NUEVAS PROTEINAS DE FUSION (F) DEL VIRUS RESPIRATORIO SINCITIAL HUMANO (HRSV) Y DEL METAPNEUMOVIRUS HUMANO (HMPV) CON PROPIEDADES ANTIGENICAS E INMUNOGENICAS MEJORADAS

SAF2015-67033-R

Nombre agencia financiadora Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad
Acrónimo agencia financiadora MINECO
Programa Programa Estatal de I+D+I Orientada a los Retos de la Sociedad
Subprograma Todos los retos
Convocatoria Proyectos de I+D+I dentro del Programa Estatal Retos de la Sociedad (2015)
Año convocatoria 2015
Unidad de gestión Dirección General de Investigación Científica y Técnica
Centro beneficiario INSTITUTO DE SALUD CARLOS III (ISCIII)
Centro realización CENTRO NACIONAL DE MICROBIOLOGÍA
Identificador persistente http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100003329

Publicaciones

Resultados totales (Incluyendo duplicados): 3
Encontrada(s) 1 página(s)

Apoptosis, Toll-like, RIG-I-like and NOD-like Receptors Are Pathways Jointly Induced by Diverse Respiratory Bacterial and Viral Pathogens

Docta Complutense
  • Martínez, Isidoro
  • Oliveros, Juan
  • Cuesta, Isabel
  • Barrera, Jorge
  • Ausina, Vicente
  • Casals Carro, María Cristina
  • Lorenzo, Alba de
  • García, Ernesto
  • García-Fojeda García-Valdecasas, María Belén
  • Garmendia, Junkal
  • González-Nicolau, Mar
  • Lacoma, Alicia
  • Menéndez, Margarita
  • Moranta, David
  • Nieto, Amelia
  • Ortín, Juan
  • Pérez-González, Alicia
  • Prat, Cristina
  • Ramos-Sevillano, Elisa
  • Regueiro, Verónica
  • Rodriguez-Frandsen, Ariel
  • Solís, Dolores
  • Yuste, José
  • Bengoechea, José
  • Melero, José
Lower respiratory tract infections are among the top five leading causes of human death. Fighting these infections is therefore a world health priority. Searching for induced alterations in host gene expression shared by several relevant respiratory pathogens represents an alternative to identify new targets for wide-range host-oriented therapeutics. With this aim, alveolar macrophages were independently infected with three unrelated bacterial (Streptococcus pneumoniae, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Staphylococcus aureus) and two dissimilar viral (respiratory syncytial virus and influenza A virus) respiratory pathogens, all of them highly relevant for human health. Cells were also activated with bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) as a prototypical pathogen-associated molecular pattern. Patterns of differentially expressed cellular genes shared by the indicated pathogens were searched by microarray analysis. Most of the commonly up-regulated host genes were related to the innate immune response and/or apoptosis, with Toll-like, RIG-I-like and NOD-like receptors among the top 10 signaling pathways with over-expressed genes. These results identify new potential broad-spectrum targets to fight the important human infections caused by the bacteria and viruses studied here.




Apoptosis, Toll-like, RIG-I-like and NOD-like receptors are pathways jointly induced by diverse respiratory bacterial and viral pathogens

Dipòsit Digital de Documents de la UAB
  • Martínez, Isidoro|||0000-0002-9949-9264
  • Oliveros, Juan C.
  • Cuesta, Isabel
  • de la Barrera, Jorge
  • Ausina, Vicente|||0000-0002-1798-9869
  • Casals, Cristina
  • de Lorenzo, Alba
  • García, Ernesto
  • García Fojeda, Belén
  • Garmendia, Junkal
  • González Nicolau, Mar
  • Lacoma, Alicia|||0000-0002-2049-3872
  • Menéndez, Margarita
  • Moranta, D.|||0000-0001-9528-4920
  • Nieto, Amelia
  • Ortín, Juan
  • Pérez González, Alicia
  • Prat i Aymerich, Cristina|||0000-0001-6974-9165
  • Ramos Sevillano, Elisa
  • Regueiro, Verónica
  • Rodriguez Frandsen, Ariel
  • Solís, Dolores
  • Yuste, José|||0000-0001-7996-0837
  • Bengoechea, José A.
  • Melero, José A.
Lower respiratory tract infections are among the top five leading causes of human death. Fighting these infections is therefore a world health priority. Searching for induced alterations in host gene expression shared by several relevant respiratory pathogens represents an alternative to identify new targets for wide-range host-oriented therapeutics. With this aim, alveolar macrophages were independently infected with three unrelated bacterial (Streptococcus pneumoniae, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Staphylococcus aureus) and two dissimilar viral (respiratory syncytial virus and influenza A virus) respiratory pathogens, all of them highly relevant for human health. Cells were also activated with bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) as a prototypical pathogen-associated molecular pattern. Patterns of differentially expressed cellular genes shared by the indicated pathogens were searched by microarray analysis. Most of the commonly up-regulated host genes were related to the innate immune response and/or apoptosis, with Toll-like, RIG-I-like and NOD-like receptors among the top 10 signaling pathways with over-expressed genes. These results identify new potential broad-spectrum targets to fight the important human infections caused by the bacteria and viruses studied here.




Rotavirus Particle Disassembly and Assembly In Vivo and In Vitro

Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC
  • Asensio-Cob, Dunia
  • Rodríguez, Javier M.
  • Luque Buzo, Daniel
Rotaviruses (RVs) are non-enveloped multilayered dsRNA viruses that are major etiologic agents of diarrheal disease in humans and in the young in a large number of animal species. The viral particle is composed of three different protein layers that enclose the segmented dsRNA genome and the transcriptional complexes. Each layer defines a unique subparticle that is associated with a different phase of the replication cycle. Thus, while single- and double-layered particles are associated with the intracellular processes of selective packaging, genome replication, and transcription, the viral machinery necessary for entry is located in the third layer. This modular nature of its particle allows rotaviruses to control its replication cycle by the disassembly and assembly of its structural proteins. In this review, we examine the significant advances in structural, molecular, and cellular RV biology that have contributed during the last few years to illuminating the intricate details of the RV particle disassembly and assembly processes., This work was supported by a grant from the Instituto de Salud Carlos III (PI20CIII-00014) to D.L. D.A.-C. was funded by the Ministry for Science and Innovation (contract FPI BES-2016-079052)., Peer reviewed