Ainara Castellanos-Rubio

Ainara Castellanos-Rubio
  • PhD
  • University of the Basque Country

About

84
Publications
7,130
Reads
How we measure 'reads'
A 'read' is counted each time someone views a publication summary (such as the title, abstract, and list of authors), clicks on a figure, or views or downloads the full-text. Learn more
2,067
Citations
Current institution
University of the Basque Country

Publications

Publications (84)
Article
Full-text available
RNA eraldaketek gaixotasun autoimmuneen garapenean duten eragina geroz eta ikertuagoa da, baina oraindik patogenian duten inplikazioa ez dago guztiz argi. METTL1 entzimak katalizatutako m7G metilazioa hainbat gaixotasun autoimmuneekin lotu dira, baina honen eragina 1 motako diabetesean eta eritasun zeliakoan ez da oraindik ikertu. Ikerketa honetan...
Article
Full-text available
The present work represents a significant advancement in the design of magnetic nanoparticles for biomedical applications. Herein, an improved chemical approach is presented, involving the thermal decomposition of various Fe−M bimetallic oleates (where M = Mn, Co, and Zn). Through this method a series of nanoparticles (NPs) with moderate doping lev...
Preprint
Full-text available
m6A RNA modifications and reovirus infections have recently been involved in the development of celiac disease. Moreover, viral infections are linked to alterations in the RNA modification machinery of the host, but the link between these two events has not been studied in the context of autoimmunity driven tissue damage. Here we used an in vitro m...
Article
Full-text available
Immune disease-associated non-coding SNPs, which often locate in tissue-specific regulatory elements, are emerging as key factors in gene regulation. Among these elements, long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) participate in many cellular processes, and their characteristics make these molecules appealing therapeutic targets. In this study, we have studie...
Article
Full-text available
The therapeutic application of drugs often faces challenges due to non-specific distribution, inadequate dosification and degradation, which limits their efficacy. Two primary strategies are employed to overcome these issues: the...
Article
Background Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) can perform tasks of key relevance in fat cells, contributing, when defective, to the burden of obesity and its sequelae. Here, scrutiny of adipose tissue transcriptomes before and after bariatric surgery (GSE53378) granted identification of 496 lncRNAs linked to the obese phenotype. Only expression of linc...
Article
Full-text available
Cytokine mediated sustained inflammation increases the risk to develop different complex chronic inflammatory diseases, but the implicated mechanisms remain unclear. Increasing evidence shows that long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) play key roles in the pathogenesis of inflammatory disorders, while inflammation associated variants are described to affec...
Article
Full-text available
Development of new high throughput array-based techniques and, more recently, next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies have revolutionized our capability to accurately characterize single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) throughout the genome. These advances have facilitated large-scale genome-wide association studies (GWAS), which have served...
Preprint
Full-text available
Inflammatory bowel disease is a chronic inflammatory disorder of the intestine that develops in genetically susceptible individuals and which etiology remains unknown. Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) have emerged as tissue-specific regulators of inflammation. In addition, m6A methylation modulates gene expression in an allele-specific manner, partic...
Article
The useful concepts of reticular chemistry, rigid and predictable metal nodes together with strong and manageable covalent interactions between metal centers and organic linkers, have made the so-called metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) a flourishing area of enormous applicability. In this work, the extension of similar strategies to supramolecularly...
Article
Full-text available
Long noncoding RNAs have been identified in most vertebrates, but the functional characterization of these molecules is challenging, mainly due to the lack of linear sequence homology between species. In this work, we aimed to find functional evolutionary convergent lncRNAs involved in development by screening of k-mer content (nonlinear similarity...
Chapter
Celiac disease is a highly prevalent immune-mediated enteropathy that develops in genetically susceptible individuals expressing HLA-DQ2 or HLA-DQ8 after ingestion of gluten and results in decreased quality of life and increased morbidity. This pathology is triggered by immunogenic peptides generated from gliadins present in gluten, which act on th...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction Most of the disease-associated single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) lie in non- coding regions of the human genome. Many of these variants have been predicted to impact the expression and function of long non-coding RNAs (lncRNA), but the contribution of these molecules to the development of complex diseases remains to be clarified....
Preprint
Full-text available
Cytokine mediated sustained inflammation increases the risk to develop different complex chronic inflammatory diseases, such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Recent studies highlighted the involvement of inflammation associated gene variants in m6A methylation. Moreover, long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) participate in the pathogenesis of inflammat...
Chapter
Celiac disease (CD) is a complex immune disorder of the intestine that developes in genetically susceptible individuals. CD develops as an intolerance to ingested gluten proteins (gliadins, secalins, hordeins and avenins), being gliadin one of the most immunogenic. Here we present a protocol for the preparation of digested gliadin for laboratory us...
Chapter
Celiac disease (CeD) is a complex autoimmune disorder characterized by intestinal immune-derived injury that develops in response to dietary gluten consumption. Human Leucocyte Antigen (HLA) complex haplotype typing is one of the main tests for CeD diagnosis, together with anti-endomysium and anti-transglutaminase autoantibody detection in blood an...
Article
Full-text available
Nanosystems that simultaneously contain fluorescent and magnetic modules can offer decisive advantages in the development of new biomedical approaches. A biomaterial that enables multimodal imaging and contains highly efficient nanoheaters together with an intrinsic temperature sensor would become an archetypical theranostic agent. In this work, we...
Preprint
Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) have been identified in almost all vertebrates, but the functional characterization of these RNA molecules is being challenging, mainly due to the lack of linear sequence homology between species. In this work, we aimed to find evolutionary convergent lncRNAs involved in development by means of k-mer content and second...
Chapter
Genome wide association studies (GWAS) have identified many loci contributing to genetic variation of complex traits. Immune mediated disorders are complex diseases for which hundreds of risk alleles have been identified by GWAS. However, the intergenic location of most of the signals has make it difficult to decipher their implication in disease p...
Article
The main objective of the preparation of the Fe3-xGaxO4 (0.14 ≤ x ≤ 1.35) system was to further the knowledge of the magnetic response of Ga3+-doped magnetite for application as MRI contrast agents. With this purpose, monodisperse nanoparticles between 7 and 10 nm with different amounts of gallium were prepared from an optimized protocol based on t...
Chapter
Technological advances in high-throughput sequencing in combination with antibody enrichment and/or induced nucleotide-specific chemical modifications have accelerated the mapping of epitranscriptomic modifications. However, site-specific detection and quantification of m6A are still technically challenging. Here, we describe a simple RT-QPCR-based...
Article
Full-text available
The currently existing magnetic hyperthermia treatments usually need to employ very large doses of magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) and/or excessively high excitation conditions (H × f > 1010 A/m s) to reach the therapeutic temperature range that triggers cancer cell death. To make this anticancer therapy truly minimally invasive, it is crucial the de...
Article
Full-text available
Objectives Coeliac disease (CD) is a complex autoimmune disorder that develops in genetically susceptible individuals. Dietary gluten triggers an immune response for which the only available treatment so far is a strict, lifelong gluten free diet. Human leucocyte antigen (HLA) genes and several non-HLA regions have been associated with the genetic...
Article
Full-text available
mRNA stability influences gene expression and translation in almost all living organisms, and the levels of mRNA molecules in the cell are determined by a balance between production and decay. Maintaining an accurate balance is crucial for the correct function of a wide variety of biological processes and to maintain an appropriate cellular homeost...
Chapter
Celiac disease (CD) is an immune-mediated disease that develops in genetically susceptible individuals upon gluten exposure. Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) genes in the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) have been described to represent the 40% of the genetic risk to develop CD. Aiming to gain understanding of the genetic involvement in CD, high...
Article
Full-text available
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a chronic inflammatory condition of the gastrointestinal tract that develops due to the interaction between genetic and environmental factors. More than 160 loci have been associated with IBD, but the functional implication of many of the associated genes remains unclear. N6-Methyladenosine (m6A) is the most abun...
Article
Full-text available
Local heat generation from magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) exposed to alternating magnetic fields can revolutionize cancer treatment. However, the application of MNPs as anticancer therapy is limited by serious drawbacks. Foremost among these are the fast uptake and biodegradation of NPs by cancer cells and the unpredictable magnetic behavior of NPs...
Article
Full-text available
Celiac disease (CD) patients present a loss of intestinal barrier function due to structural alterations in the tight junction (TJ) network, the most apical unions between epithelial cells. The association of TJ-related gene variants points to an implication of this network in disease susceptibility. This work aims to characterize the functional im...
Article
Full-text available
N6-methyladenosine (m6A) is the most common and abundant RNA modification. Recent studies have shown its importance in the regulation of several biological processes, including the immune response, and different approaches have been developed in order to map and quantify m6A marks. However, site specific detection of m6A methylation has been techni...
Article
Full-text available
Immune-mediated diseases, such as celiac disease, type 1 diabetes or multiple sclerosis, are a clinically heterogeneous group of diseases that share many key genetic triggers. Although the pathogenic mechanisms responsible for the development of immune mediated disorders is not totally understood, high-throughput genomic studies, such as GWAS and I...
Article
Full-text available
Aims/hypothesis The initial stages of type 1 diabetes are characterised by an aberrant islet inflammation that is in part regulated by the interaction between type 1 diabetes susceptibility genes and environmental factors. Chromosome 16p13 is associated with type 1 diabetes and CLEC16A is thought to be the aetiological gene in the region. Recent ge...
Article
Full-text available
The Human Leucocyte Antigen (HLA) locus and other DNA sequence variants identified in Genome-Wide Association (GWA) studies explain around 50% of the heritability of celiac disease (CD). However, the pathogenesis of CD could be driven by other layers of genomic information independent from sequence variation, such as DNA methylation, and it is poss...
Article
Celiac disease (CD) is a chronic immune-mediated disorder triggered by the consumption of dietary gluten that develops in genetically susceptible individuals. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and RNA sequencing technology (RNAseq) have helped in the detection of genes and genetic mechanisms involved in CD pathogenesis. However, the majority o...
Article
The purpose of this protocol is to fractionate human intestinal tissue obtained by endoscopy into nuclear and cytoplasmic compartments for the localization analysis of specific proteins or protein complexes in different tissue states (i.e., healthy vs. disease). This method is useful for the fractionation of both fresh and frozen intestinal tissue...
Article
Objective: To identify additional celiac disease associated loci in the Major Histocompatibility Complex independent from classical HLA risk alleles (HLA-DR3-DQ2) and to characterize their potential functional impact in celiac disease pathogenesis at the intestinal level. Methods: We performed a high resolution SNP genotyping of the MHC region,...
Article
Full-text available
Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) have emerged as critical regulators of inflammation. To further understand the interaction between inflammatory signaling pathways and lncRNAs, we characterized the function of cardiac and apoptosis-related lncRNA (Carlr), an lncRNA expressed in both mouse and human cells of diverse tissues. Carlr expression is increas...
Chapter
Celiac disease (CD) is a chronic, autoimmune disease of the small intestine with a strong but complex genetic component. The disease is triggered by the consumption of dietary gluten through the presentation of immunogenic gliadin peptides to T helper lymphocytes by HLA-DQ2 and DQ8 heterodimers, which are the major contributors to the genetic risk....
Article
Full-text available
Long noncoding RNAs in inflammation Growing evidence suggests that long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) are important modulators of gene expression. Castellanos-Rubio et al. identified a lncRNA, lnc13, that suppresses inflammatory gene expression in macrophages (see the Perspective by Huarte). Lnc13 interacts with proteins that regulate chromatin accessib...
Article
Full-text available
Positron annihilation lifetime spectroscopy (PALS) provides a direct measurement of the free volume void sizes in polymers and biological systems. This free volume is critical in explaining and understanding physical and mechanical properties of polymers. Moreover, PALS has been recently proposed as a potential tool in detecting cancer at early sta...
Article
Full-text available
It is known that the NFκB route is constitutively upregulated in celiac disease (CD), an immune-mediated disorder of the gut caused by intolerance to ingested gluten. Our aim was to scrutinize the expression patterns of several of the most biologically relevant components of the NFκB route in intestinal biopsies from active and treated patients and...
Data
Amplification efficiency plots for Taqman Copy Number assay pairs (target and reference) calculated from multiplex reactions with input DNA concentrations covering 4 orders of magnitude (0.02–200 ng DNA) per reaction. (TIFF)
Article
Full-text available
The possible implication of copy number variation (CNV) in the genetic susceptibility to human disease needs to be assessed using robust methods that can be applied at a population scale. In this report, we analyze the performance of the two major techniques, quantitative PCR (qPCR) and paralog ratio test (PRT), and investigate the influence of inp...
Article
Celiac disease (CD) involves disturbance of the small-bowel mucosal vascular network, and transglutaminase autoantibodies (TGA) have been related to angiogenesis disturbance, a complex phenomenon probably also influenced by common genetic variants in angiogenesis-related genes. A set of genes with "angiogenesis" GO term identified in a previous exp...
Article
Recent genome wide association studies (GWAS) on coeliac disease (CD) have identified risk loci harbouring genes that fit the accepted pathogenic model and are considered aetiological candidates. Using Taqman single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) and expression assays, the study genotyped 11 SNPs tagging eight GWAS regions (1q31, 2q11-2q12, 3p21, 3q...
Article
Killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIRs) modulate natural killer (NK) and T-cell function by human leukocyte antigen class I interaction and have been implicated in celiac disease (CD). Qualitative expression of 16 KIR genes was determined in biopsies from 22 CD patients at diagnosis and after >2 years on a gluten-free diet (GFD). Quantitat...
Article
Celiac disease (CD) is an immune-mediated disorder of the gut in which innate and adaptive responses are involved. Toll-like receptor (TLR) 2 and TLR4 participate in host defense through antigen recognition, and show altered expression in CD gut mucosa. beta-defensins are inducible antimicrobial peptides, and DEFB gene copy number polymorphisms hav...
Article
An aberrant immune response triggered by dietary gluten is the main driving force underlying celiac disease (CD), but other biologic pathways that are dysregulated also participate in disease development. Genetic variation within these pathways might influence expression, contributing to susceptibility to CD. We have investigated the implication of...
Article
Celiac disease (CD) is a complex, immune-mediated intolerance to gliadin that develops in genetically susceptible individuals. Although the main driving force of the disease is an aberrant autoimmune response, several other pathogenic mechanisms, many still unidentified, are also involved. In order to describe at a network level the alterations pro...
Article
Full-text available
The objective of this study was to identify additional diabetes susceptibility markers in the MHC that could be responsible for the differential diabetogenicity of different HLA-DR3 CEHs. High-resolution SNP genotyping of the MHC was carried out in 15 type 1 diabetes (T1D) patients and 39 non-diabetic controls, homozygous for DR3-DQ2 and with one c...
Article
Celiac disease (CD) is an immunological disorder caused by intolerance to ingested gliadin and other cereal prolamins that has been included in the T(H)1-dominated group of diseases, where IL-12 induced IFNgamma is the major proinflamatory signal. Recently, another linage of T cells has been described, namely T(H)17, characterized by production of...
Article
Full-text available
The functional (R620W) variant of human PTPN22 (protein tyrosine phosphatase non-receptor 22) gene has been implicated in the risk to several autoimmune disorders, including type 1 diabetes, Graves' disease, rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus. In an association study of this single nucleotide polymorphism with celiac disease (CD)...
Article
Full-text available
Celiac disease is a complex, immune-mediated disorder of the intestinal mucosa with a strong genetic component. HLA-DQ2 is the major determinant of risk, but other minor genes, still to be identified, also are involved. We designed a strategy that combines gene expression profiling of intestinal biopsy specimens, linkage region information, and dif...
Article
Toll-like receptors (TLRs) participate in the first line of immune defense through antigen pattern recognition, and ligands include exogenous and host-derived molecules. Coding variants in TLR4 have been associated with autoimmune diseases like ulcerative colitis, Crohn's disease, and rheumatoid arthritis. Our aim was to determine whether these pol...
Article
Full-text available
Genome-wide scans have detected linkage to celiac disease (CD) in several genomic locations, including 19q13.4. Killer immunoglobulin-like receptor (KIR) genes map to the region and encode receptors of natural killer (NK) cells and certain T cells that modulate cytolitic activity through interactions with HLA class I ligands, participating in the i...

Network

Cited By