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Dive into the research topics where Piero Crespo is active.

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Featured researches published by Piero Crespo.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2002

Erk5 Participates in Neuregulin Signal Transduction and Is Constitutively Active in Breast Cancer Cells Overexpressing ErbB2

Azucena Esparís-Ogando; Elena Díaz-Rodríguez; Juan Carlos Montero; Laura Yuste; Piero Crespo; Atanasio Pandiella

ABSTRACT The four receptor tyrosine kinases of the ErbB family play essential roles in several physiological processes and have also been implicated in tumor generation and/or progression. Activation of ErbB1/EGFR is mainly triggered by epidermal growth factor (EGF) and other related ligands, while activation of ErbB2, ErbB3, and ErbB4 receptors occurs by binding to another set of EGF-like ligands termed neuregulins (NRGs). Here we show that the Erk5 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway participates in NRG signal transduction. In MCF7 cells, NRG activated Erk5 in a time- and dose-dependent fashion. The action of NRG on Erk5 was dependent on the kinase activity of ErbB receptors but was independent of Ras. Expression in MCF7 cells of a dominant negative form of Erk5 resulted in a significant decrease in NRG-induced proliferation of MCF7 cells. Analysis of Erk5 in several human tumor cell lines indicated that a constitutively active form of this kinase was present in the BT474 and SKBR3 cell lines, which also expressed activated forms of ErbB2, ErbB3, and ErbB4. Treatments aimed at decreasing the activity of these receptors caused Erk5 inactivation, indicating that the active form of Erk5 present in BT474 and SKBR3 cells was due to a persistent positive stimulus originating at the ErbB receptors. In BT474 cells expression of the dominant negative form of Erk5 resulted in reduced proliferation, indicating that in these cells Erk5 was also involved in the control of proliferation. Taken together, these results suggest that Erk5 may play a role in the regulation of cell proliferation by NRG receptors and indicate that constitutively active NRG receptors may induce proliferative responses in cancer cells through this MAPK pathway.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2008

Fast regulation of AP-1 activity through interaction of lamin A/C, ERK1/2, and c-Fos at the nuclear envelope

José M. González; Ana Navarro-Puche; Berta Casar; Piero Crespo; Vicente Andrés

Sequestration of c-Fos at the nuclear envelope (NE) through interaction with A-type lamins suppresses AP-1–dependent transcription. We show here that c-Fos accumulation within the extraction-resistant nuclear fraction (ERNF) and its interaction with lamin A are reduced and enhanced by gain-of and loss-of ERK1/2 activity, respectively. Moreover, hindering ERK1/2-dependent phosphorylation of c-Fos attenuates its release from the ERNF induced by serum and promotes its interaction with lamin A. Accordingly, serum stimulation rapidly releases preexisting c-Fos from the NE via ERK1/2-dependent phosphorylation, leading to a fast activation of AP-1 before de novo c-Fos synthesis. Moreover, lamin A–null cells exhibit increased AP-1 activity and reduced levels of c-Fos phosphorylation. We also find that active ERK1/2 interacts with lamin A and colocalizes with c-Fos and A-type lamins at the NE. Thus, NE-bound ERK1/2 functions as a molecular switch for rapid mitogen-dependent AP-1 activation through phosphorylation-induced release of preexisting c-Fos from its inhibitory interaction with lamin A/C.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2006

Distinct Utilization of Effectors and Biological Outcomes Resulting from Site-Specific Ras Activation: Ras Functions in Lipid Rafts and Golgi Complex Are Dispensable for Proliferation and Transformation

David Matallanas; Victoria Sanz-Moreno; Imanol Arozarena; Fernando Calvo; Lorena Agudo-Ibáñez; Eugenio Santos; Maria T. Berciano; Piero Crespo

ABSTRACT Ras proteins are distributed in different types of plasma membrane microdomains and endomembranes. However, how microlocalization affects the signals generated by Ras and its subsequent biological outputs is largely unknown. We have approached this question by selectively targeting RasV12 to different cellular sublocalizations. We show here that compartmentalization dictates Ras utilization of effectors and the intensity of its signals. Activated Ras can evoke enhanced proliferation and transformation from most of its platforms, with the exception of the Golgi complex. Furthermore, signals that promote survival emanate primarily from the endoplasmic reticulum pool. In addition, we have investigated the need for the different pools of endogenous Ras in the conveyance of upstream mitogenic and transforming signals. Using targeted RasN17 inhibitory mutants and in physiological contexts such as H-Ras/N-Ras double knockout fibroblasts, we demonstrate that Ras functions at lipid rafts and at the Golgi complex are fully dispensable for proliferation and transformation.


Current Biology | 2006

Phosphorylation of p38 by GRK2 at the Docking Groove Unveils a Novel Mechanism for Inactivating p38MAPK

Sandra Peregrín; María Jurado-Pueyo; Pedro M. Campos; Victoria Sanz-Moreno; Ana Ruiz-Gómez; Piero Crespo; Federico Mayor; Cristina Murga

p38 Mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK) are a family of Ser/Thr kinases that regulate important cellular processes such as stress responses, differentiation, and cell-cycle control . Activation of MAPK is achieved through a linear signaling cascade in which upstream kinases (MAPKKs) dually phosphorylate MAPKs at a conserved 3-amino-acid motif (Thr-X-Tyr) . G-protein-coupled receptor kinases (GRKs) are known to selectively phosphorylate G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) and thus trigger desensitization . We report that GRK2 is a novel inactivating kinase of p38MAPK. p38 associates with GRK2 endogenously and is phosphorylated by GRK2 at Thr-123, a residue located at its docking groove. Mimicking phosphorylation at this site impairs the binding and activation of p38 by MKK6 and diminishes the capacity of p38 to bind and phosphorylate its substrates. Accordingly, p38 activation is decreased or increased when cellular GRK2 levels are enhanced or reduced, respectively. Changes in GRK2 levels and activity can modify p38-dependent processes such as differentiation of preadipocytic cells and LPS-induced cytokine release, enhanced in macrophages from GRK2(+/-) mice. Phosphorylation of p38 at a region key for its interaction with different partners uncovers a new mechanism for the regulation of this important family of kinases.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Differences on the inhibitory specificities of H-Ras, K-Ras, and N-Ras (N17) dominant negative mutants are related to their membrane microlocalization.

David Matallanas; Imanol Arozarena; Maria T. Berciano; David S. Aaronson; Angel Pellicer; Miguel Lafarga; Piero Crespo

Ras GTPases include the isoforms H-Ras, K-Ras, and N-Ras. Despite their great biochemical and biological similarities, evidence is mounting suggesting that Ras proteins may not be functionally redundant. A widespread strategy for studying small GTPases is the utilization of dominant inhibitory mutants that specifically block the activation of their respective wild-type proteins. As such, H-Ras N17 has proved to be extremely valuable as a tool to probe Ras functions. However, a comparative study on the inhibitory specificities of H-, K-, and N-Ras N17 mutants has not been approached thus far. Herein, we demonstrate that H-, K-, and N-Ras N17 mutants exhibit markedly distinct inhibitory effects toward H-, K-, and N-Ras. H-Ras N17 can effectively inhibit the activation of all three isoforms. K-Ras N17 completely blocks the activation of K-Ras and is only slightly inhibitory on H-Ras. N-Ras N17 can mainly inhibit N-Ras activation. In light of the recent data on the compartmentalization of H-Ras and K-Ras in the plasma membrane, here we present for the first time a description of N-Ras cellular microlocalization. Overall, our results on Ras N17 mutants specificities exhibit a marked correlation with the localization of the Ras isoforms to distinct membrane microdomains.


Molecular Cell | 2008

Essential Role of ERK Dimers in the Activation of Cytoplasmic but Not Nuclear Substrates by ERK-Scaffold Complexes

Berta Casar; Adán Pinto; Piero Crespo

Signals transmitted by ERK MAP kinases regulate the functions of multiple substrates present in the nucleus and in the cytoplasm. ERK signals are optimized by scaffold proteins that modulate their intensity and spatial fidelity. Once phosphorylated, ERKs dimerize, but how dimerization impacts on the activation of the different pools of substrates and whether it affects scaffolds functions as spatial regulators are unknown aspects of ERK signaling. Here we demonstrate that scaffolds and ERK dimers are essential for the activation of cytoplasmic but not nuclear substrates. Dimerization is critical for connecting the scaffolded ERK complex to cognate cytoplasmic substrates. Contrarily, nuclear substrates associate to ERK monomers. Furthermore, we show that preventing ERK dimerization is sufficient for attenuating cellular proliferation, transformation, and tumor development. Our results disclose a functional relationship between scaffold proteins and ERK dimers and identify dimerization as a key determinant of the spatial specificity of ERK signals.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2009

Ras Subcellular Localization Defines Extracellular Signal-Regulated Kinase 1 and 2 Substrate Specificity through Distinct Utilization of Scaffold Proteins

Berta Casar; Imanol Arozarena; Victoria Sanz-Moreno; Adán Pinto; Lorena Agudo-Ibáñez; Richard Marais; Robert E. Lewis; Maria T. Berciano; Piero Crespo

ABSTRACT Subcellular localization influences the nature of Ras/extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) signals by unknown mechanisms. Herein, we demonstrate that the microenvironment from which Ras signals emanate determines which substrates will be preferentially phosphorylated by the activated ERK1/2. We show that the phosphorylation of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFr) and cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPLA2) is most prominent when ERK1/2 are activated from lipid rafts, whereas RSK1 is mainly activated by Ras signals from the disordered membrane. We present evidence indicating that the underlying mechanism of this substrate selectivity is governed by the participation of different scaffold proteins that distinctively couple ERK1/2, activated at defined microlocalizations, to specific substrates. As such, we show that for cPLA2 activation, ERK1/2 activated at lipid rafts interact with KSR1, whereas ERK1/2 activated at the endoplasmic reticulum utilize Sef-1. To phosphorylate the EGFr, ERK1/2 activated at lipid rafts require the participation of IQGAP1. Furthermore, we demonstrate that scaffold usage markedly influences the biological outcome of Ras site-specific signals. These results disclose an unprecedented spatial regulation of ERK1/2 substrate specificity, dictated by the microlocalization from which Ras signals originate and by the selection of specific scaffold proteins.


Molecular Cell | 2011

Mutant K-Ras activation of the proapoptotic MST2 pathway is antagonized by wild-type K-Ras.

David Matallanas; David Romano; Fahd Al-Mulla; Eric O'Neill; Waleed Al-Ali; Piero Crespo; Brendan Doyle; Colin Nixon; Owen J. Sansom; Matthias Drosten; Mariano Barbacid; Walter Kolch

K-Ras mutations are frequent in colorectal cancer (CRC), albeit K-Ras is the only Ras isoform that can elicit apoptosis. Here, we show that mutant K-Ras directly binds to the tumor suppressor RASSF1A to activate the apoptotic MST2-LATS1 pathway. In this pathway LATS1 binds to and sequesters the ubiquitin ligase Mdm2 causing stabilization of the tumor suppressor p53 and apoptosis. However, mutant Ras also stimulates autocrine activation of the EGF receptor (EGFR) which counteracts mutant K-Ras-induced apoptosis. Interestingly, this protection requires the wild-type K-Ras allele, which inhibits the MST2 pathway in part via AKT activation. Confirming the pathophysiological relevance of the molecular findings, we find a negative correlation between K-Ras mutation and MST2 expression in human CRC patients and CRC mouse models. The small number of tumors with co-expression of mutant K-Ras and MST2 has elevated apoptosis rates. Thus, in CRC, mutant K-Ras transformation is supported by the wild-type allele.


Oncogene | 2004

The small GTP-binding protein, Rhes, regulates signal transduction from G protein-coupled receptors

Pierfrancesco Vargiu; Ricardo de Abajo; Juan Antonio Garcia-Ranea; Alfonso Valencia; Pilar Santisteban; Piero Crespo; Juan Bernal

The Ras homolog enriched in striatum, Rhes, is the product of a thyroid hormone-regulated gene during brain development. Rhes and the dexamethasone-induced Dexras1 define a novel distinct subfamily of proteins within the Ras family, characterized by an extended variable domain in the carboxyl terminal region. We have carried this study because there is a complete lack of knowledge on Rhes signaling. We show that in PC12 cells, Rhes is targeted to the plasma membrane by farnesylation. We demonstrate that about 30% of the native Rhes protein is bound to GTP and this proportion is unaltered by typical Ras family nucleotide exchange factors. However, Rhes is not transforming in murine fibroblasts. We have also examined the role of Rhes in cell signaling. Rhes does not stimulate the ERK pathway. By contrast, it binds to and activates PI3K. On the other hand, we demonstrate that Rhes impairs the activation of the cAMP/PKA pathway by thyroid-stimulating hormone, and by an activated β2 adrenergic receptor by a mechanism that suggests uncoupling of the receptor to its cognate heterotrimeric complex. Overall, our results provide the initial insights into the role in signal transduction of this novel Ras family member.


The EMBO Journal | 2003

Vav mediates Ras stimulation by direct activation of the GDP/GTP exchange factor Ras GRP1.

María J. Caloca; José L. Zugaza; David Matallanas; Piero Crespo; Xosé R. Bustelo

Here we describe a new signaling cross‐talk between the Vav/Rac1 and Ras pathways that is established through the stimulation of RasGRP1, an exchange factor for Ras subfamily GTPases. This interaction is crucial for Ras activation in lymphoid cells, since this GTPase cannot become activated in the absence of Vav proteins. The activation of RasGRP1 requires both the generation of diacylglycerol via phospho lipase C‐γ and the induction of actin polymerization, two responses induced by Vav and Rac1 that facilitate the translocation of RasGRP1 to juxtamembrane areas of the cell. Consistent with this, the cross‐talk can be activated by tyrosine‐phosphorylated wild‐type Vav, oncogenic Vav and constitutively active Rac1. Conversely, Ras activation can be blocked in lymphocytes and ectopic systems using inhibitors affecting either phospholipase C‐γ or F‐actin polymerization. These results indicate that a relay mechanism exists in lymphoid and other cells helping in the generation of robust signaling responses by the Rac/Rho and Ras pathways upon receptor engagement.

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Berta Casar

Spanish National Research Council

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Javier León

Spanish National Research Council

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Fernando Calvo

Institute of Cancer Research

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Adán Pinto

Spanish National Research Council

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Ana M. Herrero

Spanish National Research Council

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