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Dive into the research topics where Leonor Cancela is active.

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Featured researches published by Leonor Cancela.


BMC Genomics | 2011

Transcriptome sequencing and microarray development for the Manila clam, Ruditapes philippinarum: genomic tools for environmental monitoring

Massimo Milan; Alessandro Coppe; Richard Reinhardt; Leonor Cancela; Ricardo B. Leite; Carlos Eugenio Saavedra; Claudio Ciofi; Guido Chelazzi; Tomaso Patarnello; Stefania Bortoluzzi; Luca Bargelloni

BackgroundThe Manila clam, Ruditapes philippinarum, is one of the major aquaculture species in the world and a potential sentinel organism for monitoring the status of marine ecosystems. However, genomic resources for R. philippinarum are still extremely limited. Global analysis of gene expression profiles is increasingly used to evaluate the biological effects of various environmental stressors on aquatic animals under either artificial conditions or in the wild. Here, we report on the development of a transcriptomic platform for global gene expression profiling in the Manila clam.ResultsA normalized cDNA library representing a mixture of adult tissues was sequenced using a ultra high-throughput sequencing technology (Roche 454). A database consisting of 32,606 unique transcripts was constructed, 9,747 (30%) of which could be annotated by similarity. An oligo-DNA microarray platform was designed and applied to profile gene expression of digestive gland and gills. Functional annotation of differentially expressed genes between different tissues was performed by enrichment analysis. Expression of Natural Antisense Transcripts (NAT) analysis was also performed and bi-directional transcription appears a common phenomenon in the R. philippinarum transcriptome. A preliminary study on clam samples collected in a highly polluted area of the Venice Lagoon demonstrated the applicability of genomic tools to environmental monitoring.ConclusionsThe transcriptomic platform developed for the Manila clam confirmed the high level of reproducibility of current microarray technology. Next-generation sequencing provided a good representation of the clam transcriptome. Despite the known limitations in transcript annotation and sequence coverage for non model species, sufficient information was obtained to identify a large set of genes potentially involved in cellular response to environmental stress.


Marine Biotechnology | 2008

Nutrient Limitation is the Main Regulatory Factor for Carotenoid Accumulation and for Psy and Pds Steady State Transcript Levels in Dunaliella salina (Chlorophyta) Exposed to High Light and Salt Stress

Sacha Coesel; Alexandra Baumgartner; Licia Marlene Teles; Ana A. Ramos; Nuno Henriques; Leonor Cancela; J. Varela

Dunaliella salina (Dunal) Teodoresco (1905) is a green unicellular alga able to withstand severe salt, light, and nutrient stress, adaptations necessary to grow in harsh environments such as salt ponds. In response to such growth conditions, this microalga accumulates high amounts of β-carotene in its single chloroplast. In this study, we show that carotenoid accumulation is consistently inhibited in cells grown in nutrient-supplemented media and exposed either to high-light or medium-low-light conditions. Likewise, carotenogenesis in cells shifted to higher salinity (up to 27% NaCl) under medium-low-light conditions is inhibited by the presence of nutrients. The steady-state levels of transcripts encoding phytoene synthase and phytoene desaturase increased substantially in D. salina cells shifted to high light or high salt under nutrient-limiting conditions, whereas the presence of nutrients inhibited this response. The regulatory effect of nutrient availability on the accumulation of carotenoids and messenger RNA levels of the first two enzymes committed to carotenoid biosynthesis is discussed.


BMC Genomics | 2013

mRNA-Seq and microarray development for the Grooved carpet shell clam, Ruditapes decussatus: a functional approach to unravel host -parasite interaction

Ricardo B. Leite; Massimo Milan; Alessandro Coppe; Stefania Bortoluzzi; António dos Anjos; Richard Reinhardt; Carlos Saavedra; Tomaso Patarnello; Leonor Cancela; Luca Bargelloni

BackgroundThe Grooved Carpet shell clam Ruditapes decussatus is the autochthonous European clam and the most appreciated from a gastronomic and economic point of view. The production is in decline due to several factors such as Perkinsiosis and habitat invasion and competition by the introduced exotic species, the manila clam Ruditapes philippinarum. After we sequenced R. decussatus transcriptome we have designed an oligo microarray capable of contributing to provide some clues on molecular response of the clam to Perkinsiosis.ResultsA database consisting of 41,119 unique transcripts was constructed, of which 12,479 (30.3%) were annotated by similarity. An oligo-DNA microarray platform was then designed and applied to profile gene expression in R. decussatus heavily infected by Perkinsus olseni. Functional annotation of differentially expressed genes between those two conditionswas performed by gene set enrichment analysis. As expected, microarrays unveil genes related with stress/infectious agents such as hydrolases, proteases and others. The extensive role of innate immune system was also analyzed and effect of parasitosis upon expression of important molecules such as lectins reviewed.ConclusionsThis study represents a first attempt to characterize Ruditapes decussatus transcriptome, an important marine resource for the European aquaculture. The trancriptome sequencing and consequent annotation will increase the available tools and resources for this specie, introducing the possibility of high throughput experiments such as microarrays analysis. In this specific case microarray approach was used to unveil some important aspects of host-parasite interaction between the Carpet shell clam and Perkinsus, two non-model species, highlighting some genes associated with this interaction. Ample information was obtained to identify biological processes significantly enriched among differentially expressed genes in Perkinsus infected versus non-infected gills. An overview on the genes related with the immune system on R. decussatus transcriptome is also reported.


Marine Genomics | 2010

Gilthead sea bream (Sparus auratus) and European sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax) expressed sequence tags: Characterization, tissue-specific expression and gene markers.

Bruno Louro; Ana Lúcia Passos; Erika Souche; Costas S. Tsigenopoulos; Alfred Beck; Jacques Lagnel; François Bonhomme; Leonor Cancela; Joan Cerdà; Melody S. Clark; Esther Lubzens; Antonis Magoulas; Josep V. Planas; Filip Volckaert; Richard Reinhardt; Adelino V. M. Canario

The gilthead sea bream, Sparus auratus, and the European sea bass, Dicentrarchus labrax, are two of the most important marine species cultivated in Southern Europe. This study aimed at increasing genomic resources for the two species and produced and annotated two sets of 30,000 expressed sequence tags (EST) each from 14 normalized tissue-specific cDNA libraries from sea bream and sea bass. Clustering and assembly of the ESTs formed 5268 contigs and 12,928 singletons for sea bream and 4573 contigs and 13,143 singletons for sea bass, representing 18,196 and 17,716 putative unigenes, respectively. Assuming a similar number of genes in sea bass, sea bream and in the model fish Gasterosteus aculeatus genomes, it was estimated that approximately two thirds of the sea bream and the sea bass transcriptomes were covered by the unigene collections. BLAST sequence similarity searches (using a cut off of e-value <10(-5)) against fully the curated SwissProt (and TrEMBL) databases produced matches of 28%(37%) and 43%(53%) of the sea bream and sea bass unigene datasets respectively, allowing some putative designation of function. A comparative approach is described using human Ensembl peptide ID homologs for functional annotation, which increased the number of unigenes with GO terms assigned and resulted in more GO terms assigned per unigene. This allowed the identification of tissue-specific genes using enrichment analysis for GO pathways and protein domains. The comparative annotation approach represents a good strategy for transferring more relevant biological information from highly studied species to genomic resource poorer species. It was possible to confirm by interspecies mRNA-to-genomic alignments 25 and 21 alternative splice events in sea bream and sea bass genes, respectively. Even using normalized cDNA from relatively few pooled individuals it was possible to identify 1145 SNPs and 1748 microsatellites loci for genetic marker development. The EST data are being applied to a range of projects, including the development microarrays, genetic and radiation hybrid maps and QTL genome scans. This highlights the important role of ESTs for generating genetic and genomic resources of aquaculture species.


Bioacoustics-the International Journal of Animal Sound and Its Recording | 2008

THE EVOLUTION OF CICADA SONGS CONTRASTED WITH THE RELATIONSHIPS INFERRED FROM MITOCHONDRIAL DNA (INSECTA, HEMIPTERA)

Paulo J. Fonseca; Ester A. Serrão; Francisco Pina-Martins; P. F. Silva; Sara Mira; José A. Quartau; Octávio S. Paulo; Leonor Cancela

ABSTRACT The molecular phylogeny of nine Palaearctic species of cicadas (Hemiptera, Cicadoidea) was inferred using two mitochondrial DNA genes, Cytochrome Oxidase I and II. The two main groups detected, namely species within Tettigetta and Tympanistalna, as well as the two species investigated in the genus Cicada, are robustly supported across the analytical methods. The structure of the song syllables, generated during single tymbal cycles of males of the analysed group of species is remarkably consistent in these two phyletic lines. This reflects the morphology and the mechanics of the tymbal. However the higher level song patterns, which depend on the activity of the central nervous system and have evolved to advertise receptive mates, do not seem to be consistent with either the inferred molecular topology or the basic tymbal cycle. The observed similarities between the molecular phylogeny and the basic tymbal cycles seem to reflect the basic conservative nature of the tymbal structure, while the discrepancy between the former and the calling song pattern is probably related to the high plasticity of the pattern generator in the central nervous system and dependent on species-specific selection.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Effect of C282Y Genotype on Self-Reported Musculoskeletal Complications in Hereditary Hemochromatosis

António Camacho; T. Funck-Brentano; Márcio Simão; Leonor Cancela; Sébastien Ottaviani; Martine Cohen-Solal; Pascal Richette

Objective Arthropathy that mimics osteoarthritis (OA) and osteoporosis (OP) is considered a complication of hereditary hemochromatosis (HH). We have limited data comparing OA and OP prevalence among HH patients with different hemochromatosis type 1 (HFE) genotypes. We investigated the prevalence of OA and OP in patients with HH by C282Y homozygosity and compound heterozygosity (C282Y/H63D) genotype. Methods A total of 306 patients with HH completed a questionnaire. Clinical and demographic characteristics and presence of OA, OP and related complications were compared by genotype, adjusting for age, sex, body mass index (BMI), current smoking and menopausal status. Results In total, 266 of the 306 patients (87%) were homozygous for C282Y, and 40 (13%) were compound heterozygous. The 2 groups did not differ by median age [60 (interquartile range [IQR] 53 to 68) vs. 61 (55 to 67) years, P=0.8], sex (female: 48.8% vs. 37.5%, P=0.18) or current smoking habits (12.4% vs. 10%, P=0.3). As compared with compound heterozygous patients, C282Y homozygous patients had higher median serum ferritin concentration at diagnosis [1090 (IQR 610 to 2210) vs. 603 (362 to 950) µg/L, P<0.001], higher median transferrin saturation [80% (IQR 66 to 91%) vs. 63% (55 to 72%), P<0.001]) and lower median BMI [24.8 (22.1 to 26.9) vs. 26.2 (23.5 to 30.3) kg/m2, P<0.003]. The overall prevalence of self-reported OA was significantly higher with C282Y homozygosity than compound heterozygosity (53.4% vs. 32.5%; adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 2.4 [95% confidence interval 1.2–5.0]), as was self-reported OP (25.6% vs. 7.5%; aOR 3.5 [1.1–12.1]). Conclusion Patients with C282Y homozygosity may be at increased risk of musculoskeletal complications of HH.


Gene | 2008

Increasing genomic information in bivalves through new EST collections in four species: development of new genetic markers for environmental studies and genome evolution.

Arnaud Tanguy; Nicolas Bierne; Carlos Saavedra; Benjamin Piña; Evelyne Bachère; Michael Kube; Eric Bazin; François Bonhomme; Pierre Boudry; Viviane Boulo; Isabelle Boutet; Leonor Cancela; Carole Dossat; Pascal Favrel; Arnaud Huvet; Sergio Jarque; Didier Jollivet; Sven Klages; Sylvie Lapegue; Ricardo B. Leite; Jeanne Moal; Dario Moraga; Richard Reinhardt; Jean-Francois Samain; Eleftherios Zouros; Adelino V. M. Canario


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1990

Molecular structure, chromosome assignment, and promoter organization of the human matrix Gla protein gene.

Leonor Cancela; Chih-Lin Hsieh; Uta Francke; Paul A. Price


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1997

Identification of a novel negative retinoic acid responsive element in the promoter of the human matrix Gla protein gene

Jutta Kirfel; Manuela Kelter; Leonor Cancela; Paul A. Price; Roland Schüle


Marine Biotechnology | 2014

Dietary supplementation with vitamin k affects transcriptome and proteome of Senegalese sole, improving larval performance and quality.

Nadège Richard; Ignacio Fernández; Tune Wulff; Kristin Hamre; Leonor Cancela; Luís E.C. Conceição; Paulo J. Gavaia

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Paulo J. Gavaia

University of the Algarve

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Vincent Laizé

University of the Algarve

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Pedro Pousão-Ferreira

Instituto Português do Mar e da Atmosfera

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Daniel M. Tiago

University of the Algarve

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Dina C. Simes

University of the Algarve

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