Gustavo Tapia
Autonomous University of Barcelona
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Featured researches published by Gustavo Tapia.
Infection and Immunity | 2003
Pere-Joan Cardona; Sergi Gordillo; Jorge Díaz; Gustavo Tapia; Isabel Amat; Angeles Pallarés; Cristina Vilaplana; Aurelio Ariza; Vicenç Ausina
ABSTRACT We have used the murine model of aerosol-induced experimental tuberculosis to assess the effects of four clinical isolates and a reference strain of Mycobacterium tuberculosis on resistant C57BL/6 mice and susceptible DBA/2 mice. Histological studies and detection of 25 cytokines potentially involved in the infection were carried out. DBA/2 mice showed higher concentrations of bacilli in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid and lung tissue. Furthermore, these mice evidenced a larger granulomatous infiltration in the parenchyma due to an increased rate of emigration of infected foamy macrophages from the granulomas to the neighboring pulmonary alveolar spaces. The better control of bacillary concentrations and pulmonary infiltration observed in C57BL/6 mice from week 3 postinfection could result from their higher RANTES, ICAM-1, and gamma interferon (IFN-γ) mRNA levels. On the other hand, the higher MIP-2 and MCP-3 mRNA levels seen in DBA/2 mice would result in stronger lung recruitment of macrophages and neutrophils. Additionally, DBA/2 mice showed increased inducible nitric oxide synthase expression, induced by the larger number of foamy macrophages, at weeks 18 and 22. This increment was a consequence of phagocytosed bacillary debris, was independent of IFN-γ expression, and could exert only a bacteriostatic effect. The results of the study suggest that DBA/2 mice are more susceptible than C57BL/6 mice to M. tuberculosis infection due to a higher bronchial dissemination of bacilli inside poorly activated foamy macrophages.
Tuberculosis | 2009
Neus Cáceres; Gustavo Tapia; Isabel Ojanguren; Frédéric Altare; Olga Gil; Sergio Wyton L. Pinto; Cristina Vilaplana; Pere-Joan Cardona
The chronic phase of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection in mouse experimental models is characterized by the accumulation of foamy macrophages (FM)--which shape the outer ring of the granuloma - in the alveolar spaces, as detected in paraffin-embedded tissues stained with hematoxylin-eosin. In this study, the use of semi- and ultra-thin sections offers more detailed information about the origin of FM both in mouse and guinea-pig experimental models. Lipid bodies (LB) are present in macrophages from the beginning of infection and accumulate in the chronic phase. LB progress from an early (ELB) to a late (LLB) stage, defined according to their progressive capacity to generate cholesterol crystals, resembling atherosclerotic lesions. FM arise from massive accumulation of LLB. Electronic microscopy reveals intracellular lipophilic inclusions (ILIs) in those M. tuberculosis bacilli inside FM. It is our hypothesis that the accumulation of lipids in M. tuberculosis concomitant to the establishment of the non-replicating state prepares the bacilli for future reactivation and for facing future stressful environments.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Olga Gil; Iván Díaz; Cristina Vilaplana; Gustavo Tapia; Jorge Díaz; Maria Fort; Neus Cáceres; Sergio Wyton L. Pinto; Joan A. Caylà; Leigh A. L. Corner; Mariano Domingo; Pere-Joan Cardona
A transthoracic infection involving a low dose of Mycobacterium tuberculosis has been used to establish a new model of infection in minipigs. The 20-week monitoring period showed a marked Th1 response and poor humoral response for the whole infection. A detailed histopathological analysis was performed after slicing the formalin-fixed whole lungs of each animal. All lesions were recorded and classified according to their microscopic aspect, their relationship with the intralobular connective network and their degree of maturity in order to obtain a dissemination ratio (DR) between recent and old lesions. CFU counts and evolution of the DR with time showed that the proposed model correlated with a contained infection, decreasing from week 9 onwards. These findings suggest that the infection induces an initial Th1 response, which is followed by local fibrosis and encapsulation of the granulomas, thereby decreasing the onset of new lesions. Two therapeutic strategies were applied in order to understand how they could influence the model. Thus, chemotherapy with isoniazid alone helped to decrease the total number of lesions, despite the increase in DR after week 9, with similar kinetics to those of the control group, whereas addition of a therapeutic M. tuberculosis fragment-based vaccine after chemotherapy increased the Th1 and humoral responses, as well as the number of lesions, but decreased the DR. By providing a local pulmonary structure similar to that in humans, the mini-pig model highlights new aspects that could be key to a better understanding tuberculosis infection control in humans.
Histopathology | 2011
Gustavo Tapia; Raquel López; Ana M. Muñoz-Mármol; José L. Mate; Carolina Sanz; Ruth Marginet; José-Tomás Navarro; Josep-Maria Ribera; Aurelio Ariza
Tapia G, Lopez R, Muñoz‐Mármol A M, Mate J L, Sanz C, Marginet R, Navarro J‐T, Ribera J‐M & Ariza A (2011) Histopathology59, 672–678
PLOS ONE | 2010
Mireia Margelí; Beatriz Cirauqui; Eva Castellà; Gustavo Tapia; Carlota Costa; Ana Giménez-Capitán; Agustí Barnadas; Maria Sanchez Ronco; Susana Benlloch; Miquel Taron; Rafael Rosell
Background A fraction of sporadic breast cancers has low BRCA1 expression. BRCA1 mutation carriers are more likely to achieve a pathological complete response with DNA-damage-based chemotherapy compared to non-mutation carriers. Furthermore, sporadic ovarian cancer patients with low levels of BRCA1 mRNA have longer survival following platinum-based chemotherapy than patients with high levels of BRCA1 mRNA. Methodology/Principal Findings Tumor biopsies were obtained from 86 breast cancer patients who were candidates for neoadjuvant chemotherapy, treated with four cycles of neoadjuvant fluorouracil, epirubicin and cyclophosphamide. Estrogen receptor (ER), progesterone receptor (PR), HER2, cytokeratin 5/6 and vimentin were examined by tissue microarray. HER2 were also assessed by chromogenic in situ hybridization, and BRCA1 mRNA was analyzed in a subset of 41 patients for whom sufficient tumor tissue was available by real-time quantitative PCR. Median time to progression was 42 months and overall survival was 55 months. In the multivariate analysis for time to progression and overall survival for 41 patients in whom BRCA1 could be assessed, low levels of BRCA1 mRNA, positive PR and negative lymph node involvement predicted a significantly lower risk of relapse, low levels of BRCA1 mRNA and positive PR were the only variables associated with significantly longer survival. Conclusions/Significance We provide evidence for a major role for BRCA1 mRNA expression as a marker of time to progression and overall survival in sporadic breast cancers treated with anthracycline-based chemotherapy. These findings can be useful for customizing chemotherapy.
Histopathology | 2013
Ana M. Muñoz-Mármol; Carolina Sanz; Gustavo Tapia; Ruth Marginet; Aurelio Ariza; José L. Mate
To assess how hybridization probe design may affect MYC status determination in Burkitt lymphoma and diffuse large B‐cell lymphoma.
International Journal of Experimental Pathology | 2006
Evelyn Guirado; Sergi Gordillo; Olga Gil; Jorge Díaz; Gustavo Tapia; Cristina Vilaplana; Vicenç Ausina; Pere-Joan Cardona
Intragranulomatous necrosis is a primary feature in the natural history of human tuberculosis (TB). Unfortunately, this phenomenon is not usually seen in the experimental TB murine model. Artificial induction of this necrosis in pulmonary granulomas (INPG) may be achieved through aerosol inoculation of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) 3 weeks after Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection. At week 9 post‐infection, the centre of primary granulomas became larger, showing eosinophilic necrosis. Interestingly, INPG induction was related to mice strains C57BL/6 and 129/Sv, but not to BALB/c and DBA/2. Furthermore, the same pattern was obtained with the induction of infection using a clinical M. tuberculosis strain (UTE 0335R) that naturally induces INPG. In all the mice strains tested, the study of pulmonary mRNA expression revealed a tendency to increase or to maintain the expression of RANTES, interferon‐γ, tumour necrosis factor and iNOS, in both LPS‐ and UTE 0335R‐induced INPG, thus suggesting that this response must be necessary but not sufficient for inducing INPG. Our work supports that INPG induction is a local phenomenon unrelated to the resistant (C57BL/6 and BALB/c) or susceptible (129/Sv and DBA/2) background of mice strains against M. tuberculosis infection.
Apmis | 2015
Gustavo Tapia; Maria-Joao Baptista; Ana-Maria Muñoz-Marmol; Ayman Gaafar; Maria Puente-Pomposo; Olga García; Ruth Marginet-Flinch; Carolina Sanz; José-Tomás Navarro; Juan-Manuel Sancho; Josep-Maria Ribera; Aurelio Ariza; José-Luis Mate
MYC and BCL2 gene translocations and protein expression have recently demonstrated to be of prognostic significance in systemic diffuse large B‐cell lymphoma (DLBCL). However, their role in primary central nervous system DLBCL (CNS‐DLBCL) prognosis has been scarcely analyzed. We studied the immunophenotype, the status of the MYC, BCL2, and BCL6 genes and the clinical features of a series of 42 CNS‐DLBCL and evaluated their prognostic significance. We found high MYC protein expression in 43% of cases, and this was associated with lower overall survival (OS). Cases with concurrent expression of MYC and BCL2 showed a lower OS, although the difference did not reach statistical significance. Translocations involving the MYC or BCL2 genes were not detected. The BCL6 gene was frequently translocated, but was unrelated to survival. We conclude that MYC protein expression detected by immunohistochemistry identifies a CNS‐DLBCL subset with worse prognosis and may contribute to a more accurate risk stratification of CNS‐DLBCL patients.
Journal of Cutaneous Pathology | 2007
J.M. Carrascosa; Gustavo Tapia; Isabel Bielsa; María-José Fuente; Carlos Ferrándiz
Background: To evaluate the effects of narrow‐band UV‐B (NBUVB) on the immunohistochemical markers of cellular and cytokine activation as well as of abnormal epidermal differentiation and proliferation – pharmacodynamic markers of response to therapy (PMT)– in psoriatic lesions.
Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2010
Blanca Xicoy; Josep-Maria Ribera; José-Luis Mate; Gustavo Tapia; José-Tomás Navarro; Carolina Sanz; Aurelio Ariza; Evarist Feliu
Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most common lymphoma subtype in non-immunosuppressed and in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive patients. The prognosis of DLBCL with germinal center (GC) phenotype is better than that of the non-germinal center (non-GC) phenotype by immunohistochemical expression profile (IHC) in some studies but not in others. The frequency and the prognosis of these phenotypic subtypes in DLBCL related to HIV infection is not well known. The objectives of this study were to characterize the IHC by tissue microarray in 98 patients with DLBCL, 34 of whom were HIV-positive, and to evaluate their prognosis. Patients with HIV-related DLBCL with a non-GC pattern had poorer prognosis than patients with non-HIV-related DLBCL with the same pattern, but this difference disappeared when we considered only patients receiving HAART.