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Dive into the research topics where J. de las Rivas is active.

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Featured researches published by J. de las Rivas.


Leukemia | 2007

Gene expression profiling of B lymphocytes and plasma cells from Waldenström's macroglobulinemia: comparison with expression patterns of the same cell counterparts from chronic lymphocytic leukemia, multiple myeloma and normal individuals.

Norma C. Gutiérrez; Enrique M. Ocio; J. de las Rivas; Patricia Maiso; Manuel Delgado; Encarna Fermiñán; M J Arcos; Menendez Sanchez; José Mariano Hernández; J. F. San Miguel

The tumoral clone of Waldenströms macroglobulinemia (WM) shows a wide morphological heterogeneity, which ranges from B lymphocytes (BL) to plasma cells (PC). By means of genome-wide expression profiling we have been able to identify genes exclusively deregulated in BL and PC from WM, but with a similar expression pattern in their corresponding cell counterparts from chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and multiple myeloma (MM), as well as normal individuals. The differentially expressed genes have important functions in B-cell differentiation and oncogenesis. Thus, two of the genes downregulated in WM-BL were IL4R, which plays a relevant role in CLL B-cell survival, and BACH2, which participates in the development of class-switched PC. Interestingly, one of the upregulated genes in WM-BL was IL6. A set of four genes was able to discriminate clonal BL from WM and CLL: LEF1 (WNT/β-catenin pathway), MARCKS, ATXN1 and FMOD. We also found deregulation of genes involved in plasma cell differentiation such as PAX5, which was overexpressed in WM-PC, and IRF4 and BLIMP1, which were underexpressed. In addition, three of the target genes activated by PAX5 – CD79, BLNK and SYK – were upregulated in WM-PC. In summary, these results indicate that both PC and BL from WM are genetically different from the MM and CLL cell counterpart.


Molecular Oncology | 2014

miRNA cargo within exosome-like vesicle transfer influences metastatic bone colonization

Karmele Valencia; Diego Luis-Ravelo; Nicolas Bovy; Iker Antón; Susana Martínez-Canarias; Carolina Zandueta; Cristina Ormazábal; Ingrid Struman; Sébastien Tabruyn; Vera Rebmann; J. de las Rivas; Elisabet Guruceaga; Eva Bandrés; Fernando Lecanda

Bone metastasis represents one of the most deleterious clinical consequences arising in the context of many solid tumors. Severe osteolysis results from tumor cell colonization of the bone compartment, a process which entails reciprocal exchange of soluble signals between tumor cells and their osseous microenvironment. Recent evidence indicates that tumor‐intrinsic miRNAs are pleiotropic regulators of gene expression. But they are also frequently released in exosome‐like vesicles (ELV). Yet the functional relevance of the transference of tumor‐derived ELV and their miRNA cargo to the extracellular milieu during osseous colonization is unknown.


Neuroscience | 2007

Laser microdissection and microarray analysis of the hippocampus of Ras-GRF1 knockout mice reveals gene expression changes affecting signal transduction pathways related to memory and learning

Alberto Fernández-Medarde; A. Porteros; J. de las Rivas; Alejandro Núñez; José J. Fuster; Eugenio Santos

We used manual macrodissection or laser capture microdissection (LCM) to isolate tissue sections of the hippocampus area of Ras-GRF1 wild type and knockout mice brains, and analyzed their transcriptional patterns using commercial oligonucleotide microarrays. Comparison between the transcriptomes of macrodissected and microdissected samples showed that the LCM samples allowed detection of significantly higher numbers of differentially expressed genes, with higher statistical rates of significance. These results validate LCM as a reliable technique for in vivo genomic studies in the brain hippocampus, where contamination by surrounding areas (not expressing Ras-GRF1) increases background noise and impairs identification of differentially expressed genes. Comparison between wild type and knockout LCM hippocampus samples revealed that Ras-GRF1 elimination caused significant gene expression changes, mostly affecting signal transduction and related neural processes. The list of 36 most differentially expressed genes included loci concerned mainly with Ras/G protein signaling and cytoskeletal organization (i.e. 14-3-3gamma/zeta, Kcnj6, Clasp2) or related, cross-talking pathways (i.e. jag2, decorin, strap). Consistent with the phenotypes shown by Ras-GRF1 knockout mice, many of these differentially expressed genes play functional roles in processes such as sensory development and function (i.e. Sptlc1, antiquitin, jag2) and/or neurological development/neurodegeneration processes affecting memory and learning. Indeed, potential links to neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer disease (AD) or Creutzfeldt-Jacobs disease (CJD), have been reported for a number of differentially expressed genes identified in this study (Ptma, Aebp2, Clasp2, Hebp1, 14-3-3gamma/zeta, Csnk1delta, etc.). These data, together with the previously described role of IRS and insulin (known Ras-GRF1 activators) in AD, warrant further investigation of a potential functional link of Ras-GRF1 to neurodegenerative processes.


Leukemia | 2005

Mobilisation with G-CSF in healthy donors promotes a high but temporal deregulation of genes

Jm Hernandez; C. Castilla; Norma C. Gutiérrez; Isabel M. Isidro; Manuel Delgado; J. de las Rivas; Encarna Fermiñán; J.L. García; Enrique M. Ocio; M.C. del Cañizo; J. F. San Miguel

Mobilisation with G-CSF in healthy donors promotes a high but temporal deregulation of genes


Leukemia | 2013

Genome-wide profiling of methylation identifies novel targets with aberrant hypermethylation and reduced expression in low-risk myelodysplastic syndromes

B M Del Rey; Kathleen O'Hagan; Margaret Dellett; Sara Aibar; Hilary A. A. Colyer; M E Alonso; M. Diez-Campelo; Richard N. Armstrong; Daniel J. Sharpe; Norma C. Gutiérrez; J.L. García; J. de las Rivas; Ken I. Mills; Jesús-María Hernández-Rivas

Gene expression profiling signatures may be used to classify the subtypes of Myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) patients. However, there are few reports on the global methylation status in MDS. The integration of genome-wide epigenetic regulatory marks with gene expression levels would provide additional information regarding the biological differences between MDS and healthy controls. Gene expression and methylation status were measured using high-density microarrays. A total of 552 differentially methylated CpG loci were identified as being present in low-risk MDS; hypermethylated genes were more frequent than hypomethylated genes. In addition, mRNA expression profiling identified 1005 genes that significantly differed between low-risk MDS and the control group. Integrative analysis of the epigenetic and expression profiles revealed that 66.7% of the hypermethylated genes were underexpressed in low-risk MDS cases. Gene network analysis revealed molecular mechanisms associated with the low-risk MDS group, including altered apoptosis pathways. The two key apoptotic genes BCL2 and ETS1 were identified as silenced genes. In addition, the immune response and micro RNA biogenesis were affected by the hypermethylation and underexpression of IL27RA and DICER1. Our integrative analysis revealed that aberrant epigenetic regulation is a hallmark of low-risk MDS patients and could have a central role in these diseases.


Annals of Oncology | 2012

Identification of a novel recurrent gain on 20q13 in chronic lymphocytic leukemia by array CGH and gene expression profiling

Ana Eugenia Rodríguez; Cristina Robledo; J.L. García; González M; Norma C. Gutiérrez; José-Antonio Hernández; Virgilio Sandoval; A. García de Coca; Isabel Recio; A. Risueño; Guillermo Martín-Núñez; Eva Garcia; Rosa Fisac; J. Conde; J. de las Rivas; José Mariano Hernández

BACKGROUND The presence of genetic changes is a hallmark of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). The most common cytogenetic abnormalities with independent prognostic significance in CLL are 13q14, ATM and TP53 deletions and trisomy 12. However, CLL displays a great genetic and biological heterogeneity. The aim of this study was to analyze the genomic imbalances in CLL cytogenetic subsets from both genomic and gene expression perspectives to identify new recurrent alterations. PATIENTS AND METHODS The genomic imbalances and expression levels of 67 patients were analyzed. The novel recurrent abnormalities detected with bacterial artificial chromosome array were confirmed by FISH and oligonucleotide microarrays. In all cases, gene expression profiling was assessed. RESULTS Copy number alterations were identified in 75% of cases. Overall, the results confirmed FISH studies for the regions frequently involved in CLL and also defined a new recurrent gain on chromosome 20q13.12, in 19% (13/67) of the CLL patients. Oligonucleotide expression correlated with the regions of loss or gain of genomic material, suggesting that the changes in gene expression are related to alterations in copy number. CONCLUSION Our study demonstrates the presence of a recurrent gain in 20q13.12 associated with overexpression of the genes located in this region, in CLL cytogenetic subgroups.BACKGROUND The presence of genetic changes is a hallmark of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). The most common cytogenetic abnormalities with independent prognostic significance in CLL are 13q14, ATM and TP53 deletions and trisomy 12. However, CLL displays a great genetic and biological heterogeneity. The aim of this study was to analyze the genomic imbalances in CLL cytogenetic subsets from both genomic and gene expression perspectives to identify new recurrent alterations. PATIENTS AND METHODS The genomic imbalances and expression levels of 67 patients were analyzed. The novel recurrent abnormalities detected with bacterial artificial chromosome array were confirmed by FISH and oligonucleotide microarrays. In all cases, gene expression profiling was assessed. RESULTS Copy number alterations were identified in 75% of cases. Overall, the results confirmed FISH studies for the regions frequently involved in CLL and also defined a new recurrent gain on chromosome 20q13.12, in 19% (13/67) of the CLL patients. Oligonucleotide expression correlated with the regions of loss or gain of genomic material, suggesting that the changes in gene expression are related to alterations in copy number. CONCLUSION Our study demonstrates the presence of a recurrent gain in 20q13.12 associated with overexpression of the genes located in this region, in CLL cytogenetic subgroups.


Anales Del Sistema Sanitario De Navarra | 2006

Las metástasis óseas del cáncer

Silvestre Vicent; Diego Luis-Ravelo; Iker Antón; I. Hernández; Susana Martínez; J. de las Rivas; A. Gúrpide; Fernando Lecanda

Bone metastases represent a devastating clinical problem in the most frequent neoplasies, especially in multiple myeloma, tumours breast, prostate and lung. The consequences include pain which is refractory to conventional analgesics, osteolysis often leading to bone-marrow compression and pathological fractures, and metabolic disorders. Recent advances in diagnosis using imaging techniques as well as different biochemical techniques have helped accurate diagnosis and follow-up. The increase in survival has improved through a multimodal approach combining, inhibition of osteolysis, with prophylactic orthopaedic surgery and radiation therapy. Recent advances in basic research have determined the molecular metastatic that can predict its proclivity to metastasize. Basic research will improve understanding of the basic mechanisms and lead to the clarification of molecular targets that will help in the development of medicines capable of preventing, decreasing or blocking the metastatic process.


BMC Bioinformatics | 2018

Encompassing new use cases - level 3.0 of the HUPO-PSI format for molecular interactions

M. Sivade; D. Alonso-López; Mais G. Ammari; Grace Bradley; Nancy H. Campbell; Arnaud Ceol; Gianni Cesareni; Colin W. Combe; J. de las Rivas; Noemi del-Toro; Joshua Heimbach; Henning Hermjakob; Igor Jurisica; M. Koch; Luana Licata; Ruth C. Lovering; David J. Lynn; Birgit Meldal; Gos Micklem; Simona Panni; Pablo Porras; S. Ricard-Blum; Bernd Roechert; Lukasz Salwinski; A. Shrivastava; J. Sullivan; N. Thierry-Mieg; Y. Yehudi; K. Van Roey; Sandra Orchard

BackgroundSystems biologists study interaction data to understand the behaviour of whole cell systems, and their environment, at a molecular level. In order to effectively achieve this goal, it is critical that researchers have high quality interaction datasets available to them, in a standard data format, and also a suite of tools with which to analyse such data and form experimentally testable hypotheses from them. The PSI-MI XML standard interchange format was initially published in 2004, and expanded in 2007 to enable the download and interchange of molecular interaction data. PSI-XML2.5 was designed to describe experimental data and to date has fulfilled this basic requirement. However, new use cases have arisen that the format cannot properly accommodate. These include data abstracted from more than one publication such as allosteric/cooperative interactions and protein complexes, dynamic interactions and the need to link kinetic and affinity data to specific mutational changes.ResultsThe Molecular Interaction workgroup of the HUPO-PSI has extended the existing, well-used XML interchange format for molecular interaction data to meet new use cases and enable the capture of new data types, following extensive community consultation. PSI-MI XML3.0 expands the capabilities of the format beyond simple experimental data, with a concomitant update of the tool suite which serves this format. The format has been implemented by key data producers such as the International Molecular Exchange (IMEx) Consortium of protein interaction databases and the Complex Portal.ConclusionsPSI-MI XML3.0 has been developed by the data producers, data users, tool developers and database providers who constitute the PSI-MI workgroup. This group now actively supports PSI-MI XML2.5 as the main interchange format for experimental data, PSI-MI XML3.0 which additionally handles more complex data types, and the simpler, tab-delimited MITAB2.5, 2.6 and 2.7 for rapid parsing and download.


BMC Bioinformatics | 2018

JAMI: a Java library for molecular interactions and data interoperability

M. Sivade; M. Koch; A. Shrivastava; D. Alonso-López; J. de las Rivas; Noemi del-Toro; Colin W. Combe; Birgit Meldal; Joshua Heimbach; Juri Rappsilber; J. Sullivan; Y. Yehudi; Sandra Orchard

BackgroundA number of different molecular interactions data download formats now exist, designed to allow access to these valuable data by diverse user groups. These formats include the PSI-XML and MITAB standard interchange formats developed by Molecular Interaction workgroup of the HUPO-PSI in addition to other, use-specific downloads produced by other resources. The onus is currently on the user to ensure that a piece of software is capable of read/writing all necessary versions of each format. This problem may increase, as data providers strive to meet ever more sophisticated user demands and data types.ResultsA collaboration between EMBL-EBI and the University of Cambridge has produced JAMI, a single library to unify standard molecular interaction data formats such as PSI-MI XML and PSI-MITAB. The JAMI free, open-source library enables the development of molecular interaction computational tools and pipelines without the need to produce different versions of software to read different versions of the data formats.ConclusionSoftware and tools developed on top of the JAMI framework are able to integrate and support both PSI-MI XML and PSI-MITAB. The use of JAMI avoids the requirement to chain conversions between formats in order to reach a desired output format and prevents code and unit test duplication as the code becomes more modular. JAMI’s model interfaces are abstracted from the underlying format, hiding the complexity and requirements of each data format from developers using JAMI as a library.


British Journal of Dermatology | 2017

MicroRNA (miR)-203 and miR-205 expression patterns identify subgroups of prognosis in cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma

J. Cañueto; E. Cardeñoso-Álvarez; J.L. García-Hernández; Purificación Galindo-Villardón; P. Vicente-Galindo; J.L. Vicente-Villardón; D. Alonso-López; J. de las Rivas; J. Valero; E. Moyano-Sanz; E. Fernández-López; Jian-Hua Mao; Andrés Castellanos-Martín; C. Román-Curto; Jesus Perez-Losada

Cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (CSCC) is the second most widespread cancer in humans and its incidence is rising. These tumours can evolve as diseases of poor prognosis, and therefore it is important to identify new markers to better predict its clinical evolution.

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Norma C. Gutiérrez

Spanish National Research Council

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J.L. García

University of Salamanca

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