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Dive into the research topics where Juan Cedano is active.

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Featured researches published by Juan Cedano.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2010

Protein nanodisk assembling and intracellular trafficking powered by an arginine-rich (R9) peptide

Esther Vázquez; Mónica Roldán; César Díez-Gil; Ugutz Unzueta; Joan Domingo-Espín; Juan Cedano; Oscar Conchillo; Imma Ratera; Jaume Veciana; Xavier Daura; Neus Ferrer-Miralles; Antonio Villaverde

AIMS Arginine(R)-rich cationic peptides are powerful tools in drug delivery since, alone or when associated with polyplexes, proteins or chemicals, they confer DNA condensation, membrane translocation and blood-brain barrier crossing abilities. The unusual stability and high in vivo performance of their associated drugs suggest a particulate organization or R(n) complexes, which this study aimed to explore. MATERIALS & METHODS We have analyzed the particulate organization and biological performance in DNA delivery of a model, R9-containing green fluorescent protein by dynamic light scattering, transmission electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy, single cell confocal microscopy and flow cytometry. RESULTS A deep nanoscale examination of R9-powered constructs reveals a novel and promising feature of R9, that when fused to a scaffold green fluorescent protein, promote its efficient self-assembling as highly stable, regular disk-shaped nanoparticles of 20 x 3 nm. These constructs are efficiently internalized in mammalian cells and rapidly migrate through the cytoplasm towards the nucleus in a fully bioactive form. Besides, such particulate platforms accommodate, condense and deliver plasmid DNA to the nucleus and promote plasmid-driven transgene expression. CONCLUSION The architectonic properties of arginine-rich peptides at the nanoscale reveal a new category of protein nanoparticles, namely nanodisks, and provide novel strategic concepts and architectonic tools for the tailored construction of new-generation artificial viruses for gene therapy and drug delivery.


ACS Nano | 2014

In vivo architectonic stability of fully de novo designed protein-only nanoparticles.

María Virtudes Céspedes; Ugutz Unzueta; Witold I. Tatkiewicz; Alejandro Sánchez-Chardi; Oscar Conchillo-Solé; Patricia Álamo; Zhikun Xu; Isolda Casanova; José Luis Corchero; Mireia Pesarrodona; Juan Cedano; Xavier Daura; Imma Ratera; Jaume Veciana; Neus Ferrer-Miralles; Esther Vázquez; Antonio Villaverde; Ramon Mangues

The fully de novo design of protein building blocks for self-assembling as functional nanoparticles is a challenging task in emerging nanomedicines, which urgently demand novel, versatile, and biologically safe vehicles for imaging, drug delivery, and gene therapy. While the use of viruses and virus-like particles is limited by severe constraints, the generation of protein-only nanocarriers is progressively reachable by the engineering of protein-protein interactions, resulting in self-assembling functional building blocks. In particular, end-terminal cationic peptides drive the organization of structurally diverse protein species as regular nanosized oligomers, offering promise in the rational engineering of protein self-assembling. However, the in vivo stability of these constructs, being a critical issue for their medical applicability, needs to be assessed. We have explored here if the cross-molecular contacts between protein monomers, generated by end-terminal cationic peptides and oligohistidine tags, are stable enough for the resulting nanoparticles to overcome biological barriers in assembled form. The analyses of renal clearance and biodistribution of several tagged modular proteins reveal long-term architectonic stability, allowing systemic circulation and tissue targeting in form of nanoparticulate material. This observation fully supports the value of the engineered of protein building blocks addressed to the biofabrication of smart, robust, and multifunctional nanoparticles with medical applicability that mimic structure and functional capabilities of viral capsids.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

MultitaskProtDB: a database of multitasking proteins

Sergio Hernández; Gabriela Ferragut; Isaac Amela; JosepAntoni Perez-Pons; Jaume Piñol; Angel Mozo-Villarias; Juan Cedano; Enrique Querol

We have compiled MultitaskProtDB, available online at http://wallace.uab.es/multitask, to provide a repository where the many multitasking proteins found in the literature can be stored. Multitasking or moonlighting is the capability of some proteins to execute two or more biological functions. Usually, multitasking proteins are experimentally revealed by serendipity. This ability of proteins to perform multitasking functions helps us to understand one of the ways used by cells to perform many complex functions with a limited number of genes. Even so, the study of this phenomenon is complex because, among other things, there is no database of moonlighting proteins. The existence of such a tool facilitates the collection and dissemination of these important data. This work reports the database, MultitaskProtDB, which is designed as a friendly user web page containing >288 multitasking proteins with their NCBI and UniProt accession numbers, canonical and additional biological functions, monomeric/oligomeric states, PDB codes when available and bibliographic references. This database also serves to gain insight into some characteristics of multitasking proteins such as frequencies of the different pairs of functions, phylogenetic conservation and so forth.


International Journal of Nanomedicine | 2012

Intracellular CXCR4+ cell targeting with T22-empowered protein-only nanoparticles

Ugutz Unzueta; María Virtudes Céspedes; Neus Ferrer-Miralles; Isolda Casanova; Juan Cedano; José Luis Corchero; Joan Domingo-Espín; Antonio Villaverde; Ramon Mangues; Esther Vázquez

Video abstract Video


Biomaterials | 2012

Non-amyloidogenic peptide tags for the regulatable self-assembling of protein-only nanoparticles

Ugutz Unzueta; Neus Ferrer-Miralles; Juan Cedano; Xu Zikung; Mireia Pesarrodona; Paolo Saccardo; Elena García-Fruitós; Joan Domingo-Espín; Pradeep Kumar; Kailash Chand Gupta; Ramon Mangues; Antonio Villaverde; Esther Vázquez

Controlling the self-assembling of building blocks as nanoscale entities is a requisite for the generation of bio-inspired vehicles for nanomedicines. A wide spectrum of functional peptides has been incorporated to different types of nanoparticles for the delivery of conventional drugs and nucleic acids, enabling receptor-specific cell binding and internalization, endosomal escape, cytosolic trafficking, nuclear targeting and DNA condensation. However, the development of architectonic tags to induce the self-assembling of functionalized monomers has been essentially neglected. We have examined here the nanoscale architectonic capabilities of arginine-rich cationic peptides, that when displayed on His-tagged proteins, promote their self-assembling as monodisperse, protein-only nanoparticles. The scrutiny of the cross-molecular interactivity cooperatively conferred by poly-arginines and poly-histidines has identified regulatable electrostatic interactions between building blocks that can also be engineered to encapsulate cargo DNA. The combined use of cationic peptides and poly-histidine tags offers an unusually versatile approach for the tailored design and biofabrication of protein-based nano-therapeutics, beyond the more limited spectrum of possibilities so far offered by self-assembling amyloidogenic peptides.


Microbial Cell Factories | 2011

Self-assembling, protein-based intracellular bacterial organelles: emerging vehicles for encapsulating, targeting and delivering therapeutical cargoes

José Luis Corchero; Juan Cedano

Many bacterial species contain intracellular nano- and micro-compartments consisting of self-assembling proteins that form protein-only shells. These structures are built up by combinations of a reduced number of repeated elements, from 60 repeated copies of one unique structural element self-assembled in encapsulins of 24 nm to 10,000-20,000 copies of a few protein species assembled in a organelle of around 100-150 nm in cross-section. However, this apparent simplicity does not correspond to the structural and functional sophistication of some of these organelles. They package, by not yet definitely solved mechanisms, one or more enzymes involved in specific metabolic pathways, confining such reactions and sequestering or increasing the inner concentration of unstable, toxics or volatile intermediate metabolites. From a biotechnological point of view, we can use the self assembling properties of these particles for directing shell assembling and enzyme packaging, mimicking nature to design new applications in biotechnology. Upon appropriate engineering of the building blocks, they could act as a new family of self-assembled, protein-based vehicles in Nanomedicine to encapsulate, target and deliver therapeutic cargoes to specific cell types and/or tissues. This would provide a new, intriguing platform of microbial origin for drug delivery.


Microbial Cell Factories | 2011

Biological activities of histidine-rich peptides; merging biotechnology and nanomedicine.

Neus Ferrer-Miralles; José Luis Corchero; Pradeep Kumar; Juan Cedano; Kailash Chand Gupta; Antonio Villaverde; Esther Vázquez

Histidine-rich peptides are commonly used in recombinant protein production as purification tags, allowing the one-step affinity separation of the His-tagged proteins from the extracellular media or cell extracts. Genetic engineering makes feasible the post-purification His-tag removal by inserting, between the tag and the main protein body, a target site for trans-acting proteases or a self-proteolytic peptide with regulatable activities. However, for technical ease, His tags are often not removed and the fusion proteins eventually used in this form. In this commentary, we revise the powerful biological properties of histidine-rich peptides as endosomolytic agents and as architectonic tags in nanoparticle formation, for which they are exploited in drug delivery and other nanomedical applications. These activities, generally unknown to biotechnologists, can unwillingly modulate the functionality and biotechnological performance of recombinant proteins in which they remain trivially attached.


Bioinformatics | 1997

'TransMem': a neural network implemented in Excel spreadsheets for predicting transmembrane domains of proteins.

Patrick Aloy; Juan Cedano; Baldomero Oliva; Francesc X. Avilés; Enrique Querol

MOTIVATION Genomic sequences from different organisms, even prokaryotic, have plenty of orphan ORFs, making necessary methods for the prediction of protein structure and function. The prediction of the presence of hydrophobic transmembrane (HTM) stretches is a valuable clue for this. RESULTS The program. TransMem, based on a neural network and running on personal computers (either Apple Macintosh or PC, using Excel worksheets), for the prediction and distribution of amino acid residues in transmembrane segments of integral membrane proteins is reported. The percentage of residue predictive accuracy obtained for the set of proteins tested is 93%, ranging from 99.9% for the best to 71.7% for the worst prediction. The segment-based accuracy is 93.6%; 63.6% of the protein set match any of the predicted and observed segment locations. AVAILABILITY TransMem is available upon request or by anonymous up: IP address: luz.uab.es, directory/pub/ TransMem. It is also placed on the EMBL file server (ftp:/(/)ftp.ebi.ac.uk/pub/software/mac/TransMem ).


PLOS ONE | 2007

Pathogen Proteins Eliciting Antibodies Do Not Share Epitopes with Host Proteins: A Bioinformatics Approach

Isaac Amela; Juan Cedano; Enrique Querol

The best way to prevent diseases caused by pathogens is by the use of vaccines. The advent of genomics enables genome-wide searches of new vaccine candidates, called reverse vaccinology. The most common strategy to apply reverse vaccinology is by designing subunit recombinant vaccines, which usually generate an humoral immune response due to B-cell epitopes in proteins. A major problem for this strategy is the identification of protective immunogenic proteins from the surfome of the pathogen. Epitope mimicry may lead to auto-immune phenomena related to several human diseases. A sequence-based computational analysis has been carried out applying the BLASTP algorithm. Therefore, two huge databases have been created, one with the most complete and current linear B-cell epitopes, and the other one with the surface-protein sequences of the main human respiratory bacterial pathogens. We found that none of the 7353 linear B-cell epitopes analysed shares any sequence identity region with human proteins capable of generating antibodies, and that only 1% of the 2175 exposed proteins analysed contain a stretch of shared sequence with the human proteome. These findings suggest the existence of a mechanism to avoid autoimmunity. We also propose a strategy for corroborating or warning about the viability of a protein linear B-cell epitope as a putative vaccine candidate in a reverse vaccinology study; so, epitopes without any sequence identity with human proteins should be very good vaccine candidates, and the other way around.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2012

RGD-based cell ligands for cell-targeted drug delivery act as potent trophic factors.

Joan Domingo-Espín; Valérie Petegnief; Núria de Vera; Oscar Conchillo-Solé; Paolo Saccardo; Ugutz Unzueta; Esther Vázquez; Juan Cedano; Luciana Negro; Xavier Daura; Hugo Peluffo; Anna M. Planas; Antonio Villaverde; Neus Ferrer-Miralles

UNLABELLED Integrin-binding, Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD)-containing peptides are the most widely used agents to deliver drugs, nanoparticles, and imaging agents. Although in nature, several protein-mediated signal transduction events depend on RGD motifs, the potential of RGD-empowered materials in triggering undesired cell-signaling cascades has been neglected. Using an RGD-functionalized protein nanoparticle, we show here that the RGD motif acts as a powerful trophic factor, supporting extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2)-linked cell proliferation and partial differentiation of PC12 cells, a neuronlike model. FROM THE CLINICAL EDITOR This work focuses on RGD peptides, which are among the most commonly used tags for targeted drug delivery. They also promote protoneurite formation and expression of neuronal markers (MAP2) in model PC12 cells, which is an unexpected but relevant event in the functionalization of drugs and their nanocarriers.

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Enrique Querol

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Isaac Amela

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Antonio Gómez

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Neus Ferrer-Miralles

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Jaume Piñol

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Sergio Hernández

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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