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Dive into the research topics where Oreto Antúnez is active.

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Featured researches published by Oreto Antúnez.


Cell | 2004

Sus1, a Functional Component of the SAGA Histone Acetylase Complex and the Nuclear Pore-Associated mRNA Export Machinery

Susana Rodríguez-Navarro; Tamás Fischer; Ming-Juan Luo; Oreto Antúnez; Susanne Brettschneider; Johannes Lechner; José E. Pérez-Ortín; Robin Reed; Ed Hurt

Gene expression is a coordinated multistep process that begins with transcription and RNA processing in the nucleus followed by mRNA export to the cytoplasm for translation. Here we report the identification of a protein, Sus1, which functions in both transcription and mRNA export. Sus1 is a nuclear protein with a concentration at the nuclear pores. Biochemical analyses show that Sus1 interacts with SAGA, a large intranuclear histone acetylase complex involved in transcription initiation, and with the Sac3-Thp1 complex, which functions in mRNA export with specific nuclear pore proteins at the nuclear basket. DNA macroarray analysis revealed that Sus1 is required for transcription regulation. Moreover, chromatin immunoprecipitation showed that Sus1 is associated with the promoter of a SAGA-dependent gene during transcription activation. Finally, mRNA export is impaired in sus1 mutants. These data provide an unexpected connection between the SAGA histone acetylase complex and the mRNA export machinery.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2008

The inner nuclear membrane protein Src1 associates with subtelomeric genes and alters their regulated gene expression

Stefanie E. Grund; Tamás Fischer; Ghislain G. Cabal; Oreto Antúnez; José E. Pérez-Ortín; Ed Hurt

Inner nuclear membrane proteins containing a LEM (LAP2, emerin, and MAN1) domain participate in different processes, including chromatin organization, gene expression, and nuclear envelope biogenesis. In this study, we identify a robust genetic interaction between transcription export (TREX) factors and yeast Src1, an integral inner nuclear membrane protein that is homologous to vertebrate LEM2. DNA macroarray analysis revealed that the expression of the phosphate-regulated genes PHO11, PHO12, and PHO84 is up-regulated in src1Δ cells. Notably, these PHO genes are located in subtelomeric regions of chromatin and exhibit a perinuclear location in vivo. Src1 spans the nuclear membrane twice and exposes its N and C domains with putative DNA-binding motifs to the nucleoplasm. Genome-wide chromatin immunoprecipitation–on-chip analyses indicated that Src1 is highly enriched at telomeres and subtelomeric regions of the yeast chromosomes. Our data show that the inner nuclear membrane protein Src1 functions at the interface between subtelomeric gene expression and TREX-dependent messenger RNA export through the nuclear pore complexes.


Yeast | 2008

Mitochondrial inheritance and fermentative : oxidative balance in hybrids between Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Saccharomyces uvarum

Lisa Solieri; Oreto Antúnez; José E. Pérez-Ortín; Eladio Barrio; Paolo Giudici

Breeding between Saccharomyces species is a useful tool for obtaining improved wine yeast strains, combining fermentative features of parental species. In this work, 25 artificial Saccharomyces cerevisiae × Saccharomyces uvarum hybrids were constructed by spore conjugation. A multi‐locus PCR–restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR–RFLP) analysis, targeting six nuclear gene markers and the ribosomal region including the 5.8S rRNA gene and the two internal transcribed spacers, showed that the hybrid genome is the result of two chromosome sets, one coming from S. cerevisiae and the other from S. uvarum. Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) typing showed uniparental inheritance in all hybrids. Furthermore, sibling hybrids, obtained by repeated crosses between the same parental strains, showed the same mtDNA, suggesting that the mitochondrial transmission is not stochastic or species‐specific, but dependent on the parental strains. Finally four hybrids, two of which with S. cerevisiae mtDNA and two with S. uvarum mtDNA, were subjected to transcriptome analysis. Our results showed that the hybrids bearing S. cerevisiae mtDNA exhibited less expression of genes involved in glycolysis/fermentation pathways and in hexose transport compared to hybrids with S. uvarum mtDNA. Respiration assay confirmed the increased respiratory activity of hybrids with the S. cerevisiae mtDNA genome. These findings suggest that mtDNA type and fermentative : respiratory performances are correlated in S. cerevisiae × S. uvarum hybrids and the mtDNA type is an important trait for constructing new improved hybrids for winemaking. Copyright


Journal of Proteome Research | 2014

Surfing transcriptomic landscapes. A step beyond the annotation of chromosome 16 proteome

Victor Segura; Juan Alberto Medina-Aunon; María I. Mora; Salvador Martínez-Bartolomé; Joaquín Abián; Kerman Aloria; Oreto Antúnez; Jesus M. Arizmendi; Mikel Azkargorta; Silvia Barceló-Batllori; Jabier Beaskoetxea; Joan Josep Bech-Serra; F.J. Blanco; Mariana B. Monteiro; David Cáceres; Francesc Canals; Monserrat Carrascal; José Ignacio Casal; Felipe Clemente; Núria Colomé; Noelia Dasilva; Paula Díaz; Felix Elortza; Patricia Fernández-Puente; Manuel Fuentes; Oscar Gallardo; Severine I. Gharbi; Concha Gil; Carmen González-Tejedo; María Luisa Hernáez

The Spanish team of the Human Proteome Project (SpHPP) marked the annotation of Chr16 and data analysis as one of its priorities. Precise annotation of Chromosome 16 proteins according to C-HPP criteria is presented. Moreover, Human Body Map 2.0 RNA-Seq and Encyclopedia of DNA Elements (ENCODE) data sets were used to obtain further information relative to cell/tissue specific chromosome 16 coding gene expression patterns and to infer the presence of missing proteins. Twenty-four shotgun 2D-LC-MS/MS and gel/LC-MS/MS MIAPE compliant experiments, representing 41% coverage of chromosome 16 proteins, were performed. Furthermore, mapping of large-scale multicenter mass spectrometry data sets from CCD18, MCF7, Jurkat, and Ramos cell lines into RNA-Seq data allowed further insights relative to correlation of chromosome 16 transcripts and proteins. Detection and quantification of chromosome 16 proteins in biological matrices by SRM procedures are also primary goals of the SpHPP. Two strategies were undertaken: one focused on known proteins, taking advantage of MS data already available, and the second, aimed at the detection of the missing proteins, is based on the expression of recombinant proteins to gather MS information and optimize SRM methods that will be used in real biological samples. SRM methods for 49 known proteins and for recombinant forms of 24 missing proteins are reported in this study.


Parasitology | 2011

Screening trematodes for novel intervention targets: a proteomic and immunological comparison of Schistosoma haematobium, Schistosoma bovis and Echinostoma caproni

Melissa Higón; Graeme Cowan; Norman Nausch; David R. Cavanagh; Ana Oleaga; Rafael Toledo; J. Russell Stothard; Oreto Antúnez; Antonio Marcilla; Richard Burchmore; Francisca Mutapi

SUMMARY With the current paucity of vaccine targets for parasitic diseases, particularly those in childhood, the aim of this study was to compare protein expression and immune cross-reactivity between the trematodes Schistosoma haematobium, S. bovis and Echinostoma caproni in the hope of identifying novel intervention targets. Native adult parasite proteins were separated by 2-dimensional gel electrophoresis and identified through electrospray ionisation tandem mass spectrometry to produce a reference gel. Proteins from differential gel electrophoresis analyses of the three parasite proteomes were compared and screened against sera from hamsters infected with S. haematobium and E. caproni following 2-dimensional Western blotting. Differential protein expression between the three species was observed with circa 5% of proteins from S. haematobium showing expression up-regulation compared to the other two species. There was 91% similarity between the proteomes of the two Schistosoma species and 81% and 78·6% similarity between S. haematobium and S. bovis versus E. caproni, respectively. Although there were some common cross-species antigens, species-species targets were revealed which, despite evolutionary homology, could be due to phenotypic plasticity arising from different host-parasite relationships. Nevertheless, this approach helps to identify novel intervention targets which could be used as broad-spectrum candidates for future use in human and veterinary vaccines.


FEBS Letters | 2005

Yeast HAT1 and HAT2 deletions have different life-span and transcriptome phenotypes

Lorena E. Rosaleny; Oreto Antúnez; Ana Ruiz-Garcia; José E. Pérez-Ortín; Vicente Tordera

HAT‐B is a yeast histone acetyltransferase composed of Hat1, Hat2 and Hif1 proteins. We demonstrate that a hat2 mutant or a hat1hat2 double mutant, but not a hat1 mutant, have an extended life‐span. Transcriptome analysis shows that the single hat mutants are not very different from wild type. However, the comparison of the hat1 and hat2 transcriptomes shows that they are different. The hat1hat2 double mutant shows a transcriptional phenotype similar to that of the hat1 mutant but strongly enhanced. These results indicate that Hat2p could have additional functions in the cell to those of Hat1p.


Journal of Proteomics | 2017

A multicentric study to evaluate the use of relative retention times in targeted proteomics

Vital Vialas; Núria Colomé-Calls; Joaquín Abián; Kerman Aloria; Gloria Alvarez-Llamas; Oreto Antúnez; Jesus M. Arizmendi; Mikel Azkargorta; Silvia Barceló-Batllori; Maria G. Barderas; F.J. Blanco; J. Ignacio Casal; Vanessa Casas; Carolina de la Torre; Eduardo Chicano-Gálvez; Felix Elortza; Guadalupe Espadas; Josep Maria Estanyol; Joaquín Fernández-Irigoyen; Patricia Fernández-Puente; María José Fidalgo; Manuel Fuentes; Concha Gil; Alexandre Hainard; María Luisa Hernáez; Nieves Ibarrola; Arthur T. Kopylov; Antonio Lario; Juan Antonio López; María F. López-Lucendo

Despite the maturity reached by targeted proteomic strategies, reliable and standardized protocols are urgently needed to enhance reproducibility among different laboratories and analytical platforms, facilitating a more widespread use in biomedical research. To achieve this goal, the use of dimensionless relative retention times (iRT), defined on the basis of peptide standard retention times (RT), has lately emerged as a powerful tool. The robustness, reproducibility and utility of this strategy were examined for the first time in a multicentric setting, involving 28 laboratories that included 24 of the Spanish network of proteomics laboratories (ProteoRed-ISCIII). According to the results obtained in this study, dimensionless retention time values (iRTs) demonstrated to be a useful tool for transferring and sharing peptide retention times across different chromatographic set-ups both intra- and inter-laboratories. iRT values also showed very low variability over long time periods. Furthermore, parallel quantitative analyses showed a high reproducibility despite the variety of experimental strategies used, either MRM (multiple reaction monitoring) or pseudoMRM, and the diversity of analytical platforms employed. BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE From the very beginning of proteomics as an analytical science there has been a growing interest in developing standardized methods and experimental procedures in order to ensure the highest quality and reproducibility of the results. In this regard, the recent (2012) introduction of the dimensionless retention time concept has been a significant advance. In our multicentric (28 laboratories) study we explore the usefulness of this concept in the context of a targeted proteomics experiment, demonstrating that dimensionless retention time values is a useful tool for transferring and sharing peptide retention times across different chromatographic set-ups.


Epigenetics & Chromatin | 2018

The SAGA/TREX-2 subunit Sus1 binds widely to transcribed genes and affects mRNA turnover globally

Varinia García-Molinero; José García-Martínez; Rohit Reja; Pedro Furió-Tarí; Oreto Antúnez; Ana Conesa; B. Franklin Pugh; José E. Pérez-Ortín; Susana Rodríguez-Navarro

BackgroundEukaryotic transcription is regulated through two complexes, the general transcription factor IID (TFIID) and the coactivator Spt–Ada–Gcn5 acetyltransferase (SAGA). Recent findings confirm that both TFIID and SAGA contribute to the synthesis of nearly all transcripts and are recruited genome-wide in yeast. However, how this broad recruitment confers selectivity under specific conditions remains an open question.Results Here we find that the SAGA/TREX-2 subunit Sus1 associates with upstream regulatory regions of many yeast genes and that heat shock drastically changes Sus1 binding. While Sus1 binding to TFIID-dominated genes is not affected by temperature, its recruitment to SAGA-dominated genes and RP genes is significantly disturbed under heat shock, with Sus1 relocated to environmental stress-responsive genes in these conditions. Moreover, in contrast to recent results showing that SAGA deubiquitinating enzyme Ubp8 is dispensable for RNA synthesis, genomic run-on experiments demonstrate that Sus1 contributes to synthesis and stability of a wide range of transcripts.ConclusionsOur study provides support for a model in which SAGA/TREX-2 factor Sus1 acts as a global transcriptional regulator in yeast but has differential activity at yeast genes as a function of their transcription rate or during stress conditions.


International Microbiology | 2004

A new set of DNA macrochips for the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae: features and uses

Trinidad M. Alberola; José García-Martínez; Oreto Antúnez; Laia Viladevall; Anna Barceló; Joaquín Ariño; José E. Pérez-Ortín


Journal of Proteomics | 2011

2-D difference gel electrophoresis approach to assess protein expression profiles in Bathymodiolus azoricus from Mid-Atlantic Ridge hydrothermal vents

Oreto Antúnez; Maria João Bebianno; Miren P. Cajaraville; Amparo Torreblanca

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Anna Barceló

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Joaquín Ariño

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Laia Viladevall

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Miren P. Cajaraville

University of the Basque Country

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Concha Gil

Complutense University of Madrid

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