Marta Monzón
University of Zaragoza
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Featured researches published by Marta Monzón.
Cellular Microbiology | 2013
Juan Ignacio Aguiló; Henar Alonso; Santiago Uranga; Dessislava Marinova; Ainhoa Arbués; A. de Martino; Alberto Anel; Marta Monzón; Juan José Badiola; Julián Pardo; Roland Brosch; Carlos Martín
Apoptosis modulation is a procedure amply utilized by intracellular pathogens to favour the outcome of the infection. Nevertheless, the role of apoptosis during infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of human tuberculosis, is subject of an intense debate and still remains unclear. In this work, we describe that apoptosis induction in host cells is clearly restricted to virulent M. tuberculosis strains, and is associated with the capacity of the mycobacteria to secrete the 6 kDa early secreted antigenic target ESAT‐6 bothunder in vitro and in vivo conditions. Remarkably, only apoptosis‐inducing strains are able to propagate infection into new cells, suggesting that apoptosis is used by M. tuberculosis as a colonization mechanism. Finally, we demonstrate that in vitro modulation of apoptosis affects mycobacterial cell‐to‐cell spread capacity, establishing an unambiguous relationship between apoptosis and propagation of M. tuberculosis. Our data further indicate that BCG and MTBVAC vaccines are inefficient in inducing apoptosis and colonizing new cells, correlating with the strong attenuation profile of these strains previously observed in vitro and in vivo.
Brain Research | 2006
Paloma Hortells; Marta Monzón; Eva Monleón; Cristina Acín; Antonia Vargas; Rosa Bolea; Lluís Luján; Juan José Badiola
This work represents a comprehensive pathological description of the retina and visual pathways in naturally affected Scrapie sheep. Twenty naturally affected Scrapie sheep and 6 matched controls were used. Eyes, optic nerves and brain from each animal were fixed and histologically processed using hematoxylin-eosin, followed by immunohistochemical staining for prion protein (PrPsc) and glial fibrillar acidic protein (GFAP). Retinal histopathological changes were observed in only 7 clinically affected animals and mainly consisted of loss of outer limitant layer definition, outer plexiform layer atrophy, disorganization and loss of nuclei in both nuclear layers, and Müller glia hypertrophy. PrPsc was detected in the retina of 19 of the 20 sheep and characterized by a disseminated granular deposit across layers and intraneuronally in ganglion cells. The inner plexiform and the ganglion cell layers were the structures most severely affected by PrPsc deposits. PrPsc exhibited a tendency to spread from these two layers to the others. A marked increase in the number and intensity of GFAP-expressing Müller cells was observed in the clinical stage, especially at the terminal stage of the disease. Spongiosis and PrPsc were detected within the visual pathways at the preclinical stage, their values increasing during the course of the disease but varying between the areas examined. PrPsc was detected in only 3 optic nerves. The results suggest that the presence of PrPsc in the retina correlates with disease progression during the preclinical and clinical stages, perhaps using the inner plexiform layer as a first entry site and diffusing from the brain using a centrifugal model.
Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 2004
Eva Monleón; Marta Monzón; Paloma Hortells; Antonia Vargas; Cristina Acín; Juan José Badiola
We assessed three different visualization systems used routinely in research and diagnosis of transmissable spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) to demonstrate whether the methodology applied to immunohistochemical (IHC) examination may alter the results concerning detection of prion protein (PrPsc) in the lymphoreticular system (LRS): avidin-biotin–peroxidase (Vectastain ABC kit; Vector), Envision (DAKO), and catalyzed signal amplification (CSA; DAKO). The study aimed to determine which of these showed the highest sensitivity, with the hope of providing an accurate tool for pathogenesis and preclinical diagnosis research in TSEs. Histological sections from palatine tonsils, spleen, GALT (ileum and ileocecal valve), and lymph nodes from sheep belonging to a Spanish scrapie-positive flock were processed by IHC using L42 as primary antibody. As substrate chromogen, diaminobenzidine was used, and all slides were subjectively assessed by light microscopy. A further study using an image analyzer software system was carried out to confirm that the conclusion provided by microscopic examination was objective. The CSA system showed the highest sensitivity in all cases, increasing both variables assessed: the number of follicles that were PrPsc-positive was detected as well as the intensity of immunostaining in each of them.
Acta Orthopaedica Scandinavica | 2002
Marta Monzón; Felícito García-Alvarez; Antonio Laclériga; Beatriz Amorena
Staphylococcus aureus osteomyelitis, a major problem in orthopedic surgery, often involves biofilm bacteria adhering to implants and surrounding bone and tissues. The inadequacy of therapy or immunological surveillance has encouraged studies using animal models which simulate natural osteomyelitic infections, ensure the development of infections and avoid mortality. We evaluated 4 models for infection (8 animals/model) in rats, using stainless-steel implants in tibiae and a very adherent slime-producing bacterial strain. Each animal received: an implant containing a 12 h-biofilm with about 10 6 cfu (Model 1); an implant containing this biofilm and a suspension with about 10 4 cfu (Model 2); a sterile implant and a suspension with about 10 5 cfu (Model 3); or a sterile implant and a suspension with about 10 6 cfu (Model 4). 63 days after surgery we found 100% rat survival, colonization of bone by implant biofilm bacteria in some animals and local, but not systemic infections. Model 1 (but not Models 2-4) reproduced an infection in both, tibiae and implants, most reliably (in 100% of the animals). Model 3 was the least reliable (p < 0.01, 25% infected implants, 12% infected tibiae).
PLOS ONE | 2012
Adriana Aporta; Ainhoa Arbués; Juan Ignacio Aguiló; Marta Monzón; Juan José Badiola; Alba de Martino; Nadia L. Ferrer; Dessislava Marinova; Alberto Anel; Carlos Martín; Julián Pardo
It has been proposed that Mycobacterium tuberculosis virulent strains inhibit apoptosis and trigger cell death by necrosis of host macrophages to evade innate immunity, while non-virulent strains induce typical apoptosis activating a protective host response. As part of the characterization of a novel tuberculosis vaccine candidate, the M. tuberculosis phoP mutant SO2, we sought to evaluate its potential to induce host cell death. The parental M. tuberculosis MT103 strain and the current vaccine against tuberculosis Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) were used as comparators in mouse models in vitro and in vivo. Our data reveal that attenuated SO2 was unable to induce apoptotic events neither in mouse macrophages in vitro nor during lung infection in vivo. In contrast, virulent MT103 triggers typical apoptotic events with phosphatidylserine exposure, caspase-3 activation and nuclear condensation and fragmentation. BCG strain behaved like SO2 and did not induce apoptosis. A clonogenic survival assay confirmed that viability of BCG- or SO2-infected macrophages was unaffected. Our results discard apoptosis as the protective mechanism induced by SO2 vaccine and provide evidence for positive correlation between classical apoptosis induction and virulent strains, suggesting apoptosis as a possible virulence determinant during M. tuberculosis infection.
Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation | 2005
Rosa Bolea; Eva Monleón; Irene Schiller; Alexander J. Raeber; Cristina Acín; Marta Monzón; Inmaculada Martín-Burriel; Thomas Struckmeyer; Bruno Oesch; Juan José Badiola
One of the “gold standard” techniques for postmortem confirmation of scrapie diagnosis in sheep and goats is immunohistochemical examination of brain tissue. Active surveillance for scrapie is mainly performed by rapid diagnostic tests on the basis of postmortem immunochemical detection of prion protein (PrP) in the obex tissue. The aim of this study was to determine the performance of 2 rapid tests, Prionics®-Check LIA (a chemiluminescence sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay) and Prionics®-Check Western blot for scrapie diagnosis when applied to brain areas other than the obex, in comparison with the recognized immunohistochemistry. Prion protein was detected in the obex, cervical spinal cord, and thalamus from all the scrapie-positive sheep by the 3 tests. Western blot and LIA were negative in other areas of the brain, although weak immunohistochemical staining was detected. The results show that the 2 rapid tests studied may detect PrP in brain areas other than the obex, although with a lower sensitivity than immunohistochemistry when there is minimal PrP deposition.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2016
Nacho Aguilo; Samuel Álvarez-Arguedas; Santiago Uranga; Dessislava Marinova; Marta Monzón; Juan José Badiola; Carlos Martín
Some of the most promising novel tuberculosis vaccine strategies currently under development are based on respiratory vaccination, mimicking the natural route of infection. In this work, we have compared pulmonary and subcutaneous delivery of BCG vaccine in the tuberculosis-susceptible DBA/2 mouse strain, a model in which parenterally administered BCG vaccine does not protect against tuberculosis. Our data show that intranasally but not subcutaneously administered BCG confers robust protection against pulmonary tuberculosis challenge. In addition, our results indicate that pulmonary vaccination triggers a Mycobacterium tuberculosis-specific mucosal immune response orchestrated by interleukin 17A (IL-17A). Thus, IL-17A neutralization in vivo reduces protection and abrogates M. tuberculosis-specific immunoglobulin A (IgA) secretion to respiratory airways and lung expression of polymeric immunoglobulin receptor induced following intranasal vaccination. Together, our results demonstrate that pulmonary delivery of BCG can overcome the lack of protection observed when BCG is given parenterally, suggesting that respiratory tuberculosis vaccines could have an advantage in tuberculosis-endemic countries, where intradermally administered BCG has inefficient effectiveness against pulmonary tuberculosis.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Cristina Acín; Inmaculada Martín-Burriel; Eva Monleón; Jaber Lyahyai; José Luis Pitarch; Carmen Serrano; Marta Monzón; Pilar Zaragoza; Juan José Badiola
Classical scrapie is a neurological disorder of the central nervous system (CNS) characterized by the accumulation of an abnormal, partially protease resistant prion protein (PrPsc) in the CNS and in some peripheral tissues in domestic small ruminants. Whereas the pathological changes and genetic susceptibility of ovine scrapie are well known, caprine scrapie has been less well studied. We report here a pathological study of 13 scrapie-affected goats diagnosed in Spain during the last 9 years. We used immunohistochemical and biochemical techniques to discriminate between classical and atypical scrapie and bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE). All the animals displayed PrPsc distribution patterns and western blot characteristics compatible with classical scrapie. In addition, we determined the complete open reading frame sequence of the PRNP in these scrapie-affected animals. The polymorphisms observed were compared with those of the herd mates (n = 665) and with the frequencies of healthy herds (n = 581) of native Spanish goats (Retinta, Pirenaica and Moncaina) and other worldwide breeds reared in Spain (Saanen, Alpine and crossbreed). In total, sixteen polymorphic sites were identified, including the known amino acid substitutions at codons G37V, G127S, M137I, I142M, H143R, R151H, R154H, R211Q, Q222K, G232W, and P240S, and new polymorphisms at codons G74D, M112T, R139S, L141F and Q215R. In addition, the known 42, 138 and 179 silent mutations were detected, and one new one is reported at codon 122. The genetic differences observed in the population studied have been attributed to breed and most of the novel polymorphic codons show frequencies lower than 5%. This work provides the first basis of polymorphic distribution of PRNP in native and worldwide goat breeds reared in Spain.
Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 2003
Eva Monleón; Marta Monzón; Paloma Hortells; Antonia Vargas; Juan José Badiola
Although detection of the abnormal isoform of prion protein (PrPsc), the specific feature of transmissable spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs), has been previously demonstrated on formalin-fixed autolytic tissue, no samples with autolysis as severe as tested here (i.e., liquid state) have previously been tested. It is inevitable that a small but significant proportion of brains, especially in summer due to delays in postmortem examination, undergo an extremely severe autolysis that makes samples unsuitable for diagnosis by conventional techniques. In this study, 25 bovine samples were diagnosed by applying immunocytochemistry on the corresponding liquid fraction. Four additional portions of brainstem (positive and negative sheep and cattle) were subjected to one of the autolysis regimens at 56C or environmental conditions for up to 80 days and were analyzed with the same methodology. No abnormal protein could be detected in any of the control animals. PrPsc accumulation was observed by immunocytochemistry in all cases that were positive by either immunohistochemistry on the corresponding filtrates or by Prionics Western blotting, showing an excellent agreement between the methodology assessed and these routine techniques. The results of this study demonstrate immunocytochemistry as a useful tool for diagnosis in liquid-state samples, solving a most relevant problem in BSE and scrapie epidemiology.
Veterinary Microbiology | 2011
Eva Monleón; Ma Carmen Garza; Rocío Sarasa; Javier Álvarez-Rodriguez; Rosa Bolea; Marta Monzón; M. Antonia Vargas; Juan José Badiola; Cristina Acín
In classical scrapie, detection of PrPsc on lymphoreticular system is used for the in vivo and post mortem diagnosis of the disease. However, the sensitivity of this methodology is not well characterised because the magnitude and duration of lymphoid tissue involvement can vary considerably. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the efficiency of detecting PrPsc in rectal mucosa and third-eyelid biopsies. A total of 474 genetically susceptible sheep and 24 goats from three scrapie infected flocks were included in this study. A sample from rectal mucosa and a sample from third-eyelid lymphoid tissue were collected from each animal. Biopsy samples were fixed in formaldehyde and processed for immunohistochemical examination. Animals with negative biopsy results were studied more closely through a post mortem examination of central nervous and lymphoreticular systems and if there was a positive result, additional biopsy sections were further tested. The sensitivity of rectal mucosa and third-eyelid assays were 36% and 40% respectively on initial examination but increased to 48% and 44% respectively after retesting. The results of this field study show a high percentage of infected animals that do not have detectable levels of PrPsc in the biopsied lymphoid tissue, due mainly to the relatively high number of animals with minimal or no involvement of lymphoid tissue in the pathogenesis of the disease.