Automated Author ProfileBayón, Gustavo F.
Bayón, Gustavo F.
Current S-Index
Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets
Average Dataset Index per Dataset
Average Dataset Index per dataset
Total Datasets
Total datasets for this author
Average FAIR Score
Average FAIR Score per dataset
Total Citations
Total citations to the author's datasets
Total Mentions
Total mentions of the author's datasets
S-Index Interpretation
The S-Index (Sharing Index) is a comprehensive metric that represents the cumulative impact of all your datasets. It is calculated as the sum of Dataset Index scores across all your claimed datasets.
What it means:
- A higher S-index indicates greater overall impact of your datasets relative to typical datasets in their fields of research
- The S-Index grows as you add more datasets or as existing datasets gain more citations and mentions
- It provides a single number to track your research data impact over time
Current S-Index: 2.8 (sum of 7 datasets Dataset Index scores)
More information here.
S-Index Over Time
Cumulative Citations Over Time
Cumulative Mentions Over Time
Datasets
Histone H4 acetylation at Lysine 16 (H4K16ac) is a key epigenetic mark involved in gene regulation, DNA repair and chromatin remodeling, and though it is known to be essential for embryonic development, its role during adult life is still poorly understood. Here we show that this lysine is massively hyperacetylated in peripheral neutrophils. Genome-wide mapping of H4K16ac in terminally differentiated blood cells, along with functional experiments, supported a role for this histone post-translational modification in the regulation of cell differentiation and apoptosis in the hematopoietic system. Furthermore, in neutrophils, H4K16ac was enriched at specific DNA repeats. These DNA regions presented an accessible chromatin conformation and were associated with the cleavage sites that generate the 50 kb DNA fragments during the first stages of programmed cell death. Our results thus suggest that H4K16ac plays a dual role in myeloid cells as it not only regulates differentiation and apoptosis, but it also exhibits a non-canonical structural role in poising chromatin for cleavage at an early stage of neutrophil cell death.
Authors
- Urdinguio, Rocío G. ;
- López, Virginia ;
- Bayón, Gustavo F. ;
- Díaz De La Guardia, Rafael ;
- Sierra, Marta I. ;
- García-Toraño, Estela ;
- Pérez, Raúl F. ;
- García, María G. ;
- Carella, Antonella ;
- Pruneda, Patricia C. ;
- Prieto, Cristina ;
- Dmitrijeva, Marija ;
- Santamarina-Ojeda, Pablo ;
- Belmonte, Thalia ;
- Mangas, Cristina ;
- Diaconu, Elena ;
- Ferrero, Cecilia ;
- Tejedor, Juan Ramón ;
- Fernández-Morera, Juan L. ;
- Bravo, Cristina ;
- Bueno, Clara ;
- Sanjuan-Pla, Alejandra ;
- Rodríguez López, Ramón María ;
- Suarez-Alvarez, Beatriz ;
- López-Larrea, Carlos ;
- Bernal, Teresa ;
- Colado, Enrique ;
- Balbín, Milagros ;
- García-Suarez, Olivia ;
- Chiara, María-Dolores ;
- Sáenz-De-Santa-María, Inés ;
- Rodríguez, Francisco ;
- Pando-Sandoval, Ana ;
- Rodrigo, Luis ;
- Santos, Laura ;
- Salas, Ana ;
- Vallejo-Díaz, Jesús ;
- Carrera, Ana C. ;
- Rico, Daniel ;
- Hernández-López, Inmaculada ;
- Vayá, Amparo ;
- Ricart, José M. ;
- Seto, Edward ;
- Sima-Teruel, Núria ;
- Vaquero, Alejandro ;
- Valledor, Luis ;
- Cañal, Maria Jesus ;
- Pisano, David ;
- Graña-Castro, Osvaldo ;
- Thomas, Tim ;
- Voss, Anne K. ;
- Menéndez, Pablo ;
- Villar-Garea, Ana ;
- Deutzmann, Rainer ;
- Fernández, Agustín F. ;
- Fraga, Mario F.
Patterns of DNA methylation, an important epigenetic modification involved in gene silencing and development, are disrupted in cancer cells. Understanding the functional significance of aberrant methylation in tumors remains challenging, due in part to the lack of suitable tools to actively modify methylation patterns. DNA demethylation caused by mammalian DNA methyltransferase inhibitors is transient and replication-dependent, whereas that induced by TET enzymes involves oxidized 5mC derivatives that perform poorly understood regulatory functions. Unlike animals, plants possess enzymes that directly excise unoxidized 5mC from DNA, allowing restoration of unmethylated C through base excision repair. Here, we show that expression of Arabidopsis 5mC DNA glycosylase DEMETER (DME) in colon cancer cells demethylates and reactivates hypermethylated silenced loci. Interestingly, DME expression causes genome-wide changes that include both DNA methylation losses and gains, and partially restores the methylation pattern observed in normal tissue. Furthermore, such methylome reprogramming is accompanied by altered cell cycle responses and increased sensibility to anti-tumor drugs, decreased ability to form colonospheres, and tumor growth impairment in vivo. Our study shows that it is possible to reprogram a human cancer DNA methylome by expression of a plant DNA demethylase.
Authors
- Morales-Ruiz, Teresa ;
- García-Ortiz, María Victoria ;
- Devesa-Guerra, Iván ;
- Raya-Ruiz, Laura ;
- Tejedor, Juan R. ;
- Bayón, Gustavo F. ;
- Sierra, Marta I. ;
- Fraga, Mario F. ;
- Ariza, Rafael R. ;
- Roldán-Arjona, Teresa
Patterns of DNA methylation, an important epigenetic modification involved in gene silencing and development, are disrupted in cancer cells. Understanding the functional significance of aberrant methylation in tumors remains challenging, due in part to the lack of suitable tools to actively modify methylation patterns. DNA demethylation caused by mammalian DNA methyltransferase inhibitors is transient and replication-dependent, whereas that induced by TET enzymes involves oxidized 5mC derivatives that perform poorly understood regulatory functions. Unlike animals, plants possess enzymes that directly excise unoxidized 5mC from DNA, allowing restoration of unmethylated C through base excision repair. Here, we show that expression of Arabidopsis 5mC DNA glycosylase DEMETER (DME) in colon cancer cells demethylates and reactivates hypermethylated silenced loci. Interestingly, DME expression causes genome-wide changes that include both DNA methylation losses and gains, and partially restores the methylation pattern observed in normal tissue. Furthermore, such methylome reprogramming is accompanied by altered cell cycle responses and increased sensibility to anti-tumor drugs, decreased ability to form colonospheres, and tumor growth impairment in vivo. Our study shows that it is possible to reprogram a human cancer DNA methylome by expression of a plant DNA demethylase.
Authors
- Morales-Ruiz, Teresa ;
- García-Ortiz, María Victoria ;
- Devesa-Guerra, Iván ;
- Raya-Ruiz, Laura ;
- Tejedor, Juan R. ;
- Bayón, Gustavo F. ;
- Sierra, Marta I. ;
- Fraga, Mario F. ;
- Ariza, Rafael R. ;
- Roldán-Arjona, Teresa
Epigenetic regulation plays an important role in cellular development and differentiation. A detailed map of the DNA methylation dynamics that occur during cell differentiation would contribute to decipher the molecular networks governing cell fate commitment. In this study we used the most recent Illumina MethylationEPIC Beadchip platform to describe the genome-wide DNA methylation changes observed throughout hematopoietic maturation by analyzing multiple hematopoietic cell types at different developmental stages.
Authors
- Tejedor, Juan Ramón ;
- Bueno, Clara ;
- Cobo, Isabel ;
- Bayón, Gustavo F. ;
- Prieto, Cristina ;
- Mangas, Cristina ;
- Pérez, Raúl F. ;
- Santamarina-Ojeda, Pablo ;
- Urdinguio, Rocío G. ;
- Menéndez, Pablo ;
- Fraga, Mario F. ;
- Fernández, Agustín F.
Cancer is an aging-associated disease but the underlying molecular links between these processes are still largely unknown. Gene promoters that become hypermethylated in aging and cancer share a common chromatin signature in ES cells. In addition, there is also global DNA hypomethylation in both processes. However, any similarities of the regions where this loss of DNA methylation occurs is currently not well characterized, nor is it known whether such regions also share a common chromatin signature in aging and cancer. To address this issue we analysed TCGA DNA methylation data from a total of 2,311 samples, including control and cancer cases from patients with breast, kidney, thyroid, skin, brain and lung tumors and healthy blood, and integrated the results with histone, chromatin state and transcription factor binding site data from the NIH Roadmap Epigenomics and ENCODE projects. We identified 98,857 CpG sites differentially methylated in aging, and 286,746 in cancer. Hyper- and hypomethylated changes in both processes each had a similar genomic distribution across tissues and displayed tissue-independent alterations. The identified hypermethylated regions in aging and cancer shared a similar bivalent chromatin signature. In contrast, hypomethylated DNA sequences occurred in very different chromatin contexts. DNA hypomethylated sequences were enriched at genomic regions marked with the activating histone posttranslational modification H3K4me1 in aging, whilst in cancer, loss of DNA methylation was primarily associated with the repressive H3K9me3 mark.
Authors
- Pérez, Raúl F. ;
- Tejedor, Juan Ramón ;
- Bayón, Gustavo F. ;
- Fernández, Agustín F. ;
- Fraga, Mario F.
Humans are increasingly exposed to nanoparticles and, although many of their physiological effects have been described, the molecular mechanisms underlying them are still largely unknown. The present study aimed to determine the possible role of certain epigenetic mechanisms in the cellular response of human lung epithelial cells that are triggered by long-term exposure to titanium dioxide nanoparticles (TiO2NPs) and multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs). The results showed that exposure to TiO2NPs had only minor effects on genome-wide DNA methylation. However, we identified 755 CpG sites showing consistent DNA hypomethylation in cells exposed to MWCNTs. These sites were mainly located at low density CpG regions and enhancers, and very frequently on the X chromosome. Our results thus suggest that long-term MWCNT exposure may have important effects on the epigenome.
Authors
- Sierra, Marta I. ;
- Rubio, Laura ;
- Bayón, Gustavo F. ;
- Cobo, Isabel ;
- Menendez, Pablo ;
- Morales, Paula ;
- Mangas, Cristina ;
- Rocio G. Urdinguio ;
- Lopez, Virginia ;
- Valdes, Adolfo ;
- Vales, Gerard ;
- Marcos, Ricard ;
- Torrecillas, Ramon ;
- Fernández, Agustin F. ;
- Fraga, Mario F.
Humans are increasingly exposed to nanoparticles and, although many of their physiological effects have been described, the molecular mechanisms underlying them are still largely unknown. The present study aimed to determine the possible role of certain epigenetic mechanisms in the cellular response of human lung epithelial cells that are triggered by long-term exposure to titanium dioxide nanoparticles (TiO2NPs) and multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs). The results showed that exposure to TiO2NPs had only minor effects on genome-wide DNA methylation. However, we identified 755 CpG sites showing consistent DNA hypomethylation in cells exposed to MWCNTs. These sites were mainly located at low density CpG regions and enhancers, and very frequently on the X chromosome. Our results thus suggest that long-term MWCNT exposure may have important effects on the epigenome.
Authors
- Sierra, Marta I. ;
- Rubio, Laura ;
- Bayón, Gustavo F. ;
- Cobo, Isabel ;
- Menendez, Pablo ;
- Morales, Paula ;
- Mangas, Cristina ;
- Rocio G. Urdinguio ;
- Lopez, Virginia ;
- Valdes, Adolfo ;
- Vales, Gerard ;
- Marcos, Ricard ;
- Torrecillas, Ramon ;
- Fernández, Agustin F. ;
- Fraga, Mario F.