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Dive into the research topics where José D. Machado is active.

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Featured researches published by José D. Machado.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Nitric Oxide Modulates a Late Step of Exocytosis

José D. Machado; Fernando Segura; Miguel A. Brioso; Ricardo Borges

The effects of nitric oxide (NO) on the late phase of exocytosis have been studied, by amperometry, on Ba2+-stimulated chromaffin cells. Acute incubation with NO or NO donors (sodium nitroprusside, spermine-NO,S-nitrosoglutathione) produced a drastic slowdown of the granule emptying. Conversely, cell treatment with Nω-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester (a NO synthase inhibitor) or with NO scavengers (methylene blue, 2-(4-carboxyphenyl)-4,4,5,5-tetramethyl-imidazoline-1-oxyl-3-oxide potassium) accelerated the extrusion of catecholamines from chromaffin granules, suggesting the presence of a NO modulatory tone. The incubation with phosphodiesterase inhibitors (3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine or zaprinast) or with the cell-permeant cGMP analog 8-bromo-cGMP, mimicked the effects of NO, suggesting the involvement of the guanylate cyclase cascade. NO effects were not related to changes in intracellular Ba2+. NO did not modify the duration of feet. Effects were evident even on pre-fusioned granules, observed under hypertonic conditions, suggesting that the fusion pore is not the target for NO, which probably acts by modifying the affinity of catecholamines for the intragranular matrix. NO could modify the synaptic transmitter efficacy through a novel mechanism, which involves the regulation of the emptying of secretory vesicles.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2006

Intragranular pH rapidly modulates exocytosis in adrenal chromaffin cells.

Marcial Camacho; José D. Machado; Mónica S. Montesinos; Manuel Criado; Ricardo Borges

Several drugs produce rapid changes in the kinetics of exocytosis of catecholamines, as measured at the single event level with amperometry. This study is intended to unveil whether the mechanism(s) responsible for these effects involve changes in the intravesicular pH. Cell incubation with bafilomycin A1, a blocker of the vesicular proton pump, caused both a deceleration in the kinetics of exocytosis and a reduction in the catecholamine content of vesicle. These effects were also observed upon reduction of proton gradient by nigericin or NH4Cl. pH measurements using fluorescent probes (acridine orange, quinacrine or enhanced green fluorescent protein–synaptobrevin) showed a strong correlation between vesicular pH and the kinetics of exocytosis. Hence, all maneuvers tested that decelerated exocytosis also alkalinized secretory vesicles and vice versa. On the other hand, calcium entry caused a transient acidification of granules. We therefore propose that the regulation of vesicular pH is, at least partially, a necessary step in the modulation of the kinetics of exocytosis and quantal size operated by some cell signals.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Intravesicular calcium release mediates the motion and exocytosis of secretory organelles. A study with adrenal chromaffin cells

Marcial Camacho; José D. Machado; Javier Alvarez; Ricardo Borges

Secretory vesicles of sympathetic neurons and chromaffin granules maintain a pH gradient toward the cytosol (pH 5.5 versus 7.2) promoted by the V-ATPase activity. This gradient of pH is also responsible for the accumulation of amines and Ca2+ because their transporters use H+ as the counter ion. We have recently shown that alkalinization of secretory vesicles slowed down exocytosis, whereas acidification caused the opposite effect. In this paper, we measure the alkalinization of vesicular pH, caused by the V-ATPase inhibitor bafilomycin A1, by total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy in cells overexpressing the enhanced green fluorescent protein-labeled synaptobrevin (VAMP2-EGFP) protein. The disruption of the vesicular gradient of pH caused the leak of Ca2+, measured with fura-2. Fluorimetric measurements, using the dye Oregon green BAPTA-2, showed that bafilomycin directly released Ca2+ from freshly isolated vesicles. The Ca2+ released from vesicles to the cytosol dramatically increased the granule motion of chromaffin- or PC12-derived granules and triggered exocytosis (measured by amperometry). We conclude that the gradient of pH of secretory vesicles might be involved in the homeostatic regulation of cytosolic Ca2+ and in two of the major functions of secretory cells, vesicle motion and exocytosis.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2010

Chromogranin B Gene Ablation Reduces the Catecholamine Cargo and Decelerates Exocytosis in Chromaffin Secretory Vesicles

Jésica Díaz-Vera; Yézer G Morales; Juan Ramon Hernandez-Fernaud; Marcial Camacho; Mónica S. Montesinos; Federico Calegari; Wieland B. Huttner; Ricardo Borges; José D. Machado

Chromogranins/secretogranins (Cgs) are the major soluble proteins of large dense-core secretory vesicles (LDCVs). We have recently reported that the absence of chromogranin A (CgA) caused important changes in the accumulation and in the exocytosis of catecholamines (CAs) using a CgA-knock-out (CgA-KO) mouse. Here, we have analyzed a CgB-KO mouse strain that can be maintained in homozygosis. These mice have 36% less adrenomedullary epinephrine when compared to Chgb+/+ [wild type (WT)], whereas the norepinephrine content was similar. The total evoked release of CA was 33% lower than WT mice. This decrease was not due to a lower frequency of exocytotic events but to less secretion per quantum (∼30%) measured by amperometry; amperometric spikes exhibited a slower ascending but a normal decaying phase. Cell incubation with l-DOPA increased the vesicle CA content of WT but not of the CgB-KO cells. Intracellular electrochemistry, using patch amperometry, showed that l-DOPA overload produced a significantly larger increase in cytosolic CAs in cells from the KO animals than chromaffin cells from the WT. These data indicate that the mechanisms for vesicular accumulation of CAs in the CgB-KO cells were saturated, while there was ample capacity for further accumulation in WT cells. Protein analysis of LDCVs showed the overexpression of CgA as well as other proteins apparently unrelated to the secretory process. We conclude that CgB, like CgA, is a highly efficient system directly involved in monoamine accumulation and in the kinetics of exocytosis from LDCVs.


The FASEB Journal | 2012

Chromogranins A and B are key proteins in amine accumulation, but the catecholamine secretory pathway is conserved without them

Jésica Díaz-Vera; Marcial Camacho; José D. Machado; Natalia Domínguez; Mónica S. Montesinos; Juan Ramon Hernandez-Fernaud; Rafael Luján; Ricardo Borges

Chromogranins are the main soluble proteins in the large dense core secretory vesicles (LDCVs) found in aminergic neurons and chromaffin cells. We recently demonstrated that chromogranins A and B each regulate the concentration of adrenaline in chromaffin granules and its exocytosis. Here we have further studied the role played by these proteins by generating mice lacking both chromogranins. Surprisingly, these animals are both viable and fertile. Although chromogranins are thought to be essential for their biogenesis, LDCVs were evident in these mice. These vesicles do have a somewhat atypical appearance and larger size. Despite their increased size, single‐cell amperometry recordings from chromaffin cells showed that the amine content in these vesicles is reduced by half. These data demonstrate that although chromogranins regulate the amine concentration in LDCVs, they are not completely essential, and other proteins unrelated to neurosecretion, such as fibrinogen, might compensate for their loss to ensure that vesicles are generated and the secretory pathway conserved.—Díaz‐Vera, J., Camacho, M., Machado, J. D., Domínguez, N., Montesinos, M. S., Hernández‐Fernaud, J. R., Luján, R., Borges, R. Chromogranins A and B are key proteins in amine accumulation, but the catecholamine secretory pathway is conserved without them. FASEB J. 26, 430–438 (2012). www.fasebj.org


Circulation Research | 2002

Hydralazine Reduces the Quantal Size of Secretory Events by Displacement of Catecholamines From Adrenomedullary Chromaffin Secretory Vesicles

José D. Machado; José F. Gómez; Gema Betancor; Marcial Camacho; Miguel A. Brioso; Ricardo Borges

Abstract— The effects of the antihypertensive agent hydralazine (1 to 100 nmol/L) on the exocytotic process of single adrenal chromaffin cells have been studied using amperometry. Hydralazine does not reduce the frequency of exocytotic spikes but rapidly slows the rate of catecholamine release from individual exocytotic events by reducing the quantal size of catecholamine exocytosis. Confocal and standard epifluorescence microscopy studies show that hydralazine rapidly accumulates within secretory vesicles. The blockade of the vesicular H+ pump with bafilomycin A1 inhibits hydralazine uptake. Experiments with permeabilized cells show that hydralazine displaces catecholamines from secretory vesicles. The drug also displaces vesicular Ca2+, as shown by fura-2 microfluorimetry. These data suggest that hydralazine acts, at least partially, by interfering with the storage of catecholamines. These effects of hydralazine occurred within seconds, and at the tissue concentrations presumably reached in antihypertensive therapy; these concentrations are a thousand times lower than those described for relaxing vascular tissues in vitro. We proposed that these novel effects could explain many of the therapeutic and side effects of this drug that are likely exerted in sympathetic nerve terminals.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2010

Chromogranins as regulators of exocytosis

Ricardo Borges; Jésica Díaz-Vera; Natalia Domínguez; María Rosa Arnau; José D. Machado

J. Neurochem. (2010) 114, 335–343.


Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology | 2010

Chromogranins A and B as Regulators of Vesicle Cargo and Exocytosis

José D. Machado; Jésica Díaz-Vera; Natalia Domínguez; Carmen M. Álvarez; Marta R. Pardo; Ricardo Borges

Chromogranins (Cgs) are acidic proteins that have been implicated in several physiological processes such as vesicle sorting, the production of bioactive peptides and the accumulation of soluble species inside large dense core vesicles (LDCV). They constitute the main protein component in the vesicular matrix of LDCV. This latter characteristic of Cgs accounts for the ability of vesicles to concentrate catecholamines and Ca2+. It is likely that Cgs are behind the delay in the neurotransmitter exit towards the extracellular milieu after vesicle fusion, due to their low affinity and high capacity to bind solutes present inside LDCV. The recent availability of mouse strains lacking Cgs, combined with the arrival of several techniques for the direct monitoring of exocytosis, have helped to expand our knowledge about the mechanisms used by granins to concentrate catecholamines and Ca2+ in LDCV, and how they affect the kinetics of exocytosis. We will discuss the roles of Cgs A and B in maintaining the intravesicular environment of secretory vesicles and in exocytosis, bringing together the most recent findings from adrenal chromaffin cells.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

ATP: The crucial component of secretory vesicles

Judith Estévez-Herrera; Natalia Domínguez; Marta R. Pardo; Ayoze González-Santana; Edward W. Westhead; Ricardo Borges; José D. Machado

Significance ATP is highly concentrated in secretory vesicles. In vitro experiments suggest that the association of ATP with catecholamines reduces their osmotic forces, permitting the extraordinary accumulation of amines within chromaffin granules. However, this has yet to be proved in living cells. Because functional cells cannot be deprived of ATP, we manipulated the vesicular nucleotide carrier, demonstrating that the extent of vesicular ATP is closely linked to the quantum catecholamine size. This is particularly evident in newly synthesized vesicles, the first to be released. This is the in vivo demonstration that vesicular ATP is an essential factor in the accumulation of neurotransmitters, which may well be a wider mechanism supporting quantal transmission. The colligative properties of ATP and catecholamines demonstrated in vitro are thought to be responsible for the extraordinary accumulation of solutes inside chromaffin cell secretory vesicles, although this has yet to be demonstrated in living cells. Because functional cells cannot be deprived of ATP, we have knocked down the expression of the vesicular nucleotide carrier, the VNUT, to show that a reduction in vesicular ATP is accompanied by a drastic fall in the quantal release of catecholamines. This phenomenon is particularly evident in newly synthesized vesicles, which we show are the first to be released. Surprisingly, we find that inhibiting VNUT expression also reduces the frequency of exocytosis, whereas the overexpression of VNUT drastically increases the quantal size of exocytotic events. To our knowledge, our data provide the first demonstration that ATP, in addition to serving as an energy source and purinergic transmitter, is an essential element in the concentration of catecholamines in secretory vesicles. In this way, cells can use ATP to accumulate neurotransmitters and other secreted substances at high concentrations, supporting quantal transmission.


Acta Physiologica | 2007

Compensatory endocytosis in chromaffin cells

Sebastian Barg; José D. Machado

Exocytosis occurs via fusion of secretory granules with the cell membrane, whereupon the granule content is at least partially released and the granule membrane is temporarily added to the plasma membrane. Exocytosis is balanced by compensatory endocytosis to achieve net equilibrium of the cell surface area and to recycle and redistribute components of the exocytosis machinery. The underlying molecular mechanisms remain a matter of debate. In this review, we summarize and discuss recent progress in the understanding of compensatory endocytosis, with the focus on chromaffin cells as a useful model for studying mechanisms of regulated secretion.

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Federico Díaz-González

Hospital Universitario de Canarias

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