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Dive into the research topics where Paulina Donoso is active.

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Featured researches published by Paulina Donoso.


Antioxidants & Redox Signaling | 2008

Crosstalk Between Calcium and Redox Signaling: From Molecular Mechanisms to Health Implications

Cecilia Hidalgo; Paulina Donoso

Studies done many years ago established unequivocally the key role of calcium as a universal second messenger. In contrast, the second messenger roles of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species have emerged only recently. Therefore, their contributions to physiological cell signaling pathways have not yet become universally accepted, and many biological researchers still regard them only as cellular noxious agents. Furthermore, it is becoming increasingly apparent that there are significant interactions between calcium and redox species, and that these interactions modify a variety of proteins that participate in signaling transduction pathways and in other fundamental cellular functions that determine cell life or death. This review article addresses first the central aspects of calcium and redox signaling pathways in animal cells, and continues with the molecular mechanisms that underlie crosstalk between calcium and redox signals under a number of physiological or pathological conditions. To conclude, the review focuses on conditions that, by promoting cellular oxidative stress, lead to the generation of abnormal calcium signals, and how this calcium imbalance may cause a variety of human diseases including, in particular, degenerative diseases of the central nervous system and cardiac pathologies.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2008

Ischemia Enhances Activation by Ca2+ and Redox Modification of Ryanodine Receptor Channels from Rat Brain Cortex

Ricardo Bull; José Pablo Finkelstein; Jorge Gálvez; Gina Sánchez; Paulina Donoso; Maria I. Behrens; Cecilia Hidalgo

Cerebral ischemia stimulates Ca2+ influx and thus increases neuronal intracellular free [Ca2+]. Using a rat model of cerebral ischemia without recirculation, we tested whether ischemia enhances the activation by Ca2+ of ryanodine receptor (RyR) channels, a requisite feature of RyR-mediated Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release (CICR). To this aim, we evaluated how single RyR channels from endoplasmic reticulum vesicles, fused into planar lipid bilayers, responded to cytoplasmic [Ca2+] changes. Endoplasmic reticulum vesicles were isolated from the cortex of rat brains incubated without blood flow for 5 min at 37°C (ischemic) or at 4°C (control). Ischemic brains displayed increased oxidative intracellular conditions, as evidenced by a lower ratio (∼130:1) of reduced/oxidized glutathione than controls (∼200:1). Single RyR channels from ischemic or control brains displayed the same three responses to Ca2+ reported previously, characterized by low, moderate, or high maximal activity. Relative to controls, RyR channels from ischemic brains displayed with increased frequency the high activity response and with lower frequency the low activity response. Both control and ischemic cortical vesicles contained the RyR2 and RyR3 isoforms in a 3:1 proportion, with undetectable amounts of RyR1. Ischemia reduced [3H]ryanodine binding and total RyR protein content by 35%, and increased at least twofold endogenous RyR2 S-nitrosylation and S-glutathionylation without affecting the corresponding RyR3 endogenous levels. In vitro RyR S-glutathionylation but not S-nitrosylation favored the emergence of high activity channels. We propose that ischemia, by enhancing RyR2 S-glutathionylation, allows RyR2 to sustain CICR; the resulting amplification of Ca2+ entry signals may contribute to cortical neuronal death.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1986

Ion pathways in transverse tubules: quantification of receptors in membranes isolated from frog and rabbit skeletal muscle

Enrique Jaimovich; Paulina Donoso; José Luis Liberona; Cecilia Hidalgo

The presence of four cation pathways in membrane vesicles isolated from transverse tubules of frog and rabbit skeletal muscle was studied by measuring binding of specific blockers. Transverse tubules purified from frog muscle have a maximal binding capacity for [3H]nitrendipine (a marker for voltage-dependent calcium channels) of 130 pmol/mg of protein; this binding is strongly dependent on temperature and, at 37 degrees C, on the presence of diltiazem. Receptors for [3H]ethylenediamine tetrodotoxin (a marker for voltage-dependent sodium channels) and for 125I-labeled alpha-bungarotoxin (a marker for acetylcholine-mediated channels) showed maximal binding values of about 5 pmol/mg. The number of sodium-pumping sites in the isolated tubule vesicles, inferred from [3H]ouabain binding, was 215 pmol/mg. The high purity of this preparation makes feasible the use of these values as a criterion to judge the degree of purity of isolated preparations, and it allows investigation of transverse tubule contamination in other muscle membrane fractions.


Biophysical Journal | 1998

Changes in Luminal pH Caused by Calcium Release in Sarcoplasmic Reticulum Vesicles

Frits Kamp; Paulina Donoso; Cecilia Hidalgo

Fast (milliseconds) Ca2+ release from sarcoplasmic reticulum is an essential step in muscle contraction. To electrically compensate the charge deficit generated by calcium release, concomitant fluxes of other ions are required. In this study we investigated the possible participation of protons as counterions during calcium release. Triad-enriched sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles, isolated from rabbit fast skeletal muscle, were passively loaded with 1 mM CaCl2 and release was induced at pCa = 5.0 and pH = 7.0 in a stopped-flow fluorimeter. Accompanying changes in vesicular lumen pH were measured with a trapped fluorescent pH indicator (pyranin). Significant acidification (approximately 0.2 pH units) of the lumen occurred within the same time scale (t(1/2) = 0.75 s) as calcium release. Enhancing calcium release with ATP or the ATP analog 5-adenylylimidodiphosphate (AMPPNP) produced >20-fold faster acidification rates. In contrast, when calcium release induced with calcium with or without AMPPNP was blocked by Mg2+, no acidification of the lumen was observed. In all cases, rate constants of luminal acidification corresponded with reported values of calcium release rate constants. We conclude that proton fluxes account for part (5-10%) of the necessary charge compensation during calcium release. The possible relevance of these findings to the physiology of muscle cells is discussed.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1989

Sodium-calcium exchange in transverse tubules isolated from frog skeletal muscle.

Paulina Donoso; Cecilia Hidalgo

Transverse tubule vesicles isolated from frog skeletal muscle display sodium-calcium exchange activity, which was characterized measuring 45Ca influx in vesicles incubated with sodium. The initial rates of exchange varied as a function of the membrane diffusion potentials imposed across the membrane vesicles, increasing with positive intravesicular potentials according to an electrogenic exchange with a stoichiometry greater than 2 sodium ions per calcium ion transported. The exchange activity was a saturable function of extravesicular free calcium, with an apparent K0.5 value of 3 microM and maximal rates of exchange ranging from 3 to 5 nmol/mg protein per 5 s. The exchange rate increased when intravesicular sodium concentration was increased; saturation was approached when vesicles were incubated with concentrations of 160 mM sodium. The isolated transverse tubule vesicles, which are sealed with the cytoplasmic side out, had a luminal content of 112 +/- 39 nmol calcium per mg protein. In the absence of sodium, the exchanger carried out electroneutral calcium-calcium exchange, which was stimulated by increasing potassium concentrations in the intravesicular side. Calcium-calcium exchange showed an extravesicular calcium dependence similar to the calcium dependence of the sodium-calcium exchange, with an apparent K0.5 of 6 microM. Sodium-calcium and calcium-calcium exchange were both inhibited by amiloride. The sodium-calcium exchange system operated both in the forward and in the reverse mode; sodium, as well as calcium, induced calcium efflux from 45Ca-loaded vesicles. This system may play an important role in decreasing the intracellular calcium concentration in skeletal muscle following electrical stimulation.


Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology | 2015

Exercise preconditioning of myocardial infarct size in dogs is triggered by calcium.

Víctor Parra; Pilar Macho; Gina Sánchez; Paulina Donoso; Raúl J Domenech

Abstract: We showed that exercise induces early and late myocardial preconditioning in dogs and that these effects are mediated through nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate reduced form (NADPH) oxidase activation. As the intracoronary administration of calcium induces preconditioning and exercise enhances the calcium inflow to the cell, we studied if this effect of exercise triggers exercise preconditioning independently of its hemodynamic effects. We analyzed in 81 dogs the effect of blocking sarcolemmal L-type Ca2+ channels with a low dose of verapamil on early and late preconditioning by exercise, and in other 50 dogs, we studied the effect of verapamil on NADPH oxidase activation in early exercise preconditioning. Exercise reduced myocardial infarct size by 76% and 52% (early and late windows respectively; P < 0.001 both), and these effects were abolished by a single low dose of verapamil given before exercise. This dose of verapamil did not modify the effect of exercise on metabolic and hemodynamic parameters. In addition, verapamil blocked the activation of NADPH oxidase during early preconditioning. The protective effect of exercise preconditioning on myocardial infarct size is triggered, at least in part, by calcium inflow increase to the cell during exercise and, during the early window, is mediated by NADPH oxidase activation.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2018

High-Fat-Diet-Induced Obesity Produces Spontaneous Ventricular Arrhythmias and Increases the Activity of Ryanodine Receptors in Mice

Gina Sánchez; Felipe Araneda; Juan Peña; José Pablo Finkelstein; Jaime A. Riquelme; Luis Montecinos; Genaro Barrientos; Paola Llanos; Zully Pedrozo; Matilde Said; Ricardo Bull; Paulina Donoso

Ventricular arrhythmias are a common cause of sudden cardiac death, and their occurrence is higher in obese subjects. Abnormal gating of ryanodine receptors (RyR2), the calcium release channels of the sarcoplasmic reticulum, can produce ventricular arrhythmias. Since obesity promotes oxidative stress and RyR2 are redox-sensitive channels, we investigated whether the RyR2 activity was altered in obese mice. Mice fed a high fat diet (HFD) became obese after eight weeks and exhibited a significant increase in the occurrence of ventricular arrhythmias. Single RyR2 channels isolated from the hearts of obese mice were more active in planar bilayers than those isolated from the hearts of the control mice. At the molecular level, RyR2 channels from HFD-fed mice had substantially fewer free thiol residues, suggesting that redox modifications were responsible for the higher activity. Apocynin, provided in the drinking water, completely prevented the appearance of ventricular arrhythmias in HFD-fed mice, and normalized the activity and content of the free thiol residues of the protein. HFD increased the expression of NOX4, an isoform of NADPH oxidase, in the heart. Our results suggest that HFD increases the activity of RyR2 channels via a redox-dependent mechanism, favoring the appearance of ventricular arrhythmias.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Activation of Chymotrypsin-Like Activity of the Proteasome during Ischemia Induces Myocardial Dysfunction and Death.

Gina Sánchez; Daniela Berrios; Ivonne Olmedo; Javier Pezoa; Jaime A. Riquelme; Luis Montecinos; Zully Pedrozo; Paulina Donoso

Inhibitors of the ubiquitin-proteasome system improve hemodynamic parameters and decrease the infarct size after ischemia reperfusion. The molecular basis of this protection is not fully understood since most available data report inhibition of the 26 proteasome after ischemia reperfusion. The decrease in cellular ATP levels during ischemia leads to the dissociation of the 26S proteasome into the 19S regulatory complex and the 20S catalytic core, which results in protein degradation independently of ubiquitination. There is scarce information on the activity of the 20S proteasome during cardiac ischemia. Accordingly, the aim of this work was to determine the effects of 30 minutes of ischemia, or 30 min of ischemia followed by 60 minutes of reperfusion on the three main peptidase activities of the 20S proteasome in Langendorff perfused rat hearts. We found that 30 min of ischemia produced a significant increase in the chymotrypsin-like activity of the proteasome, without changes in its caspase-like or trypsin-like activities. In contrast, all three activities were decreased upon reperfusion. Ixazomib, perfused before ischemia at a concentration that reduced the chymotrypsin-like activity to 50% of the control values, without affecting the other proteasomal activities, improved the hemodynamic parameters upon reperfusion and decreased the infarct size. Ixazomib also prevented the 50% reduction in RyR2 content observed after ischemia. The protection was lost, however, when simultaneous inhibition of chymotrypsin-like and caspase-like activities of the proteasome was achieved at higher concentration of ixazomib. Our results suggest that selective inhibition of chymotrypsin-like activity of the proteasome during ischemia preserves key proteins for cardiomyocyte function and exerts a positive impact on cardiac performance after reperfusion.


Biochemistry | 1996

LUMINAL PH REGULATES CALCIUM RELEASE KINETICS IN SARCOPLASMIC RETICULUM VESICLES

Paulina Donoso; Marianela Beltrán; Cecilia Hidalgo


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1993

Triads and transverse tubules isolated from skeletal muscle contain high levels of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate.

Cecilia Hidalgo; Jaime Jorquera; Victoria Tapia; Paulina Donoso

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Cecilia Hidalgo

Centro de Estudios Científicos

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