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Dive into the research topics where Nuria Matías is active.

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Featured researches published by Nuria Matías.


Current Biology | 2011

Caveolin-1 deficiency causes cholesterol dependent mitochondrial dysfunction and apoptotic susceptibility

Marta Bosch; Montserrat Marí; Albert Herms; Ana Patricia Fernández; Alba Fajardo; Adam Kassan; Albert Giralt; Anna Colell; David Balgoma; Elisabet Barbero; Elena González-Moreno; Nuria Matías; Francesc Tebar; Jesús Balsinde; Marta Camps; Carlos Enrich; Steven P. Gross; Carmen García-Ruiz; Esther Pérez-Navarro; José C. Fernández-Checa; Albert Pol

Caveolins (CAVs) are essential components of caveolae, plasma membrane invaginations with reduced fluidity, reflecting cholesterol accumulation. CAV proteins bind cholesterol, and CAVs ability to move between cellular compartments helps control intracellular cholesterol fluxes. In humans, CAV1 mutations result in lipodystrophy, cell transformation, and cancer. CAV1 gene-disrupted mice exhibit cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, cancer, atherosclerosis, and pulmonary fibrosis. The mechanism or mechanisms underlying these disparate effects are unknown, but our past work suggested that CAV1 deficiency might alter metabolism: CAV1(-/-) mice exhibit impaired liver regeneration unless supplemented with glucose, suggesting systemic inefficiencies requiring additional metabolic intermediates. Establishing a functional link between CAV1 and metabolism would provide a unifying theme to explain these myriad pathologies. Here we demonstrate that impaired proliferation and low survival with glucose restriction is a shortcoming of CAV1-deficient cells caused by impaired mitochondrial function. Without CAV1, free cholesterol accumulates in mitochondrial membranes, increasing membrane condensation and reducing efficiency of the respiratory chain and intrinsic antioxidant defense. Upon activation of oxidative phosphorylation, this promotes accumulation of reactive oxygen species, resulting in cell death. We confirm that this mitochondrial dysfunction predisposes CAV1-deficient animals to mitochondrial-related diseases such as steatohepatitis and neurodegeneration.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Specific contribution of methionine and choline in nutritional nonalcoholic steatohepatitis.Impact on mitochondrial S-adenosyl-L-methionine and glutathione

Francisco Caballero; Anna Fernández; Nuria Matías; Laura Martínez; Raquel Fucho; Montserrat Elena; Joan Caballería; Albert Morales; José C. Fernández-Checa; Carmen García-Ruiz

The pathogenesis and treatment of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) are not well established. Feeding a diet deficient in both methionine and choline (MCD) is one of the most common models of NASH, which is characterized by steatosis, mitochondrial dysfunction, hepatocellular injury, oxidative stress, inflammation, and fibrosis. However, the individual contribution of the lack of methionine and choline in liver steatosis, advanced pathology and impact on mitochondrial S-adenosyl-l-methionine (SAM) and glutathione (GSH), known regulators of disease progression, has not been specifically addressed. Here, we examined the regulation of mitochondrial SAM and GSH and signs of disease in mice fed a MCD, methionine-deficient (MD), or choline-deficient (CD) diet. The MD diet reproduced most of the deleterious effects of MCD feeding, including weight loss, hepatocellular injury, oxidative stress, inflammation, and fibrosis, whereas CD feeding was mainly responsible for steatosis, characterized by triglycerides and free fatty acids accumulation. These findings were preceded by MCD- or MD-mediated SAM and GSH depletion in mitochondria due to decreased mitochondrial membrane fluidity associated with a lower phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylethanolamine ratio. MCD and MD but not CD feeding resulted in increased ceramide levels by acid sphingomyelinase. Moreover, GSH ethyl ester or SAM therapy restored mitochondrial GSH and ameliorated hepatocellular injury in mice fed a MCD or MD diet. Thus, the depletion of SAM and GSH in mitochondria is an early event in the MCD model of NASH, which is determined by the lack of methionine. Moreover, therapy using permeable GSH prodrugs may be of relevance in NASH.


Journal of Hepatology | 2013

ASMase is required for chronic alcohol induced hepatic endoplasmic reticulum stress and mitochondrial cholesterol loading

Anna Fernández; Nuria Matías; Raquel Fucho; V. Ribas; Claudia von Montfort; Natalia Nuño; Anna Baulies; Laura Martínez; Núria Tarrats; Montserrat Marí; Anna Colell; Albert Morales; Laurent Dubuquoy; Philippe Mathurin; Ramon Bataller; Joan Caballería; Montserrat Elena; Jesús Balsinde; Neil Kaplowitz; Carmen García-Ruiz; José C. Fernández-Checa

BACKGROUND & AIMS The pathogenesis of alcohol-induced liver disease (ALD) is poorly understood. Here, we examined the role of acid sphingomyelinase (ASMase) in alcohol induced hepatic endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, a key mechanism of ALD. METHODS We examined ER stress, lipogenesis, hyperhomocysteinemia, mitochondrial cholesterol (mChol) trafficking and susceptibility to LPS and concanavalin-A in ASMase(-)(/-) mice fed alcohol. RESULTS Alcohol feeding increased SREBP-1c, DGAT-2, and FAS mRNA in ASMase(+/+) but not in ASMase(-/-) mice. Compared to ASMase(+/+) mice, ASMase(-/-) mice exhibited decreased expression of ER stress markers induced by alcohol, but the level of tunicamycin-mediated upregulation of ER stress markers and steatosis was similar in both types of mice. The increase in homocysteine levels induced by alcohol feeding was comparable in both ASMase(+/+) and ASMase(-/-) mice. Exogenous ASMase, but not neutral SMase, induced ER stress by perturbing ER Ca(2+) homeostasis. Moreover, alcohol-induced mChol loading and StARD1 overexpression were blunted in ASMase(-/-) mice. Tunicamycin upregulated StARD1 expression and this outcome was abrogated by tauroursodeoxycholic acid. Alcohol-induced liver injury and sensitization to LPS and concanavalin-A were prevented in ASMase(-/-) mice. These effects were reproduced in alcohol-fed TNFR1/R2(-/-) mice. Moreover, ASMase does not impair hepatic regeneration following partial hepatectomy. Of relevance, liver samples from patients with alcoholic hepatitis exhibited increased expression of ASMase, StARD1, and ER stress markers. CONCLUSIONS Our data indicate that ASMase is critical for alcohol-induced ER stress, and provide a rationale for further clinical investigation in ALD.


Journal of Hepatology | 2011

Targeting cholesterol at different levels in the mevalonate pathway protects fatty liver against ischemia–reperfusion injury

Laura Llacuna; Anna Fernández; Claudia von Montfort; Nuria Matías; Laura Martínez; Francisco Caballero; Antoni Rimola; Montserrat Elena; Albert Morales; José C. Fernández-Checa; Carmen García-Ruiz

BACKGROUND & AIMS Liver steatosis enhances ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury and is considered a primary factor in graft failure after liver transplantation. Although previous reports have shown a role for qualitative steatosis (macrovesicular vs. microvesicular) in hepatic I/R injury, no studies have compared side by side the specific contribution of individual lipids accumulating in fatty liver to I/R damage. METHODS We used nutritional and genetic models of micro and macrovesicular fatty livers exhibiting specific lipid profiles to assess their susceptibility to normothermic I/R injury. RESULTS Unlike choline-deficient (CD) diet-fed mice, characterized by predominant liver triglycerides/free fatty acids (TG/FFA) accumulation, mice fed a cholesterol-enriched (HC) diet, which exhibited enhanced hepatic cholesterol loading in mitochondria, were highly sensitive to I/R-induced liver injury. In vivo two-photon confocal imaging revealed enhanced mitochondrial depolarization and generation of reactive oxygen species following hepatic I/R in HC-fed but not in CD-fed mice, consistent with decreased mitochondrial GSH (mGSH) observed in HC-fed mice. Moreover, ob/ob mice, characterized by increased hepatic TG, FFA, and cholesterol levels, were as sensitive to I/R-mediated liver injury as mice fed the HC diet. Livers from ob/ob mice displayed increased StAR expression and mitochondrial cholesterol accumulation, resulting in mGSH depletion. Interestingly, atorvastatin therapy or squalene synthase inhibition in vivo attenuated StAR overexpression, mitochondrial cholesterol loading, and mGSH depletion, protecting ob/ob mice from I/R-mediated liver injury. CONCLUSIONS Cholesterol accumulation, particularly in mitochondria, sensitizes to hepatic I/R injury, and thus represents a novel target to prevent the enhanced damage of steatotic livers to I/R-mediated damage.


Journal of Hepatology | 2012

Mitochondrial GSH determines the toxic or therapeutic potential of superoxide scavenging in steatohepatitis

Claudia von Montfort; Nuria Matías; Anna Fernández; Raquel Fucho; Laura Conde de la Rosa; María Luz Martínez-Chantar; José M. Mato; Keigo Machida; Hidekazu Tsukamoto; Michael P. Murphy; Abdellah Mansouri; Neil Kaplowitz; Carmen García-Ruiz; José C. Fernández-Checa

BACKGROUND & AIMS Steatohepatitis (SH) is associated with mitochondrial dysfunction and excessive production of superoxide, which can then be converted into H(2)O(2) by SOD2. Since mitochondrial GSH (mGSH) plays a critical role in H(2)O(2) reduction, we explored the interplay between superoxide, H(2)O(2), and mGSH in nutritional and genetic models of SH, which exhibit mGSH depletion. METHODS We used isolated mitochondria and primary hepatocytes, as well as in vivo SH models showing mGSH depletion to test the consequences of superoxide scavenging. RESULTS In isolated mitochondria and primary hepatocytes, superoxide scavenging by SOD mimetics or purified SOD decreased superoxide and peroxynitrite generation but increased H(2)O(2) following mGSH depletion, despite mitochondrial peroxiredoxin/thioredoxin defense. Selective mGSH depletion sensitized hepatocytes to cell death induced by SOD mimetics, and this was prevented by RIP1 kinase inhibition with necrostatin-1 or GSH repletion with GSH ethyl ester (GSHee). Mice fed the methionine-choline deficient (MCD) diet or MAT1A(-/-) mice exhibited reduced SOD2 activity; in vivo treatment with SOD mimetics increased liver damage, inflammation, and fibrosis, despite a decreased superoxide and 3-nitrotyrosine immunoreactivity, effects that were ameliorated by mGSH replenishment with GSHee, but not NAC. As a proof-of-principle of the detrimental role of superoxide scavenging when mGSH was depleted transgenic mice overexpressing SOD2 exhibited enhanced susceptibility to MCD-mediated SH. CONCLUSIONS These findings underscore a critical role for mGSH in the therapeutic potential of superoxide scavenging in SH, and suggest that the combined approach of superoxide scavenging with mGSH replenishment may be important in SH.


Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 2009

Mitochondrial S-Adenosyl-l-Methionine Transport is Insensitive to Alcohol-Mediated Changes in Membrane Dynamics

Anna Fernández; Anna Colell; Francisco Caballero; Nuria Matías; Carmen García-Ruiz; José C. Fernández-Checa

BACKGROUND Alcohol-induced liver injury is associated with decreased S-adenosyl-l-methionine (SAM)/S-adenosyl-l-homocysteine (SAH) ratio and mitochondrial glutathione (mGSH) depletion, which has been shown to sensitize hepatocytes to tumor necrosis factor (TNF). AIMS As the effect of alcohol on mitochondrial SAM (mSAM) has been poorly characterized, our aim was to examine the status and transport of mSAM in relation to that of mGSH during alcohol intake. METHODS Sprague-Dawley rats were pair fed Lieber-DeCarli diets containing alcohol for 1 to 4 weeks and liver fractionated into cytosol and mitochondria to examine the mSAM transport and its sensitivity to membrane dynamics. RESULTS We found that cytosol SAM was depleted from the first week of alcohol feeding, with mSAM levels paralleling these changes. Cytosol SAH, however, increased during the first 3 weeks of alcohol intake, whereas its mitochondrial levels remained unchanged. mGSH depletion occurred by 3 to 4 weeks of alcohol intake due to cholesterol-mediated impaired transport from the cytosol. In contrast to this outcome, the transport of SAM into hepatic mitochondria was unaffected by alcohol intake and resistant to cholesterol-mediated perturbations in membrane dynamics; furthermore cytosolic SAH accumulation in primary hepatocytes by SAH hydrolase inhibition reproduced the mSAM depletion by alcohol due to the competition of SAH with SAM for mitochondrial transport. However, alcohol feeding did not potentiate the sensitivity to inhibition by SAH accumulation. CONCLUSIONS Alcohol-induced mSAM depletion precedes that of mGSH and occurs independently of alcohol-mediated perturbations in membrane dynamics, disproving an inherent defect in the mSAM transport by alcohol. These findings suggest that the early mSAM depletion may contribute to the alterations of mitochondrial membrane dynamics and the subsequent mGSH down-regulation induced by alcohol feeding.


Redox biology | 2017

Mitochondrial GSH replenishment as a potential therapeutic approach for Niemann Pick type C disease

Sandra Torres; Nuria Matías; Anna Baulies; S. Núñez; Cristina Alarcón-Vila; Laura Martínez; Natalia Nuño; Anna Fernández; Joan Caballería; Thierry Levade; Alba Gonzalez-Franquesa; Pablo M. Garcia-Roves; Elisa Balboa; Silvana Zanlungo; Gemma Fabriàs; Josefina Casas; Carlos Enrich; Carmen García-Ruiz; José C. Fernández-Checa

Niemann Pick type C (NPC) disease is a progressive lysosomal storage disorder caused by mutations in genes encoding NPC1/NPC2 proteins, characterized by neurological defects, hepatosplenomegaly and premature death. While the primary biochemical feature of NPC disease is the intracellular accumulation of cholesterol and gangliosides, predominantly in endolysosomes, mitochondrial cholesterol accumulation has also been reported. As accumulation of cholesterol in mitochondria is known to impair the transport of GSH into mitochondria, resulting in mitochondrial GSH (mGSH) depletion, we investigated the impact of mGSH recovery in NPC disease. We show that GSH ethyl ester (GSH-EE), but not N-acetylcysteine (NAC), restored the mGSH pool in liver and brain of Npc1-/- mice and in fibroblasts from NPC patients, while both GSH-EE and NAC increased total GSH levels. GSH-EE but not NAC increased the median survival and maximal life span of Npc1-/- mice. Moreover, intraperitoneal therapy with GSH-EE protected against oxidative stress and oxidant-induced cell death, restored calbindin levels in cerebellar Purkinje cells and reversed locomotor impairment in Npc1-/- mice. High-resolution respirometry analyses revealed that GSH-EE improved oxidative phosphorylation, coupled respiration and maximal electron transfer in cerebellum of Npc1-/- mice. Lipidomic analyses showed that GSH-EE treatment had not effect in the profile of most sphingolipids in liver and brain, except for some particular species in brain of Npc1-/- mice. These findings indicate that the specific replenishment of mGSH may be a potential promising therapy for NPC disease, worth exploring alone or in combination with other options.


Redox biology | 2017

MLN64 induces mitochondrial dysfunction associated with increased mitochondrial cholesterol content

Elisa Balboa; Juan Castro; María-José Pinochet; Gonzalo I. Cancino; Nuria Matías; Pablo J. Sáez; Alexis Martínez; Alejandra R. Alvarez; Carmen García-Ruiz; José C. Fernández-Checa; Silvana Zanlungo

MLN64 is a late endosomal cholesterol-binding membrane protein that has been implicated in cholesterol transport from endosomal membranes to the plasma membrane and/or mitochondria, in toxin-induced resistance, and in mitochondrial dysfunction. Down-regulation of MLN64 in Niemann-Pick C1 deficient cells decreased mitochondrial cholesterol content, suggesting that MLN64 functions independently of NPC1. However, the role of MLN64 in the maintenance of endosomal cholesterol flow and intracellular cholesterol homeostasis remains unclear. We have previously described that hepatic MLN64 overexpression increases liver cholesterol content and induces liver damage. Here, we studied the function of MLN64 in normal and NPC1-deficient cells and we evaluated whether MLN64 overexpressing cells exhibit alterations in mitochondrial function. We used recombinant-adenovirus-mediated MLN64 gene transfer to overexpress MLN64 in mouse liver and hepatic cells; and RNA interference to down-regulate MLN64 in NPC1-deficient cells. In MLN64-overexpressing cells, we found increased mitochondrial cholesterol content and decreased glutathione (GSH) levels and ATPase activity. Furthermore, we found decreased mitochondrial membrane potential and mitochondrial fragmentation and increased mitochondrial superoxide levels in MLN64-overexpressing cells and in NPC1-deficient cells. Consequently, MLN64 expression was increased in NPC1-deficient cells and reduction of its expression restore mitochondrial membrane potential and mitochondrial superoxide levels. Our findings suggest that MLN64 overexpression induces an increase in mitochondrial cholesterol content and consequently a decrease in mitochondrial GSH content leading to mitochondrial dysfunction. In addition, we demonstrate that MLN64 expression is increased in NPC cells and plays a key role in cholesterol transport into the mitochondria.


Redox biology | 2018

The 2-oxoglutarate carrier promotes liver cancer by sustaining mitochondrial GSH despite cholesterol loading

Anna Baulies; Joan Montero; Nuria Matías; Naroa Insausti; Oihana Terrones; Gorka Basañez; Carmen Vallejo; Laura Conde de la Rosa; Laura Martínez; David Robles; Albert Morales; Joaquín Abián; Montserrat Carrascal; Keigo Machida; Dinesh Babu Uthaya Kumar; Hidekazu Tsukamoto; Neil Kaplowitz; Carmen García-Ruiz; José C. Fernández-Checa

Cancer cells exhibit mitochondrial cholesterol (mt-cholesterol) accumulation, which contributes to cell death resistance by antagonizing mitochondrial outer membrane (MOM) permeabilization. Hepatocellular mt-cholesterol loading, however, promotes steatohepatitis, an advanced stage of chronic liver disease that precedes hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), by depleting mitochondrial GSH (mGSH) due to a cholesterol-mediated impairment in mGSH transport. Whether and how HCC cells overcome the restriction of mGSH transport imposed by mt-cholesterol loading to support mGSH uptake remains unknown. Although the transport of mGSH is not fully understood, SLC25A10 (dicarboxylate carrier, DIC) and SLC25A11 (2-oxoglutarate carrier, OGC) have been involved in mGSH transport, and therefore we examined their expression and role in HCC. Unexpectedly, HCC cells and liver explants from patients with HCC exhibit divergent expression of these mitochondrial carriers, with selective OGC upregulation, which contributes to mGSH maintenance. OGC but not DIC downregulation by siRNA depleted mGSH levels and sensitized HCC cells to hypoxia-induced ROS generation and cell death as well as impaired cell growth in three-dimensional multicellular HCC spheroids, effects that were reversible upon mGSH replenishment by GSH ethyl ester, a membrane permeable GSH precursor. We also show that OGC regulates mitochondrial respiration and glycolysis. Moreover, OGC silencing promoted hypoxia-induced cardiolipin peroxidation, which reversed the inhibition of cholesterol on the permeabilization of MOM-like liposomes induced by Bax or Bak. Genetic OGC knockdown reduced the ability of tumor-initiating stem-like cells to induce liver cancer. These findings underscore the selective overexpression of OGC as an adaptive mechanism of HCC to provide adequate mGSH levels in the face of mt-cholesterol loading and suggest that OGC may be a novel therapeutic target for HCC treatment.


Journal of Hepatology | 2011

136 OVEREXPRESSION OF 2-OXOGLUTARATE CARRIER IN HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA OVERCOMES CHOLESTEROL-MEDIATED MITOCHONDRIAL GSH DEPLETION TO EVADE CELL DEATH AND PROMOTE IN VIVO TUMOR GROWTH

Nuria Matías; J.L. Montero; Milica Stefanovic; Albert Morales; Jesús Prieto; Carmen García-Ruiz; Anna Colell; J.C. Fernandez-Checa

Trabajo presentado al 46th Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) celebrado en Berlin del 30 de marzo al 3 de abril de 2011.

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Carmen García-Ruiz

Spanish National Research Council

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José C. Fernández-Checa

University of Southern California

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Anna Fernández

Spanish National Research Council

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Albert Morales

Spanish National Research Council

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Raquel Fucho

Spanish National Research Council

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Anna Colell

Spanish National Research Council

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Laura Martínez

Spanish National Research Council

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Anna Baulies

Spanish National Research Council

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Claudia von Montfort

Spanish National Research Council

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J.C. Fernandez-Checa

Spanish National Research Council

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