Laura Paco
University of Granada
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Publication
Featured researches published by Laura Paco.
BMC Cancer | 2006
Eva Jiménez-Medina; Angel Garcia-Lora; Laura Paco; Ignacio Algarra; Antonia Collado; Federico Garrido
BackgroundPhytopharmacological studies of different Calendula extracts have shown anti-inflamatory, anti-viral and anti-genotoxic properties of therapeutic interest. In this study, we evaluated the in vitro cytotoxic anti-tumor and immunomodulatory activities and in vivo anti-tumor effect of Laser Activated Calendula Extract (LACE), a novel extract of the plant Calendula Officinalis (Asteraceae).MethodsAn aqueous extract of Calendula Officinalis was obtained by a novel extraction method in order to measure its anti-tumor and immunomodulatory activities in vitro. Tumor cell lines derived from leukemias, melanomas, fibrosarcomas and cancers of breast, prostate, cervix, lung, pancreas and colorectal were used and tumor cell proliferation in vitro was measured by BrdU incorporation and viable cell count. Effect of LACE on human peripheral blood lymphocyte (PBL) proliferation in vitro was also analyzed. Studies of cell cycle and apoptosis were performed in LACE-treated cells. In vivo anti-tumor activity was evaluated in nude mice bearing subcutaneously human Ando-2 melanoma cells.ResultsThe LACE extract showed a potent in vitro inhibition of tumor cell proliferation when tested on a wide variety of human and murine tumor cell lines. The inhibition ranged from 70 to 100%. Mechanisms of inhibition were identified as cell cycle arrest in G0/G1 phase and Caspase-3-induced apoptosis. Interestingly, the same extract showed an opposite effect when tested on PBLs and NKL cell line, in which in vitro induction of proliferation and activation of these cells was observed. The intraperitoneal injection or oral administration of LACE extract in nude mice inhibits in vivo tumor growth of Ando-2 melanoma cells and prolongs the survival day of the mice.ConclusionThese results indicate that LACE aqueous extract has two complementary activities in vitro with potential anti-tumor therapeutic effect: cytotoxic tumor cell activity and lymphocyte activation. The LACE extract presented in vivo anti-tumoral activity in nude mice against tumor growth of Ando-2 melanoma cells.
Immunogenetics | 2004
Isabel Maleno; Carmen Cabrera; Teresa Cabrera; Laura Paco; Miguel A. López-Nevot; Antonia Collado; Antonio Ferron; Federico Garrido
HLA class I loss or down-regulation is a widespread mechanism used by tumor cells to avoid tumor recognition by cytotoxic T lymphocytes, and thus favor tumor immune escape. Multiple mechanisms are responsible for these HLA class I alterations. In different epithelial tumors, loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at chromosome region 6p21.3, leading to HLA haplotype loss, occurs in 6–50% of all cases depending on the tumor entity. In this paper we report the frequency of LOH at 6p21 in 95 colorectal carcinomas (CRC) previously analyzed for altered HLA class I expression with immunohistological techniques. We used PCR microsatellite amplification of selected STR markers located on Chromosome 6 to identify LOH with DNA from microdissected tumor tissues and the surrounding stroma. Sequence-specific oligonucleotide analysis was performed in microdissected stroma and tumor cells for HLA typing, and to detect HLA haplotype loss. A high frequency (40%) of HLA haplotype loss was found in CRC. Eight tumors showed microsatellite instability. We sometimes observed two or more mechanisms responsible for HLA alteration within the same HLA-altered phenotype, such as LOH and HLA class I total loss. In 25 tumors (26%) no HLA class I alteration could be identified. These data are potentially relevant for CRC patients undergoing T-cell-based immunotherapy.
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases | 2005
Javier Oliver; María Gómez-García; Laura Paco; Miguel A. López-Nevot; Alexis Piñero; Francisco Correro; Leopoldo Martín; José A Brieva; Antonio Nieto; Javier Martin
Background: This study investigated the influence of the NFKB1−94ins/delATTG in the susceptibility/phenotype to ulcerative colitis. Methods: We analyzed the distribution of −94ins/delATTG NFKB1 in 258 patients and 264 healthy controls from southern Spain by a polymerase chain reaction‐fluorescent method. Results: The genotype and allele frequencies of −94ins/delATTG did not significantly differ between patients and controls. In fact, the frequency of the −94delATTG allele was almost identical in both groups (34.8% and 35.4%, respectively), and the del/del genotype was underrepresented in UC patients (11.2% versus 14%). In addition, no association of this polymorphism was found with any of the clinical parameters analyzed. Conclusion: These results suggest that the NFKB1 −94ins/delATTG gene variation, previously associated with UC susceptibility in North Americans, does not influence either susceptibility or phenotype of UC in the Spanish population.
Carcinogenesis | 2012
Cristina Garrido; Laura Paco; Irene Romero; Enrique Berruguilla; Julia Stefansky; Antonia Collado; Ignacio Algarra; Federico Garrido; Angel Garcia-Lora
The alteration of MHC class I (MHC-I) expression is a frequent event during cancer progression, allowing tumor cells to evade the immune system. We report that the loss of one major histocompatibility complex haplotype in human melanoma cells not only allowed them to evade immunosurveillance but also increased their intrinsic oncogenic potential. A second successive defect in MHC-I expression, MHC-I total downregulation, gave rise to melanoma cells that were more oncogenic per se in vivo and showed a higher proliferation rate and greater migratory and invasive potential in vitro. All these processes were reversed by restoring MHC-I expression via human leukocite antigen-A2 gene transfection. MHC-I cell surface expression was inversely correlated with intrinsic oncogenic potential. Modifications in the expression of various cell cycle genes were correlated with changes in MHC-I expression; the most important differences among the melanoma cell lines were in the transcriptional level of AP2-alpha, cyclin A1 and p21WAF1/CIP1. According to these results, altered MHC-I expression in malignant cells can directly increase their intrinsic oncogenic and invasive potential and modulate the expression of cell cycle genes. These findings suggest that human leukocite antigen class I molecules may act directly as tumor suppressor genes in melanoma.
Immunogenetics | 2006
Isabel Maleno; José María Romero; Teresa Cabrera; Laura Paco; Natalia Aptsiauri; Jose Manuel Cozar; Miguel Tallada; Miguel A. López-Nevot; Federico Garrido
Alterations in HLA class I antigen expression have been frequently described in different epithelial tumors and are thought to favor tumor immune escape from T lymphocyte recognition. Multiple molecular mechanisms are responsible for these altered HLA class I tumor phenotypes. Some are structural defects that produce unresponsiveness to treatment with interferons. Others include alterations in regulatory mechanisms that can be switched on by treatment of tumor cells with different cytokines. One important mechanism belonging to the first group is loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at chromosome region 6p21.3, which can lead to HLA haplotype loss. In this investigation, the frequency of LOH at 6p21 chromosome region was studied in 69 bladder carcinomas. Short tandem repeat analysis showed that 35% of cases had LOH in this chromosome region. By considering these results together with immunohistological findings previously published by our group, we identified a distribution pattern of HLA class I altered phenotypes in bladder cancer. The most frequently altered phenotype in bladder carcinomas was total loss of HLA class I expression (17 cases, 25%), followed by phenotype II associated with HLA haplotype loss (12 cases, 17.5%), and HLA allelic loss (ten cases, 14.5%). Nine cases (13%) were classified as having a compound phenotype, five cases (7%) as having HLA locus loss, and in 16 cases (23%) no alteration in HLA expression was detected. An important conclusion of this report is that a combination of different molecular and immunohistological techniques is required to precisely define which HLA alleles are lost during tumor progression and to characterize the underlying mechanisms of these losses. These studies should be performed when a cancer patient is to be included in an immunotherapy protocol that aims to stimulate different immune effector mechanisms.
Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy | 2005
Teresa Rodríguez; Rosa Méndez; Chrissy h. Roberts; Francisco Ruiz-Cabello; I. Anthony Dodi; Miguel Angel López Nevot; Laura Paco; Isabel Maleno; Steven G.E. Marsh; Graham Pawelec; Federico Garrido
Malignant transformation of cells is frequently associated with abnormalities in human leukocyte antigen (HLA) expression. MHC class I loss or down-regulation in cancer cells is a major immune escape route used by a large variety of human tumours to evade antitumour immune responses mediated by cytotoxic T lymphocytes. The goal of our study was to explore HLA genotyping and phenotyping in a variety of melanoma tumour cell lines. A total of 91 melanoma cell lines were characterised for HLA class I and II genotype. In addition, 61 out of the 91 cell lines were also analysed for HLA class I and II cell surface molecule expression by flow cytometry. Unexpectedly, we found that 19.7% of the melanoma cell lines were homozygous for HLA class I genotypes, sometimes associated with HLA class II homozygosity (8.79%) and sometimes not (10.98%). The frequency of homozygosity was significantly higher compared with the control groups (1.6%). To identify the reasons underlying the high frequency of HLA homozygosity we searched for genomic deletions using eight pairs of highly polymorphic microsatellite markers covering the entire extended HLA complex on the short arm of chromosome 6. Our results were compatible with hemizygous deletions and suggest that loss of heterozygosity on chromosome arm 6p is a common feature in melanoma cell lines. In fact, although autologous normal DNA from the patients was not available and could not be tested, the retention in some cases of heterozygosity for a number of microsatellite markers would indicate a hemizygous deletion. In the rest of the cases, markers at 6p and 6q showed a single allele pattern indicating the probable loss of part or the whole of chromosome 6. These results led us to conclude that loss of heterozygosity in chromosome 6 is nonrandom and is possibly an immunologically relevant event in human malignant melanoma. Other well-established altered HLA class I phenotypes were also detected by flow cytometry that correspond to HLA class I total loss and HLA-ABC and/or specific HLA-B locus down-regulation.
Acta Oto-laryngologica | 2005
Juan C. Amor-Dorado; Laura Paco; Javier Martin; Miguel A. López-Nevot; Miguel A. González-Gay
Conclusion. The results of this study support the assertion that Southern European individuals have a genetically mediated predisposition to develop idiopathic sudden sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL). Objective. To assess the influence of human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DQB1 and -DRB1 alleles on the susceptibility to and the severity of idiopathic sudden SNHL. Material and methods. A prospective study of patients diagnosed with idiopathic sudden SNHL between October 2000 and September 2002 was conducted. Patients were included in the study if they were diagnosed with idiopathic sudden SNHL within 1 week after the onset of deafness symptoms and had been followed for at least 12 months. HLA-DQB1 and -DRB1 typing was performed from DNA using molecular-based methods on patients and ethnically matched healthy controls. Results. Thirty-three patients fulfilled the inclusion criteria. No significant differences in HLA-DQB1 phenotype frequencies were found between patients and controls (n=145). Carriage of HLA-DRB1*0403 was significantly increased in the whole group of patients compared with controls (OR = 11.97; 95% CI 1.99–91.60; p=0.002; pcorr=0.04). In patients without auditory improvement the frequency of the HLA-DRB1*04 phenotype was significantly increased compared with healthy controls (OR = 6.57; 95% CI 1.62–26.70; p=0.003; pcorr=0.04).
International Journal of Cancer | 2007
Laura Paco; Angel Garcia-Lora; Carlos Casares; Carmen Cabrera; Ignacio Algarra; Antonia Collado; Isabel Maleno; Federico Garrido; Miguel A. López-Nevot
Loss of HLA class I expression on tumor cells is a frequent event as an immune escape mechanism. Seven different altered HLA phenotypes have been defined in tumors. Various molecular mechanisms have been described as responsible for HLA class I loss. HLA class I expression alterations occur successively and unpredictably during tumor progression in vivo and immunoselection has been implicated in this process. We present an experimental xenograft model in which melanoma cell line Ando‐2 injected into athymic nude mice lost total surface HLA class I expression and exhibited HLA class II cell surface expression. A strong down‐regulation of HLA class I expression and de novo HLA class II expression were also found when Ando‐2 melanoma cells were injected into SCID‐Beige mice. These phenomena were reproducible and were only observed in local growth in nude or SCID‐Beige mice and not in vitro after multiple passages. HLA class I surface expression was recovered after IFN‐γ treatment, indicating regulatory defects. The mechanism implicated in loss of HLA class I molecule expression were a down‐regulation of different components of antigen processing machinery and HLA class I heavy chains. These data suggest that HLA class I alterations can also occur in absence of autologous adaptive immune response. This is a good experimental in vivo model to study the relationship between tumor progression and HLA class I alterations.
Human Immunology | 2005
Gisela Orozco; Miguel A. González-Gay; Laura Paco; Miguel A. López-Nevot; Manuel Guzmán; Dora Pascual-Salcedo; Alejandro Balsa; Javier Martin
Tissue Antigens | 2005
Gisela Orozco; Elena Sánchez; Maria Dolores Collado; M. A. López-Nevot; Laura Paco; A. García; Juan Jiménez-Alonso; Javier Martin