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Dive into the research topics where Romina Vazquez is active.

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Featured researches published by Romina Vazquez.


Biophysical Journal | 2014

N-Nervonoylsphingomyelin (C24:1) Prevents Lateral Heterogeneity in Cholesterol-Containing Membranes

Sabina M. Maté; Jon V. Busto; Aritz B. García-Arribas; Jesús Sot; Romina Vazquez; Vanesa Herlax; Claude Wolf; Laura Bakás; Félix M. Goñi

This study was conducted to explore how the nature of the acyl chains of sphingomyelin (SM) influence its lateral distribution in the ternary lipid mixture SM/cholesterol/1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DOPC), focusing on the importance of the hydrophobic part of the SM molecule for domain formation. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) measurements showed that the presence of a double bond in the 24:1 SM molecule in mixtures with cholesterol (CHO) or in pure bilayers led to a decrease in the molecular packing. Confocal microscopy and AFM showed, at the meso- and nanoscales respectively, that unlike 16:0 and 24:0 SM, 24:1 SM does not induce phase segregation in ternary lipid mixtures with DOPC and CHO. This ternary lipid mixture had a nanomechanical stability intermediate between those displayed by liquid-ordered (Lo) and liquid-disordered (Ld) phases, as reported by AFM force spectroscopy measurements, demonstrating that 24:1 SM is able to accommodate both DOPC and CHO, forming a single phase. Confocal experiments on giant unilamellar vesicles made of human, sheep, and rabbit erythrocyte ghosts rich in 24:1 SM and CHO, showed no lateral domain segregation. This study provides insights into how the specific molecular structure of SM affects the lateral behavior and the physical properties of both model and natural membranes. Specifically, the data suggest that unsaturated SM may help to keep membrane lipids in a homogeneous mixture rather than in separate domains.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2014

Boundary region between coexisting lipid phases as initial binding sites for Escherichia coli alpha-hemolysin: A real-time study

Sabina M. Maté; Romina Vazquez; Vanesa Herlax; María Antonieta Daza Millone; Maria Laura Fanani; Bruno Maggio; M. E. Vela; Laura Bakás

α-Hemolysin (HlyA) is a protein toxin, a member of the pore-forming Repeat in Toxin (RTX) family, secreted by some pathogenic strands of Escherichia coli. The mechanism of action of this toxin seems to involve three stages that ultimately lead to cell lysis: binding, insertion, and oligomerization of the toxin within the membrane. Since the influence of phase segregation on HlyA binding and insertion in lipid membranes is not clearly understood, we explored at the meso- and nanoscale-both in situ and in real-time-the interaction of HlyA with lipid monolayers and bilayers. Our results demonstrate that HlyA could insert into monolayers of dioleoylphosphatidylcholine/sphingomyelin/cholesterol (DOPC/16:0SM/Cho) and DOPC/24:1SM/Cho. The time course for HlyA insertion was similar in both lipidic mixtures. HlyA insertion into DOPC/16:0SM/Cho monolayers, visualized by Brewster-angle microscopy (BAM), suggest an integration of the toxin into both the liquid-ordered and liquid-expanded phases. Atomic-force-microscopy imaging reported that phase boundaries favor the initial binding of the toxin, whereas after a longer time period the HlyA becomes localized into the liquid-disordered (Ld) phases of supported planar bilayers composed of DOPC/16:0SM/Cho. Our AFM images, however, showed that the HlyA interaction does not appear to match the general strategy described for other invasive proteins. We discuss these results in terms of the mechanism of action of HlyA.


Biochemical Journal | 2014

Novel evidence for the specific interaction between cholesterol and α-haemolysin of Escherichia coli.

Romina Vazquez; Sabina M. Maté; Laura Bakás; Marisa M. Fernández; Emilio L. Malchiodi; Vanesa Herlax

Several toxins that act on animal cells present different, but specific, interactions with cholesterol or sphingomyelin. In the present study we demonstrate that HlyA (α-haemolysin) of Escherichia coli interacts directly with cholesterol. We have recently reported that HlyA became associated with detergent-resistant membranes enriched in cholesterol and sphingomyelin; moreover, toxin oligomerization, and hence haemolytic activity, diminishes in cholesterol-depleted erythrocytes. Considering these results, we studied the insertion process, an essential step in the lytic mechanism, by the monolayer technique, finding that HlyA insertion is favoured in cholesterol- and sphingomyelin-containing membranes. On the basis of this result, we studied the direct interaction with either of the lipids by lipid dot blotting, lysis inhibition and SPR (surface plasmon resonance) assays. The results of the present study demonstrated that an interaction between cholesterol and HlyA exists that seems to favour a conformational state of the protein that allows its correct insertion into the membrane and its further oligomerization to form pores.


Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces | 2017

Interaction of acylated and unacylated forms of E. coli alpha-hemolysin with lipid monolayers: a PM-IRRAS study

Romina Vazquez; María Antonieta Daza Millone; Felippe J. Pavinatto; Vanesa Herlax; Laura Bakás; Osvaldo N. Oliveira; M. E. Vela; Sabina M. Maté

Uropathogenic strains of Escherichia coli produce virulence factors, such as the protein toxin alpha-hemolysin (HlyA), that enable the bacteria to colonize the host and establish an infection. HlyA is synthetized as a protoxin (ProHlyA) that is transformed into the active form in the bacterial cytosol by the covalent linkage of two fatty-acyl moieties to the polypeptide chain before the secretion of HlyA into the extracellular medium. The aim of this work was to investigate the effect of the fatty acylation of HlyA on protein conformation and protein-membrane interactions. Polarization-modulated infrared reflection-absorption spectroscopy (PM-IRRAS) experiments were performed at the air-water interface, and lipid monolayers mimicking the outer leaflet of red-blood-cell membranes were used as model systems for the study of protein-membrane interaction. According to surface-pressure measurements, incorporation of the acylated protein into the lipid films was faster than that of the nonacylated form. PM-IRRAS measurements revealed that the adsorption of the proteins to the lipid monolayers induced disorder in the lipid acyl chains and also changed the elastic properties of the films independently of protein acylation. No significant difference was observed between HlyA and ProHlyA in the interaction with the model lipid monolayers; but when these proteins became adsorbed on a bare air-water interface, they adopted different secondary structures. The assumption of the correct protein conformation at a hydrophobic-hydrophilic interface could constitute a critical condition for biologic activity.


Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces | 2019

Impact of sphingomyelin acyl chain (16:0 vs 24:1) on the interfacial properties of Langmuir monolayers: A PM-IRRAS study

Romina Vazquez; M. Antonieta Daza Millone; Felippe J. Pavinatto; Maria Laura Fanani; Osvaldo N. Oliveira; M. E. Vela; Sabina Maté

Membrane structure is a key factor for the cell`s physiology, pathology, and therapy. Evaluating the importance of lipid species such as N-nervonoyl sphingomyelin (24:1-SM) -able to prevent phase separation- to membrane structuring remains a formidable challenge. This is the first report in which polarization-modulated infrared reflection-absorption spectroscopy (PM-IRRAS) is applied to investigate the lipid-lipid interactions in 16:0 vs 24:1-SM monolayers and their mixtures with 1,2-Dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DOPC) and cholesterol (Chol) (DOPC/SM/Chol 2:1:1). From the results we inferred that the cis double bond (Δ15) in 24:1-SM molecule diminishes intermolecular H-bonding and chain packing density compared to that of 16:0-SM. In ternary mixtures containing 16:0-SM, the relative intensity of the two components of the Amide I band reflected changes in the H-bonding network due to SM-Chol interactions. In contrast, the contribution of the main components of the Amide I band in DOPC/24:1-SM/Chol remained as in 24:1-SM monolayers, with a larger contribution of the non-H-bonded component. The most interesting feature in these ternary films is that the CO stretching mode of DOPC appeared with an intensity similar to that of SM Amide I band in DOPC/16:0-SM/Chol monolayers (a two-phase [Lo/Le] system), whereas an extremely low intensity of the CO band was detected in DOPC/24:1-SM/Chol monolayers (single Le phase). This is evidence that the unsaturation in 24:1-SM affected not only the conformational properties of acyl chains but also the orientation of the chemical groups at the air/water interface. The physical properties and overall H-bonding ability conferred by 24:1-SM may have implications in cell signaling and binding of biomolecules.


Revista del Museo de Antropología | 2018

Protocolo para la preparación de secciones delgadas sin descalcificar de tejido óseo humano

Tamara Giselle Navarro; Marcos Jannello; Ignacio A. Cerda; Marien Béguelin; Romina Vazquez

La obtencion de cortes delgados de restos oseos correspondiente tanto a materiales fosiles como arqueologicos suele ser una tarea poco sencilla, lo cual conlleva generalmente un elevado costo y tiempos prolongados. Por otra parte, la formacion de un laboratorio con las caracteristicas necesarias para la realizacion de protocolos ya establecidos es sumamente costosa. En este trabajo se presenta un protocolo alternativo para la obtencion de cortes delgados de muestras oseas humanas de sitios arqueologicos con el objetivo de aplicarlo al analisis microestructural. Los procedimientos de obtencion de cortes delgados que aqui se detallan estan al alcance de laboratorios de reciente formacion. En primer lugar, se midio y se registro con imagenes digitales un femur, una tibia y una primera costilla de un individuo adulto procedente de un cementerio contemporaneo. Luego se extrajeron fragmentos de 1 cm de hueso. Con el material se confeccionaron replicas y por ultimo se obtuvieron los cortes delgados. Los resultados obtenidos fueron optimos para la observacion de las caracteristicas microestructurales del hueso. Con los ajustes adecuados (tiempo de fraguado, granulometria del abrasivo de acuerdo a la dureza del material, impregnacion, etc.) este protocolo podria ser utilizado para diversos tipos de muestras actuales, arqueologicas e incluso fosiles.


Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces | 2018

Phase-segregated membrane model assessed by a combined SPR-AFM approach

M. Antonieta Daza Millone; Romina Vazquez; Sabina M. Maté; M. E. Vela

Model biomembranes can provide valuable insights into the properties of complex biological membranes. Among several techniques, Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR) provides a label-free analysis of the interactions of bioactive molecules with biomembranes with an experimental setup that allows mimicking biological environments. Nevertheless, protocols that enable the preparation of stable supported membrane systems with reproducible structural and functional properties on the biosensor chip are still needed. In this work, we present a simple protocol to modify SPR substrates that allows the formation of a phase-segregated supported lipid bilayer (SLB). SLBs are formed by fusion of lipid vesicles of pure phospholipids (DMPC, DPPC and DOPC) and of a ternary mixture (DOPC/16:0 SM/Cho in 2:1:1 molar ratio) on a SPR gold sensor chip covered with a dithiothreitol monolayer. The formation of a SLB on the SPR sensing surface in a reproducible way was assessed by the combined use of the SPR technique with AFM. The interaction of a cholesterol-extracting drug with SLBs was studied as a model of membrane-lipophilic biomolecule interaction. The proposed strategy allowed us to obtain a membrane model where phase coexistence is present and where Cho depletion from ternary mixtures was comparable to the extraction results reported for human erythrocytes.


Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces | 2018

Volume expansion of erythrocytes is not the only mechanism responsible for the protection by arginine-based surfactants against hypotonic hemolysis

M. Elisa Fait; Melisa Hermet; Romina Vazquez; Sabina M. Maté; M. Antonieta Daza Millone; M. Elena Vela; Susana R. Morcelle; Laura Bakás

A novel arginine-based cationic surfactant Nα-benzoyl-arginine dodecylamide (Bz-Arg-NHC12) was synthesized in our laboratory. In this paper we study the interaction of Bz-Arg-NHC12 with sheep and human red blood cells (SRBC and HRBC respectively) due to their different membrane physicochemical/biophysical properties. SRBC demonstrated to be slightly more resistant than HRBC to the hemolytic effect of the surfactant, being the micellar structure responsible for the hemolytic effect in both cases. Moreover, besides the hemolytic effect, a dual behavior was observed for the surfactant studied: Bz-Arg-NHC12 was also able to protect red blood cells against hypotonic lysis for HRBC in a wide range of surfactant concentrations. However, the degree of protection showed for SRBC was about 50% lower than for HBRC. In this regard, a remarkable volume expansion was evidenced only for SRBC treated with Bz-Arg-NHC12, although no correlation with the antihemolytic potency (pAH) was found. On the contrary, our surfactant showed a greater pAH when human erythrocytes were submitted to hypotonic stress, with a low volume expansion, showing a higher amount of solubilized phospholipids in the supernatant when compared with SRBC behavior. Surface plasmon resonance measurements show the molecular interaction of the surfactant with lipid bilayers from HRBC and SRBC lipids, demonstrating that in the latter neither microvesicle release or lipid extraction occurred. Our results demonstrate that the volume expansion of erythrocytes is not the only mechanism responsible for the protection by surfactants against hypotonic hemolysis: volume expansion could be compensated via microvesicle release or by the extraction of membrane components upon collisions between red blood cells and surfactant aggregates depending on the membrane composition.


Runa | 2014

Áreas de entierro en cazadores-recolectores del Noroeste de Patagonia: sitio Hermanos Lazcano (Chos Malal, Neuquén)

Claudia Della Negra; Paula Novellino; Florencia Gordón; Romina Vazquez; Marien Béguelin; Paula Gonzalez; Valeria Bernal


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2016

Relationship between intracellular calcium and morphologic changes in rabbit erythrocytes: Effects of the acylated and unacylated forms of E. coli alpha-hemolysin.

Romina Vazquez; Sabina M. Maté; Laura Bakás; Carlos Muñoz-Garay; Vanesa Herlax

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Laura Bakás

National University of La Plata

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Vanesa Herlax

National University of La Plata

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Sabina M. Maté

National University of La Plata

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Sabina Maté

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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M. E. Vela

National University of La Plata

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Maria Laura Fanani

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Marien Béguelin

National University of La Plata

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Carlos Muñoz-Garay

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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