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Dive into the research topics where Laura Sánchez-García is active.

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Featured researches published by Laura Sánchez-García.


Microbial Cell Factories | 2016

Recombinant pharmaceuticals from microbial cells: a 2015 update

Laura Sánchez-García; Lucas Martín; Ramon Mangues; Neus Ferrer-Miralles; Esther Vázquez; Antonio Villaverde

Diabetes, growth or clotting disorders are among the spectrum of human diseases related to protein absence or malfunction. Since these pathologies cannot be yet regularly treated by gene therapy, the administration of functional proteins produced ex vivo is required. As both protein extraction from natural producers and chemical synthesis undergo inherent constraints that limit regular large-scale production, recombinant DNA technologies have rapidly become a choice for therapeutic protein production. The spectrum of organisms exploited as recombinant cell factories has expanded from the early predominating Escherichia coli to alternative bacteria, yeasts, insect cells and especially mammalian cells, which benefit from metabolic and protein processing pathways similar to those in human cells. Up to date, around 650 protein drugs have been worldwide approved, among which about 400 are obtained by recombinant technologies. Other 1300 recombinant pharmaceuticals are under development, with a clear tendency towards engineered versions with improved performance and new functionalities regarding the conventional, plain protein species. This trend is exemplified by the examination of the contemporary protein-based drugs developed for cancer treatment.


Microbial Cell Factories | 2014

Expanding the recombinant protein quality in Lactococcus lactis.

Olivia Cano-Garrido; Fabián Rueda; Laura Sánchez-García; Luis Ruiz-Avila; Ramon Bosser; Antonio Villaverde; Elena García-Fruitós

BackgroundEscherichia coli has been a main host for the production of recombinant proteins of biomedical interest, but conformational stress responses impose severe bottlenecks that impair the production of soluble, proteolytically stable versions of many protein species. In this context, emerging Generally Recognized As Safe (GRAS) bacterial hosts provide alternatives as cell factories for recombinant protein production, in which limitations associated to the use of Gram-negative microorganisms might result minimized. Among them, Lactic Acid Bacteria and specially Lactococcus lactis are Gram-positive GRAS organisms in which recombinant protein solubility is generically higher and downstream facilitated, when compared to E. coli. However, deep analyses of recombinant protein quality in this system are still required to completely evaluate its performance and potential for improvement.ResultsWe have explored here the conformational quality (through specific fluorescence emission) and solubility of an aggregation-prone GFP variant (VP1GFP) produced in L. lactis. In this context, our results show that parameters such as production time, culture conditions and growth temperature have a dramatic impact not only on protein yield, but also on protein solubility and conformational quality, that are particularly favored under fermentative metabolism.ConclusionsMetabolic regime and cultivation temperature greatly influence solubility and conformational quality of an aggregation-prone protein in L. lactis. Specifically, the present study proves that anaerobic growth is the optimal condition for recombinant protein production purposes. Besides, growth temperature plays an important role regulating both protein solubility and conformational quality. Additionally, our results also prove the great versatility for the manipulation of this bacterial system regarding the improvement of functionality, yield and quality of recombinant proteins in this species. These findings not only confirm L. lactis as an excellent producer of recombinant proteins but also reveal room for significant improvement by the exploitation of external protein quality modulators.


Acta Biomaterialia | 2017

Protein-only, antimicrobial peptide-containing recombinant nanoparticles with inherent built-in antibacterial activity

Naroa Serna; Laura Sánchez-García; Alejandro Sánchez-Chardi; Ugutz Unzueta; Mónica Roldán; Ramon Mangues; Esther Vázquez; Antonio Villaverde

The emergence of bacterial antibiotic resistances is a serious concern in human and animal health. In this context, naturally occurring cationic antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) might play a main role in a next generation of drugs against bacterial infections. Taking an innovative approach to design self-organizing functional proteins, we have generated here protein-only nanoparticles with intrinsic AMP microbicide activity. Using a recombinant version of the GWH1 antimicrobial peptide as building block, these materials show a wide antibacterial activity spectrum in absence of detectable toxicity on mammalian cells. The GWH1-based nanoparticles combine clinically appealing properties of nanoscale materials with full biocompatibility, structural and functional plasticity and biological efficacy exhibited by proteins. Because of the largely implemented biological fabrication of recombinant protein drugs, the protein-based platform presented here represents a novel and scalable strategy in antimicrobial drug design, that by solving some of the limitations of AMPs offers a promising alternative to conventional antibiotics. STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE The low molecular weight antimicrobial peptide GWH1 has been engineered to oligomerize as self-assembling protein-only nanoparticles of around 50nm. In this form, the peptide exhibits potent and broad antibacterial activities against both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, without any harmful effect over mammalian cells. As a solid proof-of-concept, this finding strongly supports the design and biofabrication of nanoscale antimicrobial materials with in-built functionalities. The protein-based homogeneous composition offer advantages over alternative materials explored as antimicrobial agents, regarding biocompatibility, biodegradability and environmental suitability. Beyond the described prototype, this transversal engineering concept has wide applicability in the design of novel nanomedicines for advanced treatments of bacterial infections.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2018

Self-assembling toxin-based nanoparticles as self-delivered antitumoral drugs

Laura Sánchez-García; Naroa Serna; Patricia Álamo; Rita Sala; María Virtudes Céspedes; Mónica Roldán; Alejandro Sánchez-Chardi; Ugutz Unzueta; Isolda Casanova; Ramon Mangues; Esther Vázquez; Antonio Villaverde

&NA; Loading capacity and drug leakage from vehicles during circulation in blood is a major concern when developing nanoparticle‐based cell‐targeted cytotoxics. To circumvent this potential issue it would be convenient the engineering of drugs as self‐delivered nanoscale entities, devoid of any heterologous carriers. In this context, we have here engineered potent protein toxins, namely segments of the diphtheria toxin and the Pseudomonas aeruginosa exotoxin as self‐assembling, self‐delivered therapeutic materials targeted to CXCR4+ cancer stem cells. The systemic administration of both nanostructured drugs in a colorectal cancer xenograft mouse model promotes efficient and specific local destruction of target tumor tissues and a significant reduction of the tumor volume. This observation strongly supports the concept of intrinsically functional protein nanoparticles, which having a dual role as drug and carrier, are designed to be administered without the assistance of heterologous vehicles. Graphical abstract Figure. No caption available.


Trends in Biotechnology | 2017

Protein-Based Therapeutic Killing for Cancer Therapies

Naroa Serna; Laura Sánchez-García; Ugutz Unzueta; Raquel Díaz; Esther Vázquez; Ramon Mangues; Antonio Villaverde

The treatment of some high-incidence human diseases is based on therapeutic cell killing. In cancer this is mainly achieved by chemical drugs that are systemically administered to reach effective toxic doses. As an innovative alternative, cytotoxic proteins identified in nature can be adapted as precise therapeutic agents. For example, individual toxins and venom components, proapoptotic factors, and antimicrobial peptides from bacteria, animals, plants, and humans have been engineered as highly potent drugs. In addition to the intrinsic cytotoxic activities of these constructs, their biological fabrication by DNA recombination allows the recruitment, in single pharmacological entities, of diverse functions of clinical interest such as specific cell-surface receptor binding, self-activation, and self-assembling as nanoparticulate materials, with wide applicability in cell-targeted oncotherapy and theragnosis.


Nanotechnology | 2017

Engineering multifunctional protein nanoparticles by in vitro disassembling and reassembling of heterologous building blocks

Ugutz Unzueta; Naroa Serna; Laura Sánchez-García; Mónica Roldán; Alejandro Sánchez-Chardi; Ramon Mangues; Antonio Villaverde; Esther Vázquez

The engineering of protein self-assembling at the nanoscale allows the generation of functional and biocompatible materials, which can be produced by easy biological fabrication. The combination of cationic and histidine-rich stretches in fusion proteins promotes oligomerization as stable protein-only regular nanoparticles that are composed by a moderate number of building blocks. Among other applications, these materials are highly appealing as tools in targeted drug delivery once empowered with peptidic ligands of cell surface receptors. In this context, we have dissected here this simple technological platform regarding the controlled disassembling and reassembling of the composing building blocks. By applying high salt and imidazole in combination, nanoparticles are disassembled in a process that is fully reversible upon removal of the disrupting agents. By taking this approach, we accomplish here the in vitro generation of hybrid nanoparticles formed by heterologous building blocks. This fact demonstrates the capability to generate multifunctional and/or multiparatopic or multispecific materials usable in nanomedical applications.


Small | 2018

Selective CXCR4+ Cancer Cell Targeting and Potent Antineoplastic Effect by a Nanostructured Version of Recombinant Ricin

Raquel Díaz; Victor Pallarès; Olivia Cano-Garrido; Naroa Serna; Laura Sánchez-García; Aïda Falgàs; Mireia Pesarrodona; Ugutz Unzueta; Alejandro Sánchez-Chardi; Julieta M. Sánchez; Isolda Casanova; Esther Vázquez; Ramon Mangues; Antonio Villaverde

Under the unmet need of efficient tumor-targeting drugs for oncology, a recombinant version of the plant toxin ricin (the modular protein T22-mRTA-H6) is engineered to self-assemble as protein-only, CXCR4-targeted nanoparticles. The soluble version of the construct self-organizes as regular 11 nm planar entities that are highly cytotoxic in cultured CXCR4+ cancer cells upon short time exposure, with a determined IC50 in the nanomolar order of magnitude. The chemical inhibition of CXCR4 binding sites in exposed cells results in a dramatic reduction of the cytotoxic potency, proving the receptor-dependent mechanism of cytotoxicity. The insoluble version of T22-mRTA-H6 is, contrarily, moderately active, indicating that free, nanostructured protein is the optimal drug form. In animal models of acute myeloid leukemia, T22-mRTA-H6 nanoparticles show an impressive and highly selective therapeutic effect, dramatically reducing the leukemia cells affectation of clinically relevant organs. Functionalized T22-mRTA-H6 nanoparticles are then promising prototypes of chemically homogeneous, highly potent antitumor nanostructured toxins for precise oncotherapies based on self-mediated intracellular drug delivery.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2018

Switching cell penetrating and CXCR4-binding activities of nanoscale-organized arginine-rich peptides

Marianna Teixeira de Pinho Favaro; Naroa Serna; Laura Sánchez-García; Rafael Cubarsi; Mónica Roldán; Alejandro Sánchez-Chardi; Ugutz Unzueta; Ramon Mangues; Neus Ferrer-Miralles; Adriano R. Azzoni; Esther Vázquez; Antonio Villaverde

Arginine-rich protein motifs have been described as potent cell-penetrating peptides (CPPs) but also as rather specific ligands of the cell surface chemokine receptor CXCR4, involved in the infection by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Polyarginines are commonly used to functionalize nanoscale vehicles for gene therapy and drug delivery, aimed to enhance cell penetrability of the therapeutic cargo. However, under which conditions these peptides do act as either unspecific or specific ligands is unknown. We have here explored the cell penetrability of differently charged polyarginines in two alternative presentations, namely as unassembled fusion proteins or assembled in multimeric protein nanoparticles. By this, we have observed that arginine-rich peptides switch between receptor-mediated and receptor-independent mechanisms of cell penetration. The relative weight of these activities is determined by the electrostatic charge of the construct and the oligomerization status of the nanoscale material, both regulatable by conventional protein engineering approaches.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2018

Protein nanoparticles are nontoxic, tuneable cell stressors

Marianna Teixeira de Pinho Favaro; Laura Sánchez-García; Alejandro Sánchez-Chardi; Mónica Roldán; Ugutz Unzueta; Naroa Serna; Olivia Cano-Garrido; Adriano R. Azzoni; Neus Ferrer-Miralles; Antonio Villaverde; Esther Vázquez

AIM Nanoparticle-cell interactions can promote cell toxicity and stimulate particular behavioral patterns, but cell responses to protein nanomaterials have been poorly studied. RESULTS By repositioning oligomerization domains in a simple, modular self-assembling protein platform, we have generated closely related but distinguishable homomeric nanoparticles. Composed by building blocks with modular domains arranged in different order, they share amino acid composition. These materials, once exposed to cultured cells, are differentially internalized in absence of toxicity and trigger distinctive cell adaptive responses, monitored by the emission of tubular filopodia and enhanced drug sensitivity. CONCLUSION The capability to rapidly modulate such cell responses by conventional protein engineering reveals protein nanoparticles as tuneable, versatile and potent cell stressors for cell-targeted conditioning.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2018

Release of targeted protein nanoparticles from functional bacterial amyloids: A death star-like approach

Ugutz Unzueta; María Virtudes Céspedes; Rita Sala; Patricia Álamo; Alejandro Sánchez-Chardi; Mireia Pesarrodona; Laura Sánchez-García; Olivia Cano-Garrido; Antonio Villaverde; Esther Vázquez; Ramon Mangues; Joaquin Seras-Franzoso

ABSTRACT Sustained release of drug delivery systems (DDS) has the capacity to increase cancer treatment efficiency in terms of drug dosage reduction and subsequent decrease of deleterious side effects. In this regard, many biomaterials are being investigated but none offers morphometric and functional plasticity and versatility comparable to protein‐based nanoparticles (pNPs). Here we describe a new DDS by which pNPs are fabricated as bacterial inclusion bodies (IB), that can be easily isolated, subcutaneously injected and used as reservoirs for the sustained release of targeted pNPs. Our approach combines the high performance of pNP, regarding specific cell targeting and biodistribution with the IB supramolecular organization, stability and cost effectiveness. This renders a platform able to provide a sustained source of CXCR4‐targeted pNPs that selectively accumulate in tumor cells in a CXCR4+ colorectal cancer xenograft model. In addition, the proposed system could be potentially adapted to any other protein construct offering a plethora of possible new therapeutic applications in nanomedicine.

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Alejandro Sánchez-Chardi

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Naroa Serna

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Mireia Pesarrodona

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Mónica Roldán

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Neus Ferrer-Miralles

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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