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Dive into the research topics where Isabel García-Álvarez is active.

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Featured researches published by Isabel García-Álvarez.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Synthesis of Antimitotic Thioglycosides: In Vitro and in Vivo Evaluation of Their Anticancer Activity

Isabel García-Álvarez; Hugo Groult; Josefina Casas Brugulat; M. Asunción Barreda-Manso; Manuel Nieto-Sampedro; Lorenzo Romero-Ramírez; Alfonso Fernández-Mayoralas

The synthesis and biological activity of oleylN-acetyl-α- and β-d-glucosaminides (1 and 2, respectively) and their thioglycosyl analogues (3 and 4, respectively) are reported. The compounds exhibited antimitotic activity on rat glioma (C6) and human lung carcinoma (A549) cell cultures in the micromolar range. Analysis of cell extracts using ultra performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry showed that the synthetic glycosides produce alterations in glycosphingolipid metabolism, with variable effect on the level of glucosylceramide depending on the configuration of the antimitotic used. In vivo experiments in nude mice bearing an implanted C6 glioma showed that the α-thioglycoside 3 reduced tumor volume, while the O-glycosyl derivative was inactive, highlighting the importance of using enzyme resistant glycosides.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Detection of Metabolite Changes in C6 Glioma Cells Cultured with Antimitotic Oleyl Glycoside by 1H MAS NMR

Isabel García-Álvarez; Leoncio Garrido; Ernesto Doncel-Pérez; Manuel Nieto-Sampedro; Alfonso Fernández-Mayoralas

The synthetic glycoside, oleyl N-acetyl-alpha-D-glucosaminide (1), was previously shown to exhibit antimitotic activity on rat (C6) and human (U-373) glioma lines. To obtain information about its mechanism of action, metabolite changes in C6 glioma cells were analyzed after treatment with 1 using high-resolution magic angle spinning (1)H NMR. Compound 1 caused either a decrease or an increase in the intensity of the signal assigned to coenzyme A (CoA) metabolites depending on the concentration used. The data obtained from the (1)H NMR spectra of cells cultured with 1, combined with those obtained after treatment with oleic acid (an inhibitor of acetyl-CoA carboxylase) and phenyl butyrate (a known antineoplastic agent), suggest that 1 may be altering the metabolism of fatty acids and induce apoptosis of C6 glioma cells. These results point to NMR spectroscopy as an efficient technique for monitoring the response of the cells to therapeutic agents.


ChemMedChem | 2007

Studies on the Uptake of Glucose Derivatives by Red Blood Cells

Isabel García-Álvarez; Leoncio Garrido; Alfonso Fernández-Mayoralas

Erythrocytes express the same glucose transporter (GLUT‐1) as is present in the blood‐brain barrier. With the aim of testing the viability of using this transport system to deliver glucosyl drug derivatives to the brain, the uptake of several dopamine–glucose conjugates and a few structurally related analogues by erythrocytes was studied with HPLC and 1H MAS NMR spectroscopy. The results showed that slight structural changes determine the uptake of glycoconjugates by red blood cells. However, experiments in the presence of glucose transport inhibitors showed that none of the conjugates that efficiently crossed the cell membrane were transported by GLUT‐1.


Current Topics in Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Effect of Drugs in Cells and Tissues by NMR Spectroscopy

Isabel García-Álvarez; Alfonso Fernández-Mayoralas; Leoncio Garrido

In this article, the application of high resolution NMR spectroscopy to study the effect of therapeutic compounds on cells, tissues and organisms is reviewed. To illustrate how these NMR methods can provide useful information for a better understanding about the mechanism of action of drugs and their interactions with metabolic pathways, the emphasis is placed on most recent work about drug therapeutic intervention in biological models of diseases and in humans. Specifically, the application of NMR spectroscopy to investigate the effect of drugs on the treatment of neurological disorders, cancer, infectious diseases and diabetes is illustrated. In addition, NMR studies of drug-induced toxicity and multinuclear NMR for monitoring drug delivery and catabolism are described. Current progress in NMR instrumentation and methods will continue to improve the sensitivity and maintain this very versatile technique as powerful tool for research in the field of medicinal chemistry.


Restorative Neurology and Neuroscience | 2015

Inhibition of glial proliferation, promotion of axonal growth and myelin production by synthetic glycolipid: A new approach for spinal cord injury treatment.

Isabel García-Álvarez; Alfonso Fernández-Mayoralas; Sandra Moreno-Lillo; María Sánchez-Sierra; Manuel Nieto-Sampedro; Ernesto Doncel-Pérez

PURPOSE After spinal cord injury (SCI) a glial scar is generated in the area affected that forms a barrier for axon growth and myelination, preventing functional recovery. Recently, we have described a synthetic glycolipid (IG20) that inhibited proliferation of human glioma cells. We show now that IG20 inhibited the proliferation of astrocytes and microglial cells, the principal cellular components of the glial scar, and promoting axonal outgrowth and myelin production in vitro. METHODS Glial cells were inhibited with IG20 (IC50≈10 μM) and studied by RT-PCR, Western Blotting, immunoprecipitation and fluorescence microscopy. Axonal outgrowth in dorsal root ganglia (DRG) and myelin production by oligodendrocytes were analyzed by immunocytochemistry. Adult rats were assayed in spinal cord contusion model and the recovery of treated animals (n = 6) and controls (n = 6) was followed. RESULTS The IG20 was localized in the cytosol of glial cells, forming a complex with RhoGDIα, a regulator of RhoGTPases. Treatment of astroglial cultures with IG20 increase the expression of BDNF receptor genes (TrkBT1, TrkB Full). IG20 reduced the astroglial marker GFAP, while increasing production of myelin basic protein in oligodendrocytes and promoted axonal outgrowth from DRG neurons. Local injection of IG20, near a spinal cord contusion, promoted the recovery of lesioned animals analyzed by BBB test (P <  0.05). CONCLUSIONS We propose that inhibition of astrocytes and microglia by IG20 could be diminished the glial scar formation, inducing the re-growth and myelination of axons, these elements constitute a new approach for SCI therapy.


PLOS ONE | 2013

The Effect of Antitumor Glycosides on Glioma Cells and Tissues as Studied by Proton HR-MAS NMR Spectroscopy

Isabel García-Álvarez; Leoncio Garrido; Lorenzo Romero-Ramírez; Manuel Nieto-Sampedro; Alfonso Fernández-Mayoralas; Ramón Campos-Olivas

The effect of the treatment with glycolipid derivatives on the metabolic profile of intact glioma cells and tumor tissues, investigated using proton high resolution magic angle spinning (1H HR-MAS) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, is reported here. Two compounds were used, a glycoside and its thioglycoside analogue, both showing anti-proliferative activity on glioma C6 cell cultures; however, only the thioglycoside exhibited antitumor activity in vivo. At the drug concentrations showing anti-proliferative activity in cell culture (20 and 40 µM), significant increases in choline containing metabolites were observed in the 1H NMR spectra of the same intact cells. In vivo experiments in nude mice bearing tumors derived from implanted C6 glioma cells, showed that reduction of tumor volume was associated with significant changes in the metabolic profile of the same intact tumor tissues; and were similar to those observed in cell culture. Specifically, the activity of the compounds is mainly associated with an increase in choline and phosphocholine, in both the cell cultures and tumoral tissues. Taurine, a metabolite that has been considered a biomarker of apoptosis, correlated with the reduction of tumor volume. Thus, the results indicate that the mode of action of the glycoside involves, at least in part, alteration of phospholipid metabolism, resulting in cell death.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2015

New oleyl glycoside as anti-cancer agent that targets on neutral sphingomyelinase.

Lorenzo Romero-Ramírez; Isabel García-Álvarez; Josefina Casas; M. Asunción Barreda-Manso; Manuel Nieto-Sampedro; Alfonso Fernández-Mayoralas

We designed and synthesized two anomeric oleyl glucosaminides as anti-cancer agents where the presence of a trifluoroacetyl group close to the anomeric center makes them resistant to hydrolysis by hexosaminidases. The oleyl glycosides share key structural features with synthetic and natural oleyl derivatives that have been reported to exhibit anti-cancer properties. While both glycosides showed antiproliferative activity on cancer cell lines, only the α-anomer caused endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress and cell death on C6 glioma cells. Analysis of sphingolipids and glycosphingolipds in cells treated with the glycosides showed that the α-anomer caused a drastic accumulation of ceramide and glucosylceramide and reduction of lactosylceramide and GM3 ganglioside at concentrations above a threshold of 20 μM. In order to understand how ceramide levels increase in response to α-glycoside treatment, further investigations were done using specific inhibitors of sphingolipid metabolic pathways. The pretreatment with 3-O-methylsphingomyelin (a neutral sphingomyelinase inhibitor) restored sphingomyelin levels together with the lactosylceramide and GM3 ganglioside levels and prevented the ER stress and cell death caused by the α-glycoside. The results indicated that the activation of neutral sphingomyelinase is the main cause of the alterations in sphingolipids that eventually lead to cell death. The new oleyl glycoside targets a key enzyme in sphingolipid metabolism with potential applications in cancer therapy.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Specific Synthesis of Neurostatin and Gangliosides O -Acetylated in the Outer Sialic Acids Using a Sialate Transferase

Lorenzo Romero-Ramírez; Isabel García-Álvarez; Ramón Campos-Olivas; Michel Gilbert; Marie-France Goneau; Alfonso Fernández-Mayoralas; Manuel Nieto-Sampedro

Gangliosides are sialic acid containing glycosphingolipids, commonly found on the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane. O-acetylation of sialic acid hydroxyl groups is one of the most common modifications in gangliosides. Studies on the biological activity of O-acetylated gangliosides have been limited by their scarcity in nature. This comparatively small change in ganglioside structure causes major changes in their physiological properties. When the ganglioside GD1b was O-acetylated in the outer sialic acid, it became the potent inhibitor of astroblast and astrocytoma proliferation called Neurostatin. Although various chemical and enzymatic methods to O-acetylate commercial gangliosides have been described, O-acetylation was nonspecific and produced many side-products that reduced the yield. An enzyme with O-acetyltransferase activity (SOAT) has been previously cloned from the bacteria Campylobacter jejuni. This enzyme catalyzed the acetylation of oligosaccharide-bound sialic acid, with high specificity for terminal alpha-2,8-linked residues. Using this enzyme and commercial gangliosides as starting material, we have specifically O-acetylated the gangliosides’ outer sialic acids, to produce the corresponding gangliosides specifically O-acetylated in the sialic acid bound in alpha-2,3 and alpha-2,8 residues. We demonstrate here that O-acetylation occurred specifically in the C-9 position of the sialic acid. In summary, we present a new method of specific O-acetylation of ganglioside sialic acids that permits the large scale preparation of these modified glycosphingolipids, facilitating both, the study of their mechanism of antitumoral action and their use as therapeutic drugs for treating glioblastoma multiform (GBM) patients.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2015

Novel synthetic sulfoglycolipid IG20 facilitates exocytosis in chromaffin cells through the regulation of sodium channels

Andrea Crespo-Castrillo; Eva Punzón; Ricardo de Pascual; Marcos Maroto; Juan Fernando Padín; Isabel García-Álvarez; Carmen Nanclares; Lucía Ruiz-Pascual; Luis Gandía; Alfonso Fernández-Mayoralas; Antonio G. García

In search of druggable synthetic lipids that function as potential modulators of synaptic transmission and plasticity, we synthesized sulfoglycolipid IG20, which stimulates neuritic outgrowth. Here, we have explored its effects on ion channels and exocytosis in bovine chromaffin cells. IG20 augmented the rate of basal catecholamine release. Such effect did not depend on Ca2+ mobilization from intracellular stores; rather, IG20‐elicited secretion entirely dependent on Ca2+ entry through L‐subtype voltage‐activated Ca2+ channels. Those channels were recruited by cell depolarization mediated by IG20 likely through its ability to enhance the recruitment of Na+ channels at more hyperpolarizing potentials. Confocal imaging with fluorescent derivative IG20‐NBD revealed its rapid incorporation and confinement into the plasmalemma, supporting the idea that IG20 effects are exerted through a plasmalemmal‐delimited mechanism. Thus, synthetic IG20 seems to mimic several physiological effects of endogenous lipids such as regulation of ion channels, Ca2+ signaling, and exocytosis. Therefore, sulfoglycolipid IG20 may become a pharmacological tool for investigating the role of the lipid environment on neuronal excitability, ion channels, neurotransmitter release, synaptic efficacy, and neuronal plasticity. It may also inspire the synthesis of druggable sulfoglycolipids aimed at increasing synaptic plasticity and efficacy in neurodegenerative diseases and traumatic brain–spinal cord injury.


BioMed Research International | 2015

Mass Spectrometry in Pharmacokinetic Studies of a Synthetic Compound for Spinal Cord Injury Treatment

María Sánchez-Sierra; Isabel García-Álvarez; Alfonso Fernández-Mayoralas; Sandra Moreno-Lillo; Gemma Barroso García; Verónica Moral Dardé; Ernesto Doncel-Pérez

The studies of drugs that could constitute a palliative to spinal cord injury (SCI) are a continuous and increasing demand in biomedicine field from developed societies. Recently we described the chemical synthesis and antiglioma activity of synthetic glycosides. A synthetic sulfated glycolipid (here IG20) has shown chemical stability, solubility in polar solvents, and high inhibitory capacity over glioma growth. We have used mass spectrometry (MS) to monitor IG20 (m/z = 550.3) in cells and tissues of the central nervous system (CNS) that are involved in SCI recovery. IG20 was detected by MS in serum and homogenates from CNS tissue of rats, though in the latter a previous deproteinization step was required. The pharmacokinetic parameters of serum clearance at 24 h and half-life at 4 h were determined for synthetic glycoside in the adult rat using MS. A local administration of the drug near of spinal lesion site is proposed.

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Manuel Nieto-Sampedro

Spanish National Research Council

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Lorenzo Romero-Ramírez

Spanish National Research Council

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Ernesto Doncel-Pérez

Spanish National Research Council

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Leoncio Garrido

Spanish National Research Council

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Antonio G. García

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Eva Punzón

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Hugo Groult

Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares

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Josefina Casas

Spanish National Research Council

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