162 results on '"Antonio Pérez Pérez"'
Search Results
152. Stem cells and COVID-19: are the human amniotic cells a new hope for therapies against the SARS-CoV-2 virus?
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Rodrigo N. Riedel, Antonio Pérez-Pérez, Víctor Sánchez-Margalet, Cecilia L. Varone, and Julieta L. Maymó
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COVID-19 ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Stem cells ,Stem cell therapy ,Mesenchymal stem cells ,Amnion ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Biochemistry ,QD415-436 - Abstract
Abstract A new coronavirus respiratory disease (COVID-19) caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus, surprised the entire world, producing social, economic, and health problems. The COVID-19 triggers a lung infection with a multiple proinflammatory cytokine storm in severe patients. Without effective and safe treatments, COVID-19 has killed thousands of people, becoming a pandemic. Stem cells have been suggested as a therapy for lung-related diseases. In particular, mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have been successfully tested in some clinical trials in patients with COVID-19. The encouraging results positioned MSCs as a possible cell therapy for COVID-19. The amniotic membrane from the human placenta at term is a valuable stem cell source, including human amniotic epithelial cells (hAECs) and human mesenchymal stromal cells (hAMSCs). Interestingly, amnion cells have immunoregulatory, regenerative, and anti-inflammatory properties. Moreover, hAECs and hAMSCs have been used both in preclinical studies and in clinical trials against respiratory diseases. They have reduced the inflammatory response and restored the pulmonary tissue architecture in lung injury in vivo models. Here, we review the existing data about the stem cells use for COVID-19 treatment, including the ongoing clinical trials. We also consider the non-cellular therapies that are being applied. Finally, we discuss the human amniotic membrane cells use in patients who suffer from immune/inflammatory lung diseases and hypothesize their possible use as a successful treatment against COVID-19.
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- 2021
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153. Sam68 mediates leptin signaling and action in human granulosa cells: possible role in leptin resistance in PCOS
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Teresa Vilariño-García, Antonio Pérez-Pérez, Esther Santamaría-López, Nicolás Prados, Manuel Fernández-Sánchez, and Víctor Sánchez-Margalet
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sam68 ,leptin ,polycystic ovary syndrome (pcos) ,aromatase ,signalling pathways ,Diseases of the endocrine glands. Clinical endocrinology ,RC648-665 - Abstract
Introduction: Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a complex metabolic disorder associated with ovulatory dysfunction, hyperandrogenism, obesity, and insulin resistance, that leads to subfertility. Sam68 is an RNA-binding protein with signaling functions that is ubiquitously expressed, including gonads. Sam68 is recruited to leptin signaling, mediating different leptin actions. Objective: We aimed to investigate the role of Sam68 in leptin signaling, mediating the effect on aromatase expression in granulosa cells and the posibl e implication of Sam68 in the leptin resistance in PCOS. Materials and methods: Granulosa cells were from healthy donors (n = 25) and women with PCOS (n = 25), within the age range of 20 to 40 years, from Valencian Infertility Institute (IVI), Seville, Spain. Sam68 expression was inhibited by siRNA method and overexpressed by expression vector. Expression level was analysed by qPCR and immunoblot. Statistical significance was assessed by ANOVA follo wed by different post-hoc tests. A P value of
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- 2020
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154. Historia, memoria y víctimas de la violencia política
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José Antonio Pérez Pérez
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Historia ,memoria ,violencia política ,víctimas ,History of Spain ,DP1-402 - Abstract
A lo largo de más de veinte años el Instituto de Historia Social Valentín de Foronda ha desarrollado una intensa actividad académica. En este tiempo su grupo de investigación ha impulsado diversas líneas de trabajo. Una de las más importantes se ha centrado durante los últimos años en el ámbito de la memoria y en su relación con la violencia política y las víctimas, uno de los temas más controvertidos en la historia reciente del País Vasco. A partir de diversas actividades: simposios, jornadas, seminarios, proyectos de investigación y un largo número de publicaciones, nuestro grupo ha analizado la importancia que han tenido todas la cuestiones de la memoria y la violencia política desde una perspectiva histórica, siempre abierta a la aportación de otros profesionales y disciplinas. El presente artículo tan solo constituye un repaso sobre los trabajos más importantes que hemos desarrollado a lo largo de estas dos últimas décadas en este terreno.
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- 2021
155. Obesity and Breast Cancer: Role of Leptin
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Flora Sánchez-Jiménez, Antonio Pérez-Pérez, Luis de la Cruz-Merino, and Víctor Sánchez-Margalet
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leptin signaling ,leptin receptor ,breast cancer ,obesity ,leptin ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Obesity-related breast cancer is an important threat that affects especially post-menopausal women. The link between obesity and breast cancer seems to be relying on the microenvironment generated at adipose tissue level, which includes inflammatory cytokines. In addition, its association with systemic endocrine changes, including hyperinsulinemia, increased estrogens levels, and hyperleptinemia may be key factors for tumor development. These factors may promote tumor initiation, tumor primary growth, tissue invasion, and metastatic progression. Although the relationship between obesity and breast cancer is already established, the different pathophysiological mechanisms involved are not clear. Obesity-related insulin resistance is a well-known risk factor for breast cancer development in post-menopausal women. However, the role of inflammation and other adipokines, especially leptin, is less studied. Leptin, like insulin, appears to be a growth factor for breast cancer cells. There exists a link between leptin and metabolism of estrogens and between leptin and other factors in a more complex network. As a result, obesity-associated hyperleptinemia has been suggested as an important mediator in the pathophysiology of breast cancer. On the other hand, recent data on the paradoxical effect of obesity on cancer immunotherapy efficacy has brought some controversy, since the proinflammatory effect of leptin may help the effect of immune checkpoint inhibitors. Therefore, a better knowledge of the molecular mechanisms that mediate leptin action may be helpful to understand the underlying processes which link obesity to breast cancer in post-menopausal women, as well as the possible role of leptin in the response to immunotherapy in obese patients.
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- 2019
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156. Leptin, Both Bad and Good Actor in Cancer
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Carlos Jiménez-Cortegana, Ana López-Saavedra, Flora Sánchez-Jiménez, Antonio Pérez-Pérez, Jesús Castiñeiras, Juan A. Virizuela-Echaburu, Luis de la de la Cruz-Merino, and Víctor Sánchez-Margalet
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leptin ,obesity ,inflammation ,cancer ,immune system ,immunotherapy ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Leptin is an important regulator of basal metabolism and food intake, with a pivotal role in obesity. Leptin exerts many different actions on various tissues and systems, including cancer, and is considered as a linkage between metabolism and the immune system. During the last decades, obesity and leptin have been associated with the initiation, proliferation and progression of many types of cancer. Obesity is also linked with complications and mortality, irrespective of the therapy used, affecting clinical outcomes. However, some evidence has suggested its beneficial role, called the “obesity paradox”, and the possible antitumoral role of leptin. Recent data regarding the immunotherapy of cancer have revealed that overweight leads to a more effective response and leptin may probably be involved in this beneficial process. Since leptin is a positive modulator of both the innate and the adaptive immune system, it may contribute to the increased immune response stimulated by immunotherapy in cancer patients and may be proposed as a good actor in cancer. Our purpose is to review this dual role of leptin in cancer, as well as trying to clarify the future perspectives of this adipokine, which further highlights its importance as a cornerstone of the immunometabolism in oncology.
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- 2021
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157. Proliferation and survival of human amniotic epithelial cells during their hepatic differentiation.
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Julieta L Maymó, Rodrigo Riedel, Antonio Pérez-Pérez, Marta Magatti, Bernardo Maskin, José Luis Dueñas, Ornella Parolini, Víctor Sánchez-Margalet, and Cecilia L Varone
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Stem cells derived from placental tissues are an attractive source of cells for regenerative medicine. Amniotic epithelial cells isolated from human amnion (hAECs) have desirable and competitive characteristics that make them stand out between other stem cells. They have the ability to differentiate toward all three germ layers, they are not tumorigenic and they have immunosuppressive properties. Although liver transplantation is the best way to treat acute and chronic hepatic failure patients, there are several obstacles. Recently, stem cells have been spotlighted as alternative source of hepatocytes because of their potential for hepatogenic differentiation. In this work, we aimed to study the proliferation and survival of the hAECs during their hepatic differentiation. We have also analyzed the changes in pluripotency and hepatic markers. We differentiated amniotic cells applying a specific hepatic differentiation (HD) protocol. We determined by qRT-PCR that hAECs express significant levels of SOX-2, OCT-4 and NANOG during at least 15 days in culture and these pluripotent markers diminish during HD. SSEA-4 expression was reduced during HD, measured by immunofluorescence. Morphological characteristics became more similar to hepatic ones in differentiated cells and representative hepatic markers significantly augmented their expression, measured by qRT-PCR and Western blot. Cells achieved a differentiation efficiency of 75%. We observed that HD induced proliferation and promoted survival of hAECs, during 30 days in culture, evaluated by 3H-thymidine incorporation and MTT assay. HD also promoted changes in hAECs cell cycle. Cyclin D1 expression increased, while p21 and p53 levels were reduced. Immunofluorescence analysis showed that Ki-67 expression was upregulated during HD. Finally, ERK 1/2 phosphorylation, which is intimately linked to proliferation and cell survival, augmented during all HD process and the inhibition of this signaling pathway affected not only proliferation but also differentiation. Our results suggest that HD promotes proliferation and survival of hAECs, providing important evidence about the mechanisms governing their hepatic differentiation. We bring new knowledge concerning some of the optimal transplantation conditions for these hepatic like cells.
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- 2018
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158. La integración de alumnos con necesidades educativas especiales
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Sandra Ivonne Nieto Martínez and Pedro Antonio Pérez Pérez
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necesidades educativas especiales ,integración educativa ,propuesta curricular adaptada ,educación especial ,Theory and practice of education ,LB5-3640 - Abstract
El presente trabajo analiza las experiencias de un grupo de docentes que atienden aulas regulares, ante el proceso de integración de alumnos con Necesidades Educativas Especiales. El estudio se desarrolla a partir de la observación no participante y las entrevistas interactivas no estructuradas a los docentes.
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- 2012
159. Sam68 Mediates the Activation of Insulin and Leptin Signalling in Breast Cancer Cells.
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Antonio Pérez-Pérez, Flora Sánchez-Jiménez, Teresa Vilariño-García, Luis de la Cruz, Juan A Virizuela, and Víctor Sánchez-Margalet
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Obesity is a well-known risk factor for breast cancer development in postmenopausal women. High insulin and leptin levels seem to have a role modulating the growth of these tumours. Sam68 is an RNA-binding protein with signalling functions that has been found to be overexpressed in breast cancer. Moreover, Sam68 may be recruited to insulin and leptin signalling pathways, mediating its effects on survival, growth and proliferation in different cellular types. We aimed to study the expression of Sam68 and its phosphorylation level upon insulin and leptin stimulation, and the role of Sam68 in the proliferative effect and signalling pathways that are activated by insulin or leptin in human breast adenocarcinoma cells. In the human breast adenocarcinoma cell lines MCF7, MDA-MB-231 and BT-474, Sam68 protein quantity and gene expression were increased upon leptin or insulin stimulation, as it was checked by qPCR and immunoblot. Moreover, both insulin and leptin stimulation promoted an increase in Sam68 tyrosine phosphorylation and negatively regulated its RNA binding capacity. siRNA was used to downregulate Sam68 expression, which resulted in lower proliferative effects of both insulin and leptin, as well as a lower activation of MAPK and PI3K pathways promoted by both hormones. These effects may be partly explained by the decrease in IRS-1 expression by down-regulation of Sam68. These results suggest the participation of Sam68 in both leptin and insulin receptor signaling in human breast cancer cells, mediating the trophic effects of these hormones in proliferation and cellular growth.
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- 2016
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160. Leptin is an anti-apoptotic effector in placental cells involving p53 downregulation.
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Ayelén Rayen Toro, Julieta Lorena Maymó, Federico Matías Ibarbalz, Antonio Pérez-Pérez, Bernardo Maskin, Alicia Graciela Faletti, Víctor Sánchez-Margalet, and Cecilia Laura Varone
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Leptin, a peripheral signal synthetized by the adipocyte to regulate energy metabolism, can also be produced by placenta, where it may work as an autocrine hormone. We have previously demonstrated that leptin promotes proliferation and survival of trophoblastic cells. In the present work, we aimed to study the molecular mechanisms that mediate the survival effect of leptin in placenta. We used the human placenta choriocarcinoma BeWo and first trimester Swan-71 cell lines, as well as human placental explants. We tested the late phase of apoptosis, triggered by serum deprivation, by studying the activation of Caspase-3 and DNA fragmentation. Recombinant human leptin added to BeWo cell line and human placental explants, showed a decrease on Caspase-3 activation. These effects were dose dependent. Maximal effect was achieved at 250 ng leptin/ml. Moreover, inhibition of endogenous leptin expression with 2 µM of an antisense oligonucleotide, reversed Caspase-3 diminution. We also found that the cleavage of Poly [ADP-ribose] polymerase-1 (PARP-1) was diminished in the presence of leptin. We analyzed the presence of low DNA fragments, products from apoptotic DNA cleavage. Placental explants cultivated in the absence of serum in the culture media increased the apoptotic cleavage of DNA and this effect was prevented by the addition of 100 ng leptin/ml. Taken together these results reinforce the survival effect exerted by leptin on placental cells. To improve the understanding of leptin mechanism in regulating the process of apoptosis we determined the expression of different intermediaries in the apoptosis cascade. We found that under serum deprivation conditions, leptin increased the anti-apoptotic BCL-2 protein expression, while downregulated the pro-apoptotic BAX and BID proteins expression in Swan-71 cells and placental explants. In both models leptin augmented BCL-2/BAX ratio. Moreover we have demonstrated that p53, one of the key cell cycle-signaling proteins, is downregulated in the presence of leptin under serum deprivation. On the other hand, we determined that leptin reduced the phosphorylation of Ser-46 p53 that plays a pivotal role for apoptotic signaling by p53. Our data suggest that the observed anti-apoptotic effect of leptin in placenta is in part mediated by the p53 pathway. In conclusion, we provide evidence that demonstrates that leptin is a trophic factor for trophoblastic cells.
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- 2014
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161. La configuración de nuevos espacios de sociabilidad en el ámbito del gran Bilbao de los años 60
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José Antonio PÉREZ PÉREZ
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Modern history, 1453- ,D204-475 - Abstract
RESUMEN: En el marco de las profundas transformaciones económicas y sociales experimentadas en España a partir de los años cincuenta y sobre todo de los sesenta, lo que se conoce como el «milagro español», en este artículo se analizan los cambios que afectan al «milagro vasco» y sus repercusiones en campos y niveles que configuran un nuevo y muy diferente espacio de sociabilidad. La inmigración, la modificación de la fisonomía laboral y urbana, la redistribución funcional del espacio y la ubicación residencial de los grupos sociales condicionaron la evolución de la vida cotidiana y posibilitaron nuevos ámbitos de sociabilidad. Estudiar estos procesos en sus mutuas inter-influencias, así como el papel y la evolución de la Iglesia y los grupos católicos, constituye el núcleo de este trabajo. Palabras Clave. Franquismo, desarrollo económico, inmigración, sociabilidad, Iglesia católica. ABSTRACT: Within the framework of the profound economic and social transformations that took place in Spain after the 1950s and above all in the 1970s, commonly known as the «Spanish Miracle», this article analyses the changes affecting the «Basque Miracle» and its repercussions on the fields and levels that make up a new and very different space of sociability. Immigration, changes in the urban landscape and in labour, the functional redistribution of space and the residential location of the social groups conditioned the evolution of daily life and made possible new spheres of sociability. The study of these processes and how they affect each other, as well as that of the role and evolution of the Church and Catholic groups, form the nucleus of this work. Key Words: Francoism, economic development, immigration, sociability, catholic Church.
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- 2010
162. Role of Leptin in the Activation of Immune Cells
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Patricia Fernández-Riejos, Souad Najib, Jose Santos-Alvarez, Consuelo Martín-Romero, Antonio Pérez-Pérez, Carmen González-Yanes, and Víctor Sánchez-Margalet
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Pathology ,RB1-214 - Abstract
Adipose tissue is an active endocrine organ that secretes various humoral factors (adipokines), and its shift to production of proinflammatory cytokines in obesity likely contributes to the low-level systemic inflammation that may be present in metabolic syndrome-associated chronic pathologies such as atherosclerosis. Leptin is one of the most important hormones secreted by adipocytes, with a variety of physiological roles related to the control of metabolism and energy homeostasis. One of these functions is the connection between nutritional status and immune competence. The adipocyte-derived hormone leptin has been shown to regulate the immune response, innate and adaptive response, both in normal and pathological conditions. The role of leptin in regulating immune response has been assessed in vitro as well as in clinical studies. It has been shown that conditions of reduced leptin production are associated with increased infection susceptibility. Conversely, immune-mediated disorders such as autoimmune diseases are associated with increased secretion of leptin and production of proinflammatory pathogenic cytokines. Thus, leptin is a mediator of the inflammatory response.
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- 2010
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