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Dive into the research topics where Lourdes Sánchez-Sevilla is active.

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Featured researches published by Lourdes Sánchez-Sevilla.


Laboratory Investigation | 2003

Inhibitory effect of vitamin E administration on the progression of liver regeneration induced by partial hepatectomy in rats

Cristina Trejo-Solís; Victoria Chagoya de Sánchez; Alberto Aranda-Fraustro; Lourdes Sánchez-Sevilla; Celedonio Gómez-Ruiz; Rolando Hernández-Muñoz

We have proposed that controlled peroxidative modifications of membranes could be playing a role in the early steps of liver regeneration. Hence, lipid peroxidation (LP) was modified in vivo by treatment with vitamin E in rats subjected to partial hepatectomy (PH), and its influence on liver regeneration was evaluated. Our results, using several methods to monitor LP, indicate that vitamin E administration promoted a decreased LP rate in liver subcellular membranes. Vitamin E drastically diminished cytosolic LP, shifting earlier increased LP in plasma membranes, and promoted a higher increase of nuclear LP in animals subjected to PH. Pretreatment with vitamin E induced a striking reduction of liver mass recovery and nuclear bromodeoxyuridine labeling (clearly shown at 24 hours after surgery), as well as promoted a decreased expression of cyclin D1 and of the proliferating cell nuclear antigen after PH. These effects seem to lead to a decreased mitotic index at 48 hours after PH. Vitamin E pretreatment also diminished PH-induced hypoglycemia but elevated serum bilirubin level, which was not observed in PH animals without vitamin treatment. In conclusion, an enhanced but controlled LP seems to play a critical role during the early phases of liver regeneration. Decreasing magnitude or time course of the PH-promoted enhanced LP (at early post-PH stages) by in vivo treatment with vitamin E could promote an early termination of preparative cell events, which lead to the replicative phase, during PH-promoted liver proliferation. The latter could have a significant implication in the antitumorigenic effect ascribed to the treatment with vitamin E.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Increased Erythrocytes By-Products of Arginine Catabolism Are Associated with Hyperglycemia and Could Be Involved in the Pathogenesis of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus

Serafín Ramírez-Zamora; Miguel L. Méndez-Rodríguez; Marisela Olguín-Martínez; Lourdes Sánchez-Sevilla; Miguel Quintana-Quintana; Norberto García-García; Rolando Hernández-Muñoz

Diabetes mellitus (DM) is a worldwide disease characterized by metabolic disturbances, frequently associated with high risk of atherosclerosis and renal and nervous system damage. Here, we assessed whether metabolites reflecting oxidative redox state, arginine and nitric oxide metabolism, are differentially distributed between serum and red blood cells (RBC), and whether significant metabolism of arginine exists in RBC. In 90 patients with type 2 DM without regular treatment for diabetes and 90 healthy controls, paired by age and gender, we measured serum and RBC levels of malondialdehyde (MDA), nitrites, ornithine, citrulline, and urea. In isolated RBC, metabolism of L-[14C]-arginine was also determined. In both groups, nitrites were equally distributed in serum and RBC; citrulline predominated in serum, whereas urea, arginine, and ornithine were found mainly in RBC. DM patients showed hyperglycemia and increased blood HbA1C, and increased levels of these metabolites, except for arginine, significantly correlating with blood glucose levels. RBC were observed to be capable of catabolizing arginine to ornithine, citrulline and urea, which was increased in RBC from DM patients, and correlated with an increased affinity for arginine in the activities of putative RBC arginase (Km = 0.23±0.06 vs. 0.50±0.13 mM, in controls) and nitric oxide synthase (Km = 0.28±0.06 vs. 0.43±0.09 mM, in controls). In conclusion, our results suggest that DM alters metabolite distribution between serum and RBC, demonstrating that RBC regulate serum levels of metabolites which affect nitrogen metabolism, not only by transporting them but also by metabolizing amino acids such as arginine. Moreover, we confirmed that urea can be produced also by human RBC besides hepatocytes, being much more evident in RBC from patients with type 2 DM. These events are probably involved in the specific physiopathology of this disease, i.e., endothelial damage and dysfunction.


Experimental Biology and Medicine | 2008

Partial Hepatectomy–Induced Regeneration Accelerates Reversion of Liver Fibrosis Involving Participation of Hepatic Stellate Cells

Juan Antonio Suárez-Cuenca; Victoria Chagoya de Sánchez; Alberto Aranda-Fraustro; Lourdes Sánchez-Sevilla; Lidia Martínez-Pérez; Rolando Hernández-Muñoz

Hepatic fibrosis underlies most types of chronic liver diseases and is characterized by excessive deposition of extracellular matrix (ECM), altered liver architecture, and impaired hepatocyte proliferation; however, the fibrotic liver can still regenerate after partial hepatectomy (PH). Therefore, the present study was aimed at addressing whether a PH-induced regeneration normalizes ECM turnover and the possible involvement of hepatic stellate cells (HSC) during resolution of a pre-established fibrosis. Male Wistar rats were rendered fibrotic by intraperitoneal administration of swine serum for 9 weeks and subjected afterwards to 70% PH or sham-operation. Histological and morphometric analyses were performed, and parameters indicative of cell proliferation, collagen synthesis and degradation, and activation of HSC were determined. Liver collagen content was reduced to 75% after PH in cirrhotic rats when compared with sham-operated cirrhotic rats. The regenerating fibrotic liver oxidized actively free proline and had diminished transcripts for α-1 (I) collagen mRNA, resulting in decreased collagen synthesis. PH also increased collagenase activity, accounted for by higher amounts of pro-MMP-9, MMP-2, and MMP-13, which largely coincided with a lower expression of TIMP-1 and TIMP-2. Therefore, an early decreased collagen synthesis, mild ECM degradation, and active liver regeneration were followed by higher collagenolysis and limited deposition of ECM, probably associated with increased mitochondrial activity. Activated HSC readily increased during liver fibrosis and remained activated after liver regeneration, even during fibrosis resolution. In conclusion, stimulation of liver regeneration through PH restores the balance in ECM synthesis/degradation, leading to ECM remodeling and to an almost complete resolution of liver fibrosis. As a response to the regenerative stimulus, activated HSC seem to play a controlling role on ECM remodeling during experimental cirrhosis in rats. Therefore, pharmacological approaches for the resolution of liver fibrosis by blocking HSC activation should also evaluate possible effects on liver cell proliferation.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2009

ADENOSINE ADMINISTRATION ACCELERATES PROGRESSION OF THE CELL CYCLE DURING RAT LIVER REGENERATION INDUCED BY ONE-THIRD HEPATECTOMY

Edgar Mendieta-Condado; Mariana Pichardo-Olvera; Lourdes Sánchez-Sevilla; Victoria Chagoya de Sánchez; Rolando Hernández-Muñoz

We have shown that adenosine administration is capable of reversing fibrosis in the carbon tetrachloride-induced rat cirrhotic liver, stimulating the diminished proliferative potential of the cirrhotic liver. To characterize adenosine actions on liver cellular proliferation, we used rats subjected to one-third partial hepatectomy (PH). In PH animals acutely administered with adenosine (25–200 mg/kg b.w.), parameters indicative of cell proliferation were determined. In addition, hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), epidermal growth factor, and transforming growth factor-α, cyclins, members of the E2F family, proto-oncogenes, and adenosine-receptors were determined through Western blot analyses. Adenosine (100 mg/kg body weight) induced an earlier increase in liver cell proliferation as evidenced by enhanced levels of proliferating cell nuclear antigen, nuclear Ki-67 antigen, and those for cyclins (D1, E, A, and B1), as well as by an increased mitotic index. These effects were also accompanied for a long-lasting increase of serum and liver levels of HGF and liver expression of c-Met and HGF liver activator. Adenosine effects on cell proliferation could be mediated by an early increase in E2F-1 and by that of c-Myc, despite the fact that phosphorylation of the Rb protein and expression of E2F-3 were decreased. Moreover, the liver amount of specific receptors for adenosine was not significantly changed by PH and/or adenosine treatment. In conclusion, these data suggest that adenosine actions can accelerate and increase proliferation in a “primed” liver, mainly through enhancing c-Myc, E2F family, cell-cycle cyclins, and HGF expression. Therefore, these pharmacological adenosine effects suggest a modulating role for the nucleoside on mitogenic events once the liver has been triggered to proliferate.


Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity | 2013

Oxidant Status and Lipid Composition of Erythrocyte Membranes in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes, Chronic Liver Damage, and a Combination of Both Pathologies

Rolando Hernández-Muñoz; Marisela Olguín-Martínez; Irma Aguilar-Delfín; Lourdes Sánchez-Sevilla; Norberto García-García; Mauricio Díaz-Muñoz

There is an important set of cirrhotic and diabetic patients that present both diseases. However, information about metabolic and cellular blood markers that are altered, in conjunction or distinctively, in the 3 pathological conditions is scarce. The aim of this project was to evaluate several indicators of prooxidant reactions and the membrane composition of blood samples (serum and red blood cells (RBCs)) from patients clinically classified as diabetic (n = 60), cirrhotic (n = 70), and diabetic with liver cirrhosis (n = 25) as compared to samples from a similar population of healthy individuals (n = 60). The results showed that levels of TBARS, nitrites, cysteine, and conjugated dienes in the RBC of cirrhotic patients were significantly increased. However, the coincidence of diabetes and cirrhosis partially reduced the alterations promoted by the cirrhotic condition. The amount of total phospholipids and cholesterol was greatly enhanced in the patients with both pathologies (between 60 and 200% according to the type of phospholipid) but not in the patients with only one disease. Overall, the data indicate that the cooccurrence of diabetes and cirrhosis elicits a physiopathological equilibrium that is different from the alterations typical of each individual malady.


Experimental Biology and Medicine | 2012

High dosing of α-tocopherol inhibits rat liver regeneration by modifying signal transducer and activator of transcription protein expression and its correlation with cell redox state and retinoid metabolism.

Lourdes Sánchez-Sevilla; Edgar Mendieta-Condado; Rolando Hernández-Muñoz

Lipid peroxidation (LP) promoted by partial hepatectomy (PH) is qualitatively distinct among subcellular fractions and temporally transient, probably being a necessary physiological event for rat liver regeneration. In fact, α-tocopherol (vitamin E [VE]) exerts adverse effects, partially inhibiting PH-induced rat liver regeneration and inducing decreased cyclin D1 expression. The phosphorylation of signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) factors 1 and 3 are involved in DNA synthesis and cyclin D1 expression after PH, which is stimulated by production of retinoic acid (RA). Hence, this study was aimed at addressing these events, and its association with cell redox state and oxidative stress, probably underlying VE effects on rat liver regeneration. PH-enhanced activation of STAT proteins, mainly as activated STAT-3, significantly change the cytoplasmic pool for STATs. The latter was associated to a more reduced cytoplasmic redox state and increased alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH)-mediated retinol oxidation to RA. Whereas α-tocopherol promoted minor changes in the parameters tested when administered to sham (control)-animals, pretreatment with VE blocked the PH-induced increase of reactive oxygen species (ROS), altering the pattern of STAT protein activation, blunting RA formation by decreased ADH activity, inducing higher liver caspase-3 activity and increasing tumor necrosis factor-α concentrations, while levels of interleukin-6 were decreased; altogether coinciding with disturbed PH-promoted changes on the liver redox state. In conclusion, altered activation and translocation of STAT-1 and -3 proteins and inhibited retinoid metabolism seem to be involved in the VE-induced inhibition of rat liver regeneration. Data suggest that a PH-induced increase of ROS could participate in the activation of STAT factors, retinoid metabolism and changes in the cell redox state during proliferation of liver cells.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1986

Effects of [1-Nα-trinitrophenylhistidine, 12-homoarginine]glucagon on cyclic AMP levels and free fatty acid release in isolated rat adipocytes

J. Adolfo García-Sáinz; Lourdes Sánchez-Sevilla; John T. Pelton; Dev Trivedi; Victor J. Hruby

[1-N alpha-Trinitrophenylhistidine, 12-homoarginine]glucagon (THG) stimulated, in a concentration-dependent fashion, lipolysis (2-fold) and cyclic AMP accumulation (50% over basal) in isolated rat adipocytes, but was much less effective than glucagon, which stimulated lipolysis 4-fold and cyclic AMP accumulation 10-15-fold. THG displaced to the right the concentration-response curves for glucagon and diminished in a concentration-dependent fashion the effects of a fixed concentration of glucagon. The data indicate that THG is a mixed agonist-antagonist (partial agonist) in isolated rat fat cells.


Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity | 2017

A Single Zidovudine (AZT) Administration Delays Hepatic Cell Proliferation by Altering Oxidative State in the Regenerating Rat Liver

Armando Butanda-Ochoa; Diego Rolando Hernández-Espinosa; Marisela Olguín-Martínez; Lourdes Sánchez-Sevilla; Mario R. Rodríguez; Benito Chávez-Rentería; Alberto Aranda-Fraustro; Rolando Hernández-Muñoz

The 3′-azido-3′-deoxythymidine or Zidovudine (AZT) was the first antiretroviral drug used in the treatment of HIV patients, which has good effectiveness but also hepatotoxic side effects that include cell cycle arrest and oxidative/nitrative mitochondrial damage. Whether such an oxidative damage may affect the proliferative-regenerative capacity of liver remains to be clearly specified at doses commonly used in the clinical practice. In this study, we described the oxidative-proliferative effect of AZT administered at a common clinical dose in rat liver submitted to 70% partial hepatectomy (PH). The results indicate that AZT significantly decreased DNA synthesis and the number of mitosis in liver subjected to PH in a synchronized way with the promotion of organelle-selective lipid peroxidation events (especially those observed in plasma membrane and cytosolic fractions) and with liver enzyme release to the bloodstream. Then at the dose used in clinical practice AZT decreased liver regeneration but stimulates oxidative events involved during the proliferation process in a way that each membrane system inside the cell preserves its integrity in order to maintain the cell proliferative process. Here, the induction of large amounts of free ammonia in the systemic circulation could become a factor capable of mediating the deleterious effects of AZT on PH-induced rat liver regeneration.


Gastrointestinal Tissue#R##N#Oxidative Stress and Dietary Antioxidants | 2017

Gastric Mucosal Injury and Oxidative Stress

Marisela Olguín-Martínez; Lourdes Sánchez-Sevilla; Rolando Hernández-Muñoz

Gastric and intestinal mucosa are continuously exposed to external and internal oxidants, such as cigarette smoking, alcohol, nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs, ischemia-reperfusion injury, chronic infections, and inflammatory disorders, making the gastrointestinal (GI) tract quite susceptible to ROS attack. In the normal cellular aerobic metabolism, the GI tract, can produce these reactive species as intermediates. Nonetheless, the cells from the gastric mucosa, having enzymatic or nonenzymatic antioxidant systems, protect them from the deleterious effects of ROS. Moreover, despite the protective barrier provided by the mucosa, microbial pathogens can induce oxidative injury and GI inflammatory responses, where the hypersecretion of gastric acid plays a relevant role. Nevertheless, it has also been shown that the timing and the magnitude of the lipoperoxidative events derived from ROS, could synchronize the cell proliferative and apoptotic events in the gastric mucosa. Probably, this is fundamental for the progression of the cell proliferation in the human gastric adenocarcinoma.


Journal of Translational Medicine | 2016

Putrescine treatment reverses α-tocopherol-induced desynchronization of polyamine and retinoid metabolism during rat liver regeneration.

Lourdes Sánchez-Sevilla; Edgar Mendieta-Condado; Rolando Hernández-Muñoz

BackgroundThe pre-treatment with α-tocopherol inhibits progression of rat liver proliferation induced by partial hepatectomy (PH), by decreasing and/or desynchronizing cyclin D1 expression and activation into the nucleus, activation and nuclear translocation of STAT-1 and -3 proteins and altering retinoid metabolism. Interactions between retinoic acid and polyamines have been reported in the PH-induced rat liver regeneration. Therefore, we evaluated the effect of low dosage of α-tocopherol on PH-induced changes in polyamine metabolism.MethodsThis study evaluated the participation of polyamine synthesis and metabolism during α-tocopherol-induced inhibition of rat liver regeneration. In PH-rats (Wistar) treated with α-tocopherol and putrescine, parameters indicative of cell proliferation, lipid peroxidation, ornithine decarboxylase expression (ODC), and polyamine levels, were determined.ResultsPre-treatment with α-tocopherol to PH-animals exerted an antioxidant effect, shifting earlier the increased ODC activity and expression, temporally affecting polyamine synthesis and ornithine metabolism. Whereas administration of putrescine induced minor changes in PH-rats, the concomitant treatment actually counteracted most of adverse actions exerted by α-tocopherol on the remnant liver, restituting its proliferative potential, without changing its antioxidant effect. Putrescine administration to these rats was also associated with lower ODC expression and activity in the proliferating liver, but the temporally shifting in the amount of liver polyamines induced by α-tocopherol, was also “synchronized” by the putrescine administration. The latter is supported by the fact that a close relationship was observed between fluctuations of polyamines and retinoids.ConclusionsPutrescine counteracted most adverse actions exerted by α-tocopherol on rat liver regeneration, restoring liver proliferative potential and restituting the decreased retinoid levels induced by α-tocopherol. Therefore interactions between polyamines and retinol, mediated by the oxidant status, should be taken into consideration in the development of new therapeutic strategies for pathologies occurring with liver cell proliferation.

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Rolando Hernández-Muñoz

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Marisela Olguín-Martínez

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Edgar Mendieta-Condado

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Victoria Chagoya de Sánchez

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Alberto Aranda-Fraustro

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Cristina Trejo-Solís

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Diego Rolando Hernández-Espinosa

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Juan Antonio Suárez-Cuenca

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Mauricio Díaz-Muñoz

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Norberto García-García

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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