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Dive into the research topics where Mónica Valdez-Solana is active.

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Featured researches published by Mónica Valdez-Solana.


Microbiology | 2009

Induction of morphological changes in Ustilago maydis cells by octyl gallate.

Erick Sierra-Campos; Mónica Valdez-Solana; D. Matuz-Mares; I. Velázquez; Juan Pablo Pardo

The effects of octyl gallate on Ustilago maydis yeast cells were analysed in relation to its capacity to oxidize compounds (pro-oxidant actions). All phenolic compounds tested inhibited the alternative oxidase (AOX). However, only octyl gallate induced a morphological change in yeast cells and collapsed the mitochondrial membrane potential. In contrast to octyl gallate, propyl gallate and nordihydroguaiaretic acid caused only a negligible cell change and the membrane potential was not affected. Our findings show that structurally related phenolic compounds do not necessarily exert similar actions on target cells. Preincubation of U. maydis cells with trolox inhibited the change to pseudohyphal growth produced by octyl gallate. These results suggest that in addition to the inhibitory action of octyl gallate on the AOX, this compound induces a switch from yeast to a mycelium, probably through the formation of lipid peroxides.


Journal of Chemistry | 2015

Nutritional Content and Elemental and Phytochemical Analyses of Moringa oleifera Grown in Mexico

Mónica Valdez-Solana; Verónica Y. Mejía-García; Alfredo Téllez-Valencia; Guadalupe García-Arenas; José M. Salas-Pacheco; José J. Alba-Romero; Erick Sierra-Campos

Moringa oleifera is a tree distributed in Mexican semiarid and coastal regions. M. oleifera is used in practice in the treatment of various diseases and is available without a medical prescription, often in the form of an herbal infusion for everyday use. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the chemical composition and nutritional values of dried M. oleifera leaf powder collected from two different regions in Mexico. All samples of M. oleifera exhibited moisture levels varying from 3.06 to 3.34%, lipids from 10.21 to 10.31%, fiber from 7.29 to 9.46%, ashes from 10.71 to 11.18%, crude protein from 10.74 to 11.48%, and carbohydrates from 54.61 to 57.61%. The predominant mineral elements in the leaf powder according to ICP-MS were Ca (2016.5–2620.5 mg/100 g), K (1817–1845 mg/100 g), and Mg (322.5–340.6 mg/100 g). The HPLC analysis indicated the presence of phenolic acids (gallic and chlorogenic acids) and flavonoids (rutin, luteolin, quercetin, apigenin, and kaempferol). We concluded that Lombardia M. oleifera samples could be employed in edible and commercial applications. Our results showed that the highest mean value of As from the San Pedro samples exceeds the recommended level and may constitute a health hazard to consumers.


Foods | 2017

Utility of Milk Coagulant Enzyme of Moringa oleifera Seed in Cheese Production from Soy and Skim Milks

María Alejandra Sánchez-Muñoz; Mónica Valdez-Solana; Claudia Avitia-Domínguez; Patricia Ramírez-Baca; María Guadalupe Candelas-Cadillo; Miguel Aguilera-Ortíz; Jorge Armando Meza-Velázquez; Alfredo Téllez-Valencia; Erick Sierra-Campos

In this study, the potential use of Moringa oleifera as a clotting agent of different types of milk (whole, skim, and soy milk) was investigated. M. oleifera seed extract showed high milk-clotting activity followed by flower extract. Specific clotting activity of seed extract was 200 times higher than that of flower extract. Seed extract is composed by four main protein bands (43.6, 32.2, 19.4, and 16.3 kDa). Caseinolytic activity assessed by sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and tyrosine quantification, showed a high extent of casein degradation using M. oleifera seed extract. Milk soy cheese was soft and creamy, while skim milk cheese was hard and crumbly. According to these results, it is concluded that seed extract of M. oleifera generates suitable milk clotting activity for cheesemaking. To our knowledge, this study is the first to report comparative data of M. oleifera milk clotting activity between different types of soy milk.


Biochemistry Research International | 2018

Streptozotocin-Induced Adaptive Modification of Mitochondrial Supercomplexes in Liver of Wistar Rats and the Protective Effect of Moringa oleifera Lam

María Alejandra Sánchez-Muñoz; Mónica Valdez-Solana; Mara Ibeth Campos-Almazán; Oscar Flores-Herrera; Mercedes Esparza-Perusquía; Sofia Olvera-Sanchez; Guadalupe García-Arenas; Claudia Avitia-Domínguez; Alfredo Téllez-Valencia; Erick Sierra-Campos

The increasing prevalence of diabetes continues to be a major health issue worldwide. Alteration of mitochondrial electron transport chain is a recognized hallmark of the diabetic-associated decline in liver bioenergetics; however, the molecular events involved are only poorly understood. Moringa oleifera is used for the treatment of diabetes. However, its role on mitochondrial functionality is not yet established. This study was aimed to evaluate the effect of M. oleifera extract on supercomplex formation, ATPase activity, ROS production, GSH levels, lipid peroxidation, and protein carbonylation. The levels of lipid peroxidation and protein carbonylation were increased in diabetic group. However, the levels were decreased in Moringa-treated diabetic rats. Analysis of in-gel activity showed an increase in all complex activities in the diabetic group, but spectrophotometric determinations of complex II and IV activities were unaffected in this treatment. However, we found an oxygen consumption abolition through complex I-III-IV pathway in the diabetic group treated with Moringa. While respiration with succinate feeding into complex II-III-IV was increased in the diabetic group. These findings suggest that hyperglycemia modifies oxygen consumption, supercomplexes formation, and increases ROS levels in mitochondria from the liver of STZ-diabetic rats, whereas M. oleifera may have a protective role against some alterations.


Current Protein & Peptide Science | 2016

Targeting Plasmodium Metabolism to Improve Antimalarial Drug Design.

Claudia Avitia-Domínguez; Erick Sierra-Campos; Irene Betancourt-Conde; Miriam Aguirre-Raudry; Alejandra Vázquez-Raygoza; Artemisa Luévano-De la Cruz; Alejandro Favela-Candia; Marie Sarabia-Sánchez; Lluvia Ríos-Soto; Edna Méndez-Hernández; Jorge Cisneros-Martínez; Marcelo Gómez Palacio-Gastélum; Mónica Valdez-Solana; Jessica Hernández-Rivera; Jaime De Lira-Sánchez; Mara Ibeth Campos-Almazán; Alfredo Téllez-Valencia

Malaria is one of the main infectious diseases in tropical developing countries and represents high morbidity and mortality rates nowadays. The principal etiological agent P. falciparum is transmitted through the bite of the female Anopheles mosquito. The issue has escalated due to the emergence of resistant strains to most of the antimalarials used for the treatment including Chloroquine, Sulfadoxine-Pyrimethamine, and recently Artemisinin derivatives, which has led to diminished effectiveness and by consequence increased the severity of epidemic outbreaks. Due to the lack of effective compounds to treat these drug-resistant strains, the discovery or development of novel anti-malaria drugs is important. In this context, one strategy has been to find inhibitors of enzymes, which play an important role for parasite survival. Today, promising results have been obtained in this regard, involving the entire P. falciparum metabolism. These inhibitors could serve as leads in the search of a new chemotherapy against malaria. This review focuses on the achievements in recent years with regard to inhibition of enzymes used as targets for drug design against malaria.


Medicinal Chemistry Research | 2018

Structural characterization, biochemical, inhibition and computational studies of Entamoeba histolytica phosphoglycerate mutase: finding hits for a new antiamoebic drug

Artemisa Luévano-De la Cruz; Elkin Eduardo Sanabria-Chanaga; Lilián Yépez-Mulia; Rafael Castillo; Alicia Hernández-Campos; Hugo Nájera; Claudia Avitia-Domínguez; Erick Sierra-Campos; Mónica Valdez-Solana; Alfredo Téllez-Valencia

Entamoeba histolytica is the causative agent of amoebiasis, which infects an estimated 50 million people globally each year. This parasite uses glycolysis as its only source of energy making enzymes of this route such as phosphoglycerate mutase (EhPGAM) excellent targets in the search for new drugs, a continuing necessity due to the adverse effects and unsuccessful cases of treatment that have resulted from the use of available antiparasitic agents. The aim of this work is to present the biochemical and structural characterization of EhPGAM and the results of a search for the first inhibitors of this enzyme. To this end, the activity of purified recombinant EhPGAM was assessed against an in-house chemical library of 200 benzimidazole derivatives. The results showed that seven compounds inhibited this enzyme about 40–70% at 100 μM and molecular dynamics simulations indicated that the two most potent inhibitors (Compound 1 and Compound 2) form stable complexes and have the highest binding energy. Hence, these inhibitors can be considered good candidates in the search of new drugs to treat amoebiasis.


Biology | 2018

Effects of Moringa oleifera Leaves Extract on High Glucose-Induced Metabolic Changes in HepG2 Cells

Jorge Sosa-Gutiérrez; Mónica Valdez-Solana; Tamara Y. Forbes-Hernandez; Claudia Avitia-Domínguez; Gonzalo Garcia-Vargas; José Salas-Pacheco; Oscar Flores-Herrera; Alfredo Téllez-Valencia; Maurizio Battino; Erick Sierra-Campos

Mitochondrial dysfunction is a hallmark of diabetes, but the metabolic alterations during early stages of the disease remain unknown. The ability of liver cells to rearrange their metabolism plays an important role in compensating the energy shortage and may provide cell survival. Moringa oleifera leaves have been studied for its health properties against diabetes, insulin resistance, and non-alcoholic liver disease. We postulated that M. oleifera executes a protective function on mitochondrial functionality in HepG2 treated with high glucose. We evaluated the effect of high glucose treatment on the mitochondrial function of HepG2 cells using a Seahorse extracellular flux analyzer (Agilent, Santa Clara, CA, USA), blue native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (BN-PAGE), and western blot analysis. For assessment of mitochondrial abnormalities, we measured the activity of mitochondrial Complex I and IV as well as uncoupling protein 2, and sirtuin 3 protein contents. Our results demonstrate that, under conditions mimicking the hyperglycemia, Complex I activity, UCP2, Complex III and IV subunits content, supercomplex formation, and acetylation levels are modified with respect to the control condition. However, basal oxygen consumption rate was not affected and mitochondrial reactive oxygen species production remained unchanged in all groups. Treatment of HepG2 cells with M. oleifera extract significantly increased both protein content and mitochondrial complexes activities. Nonetheless, control cells’ respiratory control ratio (RCR) was 4.37 compared to high glucose treated cells’ RCR of 15.3, and glucose plus M. oleifera treated cells’ RCR of 5.2, this indicates high-quality mitochondria and efficient oxidative phosphorylation coupling. Additionally, the state app was not altered between different treatments, suggesting no alteration in respiratory fluxes. These findings enhance understanding of the actions of M. oleifera and suggest that the known antidiabetic property of this plant, at least in part, is mediated through modulating the mitochondrial respiratory chain.


Molecules | 2017

Novel Mixed-Type Inhibitors of Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase 1B. Kinetic and Computational Studies

Marie Sarabia-Sánchez; Pedro Josué Trejo-Soto; José Miguel Velázquez-López; Carlos Carvente-García; Rafael Castillo; Alicia Hernández-Campos; Claudia Avitia-Domínguez; Daniel Enríquez-Mendiola; Erick Sierra-Campos; Mónica Valdez-Solana; José Salas-Pacheco; Alfredo Téllez-Valencia

The Atlas of Diabetes reports 415 million diabetics in the world, a number that has surpassed in half the expected time the twenty year projection. Type 2 diabetes is the most frequent form of the disease; it is characterized by a defect in the secretion of insulin and a resistance in its target organs. In the search for new antidiabetic drugs, one of the principal strategies consists in promoting the action of insulin. In this sense, attention has been centered in the protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B), a protein whose overexpression or increase of its activity has been related in many studies with insulin resistance. In the present work, a chemical library of 250 compounds was evaluated to determine their inhibition capability on the protein PTP1B. Ten molecules inhibited over the 50% of the activity of the PTP1B, the three most potent molecules were selected for its characterization, reporting Ki values of 5.2, 4.2 and 41.3 µM, for compounds 1, 2, and 3, respectively. Docking and molecular dynamics studies revealed that the three inhibitors made interactions with residues at the secondary binding site to phosphate, exclusive for PTP1B. The data reported here support these compounds as hits for the design more potent and selective inhibitors against PTP1B in the search of new antidiabetic treatment.


Molecules | 2017

Species-Specific Inactivation of Triosephosphate Isomerase from Trypanosoma brucei: Kinetic and Molecular Dynamics Studies

Alejandra Vázquez-Raygoza; Lucia Cano-González; Israel Velázquez-Martínez; Pedro Josué Trejo-Soto; Rafael Castillo; Alicia Hernández-Campos; Francisco Hernández-Luis; Jesús Oria-Hernández; Adriana Castillo-Villanueva; Claudia Avitia-Domínguez; Erick Sierra-Campos; Mónica Valdez-Solana; Alfredo Téllez-Valencia

Human African Trypanosomiasis (HAT), a disease that provokes 2184 new cases a year in Sub-Saharan Africa, is caused by Trypanosoma brucei. Current treatments are limited, highly toxic, and parasite strains resistant to them are emerging. Therefore, there is an urgency to find new drugs against HAT. In this context, T. brucei depends on glycolysis as the unique source for ATP supply; therefore, the enzyme triosephosphate isomerase (TIM) is an attractive target for drug design. In the present work, three new benzimidazole derivatives were found as TbTIM inactivators (compounds 1, 2 and 3) with an I50 value of 84, 82 and 73 µM, respectively. Kinetic analyses indicated that the three molecules were selective when tested against human TIM (HsTIM) activity. Additionally, to study their binding mode in TbTIM, we performed a 100 ns molecular dynamics simulation of TbTIM-inactivator complexes. Simulations showed that the binding of compounds disturbs the structure of the protein, affecting the conformations of important domains such as loop 6 and loop 8. In addition, the physicochemical and drug-like parameters showed by the three compounds suggest a good oral absorption. In conclusion, these molecules will serve as a guide to design more potent inactivators that could be used to obtain new drugs against HAT.


Ukrainian Biochemical Journal | 2018

Nitrate and nitrite in drinking water affect antioxidant enzymes in erythrocytes of rats

Erick Sierra-Campos; Mónica Valdez-Solana; Mara Ibeth Campos-Almazán

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Erick Sierra-Campos

Universidad Juárez del Estado de Durango

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Alfredo Téllez-Valencia

Universidad Juárez del Estado de Durango

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Claudia Avitia-Domínguez

Universidad Juárez del Estado de Durango

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Alicia Hernández-Campos

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Guadalupe García-Arenas

Universidad Juárez del Estado de Durango

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Mara Ibeth Campos-Almazán

Universidad Juárez del Estado de Durango

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María Alejandra Sánchez-Muñoz

Universidad Juárez del Estado de Durango

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Oscar Flores-Herrera

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Rafael Castillo

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Artemisa Luévano-De la Cruz

Universidad Juárez del Estado de Durango

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