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Dive into the research topics where Sihara Perez-Romero is active.

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Featured researches published by Sihara Perez-Romero.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2012

Craniopharyngiomas Express Embryonic Stem Cell Markers (SOX2, OCT4, KLF4, and SOX9) as Pituitary Stem Cells but Do Not Coexpress RET/GFRA3 Receptors

Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira; Carmen Sáez; Esther Diaz-Rodriguez; Sihara Perez-Romero; Ana Senra; Carlos Dieguez; Miguel A. Japón; Clara V. Alvarez

CONTEXT Adult stem cells maintain some markers expressed by embryonic stem cells and express other specific markers depending on the organ where they reside. Recently, stem/progenitor cells in the rodent and human pituitary have been characterized as expressing GFRA2/RET, PROP1, and stem cell markers such as SOX2 and OCT4 (GPS cells). OBJECTIVE Our objective was to detect other specific markers of the pituitary stem cells and to investigate whether craniopharyngiomas (CRF), a tumor potentially derived from Rathkes pouch remnants, express similar markers as normal pituitary stem cells. DESIGN We conducted mRNA and Western blot studies in pituitary extracts, and immunohistochemistry and immunofluorescence on sections from normal rat and human pituitaries and 20 CRF (18 adamantinomatous and two papillary). RESULTS Normal pituitary GPS stem cells localized in the marginal zone (MZ) express three key embryonic stem cell markers, SOX2, OCT4, and KLF4, in addition to SOX9 and PROP1 and β-catenin overexpression. They express the RET receptor and its GFRA2 coreceptor but also express the coreceptor GFRA3 that could be detected in the MZ of paraffin pituitary sections. CRF maintain the expression of SOX2, OCT4, KLF4, SOX9, and β-catenin. However, RET and GFRA3 expression was altered in CRF. In 25% (five of 20), both RET and GFRA3 were detected but not colocalized in the same cells. The other 75% (15 of 20) lose the expression of RET, GFRA3, or both proteins simultaneously. CONCLUSIONS Human pituitary adult stem/progenitor cells (GPS) located in the MZ are characterized by expression of embryonic stem cell markers SOX2, OCT4, and KLF4 plus the specific pituitary embryonic factor PROP1 and the RET system. Redundancy in RET coreceptor expression (GFRA2 and GFRA3) suggest an important systematic function in their physiological behavior. CRF share the stem cell markers suggesting a common origin with GPS. However, the lack of expression of the RET/GFRA system could be related to the cell mislocation and deregulated growth of CRF.


Oncogene | 2012

Direct promoter induction of p19Arf by Pit-1 explains the dependence receptor RET/Pit-1/p53-induced apoptosis in the pituitary somatotroph cells

Esther Diaz-Rodriguez; Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira; Sihara Perez-Romero; Ana Senra; C Cañibano; Ignacio Palmero; M G Borrello; Carlos Dieguez; Clara V. Alvarez

Somatotrophs produce growth hormone (GH) and are the most abundant secretory cells of the pituitary. Somatotrophs express the transcription factor Pit-1 and the dependence receptor RET, its co-receptor GFRa1 and ligand GDNF. Pit-1 is a transcription factor essential for somatotroph proliferation and differentiation and for GH expression. GDNF represses excess Pit-1 expression preventing excess GH. In the absence of GDNF, RET behaves as a dependence receptor, becomes intracellularly processed and induces strong Pit-1 expression leading to p53 accumulation and apoptosis. How accumulation of Pit-1 leads to p53 expression is unknown. We have unveiled the relationship of Pit-1 with the p19Arf gene. There is a parallel correlation of RET processing, Pit-1 increase and ARF protein and mRNA expression. Interfering the pathway with RET, Pit-1 or p19Arf siRNA blocked apoptosis. We have found a Pit-1 DNA-binding element within the ARF promoter. Pit-1 directly regulates the CDKN2A locus and binds to the p19Arft promoter inducing p19Arf gene expression. The Pit-1-binding element is conserved in rodents and humans. RET/Pit-1 induces p19Arf/p53 and apoptosis not only in a somatotroph cell line but also in primary cultures of pituitary somatotrophs, where ARF siRNA interference also blocks p53 and apoptosis. Analyses of the somatotrophs in whole pituitaries supported the above findings. Thus Pit-1, a differentiation factor, activates the oncogene-induced apoptosis (OIA) pathway as oncogenes exerting a tight control in somatotrophs to prevent the disease due to excess of GH (insulin-resistance, metabolic disease, acromegaly).


Frontiers of Hormone Research | 2010

Functional Role of the RET Dependence Receptor, GFRa Co-Receptors and Ligands in the Pituitary

Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira; Esther Diaz-Rodriguez; María E.R. García-Rendueles; Joana S. Rodrigues; Sihara Perez-Romero; Susana B. Bravo; Clara V. Alvarez

The RET receptor is a tyrosine kinase receptor implicated in kidney and neural development. In the adenopituitary RET and the co-receptor GFRa1 are expressed exclusively in the somatotrophs secreting GH. RET is implicated in a clever pathway to maintain at physiological levels the number of somatotrophs and the GH production. Thus, in absence of its ligand GDNF, RET induces apoptosis through massive expression of Pit-1 leading to p53 accumulation. In the presence of the ligand GDNF, RET activates its tyrosine kinase and promotes survival at the expense of reducing Pit-1 expression and downregulating GH. Recent data suggest that RET can also have a second role in pituitary plasticity through a second co-receptor GFRa2.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2013

Humanized Medium (h7H) Allows Long-Term Primary Follicular Thyroid Cultures From Human Normal Thyroid, Benign Neoplasm, and Cancer

Susana B. Bravo; María E.R. García-Rendueles; Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles; Joana S. Rodrigues; Sihara Perez-Romero; Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira; Maria Suarez-Fariña; Francisco Barreiro; Barbara Czarnocka; Ana Senra; Maria V. Lareu; Javier Rodríguez-García; José Cameselle-Teijeiro; Clara V. Alvarez

CONTEXT Mechanisms of thyroid physiology and cancer are principally studied in follicular cell lines. However, human thyroid cancer lines were found to be heavily contaminated by other sources, and only one supposedly normal-thyroid cell line, immortalized with SV40 antigen, is available. In primary culture, human follicular cultures lose their phenotype after passage. We hypothesized that the loss of the thyroid phenotype could be related to culture conditions in which human cells are grown in medium optimized for rodent culture, including hormones with marked differences in its affinity for the relevant rodent/human receptor. OBJECTIVE The objective of the study was to define conditions that allow the proliferation of primary human follicular thyrocytes for many passages without losing phenotype. METHODS Concentrations of hormones, transferrin, iodine, oligoelements, antioxidants, metabolites, and ethanol were adjusted within normal homeostatic human serum ranges. Single cultures were identified by short tandem repeats. Human-rodent interspecies contamination was assessed. RESULTS We defined an humanized 7 homeostatic additives medium enabling growth of human thyroid cultures for more than 20 passages maintaining thyrocyte phenotype. Thyrocytes proliferated and were grouped as follicle-like structures; expressed Na+/I- symporter, pendrin, cytokeratins, thyroglobulin, and thyroperoxidase showed iodine-uptake and secreted thyroglobulin and free T3. Using these conditions, we generated a bank of thyroid tumors in culture from normal thyroids, Graves hyperplasias, benign neoplasms (goiter, adenomas), and carcinomas. CONCLUSIONS Using appropriate culture conditions is essential for phenotype maintenance in human thyrocytes. The bank of thyroid tumors in culture generated under humanized humanized 7 homeostatic additives culture conditions will provide a much-needed tool to compare similarly growing cells from normal vs pathological origins and thus to elucidate the molecular basis of thyroid disease.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2010

Expression of exogenous proteins and short hairpin RNAs in human primary thyrocytes

Susana B. Bravo; María E.R. García-Rendueles; Sihara Perez-Romero; José Cameselle-Teijeiro; Joana S. Rodrigues; Francisco Barreiro; Clara V. Alvarez

Recently, it has been shown that commercial human thyroid lines were in fact derived from colon, mammary carcinoma, or melanoma. Others have demonstrated the absence of a common pattern of gene expression between available thyroid cancer cell lines and tumors from patients. Thus, it is important to use several primary cells with a common pathological origin to achieve reproducible results, and it is necessary to find common methods for manipulation of protein expression in such various cultures. We have standardized a transfection method for efficient expression of exogenous proteins in human primary thyroid cultures. We compared lipid-based techniques with three electroporation systems (Electroporator PulseAgile [PA]-4000, Microporator MP-100, and Nucleofector II). Nucleofection was unquestionably the most efficient even for promoter regulation studies, and it was effective in cultures from different origins as normal thyroid, papillary carcinoma, or lymphoid node metastasis. We also standardized, through lentiviral infection, the short hairpin RNA downregulation of protein expression generating human thyrocytes with low levels of p27KIP1 as a model system.


Oncogene | 2017

Rewiring of the apoptotic TGF-β-SMAD/NFκB pathway through an oncogenic function of p27 in human papillary thyroid cancer

Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles; J S Rodrigues; M E R Garcia-Rendueles; M Suarez-Fariña; Sihara Perez-Romero; Francisco Barreiro; I Bernabeu; J Rodriguez-Garcia; L Fugazzola; T Sakai; F Liu; José Cameselle-Teijeiro; Susana B. Bravo; Clara V. Alvarez

Papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC), the most frequent thyroid cancer, is characterized by low proliferation but no apoptosis, presenting frequent lymph-node metastasis. Papillary thyroid carcinoma overexpress transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-β). In human cells, TGF-β has two opposing actions: antitumoral through pro-apoptotic and cytostatic activities, and pro-tumoral promoting growth and metastasis. The switch converting TGF-β from a tumor-suppressor to tumor-promoter has not been identified. In the current study, we have quantified a parallel upregulation of TGF-β and nuclear p27, a CDK2 inhibitor, in samples from PTC. We established primary cultures from follicular epithelium in human homeostatic conditions (h7H medium). TGF-β-dependent cytostasis occurred in normal and cancer cells through p15/CDKN2B induction. However, TGF-β induced apoptosis in normal and benign but not in carcinoma cultures. In normal thyroid cells, TGF-β/SMAD repressed the p27/CDKN1B gene, activating CDK2-dependent SMAD3 phosphorylation to induce p50 NFκB-dependent BAX upregulation and apoptosis. In thyroid cancer cells, oncogene activation prevented TGF-β/SMAD-dependent p27 repression, and CDK2/SMAD3 phosphorylation, leading to p65 NFκB upregulation which repressed BAX, induced cyclin D1 and promoted TGF-β-dependent growth. In PTC samples from patients, upregulation of TGF-β, p27, p65 and cyclin D1 mRNA were significantly correlated, while the expression of the isoform BAX-β, exclusively transcribed in apoptotic cells, was negatively correlated. Additionally, combined ERK and p65 NFκB inhibitors reduced p27 expression and potentiated apoptosis in thyroid cancer cells while not affecting survival in normal thyroid cells. Our results therefore suggest that the oncoprotein p27 reorganizes the effects of TGF-β in thyroid cancer, explaining the slow proliferation but lack of apoptosis and metastatic behavior of PTC.


Journal of Molecular Endocrinology | 2012

Defining stem cell types: understanding the therapeutic potential of ESCs, ASCs, and iPS cells

Clara V. Alvarez; Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira; María E.R. García-Rendueles; Esther Diaz-Rodriguez; Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles; Sihara Perez-Romero; Tania Vila Vila; Joana S. Rodrigues; Pamela Virginia Lear; Susana B. Bravo


20th European Congress of Endocrinology | 2018

Pituitary cell activation and recruitment in hipothyroidism

Fernando Oroz; Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira; Sihara Perez-Romero; Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles; Clara V. Alvarez


ESE Basic Endocrinology Course on Endocrine and Neuroendocrine Cancer 2016 | 2016

A new chemotherapy combination (U0126+SN50) potentiates apoptosis in thyroid cancer but induced survival in normal thyroid

Joana S. Rodrigues; Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles; María E.R. García-Rendueles; María Suárez Fariña; Sihara Perez-Romero; Ignacio Bernabeu; Javier Rodríguez-García; Laura Fugazzola; Toshiyuki Sakai; Fang Liu; José Cameselle-Teijeiro; Susana B. Bravo; Clara V. Alvarez


ESE Basic Endocrinology Course on Endocrine and Neuroendocrine Cancer 2016 | 2016

Stem cells in pituitary... and in pituitary tumours

Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles; Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira; F Oroz; J S Fernandes; E Aliyev; M Suarez-Farina; Sihara Perez-Romero; Clara V Alvarez

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Clara V. Alvarez

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Montserrat Garcia-Lavandeira

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Angela R. Garcia-Rendueles

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Susana B. Bravo

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Joana S. Rodrigues

University of Santiago de Compostela

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María E.R. García-Rendueles

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Esther Diaz-Rodriguez

University of Santiago de Compostela

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José Cameselle-Teijeiro

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Ana Senra

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Francisco Barreiro

University of Santiago de Compostela

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