Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Meytha Marsch-Moreno is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Meytha Marsch-Moreno.


Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry | 1987

Thyroid hormone stimulates adipocyte differentiation of 3T3 cells.

Guillermo Flores-Delgado; Meytha Marsch-Moreno; Walid Kuri-Harcuch

Triiodothyronine added at 0.1 nM to 3T3-F442A cells cultured in adipogenic medium having endogenous hormone concentrations similar to those of hypothyroid serum stimulated adipose conversion; activities of both lipogenic enzymes, glycerophosphate dehydrogenase and malic enzyme, increased with hormone treatment. The number of adipocytes was also augmented by L-T3 addition but the number of fat cell clusters remained the same as compared to non-treated cultures, suggesting that thyroid hormone increased the number of adipocytes probably through stimulating selective multiplication of precursor adipose cells. Hormone addition to cells cultured with non-adipogenic medium did not promote conversion showing that L-T3 is not an adipogenic factor by itself. Triiodothyronine added at concentrations similar to those found in hyperthyroidism, from 10 nM up to 10 µM, also increased the proportion of adipocytes without changing the number of fat cell clusters, but they decreased the activity of both lipogenic enzymes and lipid accumulation in mature adipocytes. It can be concluded that during 3T3-F442A differentiation into adipocytes L-T3 increases the number of differentiated adipocytes and, at low concentrations, also enhances lipogenic enzyme activities, whereas at the hyperthyroid hormone levels these enzyme activities are significantly reduced, remaining at levels similar to those of cells cultured with hypothyroid medium. This cloned cell line seems to be a useful model to study thyroid hormone action at both molecular and cellular level.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Glucocorticoid Paradoxically Recruits Adipose Progenitors and Impairs Lipid Homeostasis and Glucose Transport in Mature Adipocytes

Jorge-Tonatiuh Ayala-Sumuano; Cristina Velez-delValle; Alicia Beltrán-Langarica; Meytha Marsch-Moreno; Claudia Hernández-Mosqueira; Walid Kuri-Harcuch

Chronic treatment with glucocorticoids increases the mass of adipose tissue and promotes metabolic syndrome. However little is known about the molecular effects of dexamethasone on adipose biology. Here, we demonstrated that dexamethasone induces progenitor cells to undergo adipogenesis. In the adipogenic pathway, at least two cell types are found: cells with the susceptibility to undergo staurosporine-induced adipose conversion and cells that require both staurosporine and dexamethasone to undergo adipogenesis. Dexamethasone increased and accelerated the expression of main adipogenic genes such as pparg2, cebpa and srebf1c. Also, dexamethasone altered the phosphorylation pattern of C/EBPβ, which is an important transcription factor during adipogenesis. Dexamethasone also had effect on mature adipocytes mature adipocytes causing the downregulation of some lipogenic genes, promoted a lipolysis state, and decreased the uptake of glucose. These paradoxical effects appear to explain the complexity of the action of glucocorticoids, which involves the hyperplasia of adipose cells and insulin resistance.


Cell and Tissue Research | 1999

Frozen cultured sheets of human epidermal keratinocytes enhance healing of full-thickness wounds in mice

Elisa Tamariz; Meytha Marsch-Moreno; Federico Castro-Muñozledo; Victor Tsutsumi; Walid Kuri-Harcuch

Abstract Sheets of cultured allogeneic human keratinocytes have been used for the treatment of burns and chronic leg ulcers but there has been no animal assay for the therapeutic action of these cultures. In order to analyze the effects of frozen cultures of human keratinocytes on wound healing, we have developed such an assay based on the rate of repair of full-thickness skin wounds in immunocompetent NMR1 mice. Reepithelialization of the control wounds, originating from the murine epithelium at the edge of the wound, occurred at a constant rate of advance of 150 µm/day. When frozen cultured human epidermal sheets were thawed at room temperature for 5–10 min and applied to the surface of the wound, the murine epithelium advanced at 267 µm/day. Most wounds treated with frozen cultures completely healed after 10 days, whereas most control wounds required 16 days. The accelerated reepithelialization did not depend on the presence of proliferative human keratinocytes in the frozen cultures. The cultures also promoted early formation of granulation tissue and laminin deposition over the surface of the wound bed. This simple assay should permit quantitative analysis of the effects on healing exerted not only by cultured cells, but also by proteins and small molecules.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2008

Fibromodulin gene is expressed in human epidermal keratinocytes in culture and in human epidermis in vivo

Cristina Velez-delValle; Meytha Marsch-Moreno; Federico Castro-Muñozledo; Yesid Jaime Bolívar-Flores; Walid Kuri-Harcuch

Fibromodulin is a small leucine-rich proteoglycan that has a central role in the maintenance of collagen fibrils structure, and in regulation of TGF-beta biological activity. Although, it is mainly found in cartilage and tendon, little is known regarding the expression of the fibromodulin gene in other cell types. By RT-PCR, real time PCR and immunohistochemistry, we describe the expression of the fibromodulin gene and the presence of the protein in human epidermal keratinocytes (HEK), both in culture and in normal human epidermis. Our results show, for the first time, that fibromodulin gene is constantly expressed in HEK during culture time. Immunostaining showed that fibromodulin is located intracytoplasmically in basal and stratified keratinocytes of the growing colonies, confluent cultures, and epidermis in vivo. The expression and intracellular localization of fibromodulin in HEK is a new finding and opens new possible biological roles for the SLRP family.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Epithelial cell migration requires the interaction between the vimentin and keratin intermediate filaments

Cristina Velez-delValle; Meytha Marsch-Moreno; Federico Castro-Muñozledo; Ivan J. Galván-Mendoza; Walid Kuri-Harcuch

Epithelial migration plays a central role in development, wound repair and tumor metastasis, but the role of intermediate filament in this important event is unknown. We showed recently that vimentin coexists in the same cell with keratin-KRT14 at the leading edge of the migrating epidermal cells, and knockdown of vimentin impaired colony growth. Here we demonstrate that vimentin co-localizes and co-immunoprecipitates with keratin-KRT14, and mutations in the -YRKLLEGEE- sequence of vimentin significantly reduced migration of the keratinocytes. Our data demonstrates that keratinocyte migration requires the interaction between vimentin and keratins at the -YRKLLEGEE- sequence at the helical 2B domain of vimentin. These findings have broad implications for understanding the roles of vimentin intermediate filaments in normal and neoplastic epithelial cells.


Histochemistry and Cell Biology | 2015

Vimentin is necessary for colony growth of human diploid keratinocytes.

Federico Castro-Muñozledo; Cristina Velez-delValle; Meytha Marsch-Moreno; Miriam Hernández-Quintero; Walid Kuri-Harcuch

Abstract The role of vimentin (Vim) in diploid epithelial cells is not well known. To understand its biological function, we cultured human epidermal keratinocytes under conditions that support migration, proliferation, stratification and terminal differentiation. We identified a keratinocyte subpopulation that shows a p63+/α5β1bright phenotype and displays Vim intermediate filaments (IFs) besides their keratin IF network. These cells were mainly located at the proliferative/migratory rim of the growing colonies; but also, they were scarce and scattered or formed small groups of basal cells in confluent stratified epithelia. Stimulation of cells with EGF and wounding experiments in confluent arrested epithelia increased the number of Vim+ keratinocytes in an extent higher to the expected for a cell population doubling. BrdU labeling demonstrated that most of the proliferative cells located at the migratory border of the colony have Vim, in contrast with proliferative cells located at the basal layer at the center of big colonies which lacked of Vim IFs, suggesting that Vim expression was not solely linked to proliferation. Therefore, we silenced Vim mRNA in the cultured keratinocytes and observed an inhibition of colony growth. Such results, together with long-term cultivation assays which showed that Vim might be associated to pattern formation in cultured epithelia, suggest that Vim expression is essential for a highly motile phenotype, which is necessary for keratinocyte colony growth and possibly for development and wound healing. Vim+/p63+/α5β1bright epithelial cells may play a significant physiological role in embryonic morphogenetic movements; wound healing and other pathologies such as carcinomas and hyperproliferative diseases.


Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 2016

Lipogenic Enzymes Complexes and Cytoplasmic Lipid Droplet Formation During Adipogenesis

Teresita Padilla-Benavides; Cristina Velez-delValle; Meytha Marsch-Moreno; Federico Castro-Muñozledo; Walid Kuri-Harcuch

Lipid droplets are dynamic organelles that store triglycerides and participate in their mobilization in adipose cells. These organelles require the reorganization of some structural components, the cytoskeleton, and the activation of lipogenic enzymes. Using confocal microscopy, we analyzed the participation of cytoskeletal components and two lipogenic enzymes, fatty acid synthase and glycerophosphate dehydrogenase, during lipid droplet biogenesis in differentiating 3T3‐F442A cells into adipocytes. We show that subcortical actin microfilaments are extended at the basal side of the cells in parallel arrangement to the culture dish substrate, and that the microtubule network traverses the cytoplasm as a scaffold that supports the round shape of the mature adipocyte. By immunoprecipitation, we show that vimentin and perilipin1a associate during the early stages of the differentiation process for lipid droplet formation. We also report that the antibody against perilipin1 detected a band that might correspond to a modified form of the molecule. Finally, the cytosolic distribution and punctate organization of lipogenic enzymes and their co‐localization in the proximity of lipid droplets suggest the existence of dynamic protein complexes involved in synthesis and storage of triglycerides. J. Cell. Biochem. 117: 2315–2326, 2016.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2011

Decorin gene expression and its regulation in human keratinocytes.

Cristina Velez-delValle; Meytha Marsch-Moreno; Federico Castro-Muñozledo; Walid Kuri-Harcuch

In various cell types, including cancer cells, decorin is involved in regulation of cell attachment, migration and proliferation. In skin, decorin is seen in dermis, but not in keratinocytes. We show that decorin gene (DCN) is expressed in the cultured keratinocytes, and the protein is found in the cytoplasm of differentiating keratinocytes and in suprabasal layers of human epidermis. RT-PCR experiments showed that DCN expression is regulated by pro-inflammatory and proliferative cytokines. Our data suggest that decorin should play a significant role in keratinocyte terminal differentiation, cutaneous homeostasis and dermatological diseases.


Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 2016

Retinoic Acid Inhibits Adipogenesis Modulating C/EBPβ Phosphorylation and Down Regulating Srebf1a Expression

Jorge-Tonatiuh Ayala-Sumuano; Cristina Velez-delValle; Meytha Marsch-Moreno; Alicia Beltrán-Langarica; Claudia Hernández-Mosqueira; Walid Kuri-Harcuch

Adipogenesis comprises a complex network of signaling pathways and transcriptional cascades; the GSK3β‐C/EBPβ‐srebf1a axis is a critical signaling pathway at early stages leading to the expression of PPARγ2, the master regulator of adipose differentiation. Previous work has demonstrated that retinoic acid inhibits adipogenesis affecting different signaling pathways. Here, we evaluated the anti‐adipogenic effect of retinoic acid on the adipogenic transcriptional cascade, and the expression of adipogenic genes cebpb, srebf1a, srebf1c, pparg2, and cebpa. Our results demonstrate that retinoic acid blocks adipose differentiation during commitment, returning cells to an apparent non‐committed state, since they have to be newly induced to adipose conversion after the retinoid is removed from the culture medium. Retinoic acid down regulates the expression of the adipogenic genes, srebf1a, srebf1c, pparg2, and cebpa; however, it did not down regulate the expression of cebpb, but it inhibited C/EBPβ phosphorylation at Thr188, a critical step for the progression of the adipogenic program. We also found that RA inhibition of adipogenesis did not increase the expression of dlk1, the gene encoding for Pref1, a well‐known anti‐adipogenic factor. J. Cell. Biochem. 117: 629–637, 2016.


Immunobiology | 2018

Human keratinocyte cultures (HaCaT) can be infected by DENV, triggering innate immune responses that include IFNλ and LL37

Moisés López-González; David Meza-Sánchez; Julio García-Cordero; José Bustos-Arriaga; Cristina Vélez-Del Valle; Meytha Marsch-Moreno; Tannya Castro-Jiménez; Leopoldo Flores-Romo; Leopoldo Santos-Argumedo; Benito Gutiérrez-Castañeda; Leticia Cedillo-Barrón

The skin is the first anatomical region that dengue virus (DENV) encounters during the natural infection. Although the role of some skin resident cells like dendritic cells and fibroblasts has been demonstrated to be crucial to elucidate the role of resident cells and molecules participating during the early events of the innate immune response, the participation of keratinocytes during DENV infection has not been fully elucidated. In this paper we aimed to evaluate the use of the HaCaT cell line as a model to study the immune responses of skin keratinocytes to DENV infection. We demonstrated productive DENV-2 infection of HaCaT cells and their capability to establish an antiviral response through production of type I and type III interferons (IFN-β and IFN-λ). The production of these cytokines by HaCaT cells correlated with upregulation of IFN-inducible transmembrane protein-3 (IFITM3) and viperin in bystander, uninfected cells. We also observed an increase in secretion of IL-6 and IL-8. Skin keratinocytes are known to secrete antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) during viral infections. In our model, DENV-2 infected HaCaT cells upregulate the production of cytoplasmic LL-37. We evaluated the dual role of LL-37, HBD2, and HBD3 antiviral activity and immunoregulation during DENV-2 infection of HaCaT cells and found that LL-37 significantly reduced DENV-2 replication. This indicates that the HaCaT cell line can be used as a model for studying the innate response of keratinocytes to DENV infection. Our results also suggest that skin keratinocytes play an important role in the skin microenvironment after DENV infection by secreting molecules like type I and type III IFNs, pro-inflammatory molecules, and LL-37, which may contribute to the protection against arboviral infections.

Collaboration


Dive into the Meytha Marsch-Moreno's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jorge-Tonatiuh Ayala-Sumuano

National Autonomous University of Mexico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Benito Gutiérrez-Castañeda

National Autonomous University of Mexico

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge