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Dive into the research topics where Rogelio Palomino-Morales is active.

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Featured researches published by Rogelio Palomino-Morales.


Chromosome Research | 2007

The DNA-repair Ku70 protein is located in the nucleus and tail of elongating spermatids in grasshoppers

J. Cabrero; Rogelio Palomino-Morales; Juan Pedro M. Camacho

Fluorescence immunostaining for the phosphorylated H2AX histone (γH2AX) in the grasshopper Eyprepocnemis plorans has shown abundance of γH2AX in the nuclei of round and elongating spermatids, suggesting that DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) occur regularly during spermiogenesis. Immunofluorescence patterns for Ku70, a DNA-repair protein participating in the non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) pathway, showed that this protein is present in round and elongating spermatids, implying that the NHEJ DNA-repair pathway operates during chromatin compaction in spermiogenesis. In addition, during the final stages of spermiogenesis, the Ku70 protein concentrates on the region forming the sperm tail. Since Ku70 was also abundant in spermatid tails, it is reasonable to assume that Ku70 might play a novel function in sperm-tail formation. The analysis of Ku70 immunofluorescence patterns in 13 other grasshopper species also showed the presence of this protein in the nucleus and tail of elongating spermatids, indicating that this is a general characteristic in grasshoppers.


BioMed Research International | 2009

Effect of Oxysterol-Induced Apoptosis of Vascular Smooth Muscle Cells on Experimental Hypercholesterolemia

Sonia Perales; Maria Jose Alejandre; Rogelio Palomino-Morales; Carolina Torres; J. Iglesias; Ana Linares

Smooth muscle cells (SMCs) undergo changes related to proliferation and apoptosis in the physiological remodeling of vessels and in diseases such as atherosclerosis and restenosis. Recent studies also have demonstrated the vascular cell proliferation and programmed cell death contribute to changes in vascular architecture in normal development and in disease. The present study was designed to investigate the apoptotic pathways induced by 25-hydroxycholesterol in SMCs cultures, using an in vivo/in vitro cell model in which SMCs were isolated and culture from chicken exposed to an atherogenic cholesterol-rich diet (SMC-Ch) and/or an antiatherogenic fish oil-rich diet (SMC-Ch-FO). Cells were exposed in vitro to 25-hydroxycholesterol to study levels of apoptosis and apoptotic proteins Bcl-2, Bcl-XL and Bax and the expression of bcl-2 and bcl-xL, genes. The quantitative real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and the Immunoblotting western blot analysis showed that 25-hydroxycholesterol produces apoptosis in SMCs, mediated by a high increase in Bax protein and Bax gene expression. These changes were more marked in SMC-Ch than in SMC-Ch-FO, indicating that dietary cholesterol produces changes in SMCs that make them more susceptible to 25-hydroxycholesterol-mediated apoptosis. Our results suggest that the replacement of a cholesterol-rich diet with a fish oil-rich diet produces some reversal of cholesterol-induced changes in the apoptotic pathways induced by 25-hydroxycholesterol in SMCs cultures, making SMCs more resistant to apoptosis.


Nitric Oxide | 2010

Influence of cholesterol and fish oil dietary intake on nitric oxide-induced apoptosis in vascular smooth muscle cells

Sonia Perales; M.J. Alejandre; Rogelio Palomino-Morales; Carolina Torres; Ana Linares

Apoptosis of vascular smooth muscle cells (SMC) is critically involved in the progression of atherosclerosis. We previously reported that dietary cholesterol intake induces changes in SMC at molecular and gene expression levels. The objectives of the present study were to investigate the differential response to nitric oxide of vascular SMC obtained from chicks after cholesterol and fish oil dietary intake and to examine effects on the main pro-apoptotic and anti-apoptotic genes. Dietary cholesterol intake reduced the Bcl-2/Bax (anti-apoptotic/pro-apoptotic) protein ratio in SMC, making them more susceptible to apoptosis. When cholesterol was withdrawn and replaced with a fish oil-enriched diet, the Bcl-xl/Bax protein ratio significantly increased, reversing the changes induced by cholesterol. The decrease in c-myc gene expression after apoptotic stimuli and the increase in Bcl-xl/Bax ratio indicate that fish oil has a protective role against apoptosis in SMC. Nitroprussiate-like nitric oxide donors exerted an intensive action on vascular SMC cultures. However, SMC-C (isolated from animals fed with control diet) and SMC-Ch (isolated from animals fed with cholesterol-enriched diet) responded differently to nitric oxide, especially in their bcl-2 and bcl-xl gene expression. SMC isolated from animals fed with cholesterol-enriched and then fish oil-enriched diet (SMC-Ch-FO cultures) showed an intermediate apoptosis level (Bcl-2/Bax ratio) between SMC-C and SMC-Ch, induction of c-myc expression and elevated p53 expression. These findings indicate that fish oil protects SMC against apoptosis.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Site-to-site interdomain communication may mediate different loss-of-function mechanisms in a cancer-associated NQO1 polymorphism

Encarnación Medina-Carmona; Jose L. Neira; Eduardo Salido; Julian E. Fuchs; Rogelio Palomino-Morales; David J. Timson; Angel L. Pey

Disease associated genetic variations often cause intracellular enzyme inactivation, dysregulation and instability. However, allosteric communication of mutational effects to distant functional sites leading to loss-of-function remains poorly understood. We characterize here interdomain site-to-site communication by which a common cancer-associated single nucleotide polymorphism (c.C609T/p.P187S) reduces the activity and stability in vivo of NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase 1 (NQO1). NQO1 is a FAD-dependent, two-domain multifunctional stress protein acting as a Phase II enzyme, activating cancer pro-drugs and stabilizing p53 and p73α oncosuppressors. We show that p.P187S causes structural and dynamic changes communicated to functional sites far from the mutated site, affecting the FAD binding site located at the N-terminal domain (NTD) and accelerating proteasomal degradation through dynamic effects on the C-terminal domain (CTD). Structural protein:protein interaction studies reveal that the cancer-associated polymorphism does not abolish the interaction with p73α, indicating that oncosuppressor destabilization largely mirrors the low intracellular stability of p.P187S. In conclusion, we show how a single disease associated amino acid change may allosterically perturb several functional sites in an oligomeric and multidomain protein. These results have important implications for the understanding of loss-of-function genetic diseases and the identification of novel structural hot spots as targets for pharmacological intervention.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2017

Enhanced vulnerability of human proteins towards disease-associated inactivation through divergent evolution

Encarnación Medina-Carmona; Julian E. Fuchs; Jose A. Gavira; Noel Mesa-Torres; José L. Neira; Eduardo Salido; Rogelio Palomino-Morales; M. Burgos; David J. Timson; Angel L. Pey

Human proteins are vulnerable towards disease-associated single amino acid replacements affecting protein stability and function. Interestingly, a few studies have shown that consensus amino acids from mammals or vertebrates can enhance protein stability when incorporated into human proteins. Here, we investigate yet unexplored relationships between the high vulnerability of human proteins towards disease-associated inactivation and recent evolutionary site-specific divergence of stabilizing amino acids. Using phylogenetic, structural and experimental analyses, we show that divergence from the consensus amino acids at several sites during mammalian evolution has caused local protein destabilization in two human proteins linked to disease: cancer-associated NQO1 and alanine:glyoxylate aminotransferase, mutated in primary hyperoxaluria type I. We demonstrate that a single consensus mutation (H80R) acts as a disease suppressor on the most common cancer-associated polymorphism in NQO1 (P187S). The H80R mutation reactivates P187S by enhancing FAD binding affinity through local and dynamic stabilization of its binding site. Furthermore, we show how a second suppressor mutation (E247Q) cooperates with H80R in protecting the P187S polymorphism towards inactivation through long-range allosteric communication within the structural ensemble of the protein. Our results support that recent divergence of consensus amino acids may have occurred with neutral effects on many functional and regulatory traits of wild-type human proteins. However, divergence at certain sites may have increased the propensity of some human proteins towards inactivation due to disease-associated mutations and polymorphisms. Consensus mutations also emerge as a potential strategy to identify structural hot-spots in proteins as targets for pharmacological rescue in loss-of-function genetic diseases.


Pancreas | 2015

The potential role of the glycoprotein osteoactivin/glycoprotein nonmetastatic melanoma protein B in pancreatic cancer.

Carolina Torres; Ana Linares; Maria Jose Alejandre; Rogelio Palomino-Morales; Miguel Martin; J.R. Delgado; Joquina Martinez; Sonia Perales

Objectives Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma is still one of the deadliest solid cancers so the finding of new therapeutic approaches and novel targets are of utmost importance. Glycoprotein nonmetastatic melanoma protein B (GPNMB), initially termed glycoprotein nonmetastatic gene B and also named osteoactivin (OA), is a type 1 transmembrane protein that has been recently found to play a role in cancer cell proliferation, angiogenesis, and invasion. Due to its potential responsibility in cancer aggressiveness, the main objective of this work was to assess the role of GPNMB/OA in human pancreatic cancer. Methods Using the human pancreatic cancer cell line Panc-1 in vitro, the effects of GPNMB on growth, proliferation, and invasion were tested by BrdU uptake, cell cycle and Annexin V-FITC analysis, RT-PCR, protein expression, and invasion chamber assays. Results Our results showed that GPNMB/OA protein expression prevents cells from apoptosis-enhancing proliferation and represents a novel modulator of the invasion and metastasis in pancreatic cancer cells. Conclusions Due to its main membrane localization in cancer cells and its role in the aggressiveness of pancreatic cancer, GPNMB/OA could represent a novel targeted therapy for pancreatic cancer being attractive for antibody-based therapies.


Lipids | 2006

Cyclic fluctuations of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA reductase in aortic smooth muscle cell cultures.

M.J. Alejandre; Sonia Perales; Ángel Carazo; Rogelio Palomino-Morales; Ana Linares

The cyclic fluctuations of HMG-CoA reductase activity and mRNA are reportedly related to feeding the cells in culture or to variations in food consumption by the animals over a 24-h cycle. In this work, we demonstrate cyclic increments in HMG-CoA reductase activity in smooth muscle cells (SMC) not associated with the culture feeding. Since reductase activity also shows a marked rise preceding the S phase, one of the major goals of the present work was to evaluate this dual role of reductase activity and mRNA fluctuations related to the cell cycle and to food intake in the SMC-C/SMC-Ch cultures derived from control-fed (SMC-C) and cholesterol-fed (SMC-Ch) chicks. The period and amplitude oscillations in HMG-CoA reductase activity varied depending on culture conditions: lipoprotein-deficient serum vs. FBS, young vs. senescent cells, or confluent vs. nonconfluent cultures. The HMG-CoA reductase mRNA concentration showed a marked rise after feeding not correlated to the fluctuation activity, suggesting posttranscriptional modulation. Reductase activity and mRNA were down-regulated in SMC-Ch. Since the nutritional culture conditions were the same in both cell lines, these findings indicate that consumption of a high-cholesterol diet by the animals prior to the establishment of the SMC cultures induced changes in the HMG-CoA reductase gene expression in aortic SMC.


Pancreas | 2016

Interplay Between Gemcitabine and Erlotinib Over Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma Cells.

Carolina Torres; Ana Linares; Maria Jose Alejandre; Rogelio Palomino-Morales; J.R. Delgado; Sonia Perales

Objectives Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma remains as a chemoresistant disease with the poorest prognosis. Gemcitabine has been the standard treatment during the last decade. Erlotinib, a tyrosine kinase inhibitor, in combination with gemcitabine produces a small increase in survival. However, these results remain insufficient. The aim of this study was to investigate the molecular interplay in vitro between them regarding their effects over cytotoxicity, proliferation, apoptosis, and invasion. Methods Using the human pancreatic cancer cell lines Panc-1 and BxPC-3 in vitro, the effects of gemcitabine and erlotinib therapy on growth, proliferation, and invasion were tested by cytotoxicity, cell cycle, and Annexin V-Fluorescein Isothiocyanate analysis, reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, protein expression, and Chip assays. Results Therapy decreased cell proliferation causing G0/G1 phase cell cycle arrest with induction of apoptosis in the Panc-1 cell line. This blockade was associated with increased p27 expression. Besides, treatments enhanced the nuclear factor-&kgr;B (NF-&kgr;B) pathway and the binding of NF-&kgr;B to the promoters of genes related to the proliferation and the evasion of apoptosis. Conclusions Our data suggest that, although gemcitabine and erlotinib exert antiproliferative effects over pancreatic cancer cell lines, the gemcitabine-induced activation of NF-&kgr;B expression and its DNA-binding activities are important drawbacks of this treatment against pancreatic cancer.


Current Vascular Pharmacology | 2016

Effect of HMG-CoA Reductase Inhibition on Vascular Smooth Muscle Cells Extracellular Matrix Production: Role of RhoA

Rogelio Palomino-Morales; Sonia Perales; Carolina Torres; Ana Linares; Maria Jose Alejandre

Cholesterol-lowering effects apart, statins can improve the endothelial function, stabilize the atherosclerotic plaques, decrease the oxidative stress and inflammation and inhibit the thrombogenic response by means of the inhibition of isoprenoids, which serve as lipid attachments for intracellular signaling molecules. We aimed to evaluate whether the effect of statins on RhoA activity mediate extracellular matrix production, particularly affecting collagen type I, in smooth muscle cells (SMCs). Our results showed that lovastatin decreased collagen expression in primary cultured chicken SMCs as determined by incorporation of [H3]-proline, RT-PCR and immunocytochemistry. This fall was parallel to that found in Rho A activity. Similar results were found when GGTI-298, a RhoA inhibitor, was added to the culture medium. Mevalonate or geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate reverted these effects. In order to elucidate the role of Rho A in these events we transfected the cell line A10 (rat SMCs) with constitutively active (G14V) or dominant negative RhoA (T19N) constructs. The last ones showed similar results regarding collagen production that those stated above in lovastatin treated primary SMC cultures. Constitutively active RhoA transfected cells showed the opposite effects. Next we performed a promoter activity assay to exclude post-transcriptional mechanisms implicated in these studies. We found a similar pattern in col1a2 promoter activity to that found in collagen expression. Our results have demonstrated that statins regulate the activation of RhoA through its isoprenylation, which is crucial for the regulation of extracellular matrix synthesis in SMCs.


Zoological Science | 2006

Sclerites in Different Tissues of Mediterranean Echinodermata

Amelia Ocaña Martín; J. Manuel Tierno de Figueroa; Rogelio Palomino-Morales

Abstract The presence of sclerites in different mesodermal tissues was studied in thirteen species of Mediterranean echinoderms representing the five living classes. In the species of Asteroidea and Crinoidea examined, sclerites were present only in specific tissues. In the species of Ophiuroidea and, especially, Echinoidea and Holothuroidea examined, sclerites were present in almost every tissue, but with considerable variation among species and tissues. Data on sclerite shape, size, and relative abundance (measured as tissue abundance) are presented. The data support the possible functional role of sclerites as reinforcing structures, as well as their possible use as taxonomic characters. Finally, the need of more studies to elucidate the ontogenetic and phylogenetic implications of sclerites is discussed.

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Eduardo Salido

Hospital Universitario de Canarias

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