of pituitary LH on the bioactivity of this gonadotropin in experimental diabetes. Adult male rats were treated with streptozotocin or vehicle and euthanized on days 30, 60, or 90 posttreatment. All diabetic groups exhibited a significant decrease in serum insulin and testosterone levels as well as in sperm count; serum gonadotropins and 17beta-estradiol decreased only after 90 days of insulinopenia. Both the immunoreactive concentrations and the biological to immunological ratio of intrapituitary LH significantly increased in all experimental groups, as assessed by an in vitro homologous bioassay in HEK-293 cells expressing a recombinant LH receptor. Chromatofocusing of pituitary extracts revealed the presence of multiple LH charge isoforms; the pH distribution profile of LH in diabetic and control rats was indistinguishable on days 30 and 60 posttreatment. By contrast, the abundance of more basic isoforms (pH 9.99-9.0) decreased and that of isoforms with pH values 8.99-8.0 increased in rats with long-standing diabetes compared to controls. It is concluded that experimental diabetes alters the function of the pituitary-testicular axis, resulting in reduced sex steroids levels and hypogonadotropism. Long-standing insulinopenia leads to a paradoxical accumulation of intrapituitary LH molecules enriched in bioactivity with altered terminal glycosylation, which are apparently subserved by distinct mechanisms involving altered hypothalamic and/or gonadal inputs on the gonadotrope.
Reproduction, Fertility and Development | 2006
E. Arrieta; A. Porras; Everardo González-Padilla; C. Murcia; S. Rojas; Gerardo Perera-Marín
The relative abundance of the different isoforms of pituitary and circulating luteinising hormone (LH) in ewes, at different times after the administration of gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH), during the luteal phase of the oestrous cycle was investigated. Sixteen ewes on Day 9 of their cycle were divided into four groups (n = 4). The control group (T0) received saline solution; the remaining animals received 100 microg GnRH (i.m.) 30, 90 or 180 min (T30, T90 and T180, respectively) before serum and pituitary gland collection. Luteinising hormone polymorphism was analysed by chromatofocusing (pH 10.5-3.5). The LH eluted from each chromatofocusing was grouped on the basis of the following three criteria: (1) according to the pH of elution (pH > or = 10-3.5); (2) as either a basic (pH > or = 7.5), neutral (pH 7.4-6.5) and acidic (pH < or = 6.4) elution of LH of serum and hypophyseal origin; and (3) on the basis of distinct isoforms, of which 10 (A-J) were identifiable in hypophyseal extracts and four (A-D) were found in the serum. In general, the most abundant forms of LH in both the pituitary and serum, at all times, were basic. However, that proportion was greater in hypophyseal extracts (84 +/- 3%, 81 +/- 4%, 82 +/- 3% and 83 +/- 2% at T0, T30, T90 and T180, respectively) than in serum (51 +/- 5%, 48 +/- 10% and 54 +/- 6% at T30, T90 and T180, respectively). Neutral and acidic LH made up a larger proportion of the total LH in sera (neutral: 17 +/- 4%, 20 +/- 6% and 23 +/- 3% at T30, T90 and T180, respectively; acidic: 32 +/- 8%, 32 +/- 11% and 23 +/- 6% at T30, T90 and T180, respectively) than in the pituitary extracts (neutral: 4.0 +/- 0.7%, 10 +/- 4%, 7 +/- 2% and 5.0 +/- 0.5% at T0, T30, T90 and T180, respectively; acidic: 12 +/- 3%, 11 +/- 2%, 12 +/- 2% and 12 +/- 2% at T0, T30, T90 and T180, respectively) at all times. These data reveal that the relative composition of the LH present in the pituitary gland and the LH secreted into the circulation is different, with more neutral and acidic isoforms being secreted. The pattern of circulating LH isoforms changes between 30 and 180 min after GnRH peak induction, with a greater proportion of isoform C (eluting between pH 7.0 and 6.5) at T180 compared with T30 and T90.
Animal Reproduction Science | 2015
Arnulfo Montero-Pardo; Daniel Diaz; Aleida Olivares; Everardo González-Padilla; C. Murcia; Margarita Gómez-Chavarín; Gabriel Gutiérrez-Ospina; Gerardo Perera-Marín
Although an increase in VEGF expression and synthesis in association with LH has been established; it is unknown if all LH isoforms act similarly. This study evaluated the production of cAMP and VEGF among LH isoforms in two in vitro bioassays. The LH was obtained from hypophyses and the group of isoforms was isolated by chromatofocusing. cAMP production was assessed using the in vitro bioassay of HEK-293 cells and VEGF production was evaluated in granulosa cells. Immunological activity was measured with a homologous RIA. Immunoactivity and bioactivity for each isoform were compared against a standard, by estimating the IC50 and the EC50. The basic isoforms were more immunoactive than the standard. The neutral and the moderately acidic had an immunological activity similar to the standard. The acidic isoform was the least immunoreactive. cAMP production at the EC50 dose was similar among the basic isoforms, the moderately acidic and the standard; for the neutral and the acidic, the EC50 dose was higher. It was observed that compared with the control, VEGF production at the lowest LH dose was no different in the standard and each isoform. In the intermediate dose, a positive response was caused in the standard and the neutral and basic isoforms. Although the acidic isoform showed a dose-dependent response, it was not significant relative to the control. In conclusion, the basic isoform generated the greatest cAMP and VEGF production, similar to the reference standard, and the acidic the smallest.
General and Comparative Endocrinology | 2017
Minerva Carolina Torres-Ortiz; Gabriel Gutiérrez-Ospina; Margarita Gómez-Chavarín; C. Murcia; Rogelio Alejandro Alonso-Morales; Gerardo Perera-Marín
Folliculogenesis is a process that depends on angiogenesis, in which VEGF and Notch signaling pathway members are involved. Although this pathway is present in preantral and antral follicular structures during the second stage of folliculogenesis, this association has not been described. Therefore, this study aimed to identify VEGF and Notch2 in ovary structures of infantile rats after induction of follicular development with a gonadotropin stimulus. In order to explore this possibility we analyzed rat ovary morphology from days 10-25 after birth; subsequently, the transition from preantral follicle to an antral stage was analyzed by the induction of follicular development with equine chorionic gonadotropin (eCG) and VEGF and Notch were identified in the rat ovary by fluorescence. The histological analysis revealed that the ovary of a 10-day-old rat has the highest percentage of preantral follicles and based on this a 10IU eCG dose promoted an increase in the number of antral follicles, as well as a decrease in the number of preantral follicles, related to which there was an increase in ovary weight and size. In addition, a higher concentration of circulating estradiol was observed, proliferation of granulosa cells in both follicle groups was stimulated, and the accumulation of VEGF in granulosa and theca cells and in the antral follicle oocyte was increased (p<0.05), whereas the presence of Notch2 was limited to mural granulosa cells, in granulosa cells that formed the cumulus oophorus and in the oocyte of both groups of follicles. The multiple correspondence analysis allowed us to support an association between VEGF and Notch2 during the transition from preantral to antral follicles in the ovary of an infantile rat.
Animal Reproduction Science | 2005
Gerardo Perera-Marín; C. Murcia; S. Rojas; Joel Hernández-Cerón; Everardo González-Padilla
Small Ruminant Research | 2007
Laura Martinez-Alvarez; Joel Hernández-Cerón; Everardo González-Padilla; Gerardo Perera-Marín; J. Valencia
Animal Reproduction Science | 2007
Gerardo Perera-Marín; C. Murcia; Everardo González-Padilla
Animal Reproduction Science | 2008
Gerardo Perera-Marín; Carlos G. Gutiérrez; C. Murcia; H. León; Everardo González-Padilla
Animal Reproduction Science | 2007
Susana Rojas-Maya; Everardo González-Padilla; C. Murcia-Mejía; A. Olivares-Segura; Joel Hernández-Cerón; Gerardo Perera-Marín