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Dive into the research topics where Yolanda Pazos is active.

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Featured researches published by Yolanda Pazos.


Endocrine-related Cancer | 2009

Obestatin stimulates Akt signalling in gastric cancer cells through β-arrestin-mediated epidermal growth factor receptor transactivation

Carlos J. Álvarez; María Lodeiro; Marily Theodoropoulou; Jesus P. Camiña; Felipe F. Casanueva; Yolanda Pazos

Obestatin was identified as a gut peptide encoded by the ghrelin gene that interacts with the G protein-coupled receptor, GPR39. In this work, a sequential analysis of its transmembrane signalling pathway has been undertaken to characterize the intracellular mechanisms responsible for Akt activation. The results show that Akt activation requires the phosphorylation of T308 in the A-loop by the phosphoinositide-dependent kinase 1 (PDK1) and S473 within the HM by the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) kinase complex 2 (mTORC2: Rictor, mLST8, mSin1, mTOR kinase) with participation neither of G(i)(/o)-protein nor Gbetagamma dimers. Obestatin induces the association of GPR39/beta-arrestin 1/Src signalling complex resulting in the transactivation of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and downstream Akt signalling. Upon administration of obestatin, phosphorylation of mTOR (S2448) and p70S6K1 (T389) rise with a time course that parallels that of Akt activation. Based on the experimental data obtained, a signalling pathway involving a beta-arrestin 1 scaffolding complex and EGFR to activate Akt signalling is proposed.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

The Obestatin/GPR39 System Is Up-regulated by Muscle Injury and Functions as an Autocrine Regenerative System

Uxía Gurriarán-Rodríguez; Icía Santos-Zas; Omar Al-Massadi; Carlos S. Mosteiro; Daniel Beiroa; Ruben Nogueiras; Ana B. Crujeiras; Luisa M. Seoane; José Señarís; Tomás García-Caballero; Rosalía Gallego; Felipe F. Casanueva; Yolanda Pazos; Jesus P. Camiña

Background: Satellite cell activation is orchestrated by several signals, which induce their differentiation into skeletal muscle fibers. Results: Obestatin and the GPR39 receptor exert an autocrine role on the control of myogenesis. Conclusion: Our data indicate that obestatin/GPR39 is an injury-regulated signal that functions as a myogenic regenerative system. Significance: Strategies to enhance obestatin-mediated signaling could be useful in treating trauma-induced muscle injuries and skeletal muscle myopathies. The maintenance and repair of skeletal muscle are attributable to an elaborate interaction between extrinsic and intrinsic regulatory signals that regulate the myogenic process. In the present work, we showed that obestatin, a 23-amino acid peptide encoded by the ghrelin gene, and the GPR39 receptor are expressed in rat skeletal muscle and are up-regulated upon experimental injury. To define their roles in muscle regeneration, L6E9 cells were used to perform in vitro assays. For the in vivo assays, skeletal muscle tissue was obtained from male rats and maintained under continuous subcutaneous infusion of obestatin. In differentiating L6E9 cells, preproghrelin expression and correspondingly obestatin increased during myogenesis being sustained throughout terminal differentiation. Autocrine action was demonstrated by neutralization of the endogenous obestatin secreted by differentiating L6E9 cells using a specific anti-obestatin antibody. Knockdown experiments by preproghrelin siRNA confirmed the contribution of obestatin to the myogenic program. Furthermore, GPR39 siRNA reduced obestatin action and myogenic differentiation. Exogenous obestatin stimulation was also shown to regulate myoblast migration and proliferation. Furthermore, the addition of obestatin to the differentiation medium increased myogenic differentiation of L6E9 cells. The relevance of the actions of obestatin was confirmed in vivo by the up-regulation of Pax-7, MyoD, Myf5, Myf6, myogenin, and myosin heavy chain (MHC) in obestatin-infused rats when compared with saline-infused rats. These data elucidate a novel mechanism whereby the obestatin/GPR39 system is coordinately regulated as part of the myogenic program and operates as an autocrine signal regulating skeletal myogenesis.


Journal of Endocrinology | 2011

Preproghrelin expression is a key target for insulin action on adipogenesis

Uxía Gurriarán-Rodríguez; Omar Al-Massadi; Ana B. Crujeiras; Carlos S. Mosteiro; María Amil-Diz; Daniel Beiroa; Ruben Nogueiras; Luisa M. Seoane; Rosalía Gallego; Yolanda Pazos; Felipe F. Casanueva; Jesus P. Camiña

This study aimed to investigate the role of preproghrelin-derived peptides in adipogenesis. Immunocytochemical analysis of 3T3-L1 adipocyte cells showed stronger preproghrelin expression compared with that observed in 3T3-L1 preadipocyte cells. Insulin promoted this expression throughout adipogenesis identifying mTORC1 as a critical downstream substrate for this profile. The role of preproghrelin-derived peptides on the differentiation process was supported by preproghrelin knockdown experiments, which revealed its contribution to adipogenesis. Neutralization of endogenous O-acyl ghrelin (acylated ghrelin), unacylated ghrelin, and obestatin by specific antibodies supported their adipogenic potential. Furthermore, a parallel increase in the expression of ghrelin-associated enzymatic machinery, prohormone convertase 1/3 (PC1/3) and membrane-bound O-acyltransferase 4 (MBOAT4), was dependent on the expression of preproghrelin in the course of insulin-induced adipogenesis. The coexpression of preproghrelin system and their receptors, GHSR1a and GPR39, during adipogenesis supports an autocrine/paracrine role for these peptides. Preproghrelin, PC1/3, and MBOAT4 exhibited dissimilar expression depending on the white fat depot, revealing their regulation in a positive energy balance situation in mice. The results underscore a key role for preproghrelin-derived peptides on adipogenesis through an autocrine/paracrine mechanism.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2009

Role of obestatin on growth hormone secretion: an in vitro approach.

Yolanda Pazos; Carlos J. Álvarez; Jesus P. Camiña; Omar Al-Massadi; Luisa M. Seoane; Felipe F. Casanueva

Obestatin, the ghrelin-associated peptide, showed to activate MAPK signaling with no effect on Akt nor cell proliferating activity in rat tumor somatotroph cells (growth cells, GC). A sequential analysis of the obestatin transmembrane signaling pathway indicated a route involving the consecutive activation of G(i), PI3k, novel PKCepsilon, and Src for ERK1/2 activation. Furthermore, obestatin treatment triggers growth hormone (GH) release in the first 30min, being more acute at 15min. At 1h, obestatin treated cells showed the same levels in GH secretion than controls. Added to this functionality, obestatin was secreted by GC cells. Based on the capacity to stimulate GH release from somatotroph cells, obestatin may act directly in the pituitary through an autocrine/paracrine mechanism.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Distinct phosphorylation sites on the ghrelin receptor, GHSR1a, establish a code that determines the functions of ß-arrestins

Mónica Bouzo-Lorenzo; Icía Santo-Zas; María Lodeiro; Ruben Nogueiras; Felipe F. Casanueva; Marián Castro; Yolanda Pazos; Andrew B. Tobin; Adrian J. Butcher; Jesus P. Camiña

The growth hormone secretagogue receptor, GHSR1a, mediates the biological activities of ghrelin, which includes the secretion of growth hormone, as well as the stimulation of appetite, food intake and maintenance of energy homeostasis. Mapping phosphorylation sites on GHSR1a and knowledge of how these sites control specific functional consequences unlocks new strategies for the development of therapeutic agents targeting individual functions. Herein, we have identified the phosphorylation of different sets of sites within GHSR1a which engender distinct functionality of ß-arrestins. More specifically, the Ser362, Ser363 and Thr366 residues at the carboxyl-terminal tail were primarily responsible for ß-arrestin 1 and 2 binding, internalization and ß-arrestin-mediated proliferation and adipogenesis. The Thr350 and Ser349 are not necessary for ß-arrestin recruitment, but are involved in the stabilization of the GHSR1a-ß-arrestin complex in a manner that determines the ultimate cellular consequences of ß-arrestin signaling. We further demonstrated that the mitogenic and adipogenic effect of ghrelin were mainly dependent on the ß-arrestin bound to the phosphorylated GHSR1a. In contrast, the ghrelin function on GH secretion was entirely mediated by G protein signaling. Our data is consistent with the hypothesis that the phosphorylation pattern on the C terminus of GHSR1a determines the signaling and physiological output.


Oncotarget | 2016

The role of the obestatin/GPR39 system in human gastric adenocarcinomas

Begoña O. Alén; Saul Leal-lopez; María Otero Alén; Patricia Viaño; Victoria García-Castro; Carlos S. Mosteiro; Andrés Beiras; Felipe F. Casanueva; Rosalía Gallego; Tomás García-Caballero; Jesus P. Camiña; Yolanda Pazos

Obestatin, a 23-amino acid peptide encoded by the ghrelin gene, and the GPR39 receptor were reported to be involved in the control of mitogenesis of gastric cancer cell lines; however, the relationship between the obestatin/GPR39 system and gastric cancer progression remains unknown. In the present study, we determined the expression levels of the obestatin/GPR39 system in human gastric adenocarcinomas and explored their potential functional roles. Twenty-eight patients with gastric adenocarcinomas were retrospectively studied, and clinical data were obtained. The role of obestatin/GPR39 in gastric cancer progression was studied in vitro using the human gastric adenocarcinoma AGS cell line. Obestatin exogenous administration in these GPR39-bearing cells deregulated the expression of several hallmarks of the epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and angiogenesis. Moreover, obestatin signaling promoted phenotypic changes via GPR39, increasingly impacting on the cell morphology, proliferation, migration and invasion of these cells. In healthy human stomachs, obestatin expression was observed in the neuroendocrine cells and GPR39 expression was localized mainly in the chief cells of the oxyntic glands. In human gastric adenocarcinomas, no obestatin expression was found; however, an aberrant pattern of GPR39 expression was discovered, correlating to the dedifferentiation of the tumor. Altogether, our data strongly suggest the involvement of the obestatin/GPR39 system in the pathogenesis and/or clinical outcome of human gastric adenocarcinomas and highlight the potential usefulness of GPR39 as a prognostic marker in gastric cancer.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Obestatin controls skeletal muscle fiber-type determination

Icía Santos-Zas; Tania Cid-Díaz; Jessica González-Sánchez; Uxía Gurriarán-Rodríguez; Carlos Seoane-Mosteiro; Begoña Porteiro; Ruben Nogueiras; Xesús Casabiell; José Luis Relova; Rosalía Gallego; Vincent Mouly; Yolanda Pazos; Jesus P. Camiña

Obestatin/GPR39 signaling stimulates skeletal muscle growth and repair by inducing both G-protein-dependent and -independent mechanisms linking the activated GPR39 receptor with distinct sets of accessory and effector proteins. In this work, we describe a new level of activity where obestatin signaling plays a role in the formation, contractile properties and metabolic profile of skeletal muscle through determination of oxidative fiber type. Our data indicate that obestatin regulates Mef2 activity and PGC-1α expression. Both mechanisms result in a shift in muscle metabolism and function. The increase in Mef2 and PGC-1α signaling activates oxidative capacity, whereas Akt/mTOR signaling positively regulates myofiber growth. Taken together, these data indicate that the obestatin signaling acts on muscle fiber-type program in skeletal muscle.


Journal of Cachexia, Sarcopenia and Muscle | 2017

Obestatin controls the ubiquitin–proteasome and autophagy–lysosome systems in glucocorticoid-induced muscle cell atrophy

Tania Cid-Díaz; Icía Santos-Zas; Jessica González-Sánchez; Uxía Gurriarán-Rodríguez; Carlos S. Mosteiro; Xesús Casabiell; Tomás García-Caballero; Vincent Mouly; Yolanda Pazos; Jesus P. Camiña

Many pathological states characterized by muscle atrophy are associated with an increase in circulating glucocorticoids and poor patient prognosis, making it an important target for treatment. The development of treatments for glucocorticoid‐induced and wasting disorder‐related skeletal muscle atrophy should be designed based on how the particular transcriptional program is orchestrated and how the balance of muscle protein synthesis and degradation is deregulated. Here, we investigated whether the obestatin/GPR39 system, an autocrine/paracrine signaling system acting on myogenesis and with anabolic effects on the skeletal muscle, could protect against glucocorticoid‐induced muscle cell atrophy.


Journal of Cachexia, Sarcopenia and Muscle | 2018

Improvement of Duchenne muscular dystrophy phenotype following obestatin treatment: Obestatin for focal treatment of dystrophic muscles

Jessica González-Sánchez; Agustin Sanchez-Temprano; Tania Cid-Díaz; Regina Pabst-Fernández; Carlos S. Mosteiro; Rosalía Gallego; Ruben Nogueiras; Xesús Casabiell; Gillian Butler-Browne; Vincent Mouly; José Luis Relova; Yolanda Pazos; Jesus P. Camiña

This study was performed to test the therapeutic potential of obestatin, an autocrine anabolic factor regulating skeletal muscle repair, to ameliorate the Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) phenotype.


Vitamins and Hormones Series | 2007

Basic aspects of ghrelin action.

Yolanda Pazos; Felipe F. Casanueva; Jesus P. Camiña

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Jesus P. Camiña

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Rosalía Gallego

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Ruben Nogueiras

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Carlos J. Álvarez

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Luisa M. Seoane

University of Santiago de Compostela

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