Roberto Zenteno
National Autonomous University of Mexico
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Featured researches published by Roberto Zenteno.
Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology | 1998
Jesús Hernández; Julio Reyes-Leyva; Roberto Zenteno; Humberto Ramírez; Pablo Hernández-Jáuregui; Edgar Zenteno
The immune response against the porcine rubulavirus was analyzed in experimentally infected adult pigs. High titers of virus neutralizing and hemagglutinating inhibitory antibodies were identified in infected animals. The antibody specificity was directed towards HN, M, and NP rubula virion proteins; immunodominance of HN proteins was demonstrated. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells from infected, but not from non-infected pigs proliferated in vitro in response to virus antigenic stimuli, showing a bell-shaped plot with the highest peak at 5 weeks post-infection. Virus-induced lymphoblasts expressed CD4+ CD8+ phenotype, whereas lectin-induced lymphoblasts were mainly identified as CD4+ CD8- cells. Phenotype analysis of freshly prepared PBMC revealed increased number of both monocytes (PoM1+) and total T lymphocytes (CD2+) early during infection, with reduced values of B lymphocytes at 4 weeks post-infection. Decrease in CD4+ CD8- blood cells was observed at 3 weeks post-infection, whereas both CD4- CD8+ and CD4+ CD8+ cells increased 1 and 4 weeks post-infection, respectively. This work discusses the relevance of CD4+ CD8+ T cells in the control of porcine rubulavirus infection.
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 1997
Julio Reyes-Leyva; Blanca Espinosa; Jesús Hernández; Roberto Zenteno; Verónica Vallejo; Pablo Hernández-Jáuregui; Edgar Zenteno
Relevance of membrane sialoglycoconjugates as receptors for infection by the porcine rubulavirus has been determined in vitro by sugar and lectin competition assays and by inhibition of glycosylation. Our results show that NeuAc alpha 2,3Gal but not NeuAc alpha 2,6Gal inhibits the virus infectivity of Vero cells, and the virus was effectively blocked with the lectin Maackia amurensis, specific for NeuAc alpha 2,3Gal. Inhibition of the cellular glycosylation with tunicamycin, deoxinojirimycin as well as neuraminidase treatment diminishes the viral capacity to bind and infect this cell line. Dexamethasone, which promotes the activity of sialyl alpha 2,6 glycosyltransferase, also diminishes the cell susceptibility for infection. This is the first report confirming that NeuAc alpha-2,3Gal recognition is determinant in the pathogenesis of the porcine rubulavirus.
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 2000
Roberto Zenteno; Lorena Vázquez; Claudia Sierra; Ali Pereyra; Marie Christine Slomianny; Stéphane Bouquelet; Edgar Zenteno
The serum of the freshwater prawn contains a sialic acid specific lectin (MrL) that agglutinates erythrocytes from rat and rabbit, as well as some Gram negative and positive bacterial strains. In this work, we performed the chemical characterization of the MrL purified by affinity chromatography on stroma from rat erythrocytes and by ion exchange chromatography. In its active form, MRL is a dimeric glycoprotein with 9.5 kDa per subunit. The amino acid sequence of the lectin was deduced from peptides obtained after trypsin treatment by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry-time of flight analysis (MALDI-TOF). The predicted amino acid sequence of the lectin showed 54% homology with the hyperglycemic hormone from Macrobrachium rosenbergii. It also showed homology with the variable region of the human immunoglobulin kappa (22%) and lambda (27%) light chains. The lectin is a glycoprotein with 11% (w/w) carbohydrate content and is constituted by Gal, Man, GlcNAc, GalNAc and NeuAc in a molar ratio of 4:3:2:1:0.6. The primary structure of the carbohydrate chains of the lectin from the freshwater prawn was determined by affinity chromatography of MrL-glycopeptides on Con A and LCA lectin columns, which indicated that the main carbohydrate chains conforming the lectin are N-glycosidically linked. Man3 GlcNAc2.1 oligosaccharides were the most abundant structures with 57%) followed by Gal1.3 Man3 GlcNAc2.8 with 24%. Our results suggest that the freshwater prawn possess a lectin in the hemolymph plasma, related to those from the immunoglobulin superfamily.
Glycoconjugate Journal | 1999
Julio Reyes-Leyva; Blanca Espinosa; Gerardo Santos; Roberto Zenteno; Jesús Hernández; Verónica Vallejo; Edgar Zenteno
The Hemagglutinin-Neuraminidase (HN) from the LPMV strain of Porcine rubulavirus was purified from virions by ultracentrifugation in a continuous 20–60% sucrose gradient and by ion exchange chromatography. The HN is a glycoprotein of 66 kDa constituted by 50.5, 13.3 and 13.6% of non polar, uncharged polar, and charged polar amino acids, respectively. The HN contains 4% of carbohydrates, its glycannic portion is constituted by Man, Gal, GlcNAc, GalBAc, and Neu5Ac in 3:3:4:1:1 molar ratios. The HN possesses hemagglutinating activity in the presence of erythrocytes from several animal species, including human ABO, and treating the erythrocytes with neuraminidase or pronase abolishes this activity. The binding specificity of the purified HN was determined by hapten inhibition assays, indicating that the hemagglutinating activity of the HN is specific for sialic acid and Neu5Acα2,3Gal-containing structures.
Glycoconjugate Journal | 2000
Roberto Zenteno; Lorena Vázquez; Salvador Martínez-Cairo; Stéphane Bouquelet; Concepción Agundis; Edgar Zenteno
From the serum of juvenile freshwater prawns, we isolated by affinity chromatography on glutaraldehyde-fixed rat erythrocytes stroma, immobilized in Sephadex G-25, a sialic acid specific lectin of 9.6[emsp4 ]kDa per subunit. Comparative analysis against adult organisms purified lectin, by chromatofocusing, showed that the lectin from juvenile specimens is composed by four main isoforms with a pl of 4.2, 4.6, 5.1, and 5.6, whereas the lectin from adults is eluted at pH 4.2. The amino acid composition of the lectin obtained from adult and juvenile stages suggest identity, but the compositions are not identical since a higher content of carbohydrates was found in the lectin from younger organisms. The freshwater prawn lectin showed specificity toward N-acetylated amino sugar residues such as GlcNAc, GalNAc, Neu5Ac and Neu5,9Ac; but in juvenile organisms the lectin showed three times less hemagglutinating activity than the lectin from adults. Both lectins agglutinated rat, rabbit and chicken erythrocytes, indicating that Neu5,9Ac in specific O-glycosydically linked glycans seems to be relevant for the interaction of M. rosenbergii lectins with their specific cellular receptor. Our results suggest that the physicochemical characteristics of the lectin from the freshwater prawn are regulated through maturation.
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 2000
Concepción Agundis; Ali Pereyra; Roberto Zenteno; Colette Brassart; Claudia Sierra; Lorena Vázquez; Edgar Zenteno
An enzyme-linked immunoabsorbent assay was developed to quantify the lectin present in the hemolymph of the freshwater prawn Macrobrachium rosenbergii. This method involves the use of murine monoclonal IgG1 with kappa light chain (designated as 3G1) antibodies raised against the purified lectin, the assay that we developed recognized as little as 30 ng/ml of lectin, and was used to measure the lectin concentration in animals at different maturation stages. The highest concentration of lectin was identified in the hemolymph from post-larval prawns and the lowest in molt stage adult animals. The hemagglutination activity of the lectin was four-fold higher in adult than in juvenile specimens, although in all cases N-acetylated sugar residues, such as N-acetyl-D-glucosamine, N-acetyl-D-galactosamine, and N-acetyl-D-neuraminic acid were inhibitors of the lectin activity, suggesting that lectin plays a role in the transport of N-acetylated sugar in juvenile prawns. Our results indicate that lectin concentration and hemagglutinating activity could be influenced by developmental conditions of the freshwater prawn.
Preparative Biochemistry & Biotechnology | 2002
Elvira Varela; Felipe Massó; Araceli Páez; Roberto Zenteno; Edgar Zenteno; Luis F. Montaño
ABSTRACT Two antigens, 19-kDa each, were purified from Mycobacterium bovis culture filtrate protein extract by chromatofocusing. Antigen I had a 4.5 pI, and its amino terminal (DPVDAVINTTCNYGQVVAALNATDP) showed a 100% homology with the hypothetical protein Rv 1174c. Antigen II had a pI of 6.0 pI and its amino terminal (GDLVGPG-CAEYAAANPTGPASVQGM) showed a 100% homology with M. bovis MPB70/80. Antigen I is a hetero-dimer formed by a glycosylated, 10.5-kDa, monomer and a non-glycosylated 8-kDa monomer with identical amino terminal sequences. Both antigens were recognized by the sera of PPD+ animals, but antigen I did not crossreact with sera of human PPD+ individuals. Antigen I was a weak inducer of lymphocyte proliferation and IFN-γ production. Our results show that M. bovis expresses a 19 kDa glycoprotein, homologue to the product of M. tuberculosis gen Rv-1174c, which may prove useful for bovine TB diagnostic assays.
Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 2001
Blanca Espinosa; Roberto Zenteno; Raúl Mena; Yves Robitaille; Edgar Zenteno; Jorge Guevara
Preparative Biochemistry & Biotechnology | 2009
Ali Pereyra; Concepción Agundis; Baltazar Barrera; Juan Alpuche; Claudia Sierra; Roberto Zenteno; Edgar Zenteno; Lorena Vázquez
International Journal of Peptide and Protein Research | 2009
Juan Carlos Almagro; Roberto Zenteno; Enrique Vargas-Madrazo; Francisco Lara-Ochoa