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Dive into the research topics where Mariano Ortega-Muñoz is active.

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Featured researches published by Mariano Ortega-Muñoz.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Magnetic Nanoparticles-Templated Assembly of Protein Subunits: A New Platform for Carbohydrate-Based MRI Nanoprobes

Elsa Valero; Stefano Tambalo; Pasquina Marzola; Mariano Ortega-Muñoz; Francisco Javier Lopez-Jaramillo; Francisco Santoyo-Gonzalez; de Dios López J; Juan J. Delgado; José J. Calvino; Rafael Cuesta; José M. Domínguez-Vera; Natividad Gálvez

A new approach for the preparation of carbohydrate-coated magnetic nanoparticles is reported. In a first step, we show that the pH-driven assembly-disassembly natural process that occurs in apoferritin protein is effective for the encapsulation of maghemite nanoparticles of different sizes: 4 and 6 nm. In a second step, we demonstrate that the presence of functional amine groups in the outer shell of apoferritin allows functionalization with two carbohydrates, N-acetyl-D-glucosamine and d-mannose. High-resolution electron microscopy (HREM), high angle annular dark field scanning electron microscopy (HAADF-STEM), electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS), X-ray diffraction (XRD), and SQUID technique have been used to characterize the magnetic samples, termed herein Apomaghemites. The in vivo magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies showed the efficiency in contrasting images for these samples; that is, the r(2) NMR relaxivities are comparable with Endorem (a commercial superparamagnetic MRI contrast agent). The r(2) relaxivity values as well as the pre-contrast and post-contrast T(2)*-weighted images suggested that our systems could be used as perspective superparamagnetic contrast agents for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The carbohydrate-functionalized Apomaghemite nanoparticles retained their recognition abilities, as demonstrated by the strong affinity with their corresponding carbohydrate-binding lectins.


ChemBioChem | 2010

Multimeric Lactoside “Click Clusters” as Tools to Investigate the Effect of Linker Length in Specific Interactions with Peanut Lectin, Galectin-1, and -3

Sébastien G. Gouin; José M. García Fernández; Enguerran Vanquelef; François-Yves Dupradeau; Emma Salomonsson; Hakon Leffler; Mariano Ortega-Muñoz; Ulf J. Nilsson; José Kovensky

Multimeric lactosides based on carbohydrate scaffolds with valencies ranging from 1 to 4 and different linker lengths were synthesized by a copper‐catalyzed azide–alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC). The binding affinities and crosslinking abilities of the new “click clusters” toward biologically relevant galectins (gal‐1, gal‐3) and peanut lectin were evaluated by fluorescent polarization assay (FPA) and enzyme‐linked lectin assay (ELLA), respectively. FPA indicated that the binding affinities of the synthetic multilactosides towards the galectins increased proportionally with their lactosyl content, without significant differences due to the spacer length. ELLA evidenced a modest cluster effect for the multivalent conjugates, with a relative potency per lactoside ranging from 2.1 to 3.2. Nearly identical binding affinities were recorded for derivatives differing in the length of the linkers, in agreement with the FPA data. These results demonstrate that this parameter does not significantly influence the recognition process when interactions occur at a single lectin site. Molecular dynamics revealed that glycoconjugates adopt a pseudoglobular structure with a random localization of the lactoside residues. These spatial distributions were observed irrespective of the linker length; this explains the virtually equal affinities recorded by ELLA. In contrast, two‐site “sandwich” ELLA clearly revealed that multivalent derivatives bearing the longest spacers were more efficient for crosslinking lectins. Intrinsic affinities, devoid of aggregation effects, and crosslinking capabilities are, therefore, not directly related phenomena that must be taking into consideration in neoglycoconjugate design for specific applications.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2010

Vinyl sulfone functionalized silica: a “ready to use” pre-activated material for immobilization of biomolecules

Mariano Ortega-Muñoz; Julia Morales-Sanfrutos; Alicia Megia-Fernandez; F. Javier Lopez-Jaramillo; Fernando Hernandez-Mateo; Francisco Santoyo-Gonzalez

The combination of silica as support and vinyl sulfone as reactive group led to a pre-activated material that readily reacts to form covalent bonds by Michael-type addition with both amine and thiol groups naturally occurring in biomolecules in mild conditions compatible with the biological nature of the enzymes. A simple two step synthetic strategy was designed to access this functionalized hybrid material. Two types of vinyl sulfone silicas (N-type and S-type) differing in the chemical nature of the linkers between the silica particle and the reactive vinyl sulfone group were prepared by implementation of this strategy. The capabilities of those vinyl sulfone silicas were evaluated with the model enzymes invertase, lactase and lysozyme. Both S-type and N-type vinyl sulfone silicas coupled efficiently with the model enzymes even at 4 °C by simple combination of the species and the immobilized enzymes retained the enzymatic activity. The linker showed to play a major role in the non covalent interactions between the enzymes and the silicas. In terms of capacity, the S-type material is the best option although its poor flow rate when packed in columns invalidates its applications for low pressure liquid chromatography. The capabilities of the N-type material were successfully put to the test as a pre-packed column for the immobilization of invertase and further demonstrated with two real cases of relevance in proteomics: (i) purification of glutathione-S-transferase (GST) and (ii) identification of proteins that interact with thioredoxin h2 from Pisum sativum.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2012

Vinyl Sulfone Functionalization: A Feasible Approach for the Study of the Lectin! Carbohydrate Interactions

Francisco Javier Lopez-Jaramillo; Mariano Ortega-Muñoz; Alicia Megia-Fernandez; Fernando Hernandez-Mateo; Francisco Santoyo-Gonzalez

Carbohydrate-mediated molecular recognition is involved in many biological aspects such as cellular adhesion, immune response, blood coagulation, inflammation, and infection. Considering the crucial importance of such biological events in which proteins are normally involved, synthetic saccharide-based systems have emerged as powerful tools for the understanding of protein-carbohydrate interactions. As a new approach to create saccharide-based systems, a set of representative monosaccharides (D-mannose, D-glucose, N-acetyl-D-glucosamine, and L-fucose) and disaccharides (lactose, maltose, and melibiose) were derivatized at their anomeric carbon with a vinyl sulfone group spanned by an ethylthio linker. This vinyl sulfone functionalization is demonstrated to be a general strategy for the covalent linkage of a saccharide in mild conditions via Michael-type additions with the amine and thiol groups from functionalized supports and those naturally present in biomolecules. The introduction of the ethylthio linker between the biorecognizable element (i.e., saccharide) and the reactive group (i.e., vinyl sulfone) was found to preserve the functionality of the former. The capability of the vinyl sulfone saccharides for the study of lectin-carbohydrate interactions was demonstrated by (i) immobilizing them on both amine-functionalized supports (glass slides and microwell plates) and polylysine-coated glass slides to create sugar arrays that selectively bind lectins (ii) coupling to model proteins to yield neoglycoproteins that are recognized by lectins and (iii) using vinyl sulfone saccharides as tags to allow the detection of the labeled biomolecule by HRP-lectins. The above results were further put tothe test with a real case: detection of carbohydrate binding proteins present in rice ( Oryza sativa ).


BMC Plant Biology | 2013

Vinyl sulfone silica: application of an open preactivated support to the study of transnitrosylation of plant proteins by S-nitrosoglutathione

Juan C. Begara-Morales; F. Javier Lopez-Jaramillo; Beatriz Sánchez-Calvo; Alfonso Carreras; Mariano Ortega-Muñoz; Francisco Santoyo-Gonzalez; Francisco J. Corpas; Juan B. Barroso

BackgroundS-nitrosylaton is implicated in the regulation of numerous signaling pathways with a diversity of regulatory roles. The high lability of the S-NO bond makes the study of proteins regulated by S-nitrosylation/denitrosylation a challenging task and most studies have focused on already S-nitrosylated proteins. We hypothesize that: i) S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO) transnitrosylation is a feasible mechanism to account for the physiological S-nitrosylation of rather electropositive sulfur atoms from proteins, ii) affinity chromatography is a suitable approach to isolate proteins that are prone to undergo S-transnitrosylation and iii) vinyl sulfone silica is a suitable chromatographic bead.ResultsThe combination of vinyl sulfone silica with GSNO yielded an affinity resin that withstood high ionic strength without shrinking or deforming and that it was suitable to isolate potential GSNO transnitrosylation target candidates. Fractions eluted at 1500 mM NaCl resulted in a symmetrical peak for both, protein and S-nitrosothiols, supporting the idea of transnitrosylation by GSNO as a selective process that involves strong and specific interactions with the target protein. Proteomic analysis led to the identification of 22 physiological significant enzymes that differ with the tissue analyzed, being regulatory proteins the most abundant group in hypocotyls. The identification of chloroplastidic FBPase, proteasome, GTP-binding protein, heat shock Hsp70, syntaxin, catalase I, thioredoxin peroxidase and cytochrome P450 that have already been reported as S-nitrosylated by other techniques can be considered as internal positive controls that validate our experimental approach. An additional validation was provided by the prediction of the S-nitrosylation sites in 19 of the GSNO transnitrosylation target candidates.ConclusionsVinyl sulfone silica is an open immobilization support that can be turned ad hoc and in a straightforward manner into an affinity resin. Its potential in omic sciences was successfully put to test in the context of the analysis of post-translational modification by S-nitrosylation with two different tissues: mature pea leaves and embryogenic sunflower hypocotyls. The identified proteins reveal an intriguing overlap among S-nitrosylation and both tyrosine nitration and thioredoxin regulation. Chloroplastidic FBPase is a paradigm of such overlap of post-translational modifications since it is reversible modified by thioredoxin and S-nitrosylation and irreversibly by tyrosine nitration. Our results suggest a complex interrelation among different modulation mechanisms mediated by NO-derived molecules.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2016

Polyelectrolyte Complexes of Low Molecular Weight PEI and Citric Acid as Efficient and Nontoxic Vectors for in Vitro and in Vivo Gene Delivery

M. Dolores Giron-Gonzalez; Rafael Salto-Gonzalez; F. Javier Lopez-Jaramillo; Alfonso Salinas-Castillo; Ana Belén Jódar-Reyes; Mariano Ortega-Muñoz; Fernando Hernandez-Mateo; Francisco Santoyo-Gonzalez

Gene transfection mediated by the cationic polymer polyethylenimine (PEI) is considered a standard methodology. However, while highly branched PEIs form smaller polyplexes with DNA that exhibit high transfection efficiencies, they have significant cell toxicity. Conversely, low molecular weight PEIs (LMW-PEIs) with favorable cytotoxicity profiles display minimum transfection activities as a result of inadequate DNA complexation and protection. To solve this paradox, a novel polyelectrolyte complex was prepared by the ionic cross-linking of branched 1.8 kDa PEI with citric acid (CA). This system synergistically exploits the good cytotoxicity profile exhibited by LMW-PEI with the high transfection efficiencies shown by highly branched and high molecular weight PEIs. The polyectrolyte complex (1.8 kDa-PEI@CA) was obtained by a simple synthetic protocol based on the microwave irradiation of a solution of 1.8 kDa PEI and CA. Upon complexation with DNA, intrinsic properties of the resulting particles (size and surface charge) were measured and their ability to form stable polyplexes was determined. Compared with unmodified PEIs the new complexes behave as efficient gene vectors and showed enhanced DNA binding capability associated with facilitated intracellular DNA release and enhanced DNA protection from endonuclease degradation. In addition, while transfection values for LMW-PEIs are almost null, transfection efficiencies of the new reagent range from 2.5- to 3.8-fold to those of Lipofectamine 2000 and 25 kDa PEI in several cell lines in culture such as CHO-k1, FTO2B hepatomas, L6 myoblasts, or NRK cells, simultaneously showing a negligible toxicity. Furthermore, the 1.8 kDa-PEI@CA polyelectrolyte complexes retained the capability to transfect eukaryotic cells in the presence of serum and exhibited the capability to promote in vivo transfection in mouse (as an animal model) with an enhanced efficiency compared to 25 kDa PEI. Results support the polyelectrolyte complex of LMW-PEI and CA as promising generic nonviral gene carriers.


Journal of Plant Physiology | 2010

Evidence of non-functional redundancy between two pea h-type thioredoxins by specificity and stability studies

José A. Traverso; Francisco Javier Lopez-Jaramillo; Antonio Jesús Serrato; Mariano Ortega-Muñoz; David Aguado-Llera; Mariam Sahrawy; Francisco Santoyo-Gonzalez; José L. Neira; Ana Chueca

The largest group of plant thioredoxins (TRXs) consists of the so-called h-type; their great number raises questions about their specific or redundant roles in plant cells. Pisum sativum thioredoxin h1 (PsTRXh1) and Pisum sativum thioredoxin h2 (PsTRXh2) are both h-type TRXs from pea (Pisum sativum) previously identified and biochemically characterized. While both are involved in redox regulation and show a high-sequence identity (60%), they display different behavior during in vitro and in vivo assays. In this work, we show that these two proteins display different specificity in the capturing of protein targets in vitro, by the use of a new stringent method. PsTRXh2 interacted with classical antioxidant proteins, whereas PsTRXh1 showed a completely different pattern of targeted proteins, and was able to capture a transcription factor. We also showed that the two proteins display very different thermal and chemical stabilities. We suggest that the differences in thermal and chemical stability point to a distinct and characteristic pattern of protein specificity.


Nature Communications | 2017

De novo active sites for resurrected Precambrian enzymes

Valeria A. Risso; Sergio Martínez-Rodríguez; Adela M. Candel; Dennis M. Krüger; David Pantoja-Uceda; Mariano Ortega-Muñoz; Francisco Santoyo-Gonzalez; Eric A. Gaucher; Shina Caroline Lynn Kamerlin; Marta Bruix; Jose A. Gavira; Jose M. Sanchez-Ruiz

Protein engineering studies often suggest the emergence of completely new enzyme functionalities to be highly improbable. However, enzymes likely catalysed many different reactions already in the last universal common ancestor. Mechanisms for the emergence of completely new active sites must therefore either plausibly exist or at least have existed at the primordial protein stage. Here, we use resurrected Precambrian proteins as scaffolds for protein engineering and demonstrate that a new active site can be generated through a single hydrophobic-to-ionizable amino acid replacement that generates a partially buried group with perturbed physico-chemical properties. We provide experimental and computational evidence that conformational flexibility can assist the emergence and subsequent evolution of new active sites by improving substrate and transition-state binding, through the sampling of many potentially productive conformations. Our results suggest a mechanism for the emergence of primordial enzymes and highlight the potential of ancestral reconstruction as a tool for protein engineering.


Talanta | 2016

Tetrazine-based chemistry for nitrite determination in a paper microfluidic device

Inmaculada Ortiz-Gómez; Mariano Ortega-Muñoz; Alfonso Salinas-Castillo; José Antonio Álvarez-Bermejo; Maria Ariza-Avidad; Ignacio de Orbe-Payá; Francisco Santoyo-Gonzalez; L.F. Capitán-Vallvey

We present a new chemistry to determine nitrites implemented in a microfluidic paper-based analytical device (µPAD). The device is fabricated in cellulose paper with a sample reception area and three replicate detection areas with recognition chemistry immobilized by adsorption. The method involves the use of nitrite in an acid medium reaction to generate nitrous acid, which produces the oxidation of s-dihydrotetrazine: 1,2-dihydro-3,6-bis(3,5-dimethyl-1H-pyrazol-1-yl)-1,2,4,5-tetrazine (DHBPTz), which change the detection zone from colorless to pink. We used a digital camera and smartphone for the quantitative analysis of nitrite with the color coordinate S of the HSV color space as the analytical parameter. Parameters such as concentration and volume of s-dihydrotetrazine, pH, sample volume and reaction time were studied. The detection limit for this method is 1.30µM nitrite. To estimate the selectivity of the method an interference study of common ions in water samples was performed. The procedure was applied to natural water and compared with reference procedures.


RSC Advances | 2016

Vinyl sulfone-activated silica for efficient covalent immobilization of alkaline unstable enzymes: application to levansucrase for fructooligosaccharide synthesis

Paloma Santos-Moriano; L. Monsalve-Ledesma; Mariano Ortega-Muñoz; Lucia Fernandez-Arrojo; Antonio Ballesteros; Francisco Santoyo-Gonzalez; Francisco J. Plou

Most methodologies for covalent immobilization of enzymes usually take place at high pH values to enhance the nucleophilicity of protein reactive residues; however, many enzymes inactivate during the immobilization process due to their intrinsic instability at alkaline pH values. Vinyl sulfone (VS)-activated carriers may react with several protein side-chains at neutral pHs. In this work, levansucrase-an alkaline unstable enzyme of technological interest because it forms fructooligosaccharides (FOS) and levan from sucrose-was covalently attached to VS-activated silica at pH 7.0 in a short time (5 h). Theoretical immobilization yields were close to 95% but the apparent activity did not surpass 25%, probably due to random attachment with unproductive orientations and rigidification of the enzyme structure. Due to diffusional hindrance and/or local microenvironmental effects caused by the silica surface, the immobilized levansucrase was unable to produce levan but synthesized a similar amount of FOS than the free enzyme [95 g L−1 in 28 h, with a major contribution of FOS of the β(2 → 1) type]. The VS-activated biocatalysts showed a notable operational stability in batch reactors.

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