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Dive into the research topics where Marta Pérez-Simó is active.

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Featured researches published by Marta Pérez-Simó.


Veterinary Research | 2010

Experimental infection with H1N1 European swine influenza virus protects pigs from an infection with the 2009 pandemic H1N1 human influenza virus.

Núria Busquets; Joaquim Segalés; Lorena Córdoba; Tufária Mussá; Elisa Crisci; Gerard E. Martín-Valls; Meritxell Simon-Grifé; Marta Pérez-Simó; Mónica Pérez-Maillo; José I. Núñez; Francesc Xavier Abad; Lorenzo Fraile; Sonia Pina; Natàlia Majó; Albert Bensaid; Mariano Domingo; Maria Montoya

The recent pandemic caused by human influenza virus A(H1N1) 2009 contains ancestral gene segments from North American and Eurasian swine lineages as well as from avian and human influenza lineages. The emergence of this A(H1N1) 2009 poses a potential global threat for human health and the fact that it can infect other species, like pigs, favours a possible encounter with other influenza viruses circulating in swine herds. In Europe, H1N1, H1N2 and H3N2 subtypes of swine influenza virus currently have a high prevalence in commercial farms. To better assess the risk posed by the A(H1N1) 2009 in the actual situation of swine farms, we sought to analyze whether a previous infection with a circulating European avian-like swine A/Swine/Spain/53207/2004 (H1N1) influenza virus (hereafter referred to as SwH1N1) generated or not cross-protective immunity against a subsequent infection with the new human pandemic A/Catalonia/63/2009 (H1N1) influenza virus (hereafter referred to as pH1N1) 21 days apart. Pigs infected only with pH1N1 had mild to moderate pathological findings, consisting on broncho-interstitial pneumonia. However, pigs inoculated with SwH1N1 virus and subsequently infected with pH1N1 had very mild lung lesions, apparently attributed to the remaining lesions caused by SwH1N1 infection. These later pigs also exhibited boosted levels of specific antibodies. Finally, animals firstly infected with SwH1N1 virus and latter infected with pH1N1 exhibited undetectable viral RNA load in nasal swabs and lungs after challenge with pH1N1, indicating a cross-protective effect between both strains.


Vaccine | 2011

Immunogenicity and protection against Haemophilus parasuis infection after vaccination with recombinant virulence associated trimeric autotransporters (VtaA)

Alex Olvera; Sonia Pina; Marta Pérez-Simó; Virginia Aragon; Joaquim Segalés; Albert Bensaid

Haemophilus parasuis is the etiological agent of Glässers disease in swine, characterized by fibrinous polyserositis, polyarthritis and meningitis. The lack of a vaccine against a broad spectrum of strains has limited the control of the disease. Recently, virulence associated trimeric autotransporters (VtaA) were described as antigenic proteins of H. parasuis. In this study 6 VtaA were produced as recombinant proteins and used to immunize snatch-farrowed, colostrum-deprived piglets. Immunized animals developed specific systemic and mucosal antibodies. The protective capacity of the anti-VtaA antibodies was evaluated by the inoculation of 3 × 10(8) or 6 × 10(6) colony forming units (CFU) of the highly virulent strain Nagasaki. Vaccinated animals had a delayed course of disease and 33 or 57%, respectively, of the animals survived the lethal challenge. The partial protection achieved with the recombinant VtaA supports their potential as candidates to be included in future vaccine formulations against H. parasuis.


Veterinary Research | 2010

Virulence-associated trimeric autotransporters of Haemophilus parasuis are antigenic proteins expressed in vivo

Alex Olvera; Sonia Pina; Marta Pérez-Simó; Simone Oliveira; Albert Bensaid

Glässer’s disease is a re-emerging swine disease characterized by a severe septicaemia. Vaccination has been widely used to control the disease, although there is a lack of extended cross-protection. Trimeric autotransporters, a family of surface exposed proteins implicated in host-pathogen interactions, are good vaccine candidates. Members of this family have been described in Haemophilus parasuis and designated as virulence-associated trimeric autotransporters (VtaA). In this work, we produced 15 recombinant VtaA passenger domains and looked for the presence of antibodies directed against them in immune sera by immunoblotting. After infection with a subclinical dose of H. parasuis Nagasaki, an IgG mediated antibody response against 6 (VtaA1, 5, 6, 8, 9 and 10) of the 13 VtaA of the Nagasaki strain was detected, indicating that they are expressed in vivo. IgA production against VtaA was detected in only one animal. VtaA were more likely to be late antigens when compared to early (Omp P5 and Omp P6) and late (YaeT) defined antigens. Antibody cross-reaction with two orthologs of Nagasaki’s VtaA5 and 6, VtaA15 and 16 of strain HP1319, was also detected. No antibodies against VtaA were detected in the sera of animals immunized with a bacterin of the Nagasaki strain, suggesting poor expression in the in vitro conditions used. Taken together, these results indicate that VtaA are good candidate immunogens that could be used to improve H. parasuis vaccines. However, their capacity to confer protective immunity needs to be further studied.


Veterinary Microbiology | 2013

Serum cross-reaction among virulence-associated trimeric autotransporters (VtaA) of Haemophilus parasuis

Alex Olvera; Verónica Martínez-Moliner; Sonia Pina-Pedrero; Marta Pérez-Simó; Nuria Galofré-Milà; Mar Costa-Hurtado; Virginia Aragon; Albert Bensaid

Glässers disease is a fibrinous polyserositis and polyarthritis of swine caused by the bacterium Haemophilus parasuis. Control by vaccination has been limited for years due to lack of cross-protection among strains. However, 6 trimeric autotransporters (VtaA) of the Nagasaki strain were shown to be antigenic and gave partial protection to a lethal challenge. The antigenic relationship among the VtaAs was examined by immunizing mice with individual VtaA showing that they cross-reacted by ELISA mainly with VtaA from the same group. When sera from protected and non-protected vaccinated piglets were examined no differences in VtaA cross-reactivity profiles were found. In addition, sera from commercial pigs immunized with a single VtaA (VtaA9) showed a wider range of VtaA cross-reaction, probably due to the previous colonization by H. parasuis. These results can help the development of new vaccine formulations against H. parasuis by allowing a rational VtaA selection.


Microbiology | 2012

Genomic and antigenic characterization of monomeric autotransporters of Haemophilus parasuis: an ongoing process of reductive evolution.

Sonia Pina-Pedrero; Alex Olvera; Marta Pérez-Simó; Albert Bensaid

The genome of the highly pathogenic Haemophilus parasuis Nagasaki strain (serovar 5) was sequenced to 99 % completion. A genomic comparison with two other pathogenic serovar 5 H. parasuis strains identified six genes per genome (bmaA1-bmaA6) encoding β-barrel monomeric autotransporters, bmaA2 and bmaA3 being pseudogenes in at least one strain. The remaining encoded proteins were predicted to belong to the subtilisin (BmaA1 and BmaA4) and cysteine (BmaA5 and BmaA6) protease families. Allelic polymorphism was detected in other H. parasuis strains by comparative genomic hybridization using microarrays. Recombination events were observed, some of them leading to gene disruption in one of the three strains, although synteny around bmaA genes was conserved. These results suggest that bmaA genes are undergoing a process of reductive evolution. To evaluate their use as potential vaccine antigens, the products of the passenger domains of bmaA1, bmaA4, bmaA5 and bmaA6 were produced in Escherichia coli as recombinant proteins. They were detected by immunoblotting using sera of colostrum-deprived piglets recovering from a sublethal infection with H. parasuis (Nagasaki). The existence of specific antibodies after infection with H. parasuis also demonstrated in vivo expression. Using proteomics, only BmaA6 was detected in the in vitro-grown Nagasaki strain. Interestingly, the translocator domain was found in the outer membrane, while the passenger domain was located in supernatants. These results indicate that BmaA proteins could be considered as immunogen candidates to improve H. parasuis vaccines. However, their capacity to confer protective immunity needs to be studied further.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Classical Swine Fever Virus vs. Classical Swine Fever Virus: The Superinfection Exclusion Phenomenon in Experimentally Infected Wild Boar

Sara Muñoz-González; Marta Pérez-Simó; Andreu Colom-Cadena; Oscar Cabezón; José Alejandro Bohórquez; Rosa Rosell; Lester J. Pérez; Ignasi Marco; Santiago Lavín; Mariano Domingo; Llilianne Ganges

Two groups with three wild boars each were used: Group A (animals 1 to 3) served as the control, and Group B (animals 4 to 6) was postnatally persistently infected with the Cat01 strain of CSFV (primary virus). The animals, six weeks old and clinically healthy, were inoculated with the virulent strain Margarita (secondary virus). For exclusive detection of the Margarita strain, a specific qRT-PCR assay was designed, which proved not to have cross-reactivity with the Cat01 strain. The wild boars persistently infected with CSFV were protected from superinfection by the virulent CSFV Margarita strain, as evidenced by the absence of clinical signs and the absence of Margarita RNA detection in serum, swabs and tissue samples. Additionally, in PBMCs, a well-known target for CSFV viral replication, only the primary infecting virus RNA (Cat01 strain) could be detected, even after the isolation in ST cells, demonstrating SIE at the tissue level in vivo. Furthermore, the data analysis of the Margarita qRT-PCR, by means of calculated ΔCt values, supported that PBMCs from persistently infected animals were substantially protected from superinfection after in vitro inoculation with the Margarita virus strain, while this virus was able to infect naive PBMCs efficiently. In parallel, IFN-α values were undetectable in the sera from animals in Group B after inoculation with the CSFV Margarita strain. Furthermore, these animals were unable to elicit adaptive humoral (no E2-specific or neutralising antibodies) or cellular immune responses (in terms of IFN-γ-producing cells) after inoculation with the second virus. Finally, a sequence analysis could not detect CSFV Margarita RNA in the samples tested from Group B. Our results suggested that the SIE phenomenon might be involved in the evolution and phylogeny of the virus, as well as in CSFV control by vaccination. To the best of our knowledge, this study was one of the first showing efficient suppression of superinfection in animals, especially in the absence of IFN-α, which might be associated with the lack of innate immune mechanisms.


Virus Research | 2017

A bivalent dendrimeric peptide bearing a T-cell epitope from foot-and-mouth disease virus protein 3A improves humoral response against classical swine fever virus

José Alejandro Bohórquez; Sira Defaus; Sara Muñoz-González; Marta Pérez-Simó; Rosa Rosell; Lorenzo Fraile; Francisco Sobrino; David Andreu; Llilianne Ganges

Three dendrimeric peptides were synthesized in order to evaluate their immunogenicity and their potential protection against classical swine fever virus (CSFV) in domestic pigs. Construct 1, an optimized version of a previously used dendrimer, had four copies of a B-cell epitope derived from CSFV E2 glycoprotein connected to an also CSFV-derived T-cell epitope through maleimide instead of thioether linkages. Construct 2 was similarly built but included only two copies of the B-cell epitope, and in also bivalent construct 3 the CSFV T-cell epitope was replaced by a previously described one from the 3A protein of foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV). Animals were inoculated twice with a 21-day interval and challenged 15days after the second immunization. Clinical signs were recorded daily and ELISA tests were performed to detect antibodies against specific peptide and E2. The neutralising antibody response was assessed 13days after challenge. Despite the change to maleimide connectivity, only partial protection against CSFV was again observed. The best clinical protection was observed in group 3. Animals inoculated with constructs 2 and 3 showed higher anti-peptide humoral response, suggesting that two copies of the B-cell epitope are sufficient or even better than four copies for swine immune recognition. In addition, for construct 3 higher neutralizing antibody titres against CSFV were detected. Our results support the immunogenicity of the CSFV B-cell epitope and the cooperative role of the FMDV 3A T-cell epitope in inducing a neutralising response against CSFV in domestic pigs. This is also the first time that the FMDV T-cell epitope shows effectivity in improving swine immune response against a different virus. Our findings highlight the relevance of dendrimeric peptides as a powerful tool for epitope characterization and antiviral strategies development.


Veterinary Microbiology | 2017

Corrigendum to “Efficacy of E2 glycoprotein fused to porcine CD154 as a novel chimeric subunit vaccine to prevent classical swine fever virus vertical transmission in pregnant sows”

Sara Muñoz-González; Yusmel Sordo; Marta Pérez-Simó; Marisela Suárez; Albert Canturri; María P. Rodríguez; Mt Frías-Lepoureau; Mariano Domingo; Mario Pablo Estrada; Llilianne Ganges

Here we evaluated the effect of double vaccination with a novel subunit marker vaccine candidate based in the CSFV E2 glycoprotein fused to the porcine CD154 to prevent CSFV vertical transmission. A lentivirus-based gene delivery system was used to obtain a stable recombinant HEK 293 cell line for the expression of E2 fused to porcine CD154 molecule. Six pregnant sows were distributed in two groups and at 64days of gestation animals numbered 1-4 (group 1) were vaccinated via intramuscular inoculation with 50μg of E2-CD154 subunit vaccine. Animals from group 2 (numbered 5 and 6, control animals) were injected with PBS. Seventeen days later sows from group 1 were boosted with the same vaccine dose. Twenty-seven days after the first immunization, the sows were challenged with a virulent CSFV Margarita strain and clinical signs were registered. Samples were collected during the experiment and at necropsy to evaluate immune response and virological protection. Between 14 and 18days after challenge, the sows were euthanized, the foetuses were obtained and samples of sera and tissues were collected. E2-CD154 vaccinated animals remained clinically healthy until the end of the study; also, no adverse reaction was shown after vaccination. An effective boost effect in the neutralizing antibody response after the second immunization and viral challenge was observed and support the virological protection detected in these animals after vaccination. Protection against CSFV vertical transmission was found in the 100% of serums samples from foetus of vaccinated sows. Only two out of 208 samples (0.96%) were positive with Ct value about 36 corresponding to one tonsil and one thymus, which may be non-infective viral particles. Besides, its DIVA potential and protection from vertical transmission, the novel CSFV E2 bound to CD154 subunit vaccine, is a promising alternative to the live-attenuated vaccine for developing countries.


BMC Veterinary Research | 2017

African swine fever virus infection in Classical swine fever subclinically infected wild boars

Oscar Cabezón; Sara Muñoz-González; Andreu Colom-Cadena; Marta Pérez-Simó; Rosa Rosell; Santiago Lavín; Ignasi Marco; Lorenzo Fraile; Paloma Martínez de La Riva; Fernando Rodriguez; Javier Domínguez; Llilianne Ganges

BackgroundRecently moderate-virulence classical swine fever virus (CSFV) strains have been proven capable of generating postnatal persistent infection (PI), defined by the maintenance of viremia and the inability to generate CSFV-specific immune responses in animals. These animals also showed a type I interferon blockade in the absence of clinical signs. In this study, we assessed the infection generated in 7-week-old CSFV PI wild boars after infection with the African swine fever virus (ASFV). The wild boars were divided in two groups and were infected with ASFV. Group A comprised boars who were CSFV PI in a subclinical form and Group B comprised pestivirus-free wild boars. Some relevant parameters related to CSFV replication and the immune response of CSFV PI animals were studied. Additionally, serum soluble factors such as IFN-α, TNF-α, IL-6, IL-10, IFN-γ and sCD163 were analysed before and after ASFV infection to assess their role in disease progression.ResultsAfter ASFV infection, only the CSFV PI wild boars showed progressive acute haemorrhagic disease; however, the survival rates following ASFV infection was similar in both experimental groups. Notwithstanding, the CSFV RNA load of CSFV PI animals remained unaltered over the study; likewise, the ASFV DNA load detected after infection was similar between groups. Interestingly, systemic type I FN-α and IL-10 levels in sera were almost undetectable in CSFV PI animals, yet detectable in Group B, while detectable levels of IFN-γ were found in both groups. Finally, the flow cytometry analysis showed an increase in myelomonocytic cells (CD172a+) and a decrease in CD4+ T cells in the PBMCs from CSFV PI animals after ASFV infection.ConclusionsOur results showed that the immune response plays a role in the progression of disease in CSFV subclinically infected wild boars after ASFV infection, and the immune response comprised the systemic type I interferon blockade. ASFV does not produce any interference with CSFV replication, or vice versa. ASFV infection could be a trigger factor for the disease progression in CSFV PI animals, as their survival after ASFV was similar to that of the pestivirus-free ASFV-infected group. This fact suggests a high resistance in CSFV PI animals even against a virus like ASFV; this may mean that there are relevant implications for CSF control in endemic countries. The diagnosis of ASFV and CSFV co-infection in endemic countries cannot be ruled out and need to be studied in greater depth.


Veterinary Research | 2015

Efficacy of a live attenuated vaccine in classical swine fever virus postnatally persistently infected pigs

Sara Muñoz-González; Marta Pérez-Simó; Marta Muñoz; José Alejandro Bohórquez; Rosa Rosell; Artur Summerfield; Mariano Domingo; Nicolas Ruggli; Llilianne Ganges

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Llilianne Ganges

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Sara Muñoz-González

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Mariano Domingo

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Rosa Rosell

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Albert Bensaid

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Alex Olvera

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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José Alejandro Bohórquez

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Albert Canturri

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Joaquim Segalés

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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