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Natalí Guerrero

Natalí Guerrero
  • PhD
  • Professor (Assistant) at Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Facultad de Medicina

About

39
Publications
10,613
Reads
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852
Citations
Current institution
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Facultad de Medicina
Current position
  • Professor (Assistant)
Additional affiliations
January 2014 - present
Panamerican University
Position
  • Professor (Full)
August 2007 - February 2011
Secretaría De Educación Pública
Position
  • Professor (Assistant)

Publications

Publications (39)
Article
Full-text available
Introduction Access to electric light has exposed living organisms to varying intensities of light throughout the 24 h day. Dim light at night (DLAN) is an inappropriate signal for the biological clock, which is responsible for the circadian organization of physiology. During the gestational period, physiological adaptations occur to ensure a succe...
Conference Paper
Circadian rhythm is essential for living beings. This rhythm regulates sleeping and waking patterns, hormone production, eating habits, digestion, and body temperature in humans and other animals. Prolonged use of Light at Night (LatN) has become a factor that can confuse biological clocks. In our research, we utilized ANOVA to perform feature sele...
Article
Desynchronization of circadian rhythms and sleep-wake patterns impacts biochemical, physiological, and behavioral functions, including mental processes. The complex relationship between circadian rhythms and mental health makes it challenging to determine causality between circadian desynchronization and mental disorders. Regarding the fact that ps...
Article
Full-text available
Inhabitants of urban areas are constantly exposed to light at night, which is an important environmental factor leading to circadian disruption. Streetlights filtering light through the windows and night dim light lamps are common sources of dim light at night (DLAN). The female population is susceptible to circadian disruption. The present study i...
Article
Full-text available
Light at night is an emergent problem for modern society. Rodents exposed to light at night develop a loss of circadian rhythms, which leads to increased adiposity, altered immune response, and increased growth of tumors. In female rats, constant light (LL) eliminates the estrous cycle leading to a state of persistent estrus. The suprachiasmatic nu...
Article
Diabetes mellitus type 2 (T2D) complications include brain damage which increases the risk of neurodegenerative diseases and dementia. An early manifestation of neurodegeneration is olfactory dysfunction (OD), which is also presented in diabetic patients. Previously, we demonstrated that OD correlates with IL-1β and miR-146a overexpression in the o...
Article
Full-text available
Microglia is considered the central nervous system (CNS) resident macrophages that establish an innate immune response against pathogens and toxins. However, the recent studies have shown that microglial gene and protein expression follows a cir-cadian pattern; several immune activation markers and clock genes are expressed rhythmically without the...
Article
Full-text available
The olfactory system is responsible for the reception, integration and interpretation of odors. However, in the last years, it has been discovered that the olfactory perception of food can rapidly modulate the activity of hypothalamic neurons involved in the regulation of energy balance. Conversely, the hormonal signals derived from changes in the...
Article
Full-text available
Background Many epidemiological studies revealed that shift work is associated with an increased risk of a number of pathologies, including cardiovascular diseases. An experimental model of shift work in rats has additionally been shown to recapitulate aspects of metabolic disorders observed in human shift workers, including increased fat content a...
Article
Full-text available
Sleep has a major role in learning, memory consolidation, and metabolic function. Although it is known that sleep restriction increases the accumulation of amyloid β peptide (Aβ) and the risk to develop Alzheimer's disease (AD), the mechanism behind these effects remains unknown. In this review, we discuss how chronic sleep restriction induces meta...
Preprint
Full-text available
Many epidemiological studies revealed that shift work is associated with increased risk of cardiovascular diseases. However, the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. An experimental model of shift work in rats has been shown to recapitulate the metabolic disorders observed in human shift workers, and used to demonstrate that restricting...
Article
The circadian system organizes circadian rhythms (biological cycles that occur around 24 h) that couple environmental cues (zeitgebers) with internal functions of the organism. The misalignment between circadian rhythms and external cues is known as chronodisruption and contributes to the development of mental, metabolic and other disorders, includ...
Article
Full-text available
The autonomic nervous system (ANS) modulates the immune response through the engagement of an anti-inflammatory reflex. There is controversy regarding which efferent branch of the ANS, sympathetic or parasympathetic, downregulates the intensity of the inflammatory response. Furthermore, how information about the immune status of the body reaches th...
Article
Individuals who regularly shift their sleep timing, like night and/or shift‐workers suffer from circadian desynchrony and are at risk of developing cardiometabolic diseases and cancer. Also, shift‐work is are suggested to be a risk factor for the development of mood disorders such as the burn out syndrome, anxiety, and depression. Experimental and...
Article
Full-text available
Night-workers, transcontinental travelers and individuals that regularly shift their sleep timing, suffer from circadian desynchrony and are at risk to develop metabolic disease, cancer, and mood disorders, among others. Experimental and clinical studies provide evidence that food intake restricted to the normal activity phase is a potent synchroni...
Article
Full-text available
Restricted intermittent food access to palatable food (PF) induces addiction-like behaviors and plastic changes in corticolimbic brain areas. Intermittent access protocols normally schedule PF to a fixed time, enabling animals to predict the arrival of PF. Because outside the laboratory the presence of PF may occur in a random unpredictable manner,...
Article
The circadian disruption in shift-workers is suggested to be a risk factor to develop overweight and metabolic dysfunction. The conflicting time signals given by shifted activity, shifted food intake and exposure to light at night occurring in the shift-worker are proposed to be the cause for the loss of internal synchrony and the consequent advers...
Article
New Findings What is the central question of this study ? What are the factors influencing day–night variations in postprandial triglycerides? What is the main finding and its importance ? Rats show low postprandial plasma triglyceride concentrations early in the active period that are attributable to a higher uptake by skeletal muscle and brown ad...
Article
Full-text available
Background Light at night creates a conflicting signal to the biological clock and disrupts circadian physiology. In rodents, light at night increases the risk to develop mood disorders, overweight, disrupted energy metabolism, immune dysfunction and cancer. We hypothesized that constant light (LL) in rats may facilitate tumor growth via disrupted...
Article
Circadian disruption is associated with metabolic disturbances such as hepatic-steatosis (HS), obesity and type-2 diabetes. We hypothesized that HS, resulting from constant-light (LL) exposure is due to an inconsistency between signals related to food intake and endocrine driven suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) outputs. Indeed exposing rats to LL indu...
Article
New findings: What is the topic of this review? Both branches of the autonomic nervous system are involved in the regulation of the inflammatory response. We explore how the hypothalamus may influence this process. What advances does it highlight? We analyse how a lipopolysaccharide signal is transmitted to the brain and which areas participate in...
Article
Circadian rhythms are generated by the autonomous circadian clock, the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), and clock genes that are present in all tissues. The SCN times these peripheral clocks, as well as behavioral and physiological processes. Recent studies show that frequent violations of conditions set by our biological clock, such as shift work, j...
Article
Full-text available
Unlabelled: In mammals, daily changes in body temperature (Tb) depend on the integrity of the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN). Fasting influences the Tb in the resting period and the presence of the SCN is essential for this process. However, the origin of this circadian/metabolic influence is unknown. We hypothesized that, not only the SCN but also...
Article
Full-text available
The suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) drives circadian rhythms in behavioral and physiological variables, including the inflammatory response. Shift work is known to disturb circadian rhythms and is associated with increased susceptibility to develop disease. In rodents, circadian disruption due to shifted light schedules (jet lag) induced increased in...
Article
Hepatic circadian transcription, considered to be driven by the liver clock, is largely influenced by food even uncoupling it from the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN). In SCN lesioned rats (SCNx) we determined the influence of a physiological feeding schedule on the entrainment of clock and clock-controlled (CCG) genes in the liver. We show that cloc...
Article
Several studies have shown circadian variations in the response of the immune system suggesting a role of the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN). Here we show that lipopolysaccharide (LPS) administration in the beginning of the active period induced more severe responses in temperature and cytokines than LPS given in the rest period. Moreover night admi...
Article
Full-text available
Timing of metabolic processes is crucial for balanced physiology; many studies have shown the deleterious effects of untimely food intake. The basis for this might be an interaction between the arcuate nucleus (ARC) as the main integration site for metabolic information and the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) as the master clock. Here we show in male...
Article
Full-text available
In the liver, clock genes are proposed to drive metabolic rhythms. These gene rhythms are driven by the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) mainly by food intake and via autonomic and hormonal pathways. Forced activity during the normal rest phase, induces also food intake, thus neglecting the signals of the SCN, leading to conflicting time signals to ta...
Article
The activity of steroid hormones for the efficacy of antineoplastic drugs used in lung cancer treatment has not been explored. We evaluated the influence of 17beta-estradiol on the cytotoxicity of etoposide in a lung cancer cell line (A-549) and determined systemic levels of etoposide in vivoafter pretreatment with this hormone. The effect of 17bet...

Questions

Question (1)
Question
Hi,
I am looking for a rat breast cancer cell line and found many of them at the Accegen website. However I have never heard about them before. Please share with me your experiences.
Thanks

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