Publicaciones

Esta sección incluye una lista de los últimos artículos científicos del IPNA publicados en revistas incluidas en el Science Citation Index (SCI).

En DIGITAL.CSIC, repositorio institucional del CSIC, pueden encontrar el listado completo de artículos científicos desde 1962, así como otras colecciones de interés como congresos, tesis, libros, material divulgativo, etc. del centro. El objetivo de DIGITAL.CSIC es organizar, preservar y difundir en acceso abierto los resultados de nuestra investigación.

En el repositorio institucional del CSIC, pueden encontrar el listado completo de artículos científicos, así como otras colecciones de interés como congresos, tesis, libros, material divulgativo, etc.

Ir a Digital - CSIC

 

Análisis de la Producción Científica del IPNA 2014-2019: análisis bibliométrico realizado a partir de datos recogidos en Scopus y Web of Science.

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Digital CSIC

Mining a Kröhnke Pyridine Library for Anti-Arenavirus Activity

Several arenaviruses cause hemorrhagic fever (HF) disease in humans and represent important public health problems in their endemic regions. In addition, evidence indicates that the worldwide-distributed prototypic arenavirus lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus is a neglected human pathogen of clinical significance. There are no licensed arenavirus vaccines, and current antiarenavirus therapy is limited to an off-label use of ribavirin that is only partially effective. Therefore, there is an unmet need for novel therapeutics to combat human pathogenic arenaviruses, a task that will be facilitated by the identification of compounds with antiarenaviral activity that could serve as probes to identify arenavirus-host interactions suitable for targeting, as well as lead compounds to develop future antiarenaviral drugs. Screening of a combinatorial library of Krönhke pyridines identified compound KP-146 [(5-(5-(2,3-dihydrobenzo[b][1,4] dioxin-6-yl)-4′-methoxy-[1,1′-biphenyl]-3-yl)thiophene-2-carboxamide] as having strong anti-lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) activity in cultured cells. KP-146 did not inhibit LCMV cell entry but rather interfered with the activity of the LCMV ribonucleoprotein (vRNP) responsible for directing virus RNA replication and gene transcription, as well as with the budding process mediated by the LCMV matrix Z protein. LCMV variants with increased resistance to KP-146 did not emerge after serial passages in the presence of KP-146. Our findings support the consideration of Kröhnke pyridine scaffold as a valuable source to identify compounds that could serve as tools to dissect arenavirus-host interactions, as well as lead candidate structures to develop antiarenaviral drugs.

Miranda, Pedro O.; Cubitt, Beatrice; Jacob, Nicholas T.; Janda, Kim D.; De la Torre, Juan C.

ACS Infectious Diseases 4(5): 815-824 (2018)
DOIDigital.CSIC

Mild-Base-Promoted Arylation of (Hetero)Arenes with Anilines

Transition metal-free radical arylation of heteroarenes is achieved at room temperature by simply adding aqueous sodium carbonate to a solution of the corresponding heteroarene and arenediazonium salt, which can even be formed in situ. Such an easy, inexpensive and mild methodology has been optimized and applied to the expeditious modification of interesting molecular cores like naphthylimide or bisthienylcyclopentenes.

Monzón, Diego M.; Santos, Tanausú; Pinacho Crisóstomo, Fernando R.; Martín, Víctor S.; Carrillo Fumero, Romen 

Chemistry - An Asian Journal 13(3): 325-333 (2018)
DOIDigital.CSIC

Chloro-Furanocembranolides from Leptogorgia sp. Improve Pancreatic Beta-Cell Proliferation

Two new chloro-furanocembranolides (1, 2) and two new 1,4-diketo cembranolides (3, 4) were isolated from the crude extract of Leptogorgia sp. together with a new seco-furanocembranolide (5) and the known Z-deoxypukalide (6), rubifolide (7), scabrolide D (8) and epoxylophodione (9). Their structures were determined based on spectroscopic evidence. Four compounds: 1, 2, 7 and 8 were found to activate the proliferation of pancreatic insulin-producing (beta) cells.

Gallardo, Amalia; Díaz-Marrero, Ana R. ; Rosa, José M. de la ; D'Croz, Luis; Perdomo, Germán; Cózar-Castellano, Irene; Darias, Jose; Cueto, Mercedes

Marine Drugs 16(2): 49 (2018)
DOIDigital.CSIC

The road from host-defense peptides to a new generation of antimicrobial drugs

Host-defense peptides, also called antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), whose protective action has been used by animals for millions of years, fulfill many requirements of the pharmaceutical industry, such as: (1) broad spectrum of activity; (2) unlike classic antibiotics, they induce very little resistance; (3) they act synergically with conventional antibiotics; (4) they neutralize endotoxins and are active in animal models. However, it is considered that many natural peptides are not suitable for drug development due to stability and biodisponibility problems, or high production costs. This review describes the efforts to overcome these problems and develop new antimicrobial drugs from these peptides or inspired by them. The discovery process of natural AMPs is discussed, as well as the development of synthetic analogs with improved pharmacological properties. The production of these compounds at acceptable costs, using different chemical and biotechnological methods, is also commented. Once these challenges are overcome, a new generation of versatile, potent and long-lasting antimicrobial drugs is expected.

Boto, Alicia; Pérez de Lastra, José Manuel; González Martín, Concepción C.

Molecules 23(2): 311 (2018)
DOIDigital.CSIC

Cuban cultural heritage: A rebel past for a revolutionary nation

Cuban Cultural Heritage explores the role that cultural heritage and museums played in the construction of a national identity in postcolonial Cuba. Starting with independence from Spain in 1898 and moving through Cuban-American rapprochement in 2014, Pablo Alonso González illustrates how political and ideological shifts have influenced ideas about heritage and how, in turn, heritage has been used by different social actors to reiterate their status, spread new ideologies, and consolidate political regimes.

Unveiling the connections between heritage, power, and ideology, Alonso Gonzalez delves into the intricacies of Cuban history, covering key issues such as Cuba's cultural and political relationships with Spain, the United States, the Soviet Union, and so-called Third World countries; the complexities of Cuba's status as a postcolonial state; and the potential future paths of the Revolution in the years to come. This volume offers a detailed look at the function and place of cultural heritage under socialist states.

Alonso-González, Pablo.

Cuban cultural heritage: A rebel past for a revolutionary nation (2018)
DOIDigital.CSIC

Metal-Free, Site-Selective Peptide Modification by Conversion of “Customizable” Units into β-Substituted Dehydroamino Acids

Our site-selective modification of serine or threonine units in peptides allows the generation of β-substituted dehydroamino acids, which increase peptide resistance to hydrolysis and may improve their biological properties. Both the terminal and internal positions can be modified, and different customizable units can be activated separately. Remarkably, high Z selectivity is achieved, even at internal positions. The conversion involves a one-pot oxidative radical scission/phosphorylation process by using the low-toxicity (diacetoxyiodo)benzene/iodine system as the scission reagent. The resulting α-amino phosphonates undergo a Horner-Wadsworth-Emmons reaction to produce the dehydroamino acid derivatives (in a Z/E ratio of usually >98:2) under mild and metal-free conditions.

Saavedra, Carlos Javier; Hernández, Dácil; Boto, Alicia

Chemistry-A European Journal 24(3): 599-607 (2018)
DOIDigital.CSIC

Disclosing the double mutualist role of birds on Galápagos

Life on oceanic islands deviate in many ways from that on the mainland. Their biodiversity is relatively poor and some groups are well-represented, others not, especially not insects. A scarcity of insects forces birds to explore alternative food, such as nectar and fruit. In this way, island birds may pollinate and disperse seed to an extent unseen on any mainland; they may even first consume floral resources of a plant species and then later harvest the fruit of the same species. Through this biotic reuse, they may act as double mutualists. The latter have never been studied at the level of the network, because they are traditionally considered rare. We sampled pollination and seed-dispersal interactions on Galápagos and constructed a plant-bird mutualism network of 108 plant (12% being double mutualists) and 21 bird species (48% being double mutualists), and their 479 interactions, being either single (95%) or double mutualisms (5%). Double mutualists constitute the core in the pollination-dispersal network, coupling the two link types together. They may also initiate positive feedbacks (more pollination leading to more dispersal), which theoretically are known to be unstable. Thus, double mutualisms may be a necessary, but risky prerequisite to the survival of island biodiversity.

Olesen, Jens M.; Damgaard, Christian F.; Fuster, Francisco; Heleno, Rubén H.; Nogales, Manuel; Rumeu, Beatriz; Trojeslgaard, Kristian; Vargas, Pablo; Traveset, Anna

Scientific Reports 8: 57 (2018)
DOIDigital.CSIC

Metabarcoding of freshwater invertebrates to detect the effects of a pesticide spill

Biomonitoring underpins the environmental assessment of freshwater ecosystems and guides management and conservation. Current methodology for surveys of (macro)invertebrates uses coarse taxonomic identification where species-level resolution is difficult to obtain. Next-generation sequencing of entire assemblages (metabarcoding) provides a new approach for species detection, but requires further validation. We used metabarcoding of invertebrate assemblages with two fragments of the cox1 “barcode” and partial nuclear ribosomal (SSU) genes, to assess the effects of a pesticide spill in the River Kennet (southern England). Operational taxonomic unit (OTU) recovery was tested under 72 parameters (read denoising, filtering, pair merging and clustering). Similar taxonomic profiles were obtained under a broad range of parameters. The SSU marker recovered Platyhelminthes and Nematoda, missed by cox1, while Rotifera were only amplified with cox1. A reference set was created from all available barcode entries for Arthropoda in the BOLD database and clustered into OTUs. The River Kennet metabarcoding produced matches to 207 of these reference OTUs, five times the number of species recognized with morphological monitoring. The increase was due to the following: greater taxonomic resolution (e.g., splitting a single morphotaxon “Chironomidae” into 55 named OTUs); splitting of Linnaean binomials into multiple molecular OTUs; and the use of a filtration-flotation protocol for extraction of minute specimens (meiofauna). Community analyses revealed strong differences between “impacted” vs. “control” samples, detectable with each gene marker, for each major taxonomic group, and for meio- and macrofaunal samples separately. Thus, highly resolved taxonomic data can be extracted at a fraction of the time and cost of traditional nonmolecular methods, opening new avenues for freshwater invertebrate biodiversity monitoring and molecular ecology.

Andújar, Carmelo; Arribas, Paula; Gray, Clare; Bruce, Catharine; Woodward, Guy; Yu, Douglas W.; Vogler, Alfried P.

 

 

 

Molecular Ecology 27(1): 146-166 (2018)
DOIDigital.CSIC

A set of biogenetically interesting polyhalogenated acetogenins from Ptilonia magellanica

Ptilonines A−F, pyranosylmagellanicus D−E and magellenediol are previously undescribed acetogenins isolated from the red alga Ptilonia magellanica. Their structures were determined from spectroscopic evidence. The absolute configuration of the known pyranosylmagellanicus A, was established by derivatization with (R)− and (S)−α−methoxy −α−phenylacetic acids (MPA). Ptilonines exhibit an unusual halogenation pattern, that may confer evolutionary advantages to Ptilonia magellanica, for which a biogenetic origin is proposed. The antimicrobial effect of some of these compounds was evaluated.

Gallardo, Amalia; Cueto, Mercedes; Díaz-Marrero, Ana R. ; Rosa, José M. de la; Fajardo, Víctor; San-Martín, Aurelio,; Darias, José 

Phytochemistry 145: 111-120 (2018)
DOIDigital.CSIC

Community structure of woody plants on islands along a bioclimatic gradient

Understanding patterns of community structure and the causes for their variation can be furthered by comparative biogeographic analyses of island biotas. We used woody plant data at the local scale to investigate variations in species rarity, alpha, beta, and gamma diversity within and between three islands from the oceanic archipelagoes of Azores, Canaries and Mascarene. We used standardized protocols to sample ten 50 m × 50 m forest plots in each of the three islands with contrasting climate and regional species pools: Terceira (Azores), Tenerife (Canaries), and Reunion (Mascarene Islands). Occupancy frequency distributions and species abundance distributions were used to investigate rarity. The partitioning of beta diversity in a distance-decay framework was used to test for spatial patterns of community composition. Rarity was much more pronounced in the highly diverse islands of Tenerife and Reunion than in the regionally poorer island of Terceira. The number of species rose faster with increasing sample area in both Tenerife and Reunion. The slope of the species rank abundance curve was steeper in Terceira whereas the richer island assemblages approached a lognormal model. Compositional changes according to spatial distance were mostly due to replacement of species in Terceira and Reunion. Our results point to important differences in the community structure of Terceira, which is the less diverse and temperate region in comparison to Tenerife and Reunion which are highly diverse.

Borges, Paulo A. V.; Cardoso, Pedro; Fattorini, Simone; Rigal, François; Matthews, Thomas J.; Di Biase, Letizia; Amorim, Isabel R.; Florencio, Margarita; Borda de Água, Luis; Rego, Carla; Pereira, Fernando; Nunes, Rui; Carvalho, Rui; Ferreira, María Teresa; López, Heriberto; Pérez Delgado, Antonio J.; Otto, Rüdiger; Fernández Lugo, Silvia; Nascimento Reyes, Lea de; Caujapé-Castells, Juli; Casquet, Juliane; Danflous, Samuel; Fournel, Jacques; Sadeyen, Anne-Marie; Elias, Rui B.; Fernández-Palacios, José María; Oromí, Pedro; Thébaud, Christophe; Strasberg, Dominique; Emerson, Brent C.

Frontiers of Biogeography 10(3-4): e40295 (2018)
DOIDigital.CSIC