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Dive into the research topics where Inés González-Herrero is active.

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Featured researches published by Inés González-Herrero.


The EMBO Journal | 2009

Cancer induction by restriction of oncogene expression to the stem cell compartment

María Pérez-Caro; César Cobaleda; Inés González-Herrero; Carolina Vicente-Dueñas; Camino Bermejo-Rodríguez; Margarita Sánchez-Beato; Alberto Orfao; Belén Pintado; Teresa Flores; Manuel Sánchez-Martín; Rafael Jiménez; Miguel A. Piris; Isidro Sánchez-García

In human cancers, all cancerous cells carry the oncogenic genetic lesions. However, to elucidate whether cancer is a stem cell‐driven tissue, we have developed a strategy to limit oncogene expression to the stem cell compartment in a transgenic mouse setting. Here, we focus on the effects of the BCR‐ABLp210 oncogene, associated with chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) in humans. We show that CML phenotype and biology can be established in mice by restricting BCR‐ABLp210 expression to stem cell antigen 1 (Sca1)+ cells. The course of the disease in Sca1‐BCR‐ABLp210 mice was not modified on STI571 treatment. However, BCR‐ABLp210‐induced CML is reversible through the unique elimination of the cancer stem cells (CSCs). Overall, our data show that oncogene expression in Sca1+ cells is all that is required to fully reprogramme it, giving rise to a full‐blown, oncogene‐specified tumour with all its mature cellular diversity, and that elimination of the CSCs is enough to eradicate the whole tumour.


Oncogene | 2005

SLUG in cancer development.

Pedro Antonio Pérez-Mancera; Inés González-Herrero; María Pérez-Caro; Noelia Gutiérrez-Cianca; Teresa Flores; Alfonso Gutierrez-Adan; Belén Pintado; Manuel Sánchez-Martín; Isidro Sánchez-García

The SNAIL-related zinc-finger transcription factor, SLUG (SNAI2), is critical for the normal development of neural crest-derived cells and loss-of-function SLUG mutations have been proven to contribute to piebaldism and Waardenburg syndrome type 2 in a dose-dependent fashion. While aberrant induction of SLUG has been documented in cancer cells, relatively little is known about the consequences of SLUG overexpression in malignancy. To investigate the potential role of SLUG overexpression in development and in cancer, we generated mice carrying a tetracycline-repressible Slug transgene. These mice were morphologically normal at birth, and developed mesenchymal tumours (leukaemia and sarcomas) in almost all cases examined. Suppression of the Slug transgene did not rescue the malignant phenotype. Furthermore, the BCR–ABL oncogene, which induces Slug expression in leukaemic cells, did not induce leukaemia in Slug-deficient mice, implicating Slug in BCR–ABL leukaemogenesis in vivo. Overall, the findings indicate that while Slug overexpression is not sufficient to cause overt morphogenetic defects in mice, they demonstrate a specific and critical role for Slug in the pathogenesis of mesenchymal tumours.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Expression of MALT1 oncogene in hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells recapitulates the pathogenesis of human lymphoma in mice

Carolina Vicente-Dueñas; Lorena Fontan; Inés González-Herrero; Isabel Romero-Camarero; Victor Segura; M. Angela Aznar; Esther Alonso-Escudero; Elena Campos-Sanchez; Lucía Ruiz-Roca; Marcos Barajas-Diego; Ainara Sagardoy; Jose I. Martinez-Ferrandis; Fernando Abollo-Jimenez; Cristina Bertolo; Iván Peñuelas; Francisco Javier García-Criado; María Begoña García-Cenador; Thomas Tousseyn; Xabier Agirre; Felipe Prosper; Federico Garcia-Bragado; Ellen D. McPhail; Izidore S. Lossos; Ming-Qing Du; Teresa Flores; Jesús María Hernández-Rivas; Marcos González; Antonio Salar; Beatriz Bellosillo; Eulogio Conde

Chromosomal translocations involving the MALT1 gene are hallmarks of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma. To date, targeting these translocations to mouse B cells has failed to reproduce human disease. Here, we induced MALT1 expression in mouse Sca1+Lin− hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells, which showed NF-κB activation and early lymphoid priming, being selectively skewed toward B-cell differentiation. These cells accumulated in extranodal tissues and gave rise to clonal tumors recapitulating the principal clinical, biological, and molecular genetic features of MALT lymphoma. Deletion of p53 gene accelerated tumor onset and induced transformation of MALT lymphoma to activated B-cell diffuse large-cell lymphoma (ABC-DLBCL). Treatment of MALT1-induced lymphomas with a specific inhibitor of MALT1 proteolytic activity decreased cell viability, indicating that endogenous Malt1 signaling was required for tumor cell survival. Our study shows that human-like lymphomas can be modeled in mice by targeting MALT1 expression to hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells, demonstrating the oncogenic role of MALT1 in lymphomagenesis. Furthermore, this work establishes a molecular link between MALT lymphoma and ABC-DLBCL, and provides mouse models to test MALT1 inhibitors. Finally, our results suggest that hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells may be involved in the pathogenesis of human mature B-cell lymphomas.


The EMBO Journal | 2012

A novel molecular mechanism involved in multiple myeloma development revealed by targeting MafB to haematopoietic progenitors

Carolina Vicente-Dueñas; Isabel Romero-Camarero; Inés González-Herrero; Esther Alonso-Escudero; Fernando Abollo-Jiménez; Xiaoyu Jiang; Norma C. Gutiérrez; Alberto Orfao; Nieves Marín; Luisa M. Villar; Ma Carmen Fernández Criado; Belén Pintado; Teresa Flores; Diego Alonso-López; Javier De Las Rivas; Rafael Jiménez; Francisco Javier García Criado; María Begoña García Cenador; Izidore S. Lossos; César Cobaleda; Isidro Sánchez-García

Understanding the cellular origin of cancer can help to improve disease prevention and therapeutics. Human plasma cell neoplasias are thought to develop from either differentiated B cells or plasma cells. However, when the expression of Maf oncogenes (associated to human plasma cell neoplasias) is targeted to mouse B cells, the resulting animals fail to reproduce the human disease. Here, to explore early cellular changes that might take place in the development of plasma cell neoplasias, we engineered transgenic mice to express MafB in haematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HS/PCs). Unexpectedly, we show that plasma cell neoplasias arise in the MafB‐transgenic mice. Beyond their clinical resemblance to human disease, these neoplasias highly express genes that are known to be upregulated in human multiple myeloma. Moreover, gene expression profiling revealed that MafB‐expressing HS/PCs were more similar to B cells and tumour plasma cells than to any other subset, including wild‐type HS/PCs. Consistent with this, genome‐scale DNA methylation profiling revealed that MafB imposes an epigenetic program in HS/PCs, and that this program is preserved in mature B cells of MafB‐transgenic mice, demonstrating a novel molecular mechanism involved in tumour initiation. Our findings suggest that, mechanistically, the haematopoietic progenitor population can be the target for transformation in MafB‐associated plasma cell neoplasias.


Cancer Discovery | 2015

Infection Exposure Is a Causal Factor in B-cell Precursor Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia as a Result of Pax5-Inherited Susceptibility.

Alberto Martín-Lorenzo; Julia Hauer; Carolina Vicente-Dueñas; Franziska Auer; Inés González-Herrero; Idoia García-Ramírez; Sebastian Ginzel; Ralf Thiele; Stefan N. Constantinescu; Christoph Bartenhagen; Martin Dugas; Michael Gombert; Daniel Schäfer; Oscar Blanco; Andrea Mayado; Alberto Orfao; Diego Alonso-López; Javier De Las Rivas; Cesar Cobaleda; María Begoña García-Cenador; Francisco Javier García-Criado; Isidro Sánchez-García; Arndt Borkhardt

UNLABELLED Earlier in the past century, infections were regarded as the most likely cause of childhood B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (pB-ALL). However, there is a lack of relevant biologic evidence supporting this hypothesis. We present in vivo genetic evidence mechanistically connecting inherited susceptibility to pB-ALL and postnatal infections by showing that pB-ALL was initiated in Pax5 heterozygous mice only when they were exposed to common pathogens. Strikingly, these murine pB-ALLs closely resemble the human disease. Tumor exome sequencing revealed activating somatic, nonsynonymous mutations of Jak3 as a second hit. Transplantation experiments and deep sequencing suggest that inactivating mutations in Pax5 promote leukemogenesis by creating an aberrant progenitor compartment that is susceptible to malignant transformation through accumulation of secondary Jak3 mutations. Thus, treatment of Pax5(+/-) leukemic cells with specific JAK1/3 inhibitors resulted in increased apoptosis. These results uncover the causal role of infection in pB-ALL development. SIGNIFICANCE These results demonstrate that delayed infection exposure is a causal factor in pB-ALL. Therefore, these findings have critical implications for the understanding of the pathogenesis of leukemia and for the development of novel therapies for this disease.


Nature Communications | 2013

Germinal centre protein HGAL promotes lymphoid hyperplasia and amyloidosis via BCR-mediated Syk activation

Isabel Romero-Camarero; Xiaoyu Jiang; Yasodha Natkunam; Xiaoqing Lu; Carolina Vicente-Dueñas; Inés González-Herrero; Teresa Flores; Juan L. García; George McNamara; Christian A. Kunder; Shuchun Zhao; Victor Segura; Lorena Fontan; Jose A. Martinez-Climent; Francisco Javier García-Criado; Jason D. Theis; Ahmet Dogan; Elena Campos-Sanchez; Michael R. Green; Ash A. Alizadeh; César Cobaleda; Isidro Sánchez-García; Izidore S. Lossos

The human germinal centre associated lymphoma (HGAL) gene is specifically expressed in germinal centre B-lymphocytes and germinal centre-derived B-cell lymphomas, but its function is largely unknown. Here we demonstrate that HGAL directly binds Syk in B-cells, increases its kinase activity upon B-cell receptor stimulation and leads to enhanced activation of Syk downstream effectors. To further investigate these findings in vivo, HGAL transgenic mice were generated. Starting from 12 months of age these mice developed polyclonal B-cell lymphoid hyperplasia, hypergammaglobulinemia and systemic reactive AA amyloidosis, leading to shortened survival. The lymphoid hyperplasia in the HGAL transgenic mice are likely attributable to enhanced B-cell receptor signalling as shown by increased Syk phosphorylation, ex vivo B-cell proliferation and increased RhoA activation. Overall, our study shows for the first time that the germinal centre protein HGAL regulates B-cell receptor signalling in B-lymphocytes which, without appropriate control, may lead to B-cell lymphoproliferation.


Oncogene | 2007

Sustained leukaemic phenotype after inactivation of BCR-ABLp190 in mice

María Pérez-Caro; Gutierrez-Cianca N; Inés González-Herrero; López-Hernández I; Teresa Flores; Alberto Orfao; Manuel Sánchez-Martín; Alfonso Gutierrez-Adan; Belén Pintado; Isidro Sánchez-García

Pharmacological inactivation of cancer genes or products is being used as a strategy for therapy in oncology. To investigate the potential role of BCR-ABLp190 cessation in leukaemia development, we generated mice carrying a tetracycline-repressible BCR-ABLp190 transgene. These mice were morphologically normal at birth, and developed leukaemias. Disease was characterized by the presence of B-cell blasts co-expressing myeloid markers, reminiscent of the human counterpart. BCR-ABLp190 activation can initiate leukaemia in both young and adult mice. Transitory expression of BCR-ABLp190 is enough to develop leukaemia. Suppression of the BCR-ABLp190 transgene in leukaemic CombitTA-p190 mice did not rescue the malignant phenotype, indicating that BCR-ABLp190 is not required to maintain the disease in mice. Similar results were obtained by inactivation of BCR-ABLp190 with STI571 (Gleevec; Novartis, East Hanover, NJ, USA) in leukaemic CombitTA-p190 mice. However, gradual suppression of BCR-ABLp190 in leukaemic CombitTA-p190 mice identified a minimum level of BCR-ABLp190 expression necessary to revert the specific block in B-cell differentiation in the leukaemic cells. Overall, the findings indicate that BCR-ABLp190 appears to cause epigenetic and/or genetic changes in tumour-maintaining cells that render them insensitive to BCR-ABLp190 inactivation.


Cell Cycle | 2012

Loss of p53 exacerbates multiple myeloma phenotype by facilitating the reprogramming of hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells to malignant plasma cells by MafB

Carolina Vicente-Dueñas; Inés González-Herrero; María Begoña García Cenador; Francisco Javier García Criado; Isidro Sánchez-García

Multiple myeloma (MM) is a serious, mostly incurable human cancer of malignant plasma cells. Chromosomal translocations affecting MAFB are present in a significant percentage of multiple myeloma patients. Genetically engineered Sca1-MafB mice, in which MafB expression is limited to hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HS/P-Cs), display the phenotypic features of MM. Contrary to many other types of cancer, it is not yet known if the p53 gene plays any essential role in the pathogenesis of this disease. Here, we show, taking advantage of the Sca1-MafB MM mouse model, that loss of p53 does not rescue the multiple myeloma disease, but instead accelerates its development and exacerbates the MM phenotype. Therefore, the efficiency of the MafB-induced MM reprogramming of normal HS/P-Cs to terminally differentiated malignant plasma cells is enhanced by p53 deficiency, in analogy to what happens in reprogramming to pluripotency. These results raise caution about interfering with p53 function when treating multiple myeloma.


Carcinogenesis | 2010

Bcl2 is not required for the development and maintenance of leukemia stem cells in mice

Inés González-Herrero; Carolina Vicente-Dueñas; Alberto Orfao; Teresa Flores; Rafael Jiménez; César Cobaleda; Isidro Sánchez-García

The existence of leukemia stem cells (LSCs) responsible for tumor maintenance has been firmly established. Therefore, therapeutic targeting of these LSCs may have a profound impact on cancer eradication. The anti-apoptotic protein Bcl2 has been proposed as a therapeutic target, but its role in LSC biology has not been investigated. In order to understand the role of Bcl2 in LSC generation and maintenance, we have taken advantage of our Sca1-BCRABLp210 mouse model of human chronic myeloid leukemia and bcl2 gene-targeted mice. This study provides genetic evidence that the inhibition of Bcl2 is not critical for the generation, selection or maintenance of the tumor initiating and maintaining cells in mice.


Blood | 2017

Crebbp loss cooperates with Bcl2 overexpression to promote lymphoma in mice

Idoia García-Ramírez; Saber Tadros; Inés González-Herrero; Alberto Martín-Lorenzo; Guillermo Rodríguez-Hernández; Dalia Moore; Lucía Ruiz-Roca; Oscar Blanco; Diego Alonso-López; Javier De Las Rivas; Keenan Hartert; Romain Duval; David Klinkebiel; Martin Bast; Julie M. Vose; Matthew A. Lunning; Kai Fu; Timothy C. Greiner; Fernando Rodrigues-Lima; Rafael Jiménez; Francisco Javier García Criado; María Begoña García Cenador; Paul K. Brindle; Carolina Vicente-Dueñas; Ash A. Alizadeh; Isidro Sánchez-García; Michael R. Green

CREBBP is targeted by inactivating mutations in follicular lymphoma (FL) and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL). Here, we provide evidence from transgenic mouse models that Crebbp deletion results in deficits in B-cell development and can cooperate with Bcl2 overexpression to promote B-cell lymphoma. Through transcriptional and epigenetic profiling of these B cells, we found that Crebbp inactivation was associated with broad transcriptional alterations, but no changes in the patterns of histone acetylation at the proximal regulatory regions of these genes. However, B cells with Crebbp inactivation showed high expression of Myc and patterns of altered histone acetylation that were localized to intragenic regions, enriched for Myc DNA binding motifs, and showed Myc binding. Through the analysis of CREBBP mutations from a large cohort of primary human FL and DLBCL, we show a significant difference in the spectrum of CREBBP mutations in these 2 diseases, with higher frequencies of nonsense/frameshift mutations in DLBCL compared with FL. Together, our data therefore provide important links between Crebbp inactivation and Bcl2 dependence and show a role for Crebbp inactivation in the induction of Myc expression. We suggest this may parallel the role of CREBBP frameshift/nonsense mutations in DLBCL that result in loss of the protein, but may contrast the role of missense mutations in the lysine acetyltransferase domain that are more frequently observed in FL and yield an inactive protein.

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Belén Pintado

Spanish National Research Council

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César Cobaleda

Spanish National Research Council

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Oscar Blanco

University of Salamanca

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