Pilar Sancho
University of Salamanca
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Publication
Featured researches published by Pilar Sancho.
Veterinary Journal | 2011
Ana I. Martín-Martín; Pilar Sancho; Carmen Tejedor; Luis Fernández-Lago; Nieves Vizcaíno
Outer membrane-related properties (such as auto-agglutination and susceptibility to various compounds) of strains representative of the six classical species of the genus Brucella were assessed. The differences identified could not be fully explained based on the smooth or rough phenotype of the strain. Smooth strains of the closely related species Brucella melitensis and B. abortus exhibited different susceptibility patterns and the rough, virulent B. ovis and B. canis strains were equally or more resistant to conditions such as pH, non-immune serum, hydrogen peroxide and bactericidal cationic peptides than smooth strains. Such heterogeneity in outer membrane characteristics could account for differences in pathogenicity and host tropism.
Veterinary Microbiology | 2009
Ana I. Martín-Martín; Paola Caro-Hernández; Pilar Sancho; Carmen Tejedor; Axel Cloeckaert; Luis Fernández-Lago; Nieves Vizcaíno
Members of the Omp25/Omp31 family of surface proteins were previously shown to participate in the virulence of some Brucella species and a different distribution of the seven proteins of this family among species could be related to the difference in pathogenicity and host preference they exhibit. Accordingly, in this work we have analyzed the expression of the genes coding for the Omp25/Omp31 family in the six classical Brucella species and a set of B. ovis mutant strains with each omp gene inactivated. Immunoblot of whole-cell lysates with antibodies raised against the purified recombinant outer membrane proteins (OMPs) did not show the simultaneous presence of the seven OMPs in any of the Brucella strains studied, but different Omp25/Omp31 profiles were detected, in our experimental conditions, between the Brucella strains representative of the six classical species. Transcripts for omp31, omp25 and omp25c were, in general, the most abundant of the family and some hits were found in B. ovis for a posttranscriptional regulation mechanism and for a compensatory mechanism increasing the synthesis of a protein to compensate for the absence of another one. Finally, the potential interest of Omp25c and Omp31b as subcellular vaccines, considering their occurrence in the Brucella strains studied and their antigenic relatedness with other proteins of the family, is discussed.
Veterinary Research | 2014
Pilar Sancho; Carmen Tejedor; Rebeca Singh Sidhu-Muñoz; Luis Fernández-Lago; Nieves Vizcaíno
Brucella ovis causes ram contagious epididymitis, a disease for which a specific vaccine is lacking. Attenuated Brucella melitensis Rev 1, used as vaccine against ovine and caprine brucellosis caused by B. melitensis, is also considered the best vaccine available for the prophylaxis of B. ovis infection, but its use for this purpose has serious drawbacks. In this work, two previously characterized B. ovis attenuated mutants (Δomp25 d and Δomp22) were evaluated in mice, in comparison with B. melitensis Rev 1, as vaccines against B. ovis. Similarities, but also significant differences, were found regarding the immune response induced by the three vaccines. Mice vaccinated with the B. ovis mutants developed anti-B. ovis antibodies in serum of the IgG1, IgG2a and IgG2b subclasses and their levels were higher than those observed in Rev 1-vaccinated mice. After an antigen stimulus with B. ovis cells, splenocytes obtained from all vaccinated mice secreted similar levels of TNF-α and IL12(p40) and remarkably high amounts of IFN-γ, a crucial cytokine in protective immunity against other Brucella species. By contrast, IL-1α -an enhancer of T cell responses to antigen- was present at higher levels in mice vaccinated with the B. ovis mutants, while IL-10, an anti-inflammatory cytokine, was significantly more abundant in Rev 1-vaccinated mice. Additionally, the B. ovis mutants showed appropriate persistence, limited splenomegaly and protective efficacy against B. ovis similar to that observed with B. melitensis Rev 1. These characteristics encourage their evaluation in the natural host as homologous vaccines for the specific prophylaxis of B. ovis infection.
Infection and Immunity | 2012
Ana I. Martín-Martín; Pilar Sancho; María Jesús de Miguel; Luis Fernández-Lago; Nieves Vizcaíno
ABSTRACT Brucella ovis is a rough bacterium—lacking O-polysaccharide chains in the lipopolysaccharide—that is virulent in its natural host and whose virulence mechanisms remain almost unexplored. In a search for additional traits that distinguish B. ovis from smooth Brucella, which require O-polysaccharide chains for virulence, we have analyzed the significance in B. ovis of the main virulence factors described for smooth Brucella. Attempts to obtain strains of virulent B. ovis strain PA that are mutated in the BvrR/BvrS two-component regulatory system were unsuccessful, suggesting the requirement of that system for in vitro survival, while the inactivation of bacA—in contrast to the results seen with smooth Brucella—did not affect splenic colonization in mice or behavior in J774.A1 murine macrophages. Defects in the synthesis of cyclic ß-1,2 glucans reduced the uptake of B. ovis PA in macrophages and, although the intracellular multiplication rate was unaffected, led to attenuation in mice. Growth of strains with mutations in the type IV secretion system (encoded by the virB operon) and the quorum-sensing-related regulator VjbR was severely attenuated in the mouse model, and although the mutant strains internalized like the parental strain in J774.A1 murine macrophages, they were impaired for intracellular replication. As described for B. melitensis, VjbR regulates the transcription of the virB operon positively, and the N-dodecanoyl-dl-homoserine lactone (C12-HSL) autoinducer abrogates this effect. In contrast, no apparent VjbR-mediated regulation of the fliF flagellar gene was observed in B. ovis, probably due to the two deletions detected upstream of fliF. These results, together with others reported in the text, point to similarities between rough virulent B. ovis and smooth Brucella species as regards virulence but also reveal distinctive traits that could be related to the particular pathogenicity and host tropism characteristics of B. ovis.
Veterinary Microbiology | 2016
Rebeca Singh Sidhu-Muñoz; Pilar Sancho; Nieves Vizcaíno
Mutants in several genes have been obtained on the genetic background of virulent rough (lacking O-polysaccharide) Brucella ovis PA. The target genes encode outer membrane proteins previously associated with the virulence of smooth (bearing O-polysaccharide chains in the lipopolysaccharide) Brucella strains. Multiple attempts to delete omp16, coding for a homologue to peptidoglycan-associated lipoproteins, were unsuccessful, which suggests that Omp16 is probably essential for in vitro survival of B. ovis PA. Single deletion of omp10 or omp19-that encode two other outer membrane lipoproteins--was achieved, but the simultaneous removal of both genes failed, suggesting an essential complementary function between both proteins. Two other deletion mutants, defective in the Tol-C-homologue BepC or in the SP41 adhesin, were also obtained. Surprisingly when compared to previous results obtained with smooth Brucella, none of the B. ovis mutants showed attenuation in the virulence, either in the mouse model or in cellular models of professional and non-professional phagocytes. Additionally, and in contrast to the observations reported with smooth Brucella strains, several properties related to the outer membrane remained almost unaltered. These results evidence new distinctive traits between naturally rough B. ovis and smooth brucellae.
Frontiers in Microbiology | 2018
Rebeca Singh Sidhu-Muñoz; Pilar Sancho; Axel Cloeckaert; Michel S. Zygmunt; María J. de Miguel; Carmen Tejedor; Nieves Vizcaíno
Brucella ovis is a non-zoonotic Brucella species lacking specific vaccine. It presents a narrow host range, a unique biology relative to other Brucella species, and important distinct surface properties. To increase our knowledge on its peculiar surface and virulence features, and seeking to develop a specific vaccine, multiple mutants for nine relevant cell-envelope-related genes were investigated. Mutants lacking Omp10 plus Omp19 could not be obtained, suggesting that at least one of these lipoproteins is required for viability. A similar result was obtained for the double deletion of omp31 and omp25 that encode two major surface proteins. Conversely, the absence of major Omp25c (proved essential for internalization in HeLa cells) together with Omp25 or Omp31 was tolerated by the bacterium. Although showing important in vitro and in vivo defects, the Δomp10Δomp31Δomp25c mutant was obtained, demonstrating that B. ovis PA survives to the simultaneous absence of Omp10 and four out seven proteins of the Omp25/Omp31 family (i.e., Omp31, Omp25c, Omp25b, and Omp31b, the two latter naturally absent in B. ovis). Three multiple mutants were selected for a detailed analysis of virulence in the mouse model. The Δomp31Δcgs and Δomp10Δomp31Δomp25c mutants were highly attenuated when inoculated at 106 colony forming units/mouse but they established a persistent infection when the infection dose was increased 100-fold. The Δomp10ΔugpBΔomp31 mutant showed a similar behavior until week 3 post-infection but was then totally cleared from spleen. Accordingly, it was retained as vaccine candidate for mice protection assays. When compared to classical B. melitensis Rev1 heterologous vaccine, the triple mutant induced limited splenomegaly, a significantly higher antibody response against whole B. ovis PA cells, an equivalent memory cellular response and, according to spleen colonization measurements, better protection against a challenge with virulent B. ovis PA. Therefore, it would be a good candidate to be evaluated in the natural host as a specific vaccine against B. ovis that would avoid the drawbacks of B. melitensis Rev1. In addition, the lack in this attenuated strain of Omp31, recognized as a highly immunogenic protein during B. ovis infection, would favor the differentiation between infected and vaccinated animals using Omp31 as diagnostic target.
The American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education | 2006
Pilar Sancho; Ricardo Corral; Teresa Rivas; María Jesús González; Andrés Chordi; Carmen Tejedor
Waste Management | 2004
Pilar Sancho; Ana Pinacho; P. Ramos; Carmen Tejedor
Archive | 2006
Pilar Sancho; Ricardo Corral; Teresa Rivas; Carmen Tejedor
Waste Management | 2006
A. Pinacho; P.A. García-Encina; Pilar Sancho; P. Ramos; M.C. Márquez