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Dive into the research topics where Jose M. Serrano is active.

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Featured researches published by Jose M. Serrano.


Molecular Nutrition & Food Research | 2009

Tannins: Current knowledge of food sources, intake, bioavailability and biological effects

Jose M. Serrano; Riitta Puupponen-Pimiä; Andreas Dauer; Anna-Marja Aura; Fulgencio Saura-Calixto

Tannins are a unique group of phenolic metabolites with molecular weights between 500 and 30 000 Da, which are widely distributed in almost all plant foods and beverages. Proanthocyanidins and hydrolysable tannins are the two major groups of these bioactive compounds, but complex tannins containing structural elements of both groups and specific tannins in marine brown algae have also been described. Most literature data on food tannins refer only to oligomeric compounds that are extracted with aqueous-organic solvents, but a significant number of non-extractable tannins are usually not mentioned in the literature. The biological effects of tannins usually depend on their grade of polymerisation and solubility. Highly polymerised tannins exhibit low bioaccessibility in the small intestine and low fermentability by colonic microflora. This review summarises a new approach to analysis of extractable and non-extractable tannins, major food sources, and effects of storage and processing on tannin content and bioavailability. Biological properties such as antioxidant, antimicrobial and antiviral effects are also described. In addition, the role of tannins in diabetes mellitus has been discussed.


Nutrition | 2008

Effects of grape antioxidant dietary fiber in cardiovascular disease risk factors

Jara Pérez Jiménez; Jose M. Serrano; Maria Tabernero; Sara Arranz; M. Elena Díaz-Rubio; Luis García-Diz; Isabel Goñi; Fulgencio Saura-Calixto

OBJECTIVE The objective of the study was to evaluate the effects of a grape product rich in dietary fiber and natural antioxidants on cardiovascular disease risk factors. METHODS A randomized, controlled parallel-group trial was carried out. Thirty-four non-smoking (21 normocholesterolemic and 13 hypercholesterolemic) adults were supplemented for 16 wk with 7.5 g/d of grape antioxidant dietary fiber, a natural product containing 5.25 g of dietary fiber and 1400 mg of polyphenols. Nine non-supplemented non-smokers were followed as a control group. Fasting blood samples, blood pressure, and anthropometric readings were obtained at baseline and at week 16. Subjects were allowed to consume their regular diet, which was monitored weekly. RESULTS Grape antioxidant dietary fiber (7.5 g/d) reduced significantly (P < 0.05) total cholesterol (9%), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (9%), and systolic and diastolic blood pressures (6% and 5% respectively). Greater reductions in total cholesterol (14.2%) and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (11.6%, P < 0.05) were observed in hypercholesterolemic subjects. No changes were observed in the control group. There was a reduction of 2.5 points in the Framingham Global Risk Score in the supplemented group. A significant reduction in triacylglycerol concentration took place in the supplemented hypercholesterolemic subjects (18.6%, P < 0.05). CONCLUSION Grape antioxidant dietary fiber showed significant reducing effects in lipid profile and blood pressure. The effects appear to be higher than the ones caused by other dietary fibers, such as oat fiber or psyllium, probably due to the combined effect of dietary fiber and antioxidants.


Trends in Ecology and Evolution | 1994

Parallels between the foraging strategies of ants and plants.

Francisco López; Jose M. Serrano; Francisco J. Acosta

Animal and plant ecologists generally follow separate paths. This often leads to disjointed approaches to solving similar ecological problems. In the past 20 years, two related, but unconnected, research fields have undergone rapid development: modular demography, with its morphological and functional analysis of resource capture, until now basically the domain of plant ecology; and foraging theory, traditionally applied and developed in animal ecology. The results of recent research on the foraging strategies of ants and clonal plants, however, outline a general framework of functional parallels between both types of organisms that could link important aspects of animal and plant foraging ecology.


Oecologia | 1993

Responses of the trunk routes of a harvester ant to plant density

Francisco López; Francisco J. Acosta; Jose M. Serrano

Messor barbarus is a Mediterranean harvester ant that constructs physically defined trunk routes on the ground to connect nest entrances with foraging areas. Some responses of these trunk routes to plant density (and therefore resource abundance) were analyzed by testing the preferential allocation of different parts (trunk route ends, segments and branching points) in a patchy environment. Maps of grass density in four categories and Messor barbarus trunk routes were compiled for a Mediterranean pasture in Central Spain over four consecutive years. The proportions of the density categories in each year were used to calculate random expected frequencies of the trunk route points and the predominance of higher or lower grass densities. Trunk route ends discriminate and selectively reach patches with a greater abundance of resources in all study years. Branching points are also allocated preferentially in areas with higher vegetation density, but only in years with a predominance of the higher categories of grass density. In these years, the colonies of Messor barbarus have a “phalanx” strategy at a colonial level, and branching is more profuse. Finally, trunk route segments do not indicate any preference for crossing determined vegetation densities, but rather connect successive branching points or trunk route ends by the shortest route. These results concur with a model of structural strategy change (“guerilla” — “phalanx”) (Hutchings 1988) at the level of trunk routes. They are probably constituted by “transitory” sections with few branches, that expand other more profusely branched sections which are more dedicated to foraging.


Environmental and Experimental Botany | 2001

Heat shock, mass-dependent germination, and seed yield as related components of fitness in Cistus ladanifer

Juan A. Delgado; Jose M. Serrano; Francisco López; Francisco J. Acosta

The different weight-number strategies of seed production displayed by individuals of a Mediterranean fire-prone plant species (Cistus ladanifer) were investigated in relation to seed germination responses to pre-germination heating. A control (no heating), a high temperature during a short exposure time (100 degrees C during 5 min) and a high temperature during a long exposure time (100 degrees C during 15 min) were applied to seeds from different individual plants with different mean seed weight. These pre-germination treatments resemble natural germination scenarios for the studied species, absence of fire, typical Mediterranean shrub fire, and severe fire with high fuel load. Seed germination was related to heat treatments and seed mass. Seed heating increased the proportion of seeds germinating compared with the control treatment. Mean seed weight was positively correlated to the proportion of germinated seeds but only within heat treatments. These results suggest that in periods without fire, the relative contributions to the population dynamics are equal for all seeds, regardless of their mass, whereas heavier seeds would be the main contribution after wildfire events. Since lighter seeds can be produced in higher quantities than heavier ones within a given fruit, the number of seedlings produced per fruit depended strongly on the germination conditions. In the absence of wildfire, fruits producing lighter seeds gave rise to more seedlings; nevertheless, they were numerically exceeded by those producing heavy seeds after a wildfire. The implications of these results are discussed in relation to their consequences on the population dynamics of this species, considering also additional information on stand flammability and changes in seed mass with plant age.


The American Naturalist | 1995

Dispersed Versus Central-Place Foraging: Intra- and Intercolonial Competition in the Strategy of Trunk Trail Arrangement of a Harvester Ant

Francisco J. Acosta; Francisco López; Jose M. Serrano

Competition for resources has a clear expression in the spatial arrangement of intensive foraging structures of ants. Trunk trails of harvester ants have been considered as devices that avoid competition between neighboring colonies, which give rise to irregular foraging territories around the nests. This hypothesis is valid for strict central-place foragers but loses strength when the colonies have several nest entrances and approach a dispersed central-place strategy. The strategies of trunk trail allocation in a harvester ant species (Messor barbarus) with both trunk trails and multiple nest entrances are studied in order to ascertain the outcome of the oppositing forces of neighborhood competition and trail arrangement within the colonies. Evidence is found of inter- and intracolonial competitive interactions in the arrangement of trunk trails in this species. Intracolonial competition seems to be superimposed on intercolonial interactions, which generates a composite pattern of trail allocation in which dispersed and central-place foraging concur.


Heredity | 2000

Inter‐ and intraspecific sexual discrimination in the flour beetles Tribolium castaneum and Tribolium confusum

Jose M. Serrano; Laureano Castro; Miguel A. Toro; Carlos López-Fanjul

In Tribolium castaneum (CS) and T. confusum (CF), intra- and interspecific rates of homosexual mounting have been measured. The intraspecific results are compatible with the hypothesis of both species being sexually indiscriminate. However, the CF intraspecific rates were very high (35%–53% of mountings were homosexual), suggesting a lower sexual attractiveness, or a stronger rejection to being mounted, of CF females relative to conspecific males. CS males discriminate between species but, in interspecific contacts, preferentially mounted CF males rather than CF females. CF males do not discriminate between species, but the loss of sexual attractiveness of CF females, or their rejection to being mounted, may act as a precopulatory isolation mechanism.


Plant Ecology | 2001

Age changes in the vegetative vs. reproductive allocation by module demographic strategies in a perennial plant

Francisco López; Sara G. Fungairiño; Paloma de las Heras; Jose M. Serrano; Francisco J. Acosta

Retama sphaerocarpa (L.) Boiss. is aMediterranean shrub with a remarkably simplified metameric structure. Terminalyoungest shoots act as units of modular growth, being able to produce newshootsby basal axillary buds (at the base of the shoot) and inflorescencesby lateral axillary buds. In this study, we have analysed the structural andgrowth potential features of these modules, as well as their‘demographic’ proportions, regarding the allocation of newvegetative and reproductive growth in plants of different age. Reproductiveeffort is proportionally higher in older plants. This shift in the allocationstrategy with plant ontogeny is not attained with changes in the shoot modules(which maintain a constant size, nutrient composition and show a similarnew growth investment per module) but through a different‘demographic’ composition of the ‘population’ ofmodulesaccording to their developmental fate (vegetative or reproductive).This indicates a high level of iterativity and a purely modular growth, sincethe attributes of the individual (age of the plants) do not seem toaffect those of the integrating modular units (growth performance of theshoots).


Acta Oecologica-international Journal of Ecology | 2001

Multiple infestation by seed predators: the effect of loculate fruits on intraspecific insect larval competition

Jose M. Serrano; Juan A. Delgado; Francisco López; Francisco J. Acosta; Sara G. Fungairiño

Abstract Many morphological features of fruits are important factors affecting predispersal seed predation by insects. This paper analyses the predispersal seed predation process of a major predator (a Noctuidae lepidopteran larvae) in loculate fruits of a bushy perennial plant, Cistus ladanifer . The main aim of the study is to assess the potential effect of internal valvae (which partition groups of seeds) in the intraspecific competition between larvae in multiple-infested fruits. Our results show that larvae do not reject already infested fruits, but they avoid the proximity of other larvae within the fruit, keeping an average minimum distance of one locule. In multiple-infested fruits, larval mortality increases and the proportion of seeds consumed by each larvae decreases. In those situations in which valvae keep apart larvae within a fruit, these only suffer the cost of exploitation competition with a low acquisition of resources. However, when all valvae between them are pierced by the larvae, competition switches to an interference component and larval mortality increases markedly. The existence of valvae within a fruit allows larvae to diminish the cost of intraspecific competition, obtaining high life expectancies (70%), even in triple-infested fruits.


Plant Ecology | 1997

Functional features and ontogenetic changes in reproductive allocation and partitioning strategies of plant modules

Francisco J. Acosta; Juan A. Delgado; Francisco López; Jose M. Serrano

In the concept of modularity, plant modules are considered as iterative units and their changes are analyzed in terms of number or size. This paper, however, analyses changes with respect to the reproductive functional performance of modules and individual plant age. Patterns of resource allocation and partitioning in reproductive modules (fruits) are compared between two different age groups of a bushy perennial plant, Cistus ladanifer.Although modules do not differ in their allocation strategies (young plant modules produce the same seed and packing/protective structure biomass as old plant modules), their partitioning strategies change with plant age: young plant modules produce a larger number of lighter seeds than old plants. These differences have a direct consequence on the plant pre-dispersal fitness, which is not counteracted by insect predation on reproductive modules. These results are empirical evidence of a differentiation in the performance of reproductive modules with the ontogenetic development of this plant species. We think that the consideration of such kind of changes in module features is essential in the analysis of the iterative construction of plants.

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Francisco J. Acosta

Complutense University of Madrid

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Francisco López

Complutense University of Madrid

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Juan A. Delgado

Complutense University of Madrid

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Sara G. Fungairiño

Complutense University of Madrid

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Fulgencio Saura-Calixto

Spanish National Research Council

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Isabel Goñi

Complutense University of Madrid

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Sara Arranz

Spanish National Research Council

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Jara Pérez-Jiménez

Spanish National Research Council

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Jesús M. Barandica

Complutense University of Madrid

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Juan M. Zorrilla

Complutense University of Madrid

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