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Dive into the research topics where Guillermo Luxán is active.

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Featured researches published by Guillermo Luxán.


Nature Medicine | 2013

Mutations in the NOTCH pathway regulator MIB1 cause left ventricular noncompaction cardiomyopathy

Guillermo Luxán; Jesús C. Casanova; Beatriz Martínez-Poveda; Belén Prados; Gaetano D'Amato; Donal MacGrogan; Alvaro González-Rajal; David Dobarro; Carlos Torroja; Fernando J. Martinez; Jose L. Izquierdo-Garcia; Leticia Fernández-Friera; María Sabater-Molina; Young-Y Kong; Gonzalo Pizarro; Borja Ibanez; Constancio Medrano; Pablo García-Pavía; Juan R. Gimeno; Lorenzo Monserrat; Luis Jesús Jiménez-Borreguero; José Luis de la Pompa

Left ventricular noncompaction (LVNC) causes prominent ventricular trabeculations and reduces cardiac systolic function. The clinical presentation of LVNC ranges from asymptomatic to heart failure. We show that germline mutations in human MIB1 (mindbomb homolog 1), which encodes an E3 ubiquitin ligase that promotes endocytosis of the NOTCH ligands DELTA and JAGGED, cause LVNC in autosomal-dominant pedigrees, with affected individuals showing reduced NOTCH1 activity and reduced expression of target genes. Functional studies in cells and zebrafish embryos and in silico modeling indicate that MIB1 functions as a dimer, which is disrupted by the human mutations. Targeted inactivation of Mib1 in mouse myocardium causes LVNC, a phenotype mimicked by inactivation of myocardial Jagged1 or endocardial Notch1. Myocardial Mib1 mutants show reduced ventricular Notch1 activity, expansion of compact myocardium to proliferative, immature trabeculae and abnormal expression of cardiac development and disease genes. These results implicate NOTCH signaling in LVNC and indicate that MIB1 mutations arrest chamber myocardium development, preventing trabecular maturation and compaction.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2010

Integration of a Notch-dependent mesenchymal gene program and Bmp2-driven cell invasiveness regulates murine cardiac valve formation

Luis Luna-Zurita; Belén Prados; Joaquim Grego-Bessa; Guillermo Luxán; Gonzalo del Monte; Alberto Benguría; Ralf H. Adams; José M. Pérez-Pomares; José Luis de la Pompa

Cardiac valve formation is crucial for embryonic and adult heart function. Valve malformations constitute the most common congenital cardiac defect, but little is known about the molecular mechanisms regulating valve formation and homeostasis. Here, we show that endocardial Notch1 and myocardial Bmp2 signal integration establish a valve-forming field between 2 chamber developmental domains. Patterning occurs through the activation of endocardial epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) exclusively in prospective valve territories. Mice with constitutive endocardial Notch1 activity ectopically express Hey1 and Heyl. They also display an activated mesenchymal gene program in ventricles and a partial (noninvasive) EMT in vitro that becomes invasive upon BMP2 treatment. Snail1, TGF-β2, or Notch1 inhibition reduces BMP2-induced ventricular transformation and invasion, whereas BMP2 treatment inhibits endothelial Gsk3β, stabilizing Snail1 and promoting invasiveness. Integration of Notch and Bmp2 signals is consistent with Notch1 signaling being attenuated after myocardial Bmp2 deletion. Notch1 activation in myocardium extends Hey1 expression to nonchamber myocardium, represses Bmp2, and impairs EMT. In contrast, Notch deletion abrogates endocardial Hey gene transcription and extends Bmp2 expression to the ventricular endocardium. This embryonic Notch1-Bmp2-Snail1 relationship may be relevant in adult valve disease, in which decreased NOTCH signaling causes valve mesenchyme cell formation, fibrosis, and calcification.


Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Medicine | 2014

How to Make a Heart Valve: From Embryonic Development to Bioengineering of Living Valve Substitutes

Donal MacGrogan; Guillermo Luxán; Anita Anita Driessen-Mol; Carlijn Carlijn Bouten; Frank Frank Baaijens; José Luis de la Pompa

Cardiac valve disease is a significant cause of ill health and death worldwide, and valve replacement remains one of the most common cardiac interventions in high-income economies. Despite major advances in surgical treatment, long-term therapy remains inadequate because none of the current valve substitutes have the potential for remodeling, regeneration, and growth of native structures. Valve development is coordinated by a complex interplay of signaling pathways and environmental cues that cause disease when perturbed. Cardiac valves develop from endocardial cushions that become populated by valve precursor mesenchyme formed by an epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). The mesenchymal precursors, subsequently, undergo directed growth, characterized by cellular compartmentalization and layering of a structured extracellular matrix (ECM). Knowledge gained from research into the development of cardiac valves is driving exploration into valve biomechanics and tissue engineering directed at creating novel valve substitutes endowed with native form and function.


Breast Cancer Research | 2013

Notch activation stimulates migration of breast cancer cells and promotes tumor growth

Victoria Bolós; Emilia Mira; Beatriz Martínez-Poveda; Guillermo Luxán; Marta Cañamero; Carlos Martínez-A; Santos Mañes; José Luis de la Pompa

IntroductionDysregulated NOTCH receptor activity has been implicated in breast cancer but the mechanisms by which NOTCH contributes to transformation are not yet clear, as it has context-dependent effects on the properties of transformed cells.MethodsWe have used various in vitro and in vivo carcinogenic models to analyze the impact of Notch signaling in the onset and progression of breast tumors.ResultsWe found that ectopic expression of the Notch1 intracellular domain (N1ICD) in MCF-7 breast adenocarcinoma cell line caused reduction and delocalization of E-CADHERIN levels and increased migratory and invasive abilities. Notch inhibition in the invasive breast cancer cell line MDA-MB-231 resulted in increased E-CADHERIN expression and a parallel reduction in their invasive capacity. The growth of subcutaneous xenografts produced with MCF-7 cells was boosted after N1ICD induction, in a cell autonomous manner. In vivo Notch1 activation in the mammary gland using the MMTV-Cre driver caused the formation of papillary tumors that showed increased Hes1 and Hey1 expression and delocalized E-cadherin staining.ConclusionsThese results confirm NOTCH1 as a signal triggering epithelial-mesenchymal transition in epithelial cancer cells, which may have implications in tumor dissemination, metastasis and proliferation in vivo. The identification of specific factors interacting with NOTCH signaling could thus be relevant to fully understanding the role of NOTCH in breast neoplasia.


Circulation Research | 2016

Endocardial Notch Signaling in Cardiac Development and Disease

Guillermo Luxán; Gaetano D’Amato; Donal MacGrogan; José Luis de la Pompa

The Notch signaling pathway is an ancient and highly conserved signaling pathway that controls cell fate specification and tissue patterning in the embryo and in the adult. Region-specific endocardial Notch activity regulates heart morphogenesis through the interaction with multiple myocardial-, epicardial-, and neural crest-derived signals. Mutations in NOTCH signaling elements cause congenital heart disease in humans and mice, demonstrating its essential role in cardiac development. Studies in model systems have provided mechanistic understanding of Notch function in cardiac development, congenital heart disease, and heart regeneration. Notch patterns the embryonic endocardium into prospective territories for valve and chamber formation, and later regulates the signaling processes leading to outflow tract and valve morphogenesis and ventricular trabeculae compaction. Alterations in NOTCH signaling in the endocardium result in congenital structural malformations that can lead to disease in the neonate and adult heart.


Nature Cell Biology | 2016

Sequential Notch activation regulates ventricular chamber development

Gaetano D’Amato; Guillermo Luxán; Gonzalo del Monte-Nieto; Beatriz Martínez-Poveda; Carlos Torroja; Wencke Walter; Matthew S. Bochter; Rui Benedito; Susan E. Cole; Fernando J. Martinez; Anna-Katerina Hadjantonakis; Akiyoshi Uemura; Luis Jesús Jiménez-Borreguero; José Luis de la Pompa

Ventricular chambers are essential for the rhythmic contraction and relaxation occurring in every heartbeat throughout life. Congenital abnormalities in ventricular chamber formation cause severe human heart defects. How the early trabecular meshwork of myocardial fibres forms and subsequently develops into mature chambers is poorly understood. We show that Notch signalling first connects chamber endocardium and myocardium to sustain trabeculation, and later coordinates ventricular patterning and compaction with coronary vessel development to generate the mature chamber, through a temporal sequence of ligand signalling determined by the glycosyltransferase manic fringe (MFng). Early endocardial expression of MFng promotes Dll4–Notch1 signalling, which induces trabeculation in the developing ventricle. Ventricular maturation and compaction require MFng and Dll4 downregulation in the endocardium, which allows myocardial Jag1 and Jag2 signalling to Notch1 in this tissue. Perturbation of this signalling equilibrium severely disrupts heart chamber formation. Our results open a new research avenue into the pathogenesis of cardiomyopathies.


Circulation Research | 2016

Sequential Ligand-Dependent Notch Signaling Activation Regulates Valve Primordium Formation and Morphogenesis

Donal MacGrogan; Gaetano D’Amato; Stanislao Travisano; Beatriz Martínez-Poveda; Guillermo Luxán; Gonzalo del Monte-Nieto; Tania Papoutsi; Mauro Sbroggiò; Vanesa Bou; Pablo Gómez-del Arco; Manuel Jose Gómez; Bin Zhou; Juan Miguel Redondo; Luis Jesús Jiménez-Borreguero; José Luis de la Pompa

RATIONALE The Notch signaling pathway is crucial for primitive cardiac valve formation by epithelial-mesenchymal transition, and NOTCH1 mutations cause bicuspid aortic valve; however, the temporal requirement for the various Notch ligands and receptors during valve ontogeny is poorly understood. OBJECTIVE The aim of this study is to determine the functional specificity of Notch in valve development. METHODS AND RESULTS Using cardiac-specific conditional targeted mutant mice, we find that endothelial/endocardial deletion of Mib1-Dll4-Notch1 signaling, possibly favored by Manic-Fringe, is specifically required for cardiac epithelial-mesenchymal transition. Mice lacking endocardial Jag1, Notch1, or RBPJ displayed enlarged valve cusps, bicuspid aortic valve, and septal defects, indicating that endocardial Jag1 to Notch1 signaling is required for post-epithelial-mesenchymal transition valvulogenesis. Valve dysmorphology was associated with increased mesenchyme proliferation, indicating that Jag1-Notch1 signaling restricts mesenchyme cell proliferation non-cell autonomously. Gene profiling revealed upregulated Bmp signaling in Jag1-mutant valves, providing a molecular basis for the hyperproliferative phenotype. Significantly, the negative regulator of mesenchyme proliferation, Hbegf, was markedly reduced in Jag1-mutant valves. Hbegf expression in embryonic endocardial cells could be readily activated through a RBPJ-binding site, identifying Hbegf as an endocardial Notch target. Accordingly, addition of soluble heparin-binding EGF-like growth factor to Jag1-mutant outflow tract explant cultures rescued the hyperproliferative phenotype. CONCLUSIONS During cardiac valve formation, Dll4-Notch1 signaling leads to epithelial-mesenchymal transition and cushion formation. Jag1-Notch1 signaling subsequently restrains Bmp-mediated valve mesenchyme proliferation by sustaining Hbegf-EGF receptor signaling. Our studies identify a mechanism of signaling cross talk during valve morphogenesis involved in the origin of congenital heart defects associated with reduced NOTCH function.


Journal of Anatomy | 2016

Morphogenesis of myocardial trabeculae in the mouse embryo

Gabriella Captur; R.J.M. Wilson; Michael F Bennett; Guillermo Luxán; Arthur Nasis; José Luis de la Pompa; James C. Moon; Timothy J. Mohun

Formation of trabeculae in the embryonic heart and the remodelling that occurs prior to birth is a conspicuous, but poorly understood, feature of vertebrate cardiogenesis. Mutations disrupting trabecular development in the mouse are frequently embryonic lethal, testifying to the importance of the trabeculae, and aberrant trabecular structure is associated with several human cardiac pathologies. Here, trabecular architecture in the developing mouse embryo has been analysed using high‐resolution episcopic microscopy (HREM) and three‐dimensional (3D) modelling. This study shows that at all stages from mid‐gestation to birth, the ventricular trabeculae comprise a complex meshwork of myocardial strands. Such an arrangement defies conventional methods of measurement, and an approach based upon fractal algorithms has been used to provide an objective measure of trabecular complexity. The extent of trabeculation as it changes along the length of left and right ventricles has been quantified, and the changes that occur from formation of the four‐chambered heart until shortly before birth have been mapped. This approach not only measures qualitative features evident from visual inspection of 3D models, but also detects subtle, consistent and regionally localised differences that distinguish each ventricle and its developmental stage. Finally, the combination of HREM imaging and fractal analysis has been applied to analyse changes in embryonic heart structure in a genetic mouse model in which trabeculation is deranged. It is shown that myocardial deletion of the Notch pathway component Mib1 (Mib1flox/flox; cTnT‐cre) results in a complex array of abnormalities affecting trabeculae and other parts of the heart.


FEBS Journal | 2016

Notch signalling in ventricular chamber development and cardiomyopathy

Gaetano D'Amato; Guillermo Luxán; José Luis de la Pompa

The vertebrate heart is the first organ to form and function during embryogenesis. Primitive streak‐derived cardiac progenitors located bilaterally move rostral to form the primitive heart tube that subsequently undergoes rightward looping, remodelling and septation to give rise to the mature four‐chambered heart. Tightly regulated tissue interactions orchestrate the patterning, proliferation and differentiation processes that give rise to the adult ventricles. Studies in animal models have demonstrated the crucial function of the Notch signalling pathway in ventricular development and how alterations in human NOTCH signalling may lead to disease in the form of cardiomyopathies, such as left ventricular noncompaction (LVNC). In this review, we discuss how during trabecular formation and ventricular compaction, Dll4–Notch1 signals from chamber endocardium to regulate cardiomyocyte proliferation and differentiation in a noncell autonomous fashion and how, at later stages, myocardial Jag1 and Jag2 activate Notch1 in chamber endocardium to sustain chamber patterning and compaction with simultaneous coronary vessel development mediated by Dll4–Notch1. We suggest that alterations in these molecular mechanisms underlie MIB1‐related familial LVNC and favour the hypothesis that this cardiomyopathy has a congenital nature.


Briefings in Functional Genomics | 2014

Genetic and functional genomics approaches targeting the Notch pathway in cardiac development and congenital heart disease

Donal MacGrogan; Guillermo Luxán; José Luis de la Pompa

The Notch signalling pathway plays crucial roles in cardiac development and postnatal cardiac homoeostasis. Gain- and loss-of-function approaches indicate that Notch promotes or inhibits cardiogenesis in a stage-dependent manner. However, the molecular mechanisms are poorly defined because many downstream effectors remain to be identified. Genome-scale analyses are shedding light on the genes that are regulated by Notch signalling and the mechanisms underlying this regulation. We review the functional data that implicates Notch in cardiac morphogenetic processes and expression profiling studies that enlighten the regulatory networks behind them. A recurring theme is that Notch cross-talks reiteratively with other key signalling pathways including Wnt and Bmp to coordinate cell and tissue interactions during cardiogenesis.

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José Luis de la Pompa

Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares

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Donal MacGrogan

Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares

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Beatriz Martínez-Poveda

Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares

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Gaetano D’Amato

Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares

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Belén Prados

Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares

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Luis Jesús Jiménez-Borreguero

Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares

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Anita Anita Driessen-Mol

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Carlos Torroja

Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares

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Gaetano D'Amato

Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares

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