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Dive into the research topics where Rosalba Pérez-Villalva is active.

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Featured researches published by Rosalba Pérez-Villalva.


Kidney International | 2013

Spironolactone prevents chronic kidney disease caused by ischemic acute kidney injury

Jonatan Barrera-Chimal; Rosalba Pérez-Villalva; Roxana Rodríguez-Romo; Juan Reyna; Norma Uribe; Gerardo Gamba; Norma A. Bobadilla

Acute kidney injury (AKI) has been recognized as a risk factor for the development of chronic kidney disease (CKD). Aldosterone has a critical role in promoting renal injury induced by ischemia. Here, we evaluated whether spironolactone administered before or after AKI caused by ischemia protects against CKD. In the first set of experiments, Wistar rats underwent a sham operation without or with prior spironolactone treatment, or underwent 45 minutes of bilateral renal ischemia without or with spironolactone treatment before ischemia and assessed over 270 days. The second set of rats received low (20 mg/kg) or high (80 mg/kg) doses of spironolactone at three different times after the sham operation or bilateral renal ischemia and were assessed after 90 days. Untreated animals developed CKD following ischemia-induced AKI as characterized by a progressive increase in proteinuria, renal dysfunction, podocyte injury, glomerular hypertrophy, and focal sclerosis. This was associated with increased oxidative stress, an upregulation of tumor growth factor (TGF)-β, followed by upregulation of the TGF-β downstream effectors phospho-Smad3, collagen I, fibronectin, and proinflammatory cytokines. Treatment with spironolactone either before or after ischemia prevented subsequent CKD by avoiding the activation of fibrotic and inflammatory pathways. Thus, spironolactone may be a promising treatment for the prevention of AKI-induced CKD.


Embo Molecular Medicine | 2011

Hsp72 is an early and sensitive biomarker to detect acute kidney injury

Jonatan Barrera-Chimal; Rosalba Pérez-Villalva; Cesar Cortés-González; Marcos Ojeda-Cervantes; Gerardo Gamba; Luis E. Morales-Buenrostro; Norma A. Bobadilla

This study was designed to assess whether heat shock protein Hsp72 is an early and sensitive biomarker of acute kidney injury (AKI) as well as to monitor a renoprotective strategy. Seventy‐two Wistar rats were divided into six groups: sham‐operated and rats subjected to 10, 20, 30, 45 and 60 min of bilateral ischemia (I) and 24 h of reperfusion (R). Different times of reperfusion (3, 6, 9, 12, 18, 24, 48, 72, 96 and 120 h) were also evaluated in 30 other rats subjected to 30 min of ischemia. Hsp72 messenger RNA (mRNA) and protein levels were determined in both kidney and urine. Hsp72‐specificity as a biomarker to assess the success of a renoprotective intervention was evaluated in rats treated with different doses of spironolactone before I/R. Renal Hsp72 mRNA and protein, as well as urinary Hsp72 levels, gradually increased relative to the extent of renal injury induced by different periods of ischemia quantified by histomorphometry as a benchmark of kidney damage. Urinary Hsp72 increased significantly after 3 h and continued rising until 18 h, followed by restoration after 120 h of reperfusion in accord with histopathological findings. Spironolactone renoprotection was associated with normalization of urinary Hsp72 levels. Accordingly, urinary Hsp72 was significantly increased in patients with clinical AKI before serum creatinine elevation. Our results show that urinary Hsp72 is a useful biomarker for early detection and stratification of AKI. In addition, urinary Hsp72 levels are sensitive enough to monitor therapeutic interventions and the degree of tubular recovery following an I/R insult.


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2012

Recovery from ischemic acute kidney injury by spironolactone administration

Katy Sánchez-Pozos; Jonatan Barrera-Chimal; Juan Garzón-Muvdi; Rosalba Pérez-Villalva; Roxana Rodríguez-Romo; Cristino Cruz; Gerardo Gamba; Norma A. Bobadilla

BACKGROUND Prophylactic mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) antagonism with spironolactone (Sp) in rats completely prevents renal damage induced by ischemia. Because acute renal ischemia cannot typically be predicted, this study was designed to investigate whether Sp could prevent renal injury after an ischemic/reperfusion insult. METHODS Six groups of male Wistar rats were studied: rats that received a sham abdominal operation (S); rats that underwent 20 min of ischemia and reperfusion for 24 h (I/R) and four groups of rats treated with Sp (20 mg/kg) 0, 3, 6 or 9 h after ischemia. RESULTS As expected, I/R resulted in renal dysfunction characterized by a fall in renal blood flow and glomerular filtration rate and severe tubular injury which was confirmed by a significant increase in tubular damage biomarkers including kidney injury molecule-1, heat shock protein 72 and urinary protein excretion. The renal injury induced by I/R was in part due to Rho-kinase, endothelin and angiotensin II type 1 receptor upregulation. Interestingly, Sp administration at 0 and 3 h after ischemia completely reversed and prevented the damage induced by I/R. The protection induced by Sp given 6 h after ischemia was partial, but no protection was observed by administering Sp 9 h after ischemia. CONCLUSION Our results show that MR antagonism administered, either immediately or 3 h after I/R, effectively prevented ischemic acute renal injury, indicating that spironolactone is a promising agent for preventing acute kidney injury once an ischemic insult has occurred.


American Journal of Nephrology | 2013

Mineralocorticoid Receptor Blockade Reduced Oxidative Stress in Renal Transplant Recipients: A Double-Blind, Randomized Pilot Study

Marcos Ojeda-Cervantes; Jonatan Barrera-Chimal; Josefina Alberú; Rosalba Pérez-Villalva; Luis E. Morales-Buenrostro; Norma A. Bobadilla

Background: Previous experimental studies from our laboratory have demonstrated that aldosterone plays a central role in renal ischemic processes. This study was designed to evaluate the effect of mineralocorticoid receptor blockade in renal transplant recipients from living donors. Methods: 20 adult kidney transplant recipients from living donors were included in a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical pilot study that compared spironolactone and placebo. Placebo or spironolactone (25 mg) was administered 1 day before and 3 days posttransplantation. Renal function and urinary kidney injury molecule-1, interleukin-18, and heat shock protein 72 as well as urinary hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) levels were quantified. Results: No significant differences were seen between the groups studied regarding age, gender, indication for kidney transplantation, residual renal function, renal replacement therapy, or warm and cold ischemia periods. In contrast, spironolactone administration significantly reduced the oxidative stress assessed by the urinary H2O2 excretion, in spite of no differences in renal function or reduction in tubular injury biomarkers. Conclusions: The findings of this exploratory study strongly suggest that aldosterone promotes oxidative stress and that the administration of spironolactone reduces the production of urinary H2O2 as a result of lesser formation of surrogate reactive oxygen species secondary to the ischemia-reperfusion phenomenon.


International Journal of Biological Sciences | 2015

Mild ischemic Injury Leads to Long-Term Alterations in the Kidney: Amelioration by Spironolactone Administration

Jonatan Barrera-Chimal; Rosalba Pérez-Villalva; Juan Antonio Ortega; Andrea Sánchez; Roxana Rodríguez-Romo; Marta Durand; Frederic Jaisser; Norma A. Bobadilla

Administration of the mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist spironolactone prevents the development of chronic kidney disease (CKD) after a severe ischemic injury. However, whether brief periods of ischemia lead to CKD and whether spironolactone administration after ischemia may be a useful therapeutic strategy to prevent the gradual deterioration of structure and function remains unexplored. Nineteen male Wistar rats were divided into four groups: rats that underwent renal bilateral ischemia for 10, 20, or 45 min were compared with sham operated rats. Additionally, thirteen male Wistar rats that underwent renal bilateral ischemia for 20 min were divided into an untreated ischemic group (I) and two groups receiving spironolactone, 20 mg/kg by gavage, at either 0 (Sp0) or 1.5-h after ischemia (Sp1.5). The rats were followed up and studied after 9 months. Mild (20 min) and severe (45 min) ischemia induced a progressive increase in proteinuria at varying magnitudes, whereas minor ischemia (10 min) did not modify proteinuria. CKD induced by moderate ischemia was characterized by renal hypertrophy and tubulointerstitial fibrosis. These effects were associated with activation of the transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) signaling pathway and up-regulation of endothelin receptor A (ETA) and alpha smooth muscle actin (αSMA). Spironolactone treatment immediately or 1.5-h after the ischemic insult prevented the onset of these disorders. Our results show that moderate ischemic insult leads to long-term structural and molecular changes that may compromise renal function in later stages. Additionally, we demonstrate that spironolactone administration after mild ischemia prevents this detrimental effect.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Hsp72 is a novel biomarker to predict acute kidney injury in critically ill patients.

Luis E. Morales-Buenrostro; Omar I. Salas-Nolasco; Jonatan Barrera-Chimal; Gustavo Casas-Aparicio; Sergio Irizar-Santana; Rosalba Pérez-Villalva; Norma A. Bobadilla

Background and Objectives Acute kidney injury (AKI) complicates the course of disease in critically ill patients. Efforts to change its clinical course have failed because of the fail in the early detection. This study was designed to assess whether heat shock protein (Hsp72) is an early and sensitive biomarker of acute kidney injury (AKI) compared with kidney injury molecule (Kim-1), neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL), and interleukin-18 (IL-18) biomarkers. Methods A total of 56 critically ill patients fulfilled the inclusion criteria. From these patients, 17 developed AKI and 20 were selected as controls. In AKI patients, Kim-1, IL-18, NGAL, and Hsp72 were measured from 3 days before and until 2 days after the AKI diagnosis and in no-AKI patients at 1, 5 and 10 days after admission. Biomarker sensitivity and specificity were determined. To validate the results obtained with ROC curves for Hsp72, a new set of critically ill patients was included, 10 with AKI and 12 with no-AKI patients. Results Urinary Hsp72 levels rose since 3 days before the AKI diagnosis in critically ill patients; this early increase was not seen with any other tested biomarkers. Kim-1, IL-18, NGAL, and Hsp72 significantly increased from 2 days before AKI and remained elevated during the AKI diagnosis. The best sensitivity/specificity was observed in Kim-1 and Hsp72: 83/95% and 100/90%, respectively, whereas 1 day before the AKI diagnosis, the values were 100/100% and 100/90%, respectively. The sensibility, specificity and accuracy in the validation test for Hsp72 were 100%, 83.3% and 90.9%, respectively. Conclusions The biomarker Hsp72 is enough sensitive and specific to predict AKI in critically ill patients up to 3 days before the diagnosis.


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2010

Polymerized type I collagen reduces chronic cyclosporine nephrotoxicity

Katy Sánchez-Pozos; Felipe Lee-Montiel; Rosalba Pérez-Villalva; Norma Uribe; Gerardo Gamba; Blanca Bazan-Perkins; Norma A. Bobadilla

BACKGROUND Polymerized type I collagen (P-collagen) has been successfully used to reduce human hypertrophic scars due to its anti-fibrotic and anti-inflammatory properties. We therefore carried out a study to determine if P-collagen reduces functional and structural injury in chronic cyclosporine [cyclosporine A (CsA)] nephropathy. METHODS Four groups of six male Wistar rats fed with a low sodium diet were treated with vehicle, P-collagen (0.8 mg/day, i.p.), CsA (15 mg/kg) or CsA + P-collagen for 15 days. Mean arterial pressure, renal blood flow and glomerular filtration rate were measured in all groups. Structural injury such as arteriolopathy, tubulo-interstitial fibrosis (TI-fibrosis) and positive apoptotic cells were quantified. The mRNA expression levels of transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta), kidney injury molecule (Kim-1), alpha-smooth muscle actin (alpha-SMA), glutathione peroxidase, catalase and Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD) as well as MnSOD were assessed. Antioxidant enzyme activity, renal lipoperoxidation and urinary excretion of oxygen peroxide (UH(2)O(2)V) were determined. RESULTS Cyclosporine produced renal dysfunction and induced the development of arteriolopathy, TI-fibrosis and tubular apoptosis. These alterations were associated with increases in TGF-beta, Kim-1 and alpha-SMA mRNA levels as well as with a significant increase of oxidative stress and a reduction of SOD activity. P-Collagen partially ameliorated CsA-induced renal dysfunction and structural injury and prevented both tubular apoptosis and increased oxidative stress. This renoprotective effect was found to be associated with a reduction of TGF-beta, Kim-1 and alpha-SMA mRNA levels. CONCLUSIONS This study has therefore demonstrated that P-collagen appears to have anti-fibrotic and anti-apoptotic properties and highlights the possibility that the compound might be useful in a strategy to reduce chronic CsA nephrotoxicity.


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2014

Intra-renal transfection of heat shock protein 90 alpha or beta (Hsp90α or Hsp90β) protects against ischemia/reperfusion injury

Jonatan Barrera-Chimal; Rosalba Pérez-Villalva; Juan Antonio Ortega; Norma Uribe; Gerardo Gamba; Cesar Cortés-González; Norma A. Bobadilla

BACKGROUND We previously reported that radicicol (Hsp90 inhibitor) induced a reduction in the renal blood flow and glomerular filtration rate, in part due to a reduction in urinary NO2/NO3 excretion, suggesting that Hsp90 regulates renal vascular tone in physiological conditions. However, there is a lack of information concerning Hsp90α or Hsp90β role on eNOS activity and their association with acute kidney injury (AKI) characterized by an inadequate NO production. This study evaluated the effects of Hsp90α or Hsp90β intra-renal transfection under ischemia/reperfusion (IR) injury. METHODS Uninephrectomized (Nx) rats were intra-renally transfected through injections with Hsp90α or Hsp90β cloned into pcDNA3.1(+) or empty vector (EV) at 48 h before inducing IR, as indicated in the following groups: (i) Nx+sham, (ii) Nx+IR, (iii) Nx+IR+EV, (iv) Nx+IR+Hsp90α and (v) Nx+IR+Hsp90β. After 24 h, physiological, histopathological, biochemical and molecular studies were performed. RESULTS IR-induced renal dysfunction, structural injury, tubular proliferation, the elevation of urinary Hsp72 and the reduction of urinary NO2/NO3 excretion. These alterations were associated with reduced eNOS-Hsp90 coupling and changes in the eNOS phosphorylation state mediated through a reduction in PKCα and increased Rho kinase expression. In contrast, intra-renal transfection of Hsp90α or Hsp90β prevented IR injury that was associated with the restoration of eNOS-Hsp90 coupling, eNOS activating phosphorylation and PKCα and Rho kinase levels. CONCLUSIONS Here we showed that eNOS-Hsp90 uncoupling plays a critical role in promoting NO reduction during IR. This effect was effectively reversed through Hsp90α or Hsp90β intra-renal transfection, suggesting their implication in regulating NO/eNOS pathway and the renal vascular tone.


Biomarkers | 2015

Heat shock protein 72 (Hsp72) specific induction and temporal stability in urine samples as a reliable biomarker of acute kidney injury (AKI).

Juan Antonio Ortega-Trejo; Rosalba Pérez-Villalva; Jonatan Barrera-Chimal; Diego L. Carrillo-Pérez; Luis E. Morales-Buenrostro; Gerardo Gamba; María Elena Flores; Norma A. Bobadilla

Abstract We demonstrated that urinary heat shock protein of 72 KDa (Hsp72) is a sensitive biomarker for the early detection of acute kidney injury (AKI). However, whether Hsp72 induction during an AKI episode is kidney-specific is unknown, as well as, the degree of Hsp72 stability in urine samples. In rats that underwent bilateral renal ischemia and reperfusion (I/R), Hsp72 levels were evaluated in several tissues and in collected urines under different storage and temperature conditions, as well as in variable numbers of freeze-thaw cycles. The effect of room temperature and five freeze-thaw cycles on urinary Hsp72 levels was also evaluated in urine samples from AKI patients. We found that Hsp72 increased exclusively in the renal cortex of I/R group, emphasizing its performance as an AKI biomarker. Urinary-Hsp72 remained constant at room temperature (48 h), during 9 months of storage and was not affected by five freeze/thaw cycles.


Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2017

Randomized Controlled Trial of Mineralocorticoid Receptor Blockade in Children with Chronic Kidney Allograft Nephropathy

Mara Medeiros; Luis Velásquez-Jones; Ana María Hernández; Guillermo Ramón-García; Saúl Valverde; Yolanda Fuentes; Arindal Vargas; Mauricio Patiño; Rosalba Pérez-Villalva; Juan Antonio Ortega-Trejo; Jonatan Barrera-Chimal; Norma A. Bobadilla

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES We showed that mineralocorticoid receptor blockade (MRB) prevented acute and chronic cyclosporine nephropathy (CsA-Nx) in the rat. The aim of this translational study was to investigate the effect of long-term eplerenone administration on renal allograft function in children with biopsy-proven chronic allograft nephropathy (CAN). DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS Renal transplant children <18 years, biopsy-proven CAN, and a GFR>40 ml/min per 1.73 m2 were included. Patients with BK virus active nephritis, recurrence of renal disease, GFR decline in previous 3 months, or treated with calcium antagonists or antifungal drugs were excluded. They were randomized to receive placebo (n=10) or eplerenone 25 mg/d for 24 months (n=13). Visits were scheduled at baseline, 6, 12, and 24 months. At each period, a complete clinical examination was performed and blood and urine samples were taken. Urine creatinine, 8-hydroxylated-guanosine, heat shock protein 72 (HSP72), and kidney injury molecule (KIM-1) levels were also assessed. In kidney biopsy samples, the tubulo-interstitial area affected by fibrosis (TIF) and glomerulosclerosis were measured at baseline and after 24 months. RESULTS The baseline eGFR was 80±6 in the placebo and 86±6 ml/min per 1.73 m2 in the eplerenone group; at 24 months it was 66±8 and 81±7 ml/min per 1.73 m2, respectively (P=0.33; 95% confidence intervals, -18 to 33 at baseline, and -11 to 40 after 24 months). The albumin-to-creatinine ratio was 110±74 in the placebo, and 265±140 mg/g in the eplerenone group; and after 24 months it was 276±140 and 228±88 mg/g, respectively (P=0.15; 95% confidence intervals, -283 to 593, and -485 to 391, respectively). In addition, the placebo exhibited a greater TIF, glomerulosclerosis, and urinary HSP72 compared with the eplerenone group. CONCLUSIONS Although this study was underpowered to provide definitive evidence that long-term eplerenone administration attenuates the progression of CAN in pediatric transplant patients, it encourages testing the potential benefit of MRB in this pediatric population.

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Dive into the Rosalba Pérez-Villalva's collaboration.

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Norma A. Bobadilla

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Jonatan Barrera-Chimal

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Gerardo Gamba

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Norma Uribe

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Roxana Rodríguez-Romo

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Luis E. Morales-Buenrostro

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Cesar Cortés-González

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Cristino Cruz

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Victoria Ramírez

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Ixchel Lima-Posada

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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