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Dive into the research topics where Gloria Terrados is active.

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Featured researches published by Gloria Terrados.


Molecular Cell | 2013

PrimPol, an Archaic Primase/Polymerase Operating in Human Cells

Sara García-Gómez; Aurelio Reyes; María I. Martínez-Jiménez; E. Sandra Chocrón; Silvana Mourón; Gloria Terrados; Christopher A. Powell; Eduardo Salido; Juan Méndez; Ian J. Holt; Luis Blanco

Summary We describe a second primase in human cells, PrimPol, which has the ability to start DNA chains with deoxynucleotides unlike regular primases, which use exclusively ribonucleotides. Moreover, PrimPol is also a DNA polymerase tailored to bypass the most common oxidative lesions in DNA, such as abasic sites and 8-oxoguanine. Subcellular fractionation and immunodetection studies indicated that PrimPol is present in both nuclear and mitochondrial DNA compartments. PrimPol activity is detectable in mitochondrial lysates from human and mouse cells but is absent from mitochondria derived from PRIMPOL knockout mice. PRIMPOL gene silencing or ablation in human and mouse cells impaired mitochondrial DNA replication. On the basis of the synergy observed with replicative DNA polymerases Polγ and Polε, PrimPol is proposed to facilitate replication fork progression by acting as a translesion DNA polymerase or as a specific DNA primase reinitiating downstream of lesions that block synthesis during both mitochondrial and nuclear DNA replication.


PLOS Genetics | 2009

Altered Hematopoiesis in Mice Lacking DNA Polymerase μ Is Due to Inefficient Double-Strand Break Repair

Daniel Lucas; Beatriz Escudero; José Manuel Ligos; José Segovia; Juan Camilo Estrada; Gloria Terrados; Luis Blanco; Enrique Samper; Antonio Bernad

Polymerase mu (Polμ) is an error-prone, DNA-directed DNA polymerase that participates in non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) repair. In vivo, Polμ deficiency results in impaired Vκ-Jκ recombination and altered somatic hypermutation and centroblast development. In Polμ−/− mice, hematopoietic development was defective in several peripheral and bone marrow (BM) cell populations, with about a 40% decrease in BM cell number that affected several hematopoietic lineages. Hematopoietic progenitors were reduced both in number and in expansion potential. The observed phenotype correlates with a reduced efficiency in DNA double-strand break (DSB) repair in hematopoietic tissue. Whole-body γ-irradiation revealed that Polμ also plays a role in DSB repair in non-hematopoietic tissues. Our results show that Polμ function is required for physiological hematopoietic development with an important role in maintaining early progenitor cell homeostasis and genetic stability in hematopoietic and non-hematopoietic tissues.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2009

A Role for DNA Polymerase μ in the Emerging DJH Rearrangements of the Postgastrulation Mouse Embryo

Beatriz Gozalbo-López; Paula B. Andrade; Gloria Terrados; Belén de Andrés; Natalia Serrano; Isabel Cortegano; Beatriz Palacios; Antonio Bernad; Luis Blanco; Miguel Marcos; Maria Luisa Gaspar

ABSTRACT The molecular complexes involved in the nonhomologous end-joining process that resolves recombination-activating gene (RAG)-induced double-strand breaks and results in V(D)J gene rearrangements vary during mammalian ontogeny. In the mouse, the first immunoglobulin gene rearrangements emerge during midgestation periods, but their repertoires have not been analyzed in detail. We decided to study the postgastrulation DJH joints and compare them with those present in later life. The embryo DJH joints differed from those observed in perinatal life by the presence of short stretches of nontemplated (N) nucleotides. Whereas most adult N nucleotides are introduced by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT), the embryo N nucleotides were due to the activity of the homologous DNA polymerase μ (Polμ), which was widely expressed in the early ontogeny, as shown by analysis of Polμ−/− embryos. Based on its DNA-dependent polymerization ability, which TdT lacks, Polμ also filled in small sequence gaps at the coding ends and contributed to the ligation of highly processed ends, frequently found in the embryo, by pairing to internal microhomology sites. These findings show that Polμ participates in the repair of early-embryo, RAG-induced double-strand breaks and subsequently may contribute to preserve the genomic stability and cellular homeostasis of lymphohematopoietic precursors during development.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

Genome-wide localization and expression profiling establish Sp2 as a sequence-specific transcription factor regulating vitally important genes

Gloria Terrados; Florian Finkernagel; Bastian Stielow; Dennis Sadic; Juliane Neubert; Olga Herdt; Michael Krause; Maren Scharfe; Michael Jarek; Guntram Suske

The transcription factor Sp2 is essential for early mouse development and for proliferation of mouse embryonic fibroblasts in culture. Yet its mechanisms of action and its target genes are largely unknown. In this study, we have combined RNA interference, in vitro DNA binding, chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing and global gene-expression profiling to investigate the role of Sp2 for cellular functions, to define target sites and to identify genes regulated by Sp2. We show that Sp2 is important for cellular proliferation that it binds to GC-boxes and occupies proximal promoters of genes essential for vital cellular processes including gene expression, replication, metabolism and signalling. Moreover, we identified important key target genes and cellular pathways that are directly regulated by Sp2. Most significantly, Sp2 binds and activates numerous sequence-specific transcription factor and co-activator genes, and represses the whole battery of cholesterol synthesis genes. Our results establish Sp2 as a sequence-specific regulator of vitally important genes.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Characterization of a Natural Mutator Variant of Human DNA Polymerase λ which Promotes Chromosomal Instability by Compromising NHEJ

Gloria Terrados; Jean-Pascal Capp; Yvan Canitrot; Miguel Garcia-Diaz; Katarzyna Bebenek; Tomas Kirchhoff; Alberto Villanueva; François Boudsocq; Valérie Bergoglio; Christophe Cazaux; Thomas A. Kunkel; Jean-Sébastien Hoffmann; Luis Blanco

Background DNA polymerase lambda (Polλ) is a DNA repair polymerase, which likely plays a role in base excision repair (BER) and in non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) of DNA double-strand breaks (DSB). Principal Findings Here, we described a novel natural allelic variant of human Polλ (hPolλ) characterized by a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), C/T variation in the first base of codon 438, resulting in the amino acid change Arg to Trp. In vitro enzyme activity assays of the purified W438 Polλ variant revealed that it retained both DNA polymerization and deoxyribose phosphate (dRP) lyase activities, but had reduced base substitution fidelity. Ectopic expression of the W438 hPolλ variant in mammalian cells increases mutation frequency, affects the DSB repair NHEJ pathway, and generates chromosome aberrations. All these phenotypes are dependent upon the catalytic activity of the W438 hPolλ. Conclusions The expression of a cancer-related natural variant of one specialized DNA polymerase can be associated to generic instability at the cromosomal level, probably due a defective NHEJ. These results establish that chromosomal aberrations can result from mutations in specialized DNA repair polymerases.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2013

DNA expansions generated by human Polµ on iterative sequences

Ana Aza; Maria Jose Martin; Raquel Juárez; Luis Blanco; Gloria Terrados

Polµ is the only DNA polymerase equipped with template-directed and terminal transferase activities. Polµ is also able to accept distortions in both primer and template strands, resulting in misinsertions and extension of realigned mismatched primer terminus. In this study, we propose a model for human Polµ-mediated dinucleotide expansion as a function of the sequence context. In this model, Polµ requires an initial dislocation, that must be subsequently stabilized, to generate large sequence expansions at different 5′-P-containing DNA substrates, including those that mimic non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) intermediates. Our mechanistic studies point at human Polµ residues His329 and Arg387 as responsible for regulating nucleotide expansions occurring during DNA repair transactions, either promoting or blocking, respectively, iterative polymerization. This is reminiscent of the role of both residues in the mechanism of terminal transferase activity. The iterative synthesis performed by Polµ at various contexts may lead to frameshift mutations producing DNA damage and instability, which may end in different human disorders, including cancer or congenital abnormalities.


The Scientific World Journal | 2003

Are There Mutator Polymerases

Miguel Garcia-Diaz; José F. Ruiz; Raquel Juárez; Gloria Terrados; Luis Blanco

DNA polymerases are involved in different cellular events, including genome replication and DNA repair. In the last few years, a large number of novel DNA polymerases have been discovered, and the biochemical analysis of their properties has revealed a long list of intriguing features. Some of these polymerases have a very low fidelity and have been suggested to play mutator roles in different processes, like translesion synthesis or somatic hypermutation. The current view of these processes is reviewed, and the current understanding of DNA polymerases and their role as mutator enzymes is discussed.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2003

Lack of sugar discrimination by human Pol µ requires a single glycine residue

José F. Ruiz; Raquel Juárez; Miguel Garcia-Diaz; Gloria Terrados; Angel J. Picher; Sergio González‐Barrera; Antonio R. Fernández de Henestrosa; Luis Blanco


Nucleic Acids Research | 2005

Characterization of SpPol4, a unique X-family DNA polymerase in Schizosaccharomyces pombe

Sergio González‐Barrera; Arancha Sánchez; José F. Ruiz; Raquel Juárez; Angel J. Picher; Gloria Terrados; Paula B. Andrade; Luis Blanco


DNA Repair | 2004

Aphidicolin-resistant and -sensitive base excision repair in wild-type and DNA polymerase β-defective mouse cells

Eleonora Parlanti; Barbara Pascucci; Gloria Terrados; Luis Blanco; Eugenia Dogliotti

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Luis Blanco

Spanish National Research Council

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Antonio Bernad

Spanish National Research Council

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Raquel Juárez

Spanish National Research Council

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Angel J. Picher

Spanish National Research Council

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Beatriz Escudero

Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares

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José F. Ruiz

Spanish National Research Council

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Enrique J. de la Rosa

Spanish National Research Council

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Jimena Baleriola

Spanish National Research Council

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Jose Luis M. Sanmartin

Spanish National Research Council

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Miguel Garcia-Diaz

Spanish National Research Council

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