Sara González-García
Spanish National Research Council
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Featured researches published by Sara González-García.
Nature Genetics | 2010
Pieter Van Vlierberghe; Teresa Palomero; Hossein Khiabanian; Joni Van der Meulen; Mireia Castillo; Nadine Van Roy; Barbara De Moerloose; Jan Philippé; Sara González-García; María L. Toribio; Tom Taghon; Linda Zuurbier; Barbara Cauwelier; Christine J. Harrison; Claire Schwab; Markus Pisecker; Sabine Strehl; Anton W. Langerak; Jozef Gecz; Edwin Sonneveld; Rob Pieters; Elisabeth Paietta; Jacob M. Rowe; Peter H. Wiernik; Yves Benoit; Jean Soulier; Bruce Poppe; Xiaopan Yao; Carlos Cordon-Cardo; Jules P.P. Meijerink
Tumor suppressor genes on the X chromosome may skew the gender distribution of specific types of cancer. T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is an aggressive hematological malignancy with an increased incidence in males. In this study, we report the identification of inactivating mutations and deletions in the X-linked plant homeodomain finger 6 (PHF6) gene in 16% of pediatric and 38% of adult primary T-ALL samples. Notably, PHF6 mutations are almost exclusively found in T-ALL samples from male subjects. Mutational loss of PHF6 is importantly associated with leukemias driven by aberrant expression of the homeobox transcription factor oncogenes TLX1 and TLX3. Overall, these results identify PHF6 as a new X-linked tumor suppressor in T-ALL and point to a strong genetic interaction between PHF6 loss and aberrant expression of TLX transcription factors in the pathogenesis of this disease.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2009
Sara González-García; Marina García-Peydró; Enrique Martín-Gayo; Esteban Ballestar; Manel Esteller; Rafael Bornstein; José Luis de la Pompa; Adolfo A. Ferrando; María L. Toribio
Notch1 activation is essential for T-lineage specification of lymphomyeloid progenitors seeding the thymus. Progression along the T cell lineage further requires cooperative signaling provided by the interleukin 7 receptor (IL-7R), but the molecular mechanisms responsible for the dynamic and lineage-specific regulation of IL-7R during thymopoiesis are unknown. We show that active Notch1 binds to a conserved CSL-binding site in the human IL7R gene promoter and critically regulates IL7R transcription and IL-7R α chain (IL-7Rα) expression via the CSL–MAML complex. Defective Notch1 signaling selectively impaired IL-7Rα expression in T-lineage cells, but not B-lineage cells, and resulted in a compromised expansion of early human developing thymocytes, which was rescued upon ectopic IL-7Rα expression. The pathological implications of these findings are demonstrated by the regulation of IL-7Rα expression downstream of Notch1 in T cell leukemias. Thus, Notch1 controls early T cell development, in part by regulating the stage- and lineage-specific expression of IL-7Rα.
Nature Neuroscience | 2011
Pilar Esteve; Africa Sandonìs; Marcos Cardozo; Jordi Malapeira; Carmen Ibáñez; Inmaculada Crespo; Séverine Marcos; Sara González-García; María L. Toribio; J. Arribas; Akihiko Shimono; Isabel Guerrero; Paola Bovolenta
It is well established that retinal neurogenesis in mouse embryos requires the activation of Notch signaling, but is independent of the Wnt signaling pathway. We found that genetic inactivation of Sfrp1 and Sfrp2, two postulated Wnt antagonists, perturbs retinal neurogenesis. In retinas from Sfrp1−/−; Sfrp2−/− embryos, Notch signaling was transiently upregulated because Sfrps bind ADAM10 metalloprotease and downregulate its activity, an important step in Notch activation. The proteolysis of other ADAM10 substrates, including APP, was consistently altered in Sfrp mutants, whereas pharmacological inhibition of ADAM10 partially rescued the Sfrp1−/−; Sfrp2−/− retinal phenotype. Conversely, ectopic Sfrp1 expression in the Drosophila wing imaginal disc prevented the expression of Notch targets, and this was restored by the coexpression of Kuzbanian, the Drosophila ADAM10 homolog. Together, these data indicate that Sfrps inhibit the ADAM10 metalloprotease, which might have important implications in pathological events, including cancer and Alzheimers disease.
Oncogene | 2013
R Rubio; I Gutierrez-Aranda; A I Sáez-Castillo; A Labarga; M Rosu-Myles; Sara González-García; María L. Toribio; P Menendez; R Rodriguez
Increasing evidence suggests that mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs) carrying specific mutations are at the origin of some sarcomas. We have reported that the deficiency of p53 alone or in combination with Rb (Rb−/− p53−/−) in adipose-derived MSCs (ASCs) promotes leiomyosarcoma-like tumors in vivo. Here, we hypothesized that the source of MSCs and/or the cell differentiation stage could determine the phenotype of sarcoma development. To investigate whether there is a link between the source of MSCs and sarcoma phenotype, we generated p53−/− and Rb−/−p53−/− MSCs from bone marrow (BM-MSCs). Both genotypes of BM-MSCs initiated leiomyosarcoma formation similar to p53−/− and Rb−/−p53−/− ASCs. In addition, gene expression profiling revealed transcriptome similarities between p53- or Rb-p53-deficient BM-MSCs/ASCs and muscle-associated sarcomagenesis. These data suggest that the tissue source of MSC does not seem to determine the development of a particular sarcoma phenotype. To analyze whether the differentiation stage defines the sarcoma phenotype, BM-MSCs and ASCs were induced to differentiate toward the osteogenic lineage, and both p53 and Rb were excised using Cre-expressing adenovectors at different stages along osteogenic differentiation. Regardless the level of osteogenic commitment, the inactivation of Rb and p53 in BM-MSC-derived, but not in ASC-derived, osteogenic progenitors gave rise to osteosarcoma-like tumors, which could be serially transplanted. This indicates that the osteogenic differentiation stage of BM-MSCs imposes the phenotype of in vivo sarcoma development, and that BM-MSC-derived osteogenic progenitors rather than undifferentiated BM-MSCs, undifferentiated ASCs or ASC-derived osteogenic progenitors, represent the cell of origin for osteosarcoma development.
Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology | 2012
Sara González-García; Marina García-Peydró; Juan Alcaín; María L. Toribio
Notch receptors are master regulators of many aspects of development and tissue renewal in metazoans. Notch1 activation is essential for T-cell specification of bone marrow-derived multipotent progenitors that seed the thymus, and for proliferation and further progression of early thymocytes along the T-cell lineage. Deregulated activation of Notch1 significantly contributes to the generation of T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (T-ALL). In addition to Notch1 signals, survival and proliferation signals provided by the IL-7 receptor (IL-7R) are also required during thymopoiesis. Our understanding of the molecular mechanisms controlling stage-specific survival and proliferation signals provided by Notch1 and IL-7R has recently been improved by the discovery that the IL-7R is a transcriptional target of Notch1. Thus, Notch1 controls T-cell development, in part by regulating the stage- and lineage-specific expression of IL-7R. The finding that induction of IL-7R expression downstream of Notch1 also occurs in T-ALL highlights the important contribution that deregulated IL-7R expression and function may have in this pathology. Confirming this notion, oncogenic IL7R gain-of-function mutations have recently been identified in childhood T-ALL. Here we discuss the fundamental role of Notch1 and IL-7R signalling pathways in physiological and pathological T-cell development in mice and men, highlighting their close molecular underpinnings.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2017
Enrique Martín-Gayo; Sara González-García; María J. García-León; Alba Murcia-Ceballos; Juan Alcaín; Marina García-Peydró; Luis M. Allende; Begoña Andrés; Maria Luisa Gaspar; María L. Toribio
A key unsolved question regarding the developmental origin of conventional and plasmacytoid dendritic cells (cDCs and pDCs, respectively) resident in the steady-state thymus is whether early thymic progenitors (ETPs) could escape T cell fate constraints imposed normally by a Notch-inductive microenvironment and undergo DC development. By modeling DC generation in bulk and clonal cultures, we show here that Jagged1 (JAG1)-mediated Notch signaling allows human ETPs to undertake a myeloid transcriptional program, resulting in GATA2-dependent generation of CD34+ CD123+ progenitors with restricted pDC, cDC, and monocyte potential, whereas Delta-like1 signaling down-regulates GATA2 and impairs myeloid development. Progressive commitment to the DC lineage also occurs intrathymically, as myeloid-primed CD123+ monocyte/DC and common DC progenitors, equivalent to those previously identified in the bone marrow, are resident in the normal human thymus. The identification of a discrete JAG1+ thymic medullary niche enriched for DC-lineage cells expressing Notch receptors further validates the human thymus as a DC-poietic organ, which provides selective microenvironments permissive for DC development.
Inmunología | 2009
Sara González-García; María L. Toribio
Abstract Notch receptors regulate many aspects of metazoan development and tissue renewal, such as binary cell-fate decisions, survival, proliferation and differentiation, in different cell types and in a context dependentmanner. In hematopoiesis, Notch signalling actively contributes to Tcell development by driving hematopoietic stem cell- (HSC-) derived progenitors seeding the thymus into the T-cell lineage, while simultaneously avoiding alternative cell fates. According to this critical role, deregulated Notch signalling has important consequences in T-cell generation, survival and proliferation during thymopoiesis, and significantly contributes to the generation of T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemias (T-ALL). Therefore, understanding Notch-dependent molecular pathways that control physiological and pathological development of T-cell progenitors within the thymus has become an intensive area of research in recent years. Several genes and signalling cascades, including c-myc, NF-κB and PI3K, have been identified as critical targets involved in Notch-induced T-cell oncogenesis, and others such as interleukin-7 receptor (IL-7R) have recently been suggested to participate in the process. In this review, we highlight recent studies on Notch that reveal new molecular details about how Notch signalling guides human thymic immigrants along the T-cell lineage and how deregulated activation of Notch can contribute to T cell leukemogenesis, in part by directly regulating expression of the IL-7R.
Blood | 2007
María N. Navarro; Gretel Nusspaumer; Patricia Fuentes; Sara González-García; Juan Alcaín; María L. Toribio
Archive | 2014
María L. Toribio; Sara González-García; Marina García-Peydró; Juan Alcaín; Patricia Fuentes
Archive | 2014
María Luisa aToribio; Sara González-García; Marina García-Peydró; Juan Alcaín; Patricia Fuentes