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Dive into the research topics where Nuria E. Vilaboa is active.

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Featured researches published by Nuria E. Vilaboa.


European Journal of Cell Biology | 2001

The role of intracellular oxidation in death induction (apoptosis and necrosis) in human promonocytic cells treated with stress inducers (cadmium, heat, X-rays)

Alba Galán; Laura García-Bermejo; Alfonso Troyano; Nuria E. Vilaboa; Carlos Iglesias Fernández; Elena de Blas; Patricio Aller

Treatment of U-937 human promonocytic cells with the stress inducers cadmium chloride (2 h at 200 microM), heat (2 h at 42.5 C) or X-rays (20 Gy), followed by recovery, caused death by apoptosis and stimulated caspase-3 activity. In addition, all stress agents caused intracellular oxidation, as measured by peroxide and/or anion superoxide accumulation. However, while pre-incubation with antioxidants (N-acetyl-L-cysteine or butylated hydroxyanisole) inhibited the induction of apoptosis by cadmium and X-rays, it did not affect the induction by heat-shock. Pre-incubation for 24 h with the GSH-depleting agent L-buthionine-[S,R]-sulfoximine (BSO) switched the mode of death from apoptosis to necrosis in cadmium-treated cells. By contrast, BSO only caused minor modifacions in the rate of apoptosis without affecting the mode of death in heat- and X-rays-treated cells. BSO potentiated peroxide accumulation in cells treated with both cadmium and X-rays. However, while the accumulation of peroxides was stable in the case of cadmium, it was transient in the case of X-rays. Moreover, the administration of antioxidants during the recovery period sufficed to prevent necrosis and restore apoptosis in BSO plus cadmium-treated cells. Cadmium and X-rays caused a decrease in intracellular ATP levels, but the decrease was similar in both apoptotic and necrotic cells. Taken together, these results demonstrate that (i) stress inducers cause intracellular oxidation, but oxidation is not a general requirement for apoptosis; and (ii) the duration of the oxidant state seems to be critical in determining the mode of death.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Regulation of multidrug resistance 1 (MDR1)/P-glycoprotein gene expression and activity by heat-shock transcription factor 1 (HSF1).

Nuria E. Vilaboa; Alba Galán; Alfonso Troyano; Elena de Blas; Patricio Aller

Infection of HeLa cells with adenovirus-carrying HSF1+ cDNA, which encodes a mutated form of HSF1 with constitutive transactivation capacity, increased multidrug resistance 1 (MDR1) mRNA level and P-glycoprotein (P-gp) cell surface content and stimulated rhodamine 123 accumulation and vinblastine efflux activity. On the other hand, infection with adenovirus-carrying HSP70 andHSP27 cDNAs did not increase MDR1/P-gp expression. HSF1 regulates MDR1/P-gp expression at the transcriptional level, since HSF1+ bound the heat-shock consensus elements (HSEs) in the MDR1 gene promoter and also activated the expression of an MDR1 promoter-driven reporter plasmid (pMDR1(−1202)). In addition, heat-shock increased pMDR1(−1202) promoter activity but not the activity of a similar reporter plasmid with point mutations at specific HSEs, and the heat-induced increase was totally inhibited by co-transfection with an expression plasmid carrying HSF1−, a dominant negative mutant of HSF1. The stress inducers arsenite, butyrate, and etoposide also increased pMDR1(−1202) promoter activity, but the increase was not inhibited (in the case of butyrate) or was only partially inhibited (in the case of arsenite and etoposide) by HSF1−. These results demonstrate that HSF1 regulates MDR1 expression, and that the HSEs present in the −315 to −285 region mediate the heat-induced activation of the MDR1 promoter. However, other factors may also participate in MDR1 induction by stressing agents.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2001

Modulation of the stress response during apoptosis and necrosis induction in cadmium-treated U-937 human promonocytic cells.

Alba Galán; Alfonso Troyano; Nuria E. Vilaboa; Carlos Iglesias Fernández; Elena de Blas; Patricio Aller

Treatment for 2 h with 200 microM cadmium chloride, followed by recovery, caused apoptosis and induced heat-shock protein 70 (HSP70) expression in U-937 promonocytic cells. However, pre-incubation with the GSH depleting agent L-buthionine-[S,R]-sulfoximine (BSO, 1 mM for 24 h) caused necrosis instead of apoptosis and failed to induce HSP70 expression. This failure was a consequence of necrosis instead of GSH depletion, since BSO allowed or even potentiated HSP70 induction when used in combination with heat shock (2 h at 42.5 degrees C) or with 50 microM cadmium, which caused apoptosis. The administration of N-acetyl-L-cysteine (NAC) at the beginning of recovery after BSO/200 microM cadmium treatment prevented the execution of necrosis and restored the execution of apoptosis, but did not restore HSP70 induction, indicating that the inhibition by BSO of HSP70 expression is an early regulated event. This contrasted with the capacity of NAC to prevent the alterations caused by BSO/200 microM cadmium in other proteins, namely the suppression of Bax expression and the increase in Bcl-2 and HSP-60 expression. Finally, it was observed that treatment with 200 microM cadmium rapidly increased the HSP70 mRNA level and stimulated heat-shock factor 1 (HSF1) trimerization and binding, and that these effects were prevented by pre-incubation with BSO. Taken together, these results indicate that the stress response is compatible with apoptosis but not with necrosis in cadmium-treated promonocytic cells. The suppression of the stress response is specifically due to the early inhibition of HSF1 activation.


European Journal of Cell Biology | 2000

Uncoupling of apoptosis and Jun/AP-1 activity in human promonocytic cells treated with DNA-damaging and stress-inducing agents

Alba Galán; Laura García-Bermejo; Nuria E. Vilaboa; Elena de Blas; Patricio Aller

Earlier studies have indicated that Jun/AP-1 activity is associated with, and probably required for apoptosis induction by DNA-damaging and stress-inducing agents in human myeloid cells. To investigate this possibility, we examined the capacity of continuous treatments with etoposide (10 microM) and camptothecin (0.4 microM), and pulse treatments with X-rays (20 Gy), heat (2 h at 42.5 C) and cadmium chloride (2 h at 200 microM) followed by recovery, to provoke apoptosis and to simulate c-jun and c-fos expression and AP-1 binding in U-937 human promonocytic cells. All these treatments generated apoptosis with similar efficacy (50-60% apoptotic cells at 6 h of treatment or recovery). However, the capacity to increase c-jun and c-fos mRNA levels and to stimulate AP-1 binding was very different, ranging from more than a twelve-fold increase in the case of cadmium, to almost no increase in the case of heat-shock and etoposide. When the cells were pre-conditioned with a soft heat shock (1 h at 42 degrees C) the cadmium-provoked apoptosis was greatly inhibited, but the stimulation of AP-1 binding was not affected. The administration of cAMP-increasing agents also reduced the etoposide- and cadmium-provoked apoptosis. However, cAMP greatly stimulated c-jun and c-fos expression and AP-1 binding when applied together with etoposide (which itself was ineffective), and potentiated the cadmium-induced AP-1 binding. Conversely, retinoic acid abrogated the cadmium-provoked stimulation of AP-1 binding and transactivation capacity, and greatly inhibited the stimulation of binding caused by camptothecin and X-rays. However, retinoic acid did not inhibit the induction of apoptosis by these agents. These results indicate that Jun/AP-1 activity is not necessarily coupled with apoptosis, nor required for apoptosis induction by DNA-damaging and stress-inducing agents in human promonocytic cells.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Heterologous Expression of the Transcriptional Regulator Escargot Inhibits Megakaryocytic Endomitosis

Alicia Ballester; Jonathan Frampton; Nuria E. Vilaboa; Carmela Calés

Certain cell types escape the strict mechanisms imposed on the majority of somatic cells to ensure the faithful inheritance of parental DNA content. This is the case in many embryonic tissues and certain adult cells such as mammalian hepatocytes and megakaryocytes. Megakaryocytic endomitosis is characterized by repeated S phases followed by abortive mitoses, resulting in mononucleated polyploid cells. Several cell cycle regulators have been proposed to play an active role in megakaryocytic polyploidization; however, little is known about upstream factors that could control endomitosis. Here we show that ectopic expression of the transcriptional repressorescargot interferes with the establishment of megakaryocytic endomitosis. Phorbol ester-induced polyploidization was inhibited in stably transfected megakaryoblastic HEL cells constitutively expressing escargot. Analysis of the expression and activity of different cell cycle factors revealed that Escargot affects the G1/S transition by influencing Cdk2 activity and cyclin A transcription. Nuclear proteins that specifically bind the Escargot-binding element were detected in endomitotic and non-endomitotic megakaryoblastic cells, but down-regulation occurred only during differentiation of cells that become polyploid. As Escargot was originally implicated in ploidy maintenance of Drosophila embryonic and larval cells, our results suggest that polyploidization in megakaryocytes might respond to mechanisms conserved from early development to adult cells that need to escape normal control of the diploid state.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2002

Regulation of CDC6, Geminin, and CDT1 in Human Cells that Undergo Polyploidization

Rodrigo Bermejo; Nuria E. Vilaboa; Carmela Calés


Journal of Cell Science | 1998

cAMP increasing agents attenuate the generation of apoptosis by etoposide in promonocytic leukemia cells

L. Garcia-Bermejo; Concepción Pérez; Nuria E. Vilaboa; E. de Blas; Patricio Aller


Experimental Cell Research | 1997

Modulation of heat-shock protein 70 (HSP70) gene expression by sodium butyrate in U-937 promonocytic cells: relationships with differentiation and apoptosis.

L. Garcia-Bermejo; Nuria E. Vilaboa; Concepción Pérez; Alba Galan; Elena de Blas; Patricio Aller


Journal of Cell Science | 1995

cAMP increasing agents prevent the stimulation of heat-shock protein 70 (HSP70) gene expression by cadmium chloride in human myeloid cell lines

Nuria E. Vilaboa; Consuelo Calle; Concepción Pérez; E. de Blas; L. Garcia-Bermejo; Patricio Aller


Journal of Cell Science | 1997

Differentiation of U-937 promonocytic cells by etoposide and ICRF-193, two antitumour DNA topoisomerase II inhibitors with different mechanisms of action

Concepción Pérez; Nuria E. Vilaboa; L. Garcia-Bermejo; E. de Blas; A.M. Creighton; Patricio Aller

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Patricio Aller

Spanish National Research Council

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Concepción Pérez

Spanish National Research Council

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Elena de Blas

Spanish National Research Council

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L. Garcia-Bermejo

Spanish National Research Council

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Alba Galán

Spanish National Research Council

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Alfonso Troyano

Spanish National Research Council

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Carlos Iglesias Fernández

Spanish National Research Council

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Carmela Calés

Spanish National Research Council

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Consuelo Calle

Complutense University of Madrid

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Laura García-Bermejo

Spanish National Research Council

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