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Dive into the research topics where J.M. Pérez-Pomares is active.

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Featured researches published by J.M. Pérez-Pomares.


Developmental Dynamics | 1997

CONTRIBUTION OF THE PRIMITIVE EPICARDIUM TO THE SUBEPICARDIAL MESENCHYME IN HAMSTER AND CHICK EMBRYOS

J.M. Pérez-Pomares; David Macías; Lina García-Garrido; Ramón Muñoz-Chápuli

A study about the hypothetical contribution of the epicardial cells to the subepicardial mesenchyme was carried out in Syrian hamster embryos of 9–12 days post coitum (dpc) and chick embryos of 3–5 days of incubation. In the epicardium and subepicardium of these embryos we have immunolocated the proteins cytokeratin (CK), vimentin (VIM), fibronectin (FN), and two antigens related to the transformation of endocardial cells into valvuloseptal mesenchyme, ES/130 and JB3. In the hamster embryos, CK+ subepicardial mesenchymal cells (SEMC) were apparently migrating from the primitive epicardium from 9.5 dpc at the atrioventricular (AV) groove and proximal outflow tract (OFT). The morphological signs of delamination extended by 11 dpc to the epicardium of the interventricular groove and the dorsal part of the ventricle. The relative abundance of the CK+ SEMC decreased in embryos of 12 dpc. VIM colocalized with CK in most SEMC, and in some epicardial mesothelial cells, mainly at the areas of delamination. CK immunoreactivity was also found in some early subepicardial capillaries. Similar observations were made in the chick embryos studied. The immunoreactive patterns obtained at the subepicardium with anti‐FN, ES/130, and JB3 antibodies were similar to those reported in the areas of endothelial transformation of the endocardial cushions. We suggest that these observations are compatible with an epithelial‐mesenchymal transformation involving the epicardial mesothelium and originating at least a part of the SEMC. Dev. Dyn. 1997;210:96–105.


Developmental Dynamics | 2004

Contribution of mesothelium‐derived cells to liver sinusoids in avian embryos

J.M. Pérez-Pomares; Rita Carmona; Mauricio González-Iriarte; David Macías; Juan Antonio Guadix; Ramón Muñoz-Chápuli

The developing liver is vascularized through a complex process of vasculogenesis that leads to the differentiation of the sinusoids. The main structural elements of the sinusoidal wall are endothelial and stellate (Ito) cells. We have studied the differentiation of the hepatic sinusoids in avian embryos through confocal colocalization of differentiation markers, in ovo direct labeling of the liver mesothelium, induced invasion of the developing chick liver by quail proepicardial cells, and in vitro culture of chimeric aggregates. Our results show that liver mesothelial cells give rise to mesenchymal cells which intermingle between the growing hepatoblast cords and become incorporated to the sinusoidal wall, contributing to both endothelial and stellate cell populations. We have also shown that the proepicardium, a mesothelial tissue anatomically continuous with liver mesothelium, is able to form sinusoid‐like vessels into the hepatic primordium as well as in cultured aggregates of hepatoblasts. Thus, both intrinsic or extrinsic mesothelium‐derived cells have the developmental potential to contribute to the establishment of liver sinusoids. Developmental Dynamics 229:465–474, 2004.


Evolution & Development | 2005

The origin of the endothelial cells: an evo-devo approach for the invertebrate/vertebrate transition of the circulatory system

Ramón Muñoz-Chápuli; Rita Carmona; Juan Antonio Guadix; David Macías; J.M. Pérez-Pomares

Summary Circulatory systems of vertebrate and invertebrate metazoans are very different. Large vessels of invertebrates are constituted of spaces and lacunae located between the basement membranes of endodermal and mesodermal epithelia, and they lack an endothelial lining. Myoepithelial differentation of the coelomic cells covering hemal spaces is a frequent event, and myoepithelial cells often form microvessels in some large invertebrates. There is no phylogenetic theory about the origin of the endothelial cells in vertebrates. We herein propose that endothelial cells originated from a type of specialized blood cells, called amoebocytes, that adhere to the vascular basement membrane. The transition between amoebocytes and endothelium involved the acquisition of an epithelial phenotype. We suggest that immunological cooperation was the earliest function of these protoendothelial cells. Furthermore, their ability to transiently recover the migratory, invasive phenotype of amoebocytes (i.e., the angiogenic phenotype) allowed for vascular growth from the original visceral areas to the well‐developed somatic areas of vertebrates (especially the tail, head, and neural tube). We also hypothesize that pericytes and smooth muscle cells derived from myoepithelial cells detached from the coelomic lining. As the origin of blood cells in invertebrates is probably coelomic, our hypothesis relates the origin of all the elements of the circulatory system with the coelomic wall. We have collected from the literature a number of comparative and developmental data supporting our hypothesis, for example the localization of the vascular endothelial growth factor receptor‐2 ortholog in hemocytes of Drosophila or the fact that circulating progenitors can differentiate into endothelial cells even in adult vertebrates.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2003

Development of the coronary arteries in a murine model of transposition of great arteries

Mauricio González-Iriarte; Rita Carmona; J.M. Pérez-Pomares; David Macías; Mercedes Costell; Ramón Muñoz-Chápuli

Transposition of great arteries in humans is associated with a wide spectrum of coronary artery patterns. However, no information is available about how this pattern diversity develops. We have studied the development of the coronary arteries in mouse embryos with a targeted mutation of perlecan, a mutation that leads to ventriculo-arterial discordance and complete transposition in about 70% of the embryos. The perlecan-deficient embryos bearing complete transposition showed a coronary artery pattern consisting of right and left coronary arteries arising from the morphologically dorsal and ventral sinuses of Valsalva, respectively. The left coronary artery gives rise to a large septal artery and runs along the ventral margin of the pulmonary root. In the earliest embryos where transposition could be confirmed (12.5 d post coitum), a dense subepicardial vascular plexus is located in this ventral margin. In wild-type mice, however, capillaries are very scarce on the ventral surface of the pulmonary root and the left coronary artery runs dorsally to this root. We suggest that the establishment of the diverse coronary artery patterns is determined by the anatomical arrangement and the capillary density of the peritruncal vascular plexus, a plexus that spreads from the atrio-ventricular groove and grows around the aortic or pulmonary roots depending on the degree of the short-axis aortopulmonary rotation. This simple model, based on very few assumptions, might explain all the observed variation of the coronary artery patterns in humans with transposition, as well as our observations on the perlecan-deficient and the normal mice.


Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine | 2010

The embryonic epicardium: an essential element of cardiac development.

Rita Carmona; Juan Antonio Guadix; Elena Cano; A. Ruiz-Villalba; V. Portillo-Sánchez; J.M. Pérez-Pomares; Ramón Muñoz-Chápuli

•  Introduction •  Origin of the epicardium: ontogeny and phylogeny •  Epicardial/myocardial cellular and molecular interactions •  EPDC contribute to coronary vessels and cardiac connective tissue •  Epicardium as the tip of the iceberg: coelomic‐derived cells can be essential for vascularization, growth and maturation of the visceral compartment •  Concluding remarks


Journal of Microscopy | 2007

A simple technique of image analysis for specific nuclear immunolocalization of proteins

Rita Carmona; David Macías; Juan Antonio Guadix; V. Portillo; J.M. Pérez-Pomares; Ramón Muñoz-Chápuli

Colocalization of fluorescent signals in confocal microscopy is usually evaluated by inspecting merged images from different colour channels or by using commercially available software packages. We describe in this paper a simple method for assessment of nuclear localization of proteins in tissue sections through confocal immunolocalization, propidium iodide counterstaining and image analysis. Through a macro command developed for the public domain, Java‐based software imagej, red, green, blue (RGB) images are automatically split in the red and green channels and a new image composed of the nonblack pixels coincident in both channels is created and inverted for better visualization. This method renders images devoid of both, extranuclear staining and background, thus emphasizing the nuclear signal. The resulting images can easily be used for comparison or quantification of the results. Given the simplicity of the technique and the worldwide diffusion of the software utilized, we think that this method could be useful in order to define standards of colocalization in confocal microscopy.


Developmental Dynamics | 2016

Coronary stem development in wild-type and Tbx1 null mouse hearts

Magali Théveniau-Ruissy; J.M. Pérez-Pomares; Pauline Parisot; Antonio Baldini; Lucile Miquerol; Robert G. Kelly

Background: Coronary artery (CA) stems connect the ventricular coronary tree with the aorta. Defects in proximal CA patterning are a cause of sudden cardiac death. In mice lacking Tbx1, common arterial trunk is associated with an abnormal trajectory of the proximal left CA. Here we investigate CA stem development in wild‐type and Tbx1 null embryos. Results: Genetic lineage tracing reveals that limited outgrowth of aortic endothelium contributes to proximal CA stems. Immunohistochemistry and fluorescent tracer injections identify a periarterial vascular plexus present at the onset of CA stem development. Transplantation experiments in avian embryos indicate that the periarterial plexus originates in mesenchyme distal to the outflow tract. Tbx1 is required for the patterning but not timing of CA stem development and a Tbx1 reporter allele is expressed in myocardium adjacent to the left but not right CA stem. This expression domain is maintained in Sema3c−/− hearts with a common arterial trunk and leftward positioned CA. Ectopic myocardial differentiation is observed on the left side of the Tbx1−/− common arterial trunk. Conclusions: A periarterial plexus bridges limited outgrowth of the aortic endothelium with the ventricular plexus during CA stem development. Molecular differences associated with left and right CA stems provide new insights into the etiology of CA patterning defects. Developmental Dynamics 245:445–459, 2016.


Anatomical Record-advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology | 2004

The epicardium and epicardially derived cells (EPDCs) as cardiac stem cells

Andy Wessels; J.M. Pérez-Pomares


The International Journal of Developmental Biology | 2002

Origin of coronary endothelial cells from epicardial mesothelium in avian embryos.

J.M. Pérez-Pomares; Rita Carmona; Mauricio González-Iriarte; Gerardo Atencia; Andy Wessels; Ramón Muñoz-Chápuli


Cell and Tissue Research | 2001

Localization of the Wilms' tumour protein WT1 in avian embryos

Rita Carmona; Mauricio González-Iriarte; J.M. Pérez-Pomares; Ramón Muñoz-Chápuli

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Andy Wessels

Medical University of South Carolina

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