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Dive into the research topics where María Eugenia Soria is active.

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Featured researches published by María Eugenia Soria.


Journal of Virology | 2013

Response of hepatitis C virus to long-term passage in the presence of alpha interferon: multiple mutations and a common phenotype.

Celia Perales; Nathan M. Beach; Isabel Gallego; María Eugenia Soria; Josep Quer; Juan Ignacio Esteban; Charles M. Rice; Esteban Domingo; Julie Sheldon

ABSTRACT Cell culture-produced hepatitis C virus (HCV) has been subjected to up to 100 serial passages in human hepatoma cells in the absence or presence of different doses of alpha interferon (IFN-α). Virus survival, genetic changes, fitness levels, and phenotypic traits have been examined. While high initial IFN-α doses (increasing from 1 to 4 IU/ml) did not allow HCV survival beyond passage 40, a gradual exposure (from 0.25 to 10 IU/ml) allowed the virus to survive for at least 100 passages. The virus passaged in the presence of IFN-α acquired IFN-α resistance as evidenced by enhanced progeny production and viral protein expression in an IFN-α environment. A partial IFN-α resistance was also noted in populations passaged in the absence of IFN-α. All lineages acquired adaptative mutations, and multiple, nonsynonymous mutations scattered throughout the genome were present in IFN-α-selected populations. Comparison of consensus sequences indicates a dominance of synonymous versus nonsynonymous substitutions. IFN-α-resistant populations displayed decreased sensitivity to a combination of IFN-α and ribavirin. A phenotypic trait common to all assayed viral populations is the ability to increase shutoff host cell protein synthesis, accentuated in infections with IFN-α-selected populations carried out in the presence of IFN-α. The trait was associated with enhanced phosphorylation of protein kinase R (PKR) and eIF2α, although other contributing factors are likely. The results suggest that multiple, independent mutational pathways can confer IFN-α resistance to HCV and might explain why no unified picture has been obtained regarding IFN-α resistance in vivo.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Lethal Mutagenesis of Hepatitis C Virus Induced by Favipiravir.

Ana de Avila; Isabel Gallego; María Eugenia Soria; Josep Gregori; Josep Quer; Juan Ignacio Esteban; Charles M. Rice; Esteban Domingo; Celia Perales

Lethal mutagenesis is an antiviral approach that consists in extinguishing a virus by an excess of mutations acquired during replication in the presence of a mutagen. Here we show that favipiravir (T-705) is a potent mutagenic agent for hepatitis C virus (HCV) during its replication in human hepatoma cells. T-705 leads to an excess of G → A and C → U transitions in the mutant spectrum of preextinction HCV populations. Infectivity decreased significantly in the presence of concentrations of T-705 which are 2- to 8-fold lower than its cytotoxic concentration 50 (CC50). Passaging the virus five times in the presence of 400 μM T-705 resulted in virus extinction. Since T-705 has undergone advanced clinical trials for approval for human use, the results open a new approach based on lethal mutagenesis to treat hepatitis C virus infections. If proven effective for HCV in vivo, this new anti-HCV agent may be useful in patient groups that fail current therapeutic regimens.


Journal of Virology | 2017

Internal Disequilibria and Phenotypic Diversification during Replication of Hepatitis C Virus in a Noncoevolving Cellular Environment

Elena Moreno; Isabel Gallego; Josep Gregori; Adriana Lucía-Sanz; María Eugenia Soria; Victoria Castro; Nathan M. Beach; Susanna C. Manrubia; Josep Quer; Juan Ignacio Esteban; Charles M. Rice; Jordi Gómez; Pablo Gastaminza; Esteban Domingo; Celia Perales

ABSTRACT Viral quasispecies evolution upon long-term virus replication in a noncoevolving cellular environment raises relevant general issues, such as the attainment of population equilibrium, compliance with the molecular-clock hypothesis, or stability of the phenotypic profile. Here, we evaluate the adaptation, mutant spectrum dynamics, and phenotypic diversification of hepatitis C virus (HCV) in the course of 200 passages in human hepatoma cells in an experimental design that precluded coevolution of the cells with the virus. Adaptation to the cells was evidenced by increase in progeny production. The rate of accumulation of mutations in the genomic consensus sequence deviated slightly from linearity, and mutant spectrum analyses revealed a complex dynamic of mutational waves, which was sustained beyond passage 100. The virus underwent several phenotypic changes, some of which impacted the virus-host relationship, such as enhanced cell killing, a shift toward higher virion density, and increased shutoff of host cell protein synthesis. Fluctuations in progeny production and failure to reach population equilibrium at the genomic level suggest internal instabilities that anticipate an unpredictable HCV evolution in the complex liver environment. IMPORTANCE Long-term virus evolution in an unperturbed cellular environment can reveal features of virus evolution that cannot be explained by comparing natural viral isolates. In the present study, we investigate genetic and phenotypic changes that occur upon prolonged passage of hepatitis C virus (HCV) in human hepatoma cells in an experimental design in which host cell evolutionary change is prevented. Despite replication in a noncoevolving cellular environment, the virus exhibited internal population disequilibria that did not decline with increased adaptation to the host cells. The diversification of phenotypic traits suggests that disequilibria inherent to viral populations may provide a selective advantage to viruses that can be fully exploited in changing environments.


Science of The Total Environment | 2017

TREHS: An open-access software tool for investigating and evaluating temporary river regimes as a first step for their ecological status assessment

Francesc Gallart; Núria Cid; J. Latron; Pilar Llorens; Núria Bonada; Justin Jeuffroy; Sara-María Jiménez-Argudo; Rosa-María Vega; Carolina Solà; María Eugenia Soria; Mònica Bardina; Antoni-Josep Hernández-Casahuga; Aránzazu Fidalgo; Teodoro Estrela; Antoni Munné; Narcís Prat

When the regime of a river is not perennial, there are four main difficulties with the use of hydrographs for assessing hydrological alteration: i) the main hydrological features relevant for biological communities are not quantitative (discharges) but qualitative (phases such as flowing water, stagnant pools or lack of surface water), ii) stream flow records do not inform on the temporal occurrence of stagnant pools, iii) as most of the temporary streams are ungauged, their regime has to be evaluated by alternative methods such as remote sensing or citizen science, and iv) the biological quality assessment of the ecological status of a temporary stream must follow a sampling schedule and references adapted to the flow- pool-dry regime. To overcome these challenges within an operational approach, the freely available software tool TREHS has been developed within the EU LIFE TRIVERS project. This software permits the input of information from flow simulations obtained with any rainfall-runoff model (to set an unimpacted reference stream regime) and compares this with the information obtained from flow gauging records (if available) and interviews with local people, as well as instantaneous observations by individuals and interpretation of ground-level or aerial photographs. Up to six metrics defining the permanence of water flow, the presence of stagnant pools and their temporal patterns of occurrence are used to determine natural and observed river regimes and to assess the degree of hydrological alteration. A new regime classification specifically designed for temporary rivers was developed using the metrics that measure the relative permanence of the three main phases: flow, disconnected pools and dry stream bed. Finally, the software characterizes the differences between the natural and actual regimes, diagnoses the hydrological status (degree of hydrological alteration), assesses the significance and robustness of the diagnosis and recommends the best periods for biological quality samplings.


Journal of General Virology | 2018

New hepatitis C virus genotype 1 subtype naturally harbouring resistance-associated mutations to NS5A inhibitors

Laura Ordeig; Damir Garcia-Cehic; Josep Gregori; María Eugenia Soria; Leonardo Nieto-Aponte; Celia Perales; Meritxell Llorens; Qian Chen; Mar Riveiro-Barciela; Maria Buti; Rafael Esteban; Juan Ignacio Esteban; Francisco Rodriguez-Frias; Josep Quer

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a highly divergent virus currently classified into seven major genotypes and 86 subtypes (ICTV, June 2017), which can have differing responses to therapy. Accurate genotyping/subtyping using high-resolution HCV subtyping enables confident subtype identification, identifies mixed infections and allows detection of new subtypes. During routine genotyping/subtyping, one sample from an Equatorial Guinea patient could not be classified into any of the subtypes. The complete genomic sequence was compared to reference sequences by phylogenetic and sliding window analysis. Resistance-associated substitutions (RASs) were assessed by deep sequencing. The unclassified HCV genome did not belong to any of the existing genotype 1 (G1) subtypes. Sliding window analysis along the complete genome ruled out recombination phenomena suggesting that it belongs to a new HCV G1 subtype. Two NS5A RASs (L31V+Y93H) were found to be naturally combined in the genome which could limit treatment possibilities in patients infected with this subtype.


BMC Infectious Diseases | 2018

Pipeline for specific subtype amplification and drug resistance detection in hepatitis C virus

María Eugenia Soria; Josep Gregori; Qian Chen; Damir Garcia-Cehic; Meritxell Llorens; Ana de Avila; Nathan M. Beach; Esteban Domingo; Francisco Rodriguez-Frias; Maria Buti; Rafael Esteban; Juan Ignacio Esteban; Josep Quer; Celia Perales

BackgroundDespite the high sustained virological response rates achieved with current directly-acting antiviral agents (DAAs) against hepatitis C virus (HCV), around 5–10% of treated patients do not respond to current antiviral therapies, and basal resistance to DAAs is increasingly detected among treatment-naïve infected individuals. Identification of amino acid substitutions (including those in minority variants) associated with treatment failure requires analytical designs that take into account the high diversification of HCV in more than 86 subtypes according to the ICTV website (June 2017).MethodsThe methodology has involved five sequential steps: (i) to design 280 oligonucleotide primers (some including a maximum of three degenerate positions), and of which 120 were tested to amplify NS3, NS5A-, and NS5B-coding regions in a subtype-specific manner, (ii) to define a reference sequence for each subtype, (iii) to perform experimental controls to define a cut-off value for detection of minority amino acids, (iv) to establish bioinformatics’ tools to quantify amino acid replacements, and (v) to validate the procedure with patient samples.ResultsA robust ultra-deep sequencing procedure to analyze HCV circulating in serum samples from patients infected with virus that belongs to the ten most prevalent subtypes worldwide: 1a, 1b, 2a, 2b, 2c, 2j, 3a, 4d, 4e, 4f has been developed. Oligonucleotide primers are subtype-specific. A cut-off value of 1% mutant frequency has been established for individual mutations and haplotypes.ConclusionThe methodological pipeline described here is adequate to characterize in-depth mutant spectra of HCV populations, and it provides a tool to understand HCV diversification and treatment failures. The pipeline can be periodically extended in the event of HCV diversification into new genotypes or subtypes, and provides a framework applicable to other RNA viral pathogens, with potential to couple detection of drug-resistant mutations with treatment planning.


World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2016

New real-time-PCR method to identify single point mutations in hepatitis C virus

Qian Chen; Irene Belmonte; Maria Buti; Leonardo Nieto; Damir Garcia-Cehic; Josep Gregori; Celia Perales; Laura Ordeig; Meritxell Llorens; María Eugenia Soria; Rafael Esteban; Juan Ignacio Esteban; Francisco Rodriguez-Frias; Josep Quer

AIM To develop a fast, low-cost diagnostic strategy to identify single point mutations in highly variable genomes such as hepatitis C virus (HCV). METHODS In patients with HCV infection, resistance-associated amino acid substitutions within the viral quasispecies prior to therapy can confer decreased susceptibility to direct-acting antiviral agents and lead to treatment failure and virological relapse. One such naturally occurring mutation is the Q80K substitution in the HCV-NS3 protease gene, which confers resistance to PI inhibitors, particularly simeprevir. Low-cost, highly sensitive techniques enabling routine detection of these single point mutations would be useful to identify patients at a risk of treatment failure. LightCycler methods, based on real-time PCR with sequence-specific probe hybridization, have been implemented in most diagnostic laboratories. However, this technique cannot identify single point mutations in highly variable genetic environments, such as the HCV genome. To circumvent this problem, we developed a new method to homogenize all nucleotides present in a region except the point mutation of interest. RESULTS Using nucleotide-specific probes Q, K, and R substitutions at position 80 were clearly identified at a sensitivity of 10% (mutations present at a frequency of at least 10% were detected). The technique was successfully applied to identify the Q80K substitution in 240 HCV G1 serum samples, with performance comparable to that of direct Sanger sequencing, the current standard procedure for this purpose. The new method was then validated in a Catalonian population of 202 HCV G1-infected individuals. Q80K was detected in 14.6% of G1a patients and 0% of G1b in our setting. CONCLUSION A fast, low-cost diagnostic strategy based on real-time PCR and fluorescence resonance energy transfer probe melting curve analysis has been successfully developed to identify single point mutations in highly variable genomes such as hepatitis C virus. This technique can be adapted to detect any single point mutation in highly variable genomes.


Virology | 2018

Resistance of high fitness hepatitis C virus to lethal mutagenesis

Isabel Gallego; Josep Gregori; María Eugenia Soria; Carlos García-Crespo; Mónica García-Álvarez; Alfonso Gómez-González; Rosalie Valiergue; Jordi Gómez; Juan Ignacio Esteban; Josep Quer; Esteban Domingo; Celia Perales

Viral fitness quantifies the degree of virus adaptation to a given environment. How viral fitness can influence the mutant spectrum complexity of a viral quasispecies subjected to lethal mutagenesis has not been investigated. Here we document that two high fitness hepatitis C virus populations display higher resistance to the mutagenic nucleoside analogues favipiravir and ribavirin than their parental, low fitness HCV. All populations, however, exhibited a mutation transition bias indicative of active mutagenesis. Resistance to the analogues was associated with a limited expansion of mutant spectrum complexity, as evidenced by several diversity indices used to characterize mutant spectra. The results are consistent with a replicative site-drug competition mechanism that was previously proposed for HCV fitness-associated resistance to non-mutagenic inhibitors. Other alternative, non-mutually exclusive mechanisms are considered. The results introduce viral fitness as a relevant parameter to evaluate the response of viruses to lethal mutagenesis, with implications for antiviral designs.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Rare haplotype load as marker for lethal mutagenesis

Josep Gregori; María Eugenia Soria; Isabel Gallego; Mercedes Guerrero-Murillo; Juan Ignacio Esteban; Josep Quer; Celia Perales; Esteban Domingo

RNA viruses replicate with a template-copying fidelity, which lies close to an extinction threshold. Increases of mutation rate by nucleotide analogues can drive viruses towards extinction. This transition is the basis of an antiviral strategy termed lethal mutagenesis. We have introduced a new diversity index, the rare haplotype load (RHL), to describe NS5B (polymerase) mutant spectra of hepatitis C virus (HCV) populations passaged in absence or presence of the mutagenic agents favipiravir or ribavirin. The increase in RHL is more prominent in mutant spectra whose expansions were due to nucleotide analogues than to multiple passages in absence of mutagens. Statistical tests for paired mutagenized versus non-mutagenized samples with 14 diversity indices show that RHL provides consistently the highest standardized effect of mutagenic treatment difference for ribavirin and favipiravir. The results indicate that the enrichment of viral quasispecies in very low frequency minority genomes can serve as a robust marker for lethal mutagenesis. The diagnostic value of RHL from deep sequencing data is relevant to experimental studies on enhanced mutagenesis of viruses, and to pharmacological evaluations of inhibitors suspected to have a mutagenic activity.


Journal of Viral Hepatitis | 2018

Hepatitis C virus early kinetics and resistance-associated substitution dynamics during antiviral therapy with direct-acting antivirals

Elena Perpiñán; Noelia Caro-Pérez; Neris García-González; Josep Gregori; Patricia González; Concepción Bartres; María Eugenia Soria; Celia Perales; S. Lens; Zoe Mariño; Maria Carlota Londoño; Xavier Ariza; George Koutsoudakis; Josep Quer; Fernando González-Candelas; Xavier Forns; Sofía Pérez-del-Pulgar

The emergence of resistance‐associated substitutions (RASs) can compromise the high efficacy of direct‐acting antivirals (DAAs). Little is known about RASs selection at very early time points during DAA treatment. Therefore, we analyzed the potential emergence of RASs immediately after therapy initiation. Samples of 71 patients treated with different DAAs were collected at baseline, during therapy (hours 4 and 8; days 1‐7; weeks 2‐4) or until target not detected. HCV‐RNA levels were determined by qPCR, and RASs were detected by deep sequencing. Sixty‐three (89%) patients achieved a sustained virological response (SVR), 7 (10%) relapsed, and 1 (1%) experienced a breakthrough. Almost all non‐SVR (7/8, 88%) showed RASs either at baseline or relapse. High‐frequency RASs detected at baseline (Y93H and L159F+C316N) remained detectable at early time points during therapy and reappeared as most prevalent substitutions at relapse. Conversely, emergent RASs at relapse (Q80R, D168E/V, R155K and L31V) were not observed during the first hours‐days, before HCV‐RNA became undetectable. HCV‐RNA decay and genetic evolution of the quasispecies followed a similar pattern during the first hours of therapy in SVR and non‐SVR patients. In conclusion, the absence of early RASs selection and the similar dynamics of HCV kinetics and quasispecies in SVR and non‐SVR patients after therapy initiation suggest that RASs selection may occur at later stages in the remaining reservoir, where viral populations persist hidden at very low replication levels. Nevertheless, we cannot completely exclude very early selection, when RASs are present below the sensitivity limit of deep sequencing.

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Josep Quer

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Celia Perales

Spanish National Research Council

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Juan Ignacio Esteban

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Esteban Domingo

Spanish National Research Council

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Isabel Gallego

Spanish National Research Council

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Rafael Esteban

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Ana de Avila

Spanish National Research Council

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Francisco Rodriguez-Frias

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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