Organ Transplant
Research Lines
Content with Investigacion .
Investigación en infecciones multirresistentes
La emergencia y diseminación global de cepas bacterianas de diferentes especies con resistencia a distintas clases de antibióticos (cepas multirresistentes) supone una amenaza para la eficacia del tratamiento antibiótico. El Antibiotic Resistance Global Report publicado por la Organización Mundial de la Salud en 2014 destacó altas tasas de resistencia en varias especies de bacterias patógenas en cada una de las seis regiones incluidas en el estudio (WHO; 2014). Las infecciones causadas por bacterias resistentes están asociadas a una mortalidad significativa, produciendo más de 700.000 muertes al año, y se estima que esta cifra llegará a 10 millones de muertes anuales en 2050, si no cambia la tendencia actual (Antimicrobial Resistance Rev; 2015). En 2017, la Organización Mundial de la Salud identificó las especies bacterianas frente a las que deberían implementarse nuevas medidas de tratamiento y prevención (WHO 2017). En este informe se clasificaron las especies Gram negativas multirresistentes.
Acinetobacter baumannii, Pseudomonas aeruginosa y Klebsiella pneumoniae con la prioridad más alta (Priority 1: Critical). Las tasas de resistencia a los antimicrobianos de primera línea de estas bacterias Gram-negativas multirresistentes se han incrementado a nivel global durante la última década, complicando significativamente el manejo clínico de las infecciones producidas por estos microorganismos. En este contexto, nuestro grupo está desarrollando las siguientes líneas de investigación:
1. Desarrollo de vacunas para infecciones multirresistentes
Esta línea de investigación tiene como objetivo del desarrollo preclínico de vacunas profilácticas y anticuerpos monoclonales terapéuticos para infecciones producidas por bacterias Gram negativas multirresistentes de difícil manejo clínico debido a la resistencia antimicrobiana. La investigación realizada en esta línea tiene como objetivo identificar y caracterizar antígenos de las bacterias multirresistentes (Acinetobacter baumannii, Klebsiella pneumoniae y Pseudomonas aeruginosa) que sirvan para el desarrollo de anticuerpos monoclonales y vacunas a través de estudios epidemiológicos, genómicos y proteómicos.
2. Caracterización de tratamientos novedosos para infecciones multirresistentes
Esta línea de investigación tiene como objetivo identificar y caracterizar nuevos tratamientos basados en moléculas novedosas y/o combinaciones de antibióticos existentes para infecciones producidas por bacterias Gram negativas multirresistentes. También se emplean técnicas moleculares y "omicas" para la identificación de nuevas dianas para el desarrollo de antibióticos novedosas.
3. Desarrollo de vacunas frente a SARS-CoV-2
Debido la situación producida por la propagación del SARS-CoV-2 urge la realización de estudios que tienen como objetvo el desarrollo de vacunas profilácticas. Nuestro grupo lidera el desarrollo de un prototipo de vacuna basado en ADN plasmídico que expresa antígenos de SARS-CoV-2 y la caracterización de la respuesta inmune inducida por esta vacuna en un modelo murino de inmunización.
Research projects
Content with Investigacion .
Financiación activa:
1. STOPINFECTIONS: Desarrollo de la primera vacuna válida internacional contra la neumonía resistente a antibióticos. Convocatoria Retos de Colaboración 2019. Proyecto RTC 2019-007058-1 financiado por MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033.
2. AMREADY: Desarrollo y fabricación de vacunas como soluciones y preparación ante la crisis sanitaria mundial por la resistencia a antibióticos. Convocatoria Proyectos I+D+i en líneas estratégicas, en colaboración público-privada 2021. Número de expediente PLEC2021-008078. Proyecto PLEC2021-008078 financiado por MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 y por la Unión Europea NextGenerationEU/PRTR.
3. TRANSVAC DS: Design Study for a European Vaccine R&D Infrastructure. (Unión Europea; Horizonte 2020) Work Package Leader: Michael McConnell. 2020-2022. 1.900.000 €.
4. Development of a multiepitope vaccine for the prevention of COVID-19. (CaixaImpulse Program) CF01-0002. IP: Michael McConnell. 2020-2020. 300.000 €.
5. NANOVAX: Desarrollo de nanopartículas funcionalizadas para mejorar la respuesta a vacunas frente a enfermedades infecciosas. (DTS19CIII/0007) Instituto de Salud Carlos III. IP: Michael McConnell. 2020-2021. 86.000 €.
6. Desarrollo preclínico de vacunas basadas en ADN plasmídico para la prevención de infecciones por Klebsiella pneumoniae y Acinetobacter baumannii multirresistentes. Instituto de Salud Carlos III (FIS). Co-IP: Michael McConnell. 2019-2021. 97.700 €.
7. Coordinación de actividades de investigación en el CNM para realizar una respuesta integradora frente a la pandemia por SARS-COV-2 en España. Work Package Leader: Michael McConnell. 2020-2021. 325.909 €.
8. Investigación para el desarrollo de vectores de expresión de antígenos de Actinobacillus pleuropneumonia. IP: Michael McConnell. 2019-2022. 11.000 €.
9. Investigación de anticuerpos frente a Acinetobacter baumannii. Co-IP Michael McConnell. 2018-2021. 40.400 €.
10. KapaVax: Development of a trivalent vaccine for the prevention of infection caused by Acinetobacter baumannii, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Klebsiella pneumoniae. CARB-X. IP (ISCIII): Michael McConnell. 2019-2021. 89.615 €.
11. Estudio de la cinética y reactividad de los anticuerpos neutralizantes en pacientes recuperados de COVID-19. Fundación Mutua Madrileña. Work Package Leader: Michael McConnell. 2020-2021. 80.000 €.
12. STOP-Coronavirus: factores clínicos, inmunológicos, genómicos, virológicos y bioéticos de COVID-19. (ISCIII: COV20-00181). 2020-2021. 1.200.000€.
13. Desarrollo de herramientas computacionales basadas en "big data" genómico para el diagnóstico de precisión de sepsis bacteriana. (MPY 509/19). IP: Javier Martín Galiano. 2020-2022- 74,400 €.
Publications
Broth microdilution protocol for determining antimicrobial susceptibility of Legionella pneumophila to clinically relevant antimicrobials
Sewell M, Farley C, Portal EAR, Lindsay D, Ricci ML, Jarraud S, Scaturro M, Descours G, Krøvel AV, Barton R, Boostom I, Ure R, Kese D, Gaia V, Golob M, Paukner S, Ginevra C, Afshar B, Nadarajah S, Wybo I, Michel C, Echahdi F, González-Rubio JM, González-Camacho F, Mentasti M, Flountzi AS, Petzold M, Moran-Gilad J, Uldum S, Winchell J, Wooton M, Bernard K, Jones LC, Chalker VJ, Spiller OB. J Microbiol Methods. 2025 Jan;228:107071.
PUBMED DOITrends in invasive bacterial diseases during the first 2 years of the COVID-19 pandemic: analyses of prospective surveillance data from 30 countries and territories in the IRIS Consortium
Shaw D, Abad R, Amin-Chowdhury Z, Bautista A, Bennett D, Broughton K, Cao B, Casanova C, Choi EH, Chu YW, Claus H, Coelho J, Corcoran M, Cottrell S, Cunney R, Cuypers L, Dalby T, Davies H, de Gouveia L, Deghmane AE, Demczuk W, Desmet S, Domenech M, Drew R, du Plessis M, Duarte C, Erlendsdóttir H, Fry NK, Fuursted K, Hale T, Henares D, Henriques-Normark B, Hilty M, Hoffmann S, Humphreys H, Ip M, Jacobsson S, Johnson C, Johnston J, Jolley KA, Kawabata A, Kozakova J, Kristinsson KG, Krizova P, Kuch A, Ladhani S, Lâm TT, León ME, Lindholm L, Litt D, Maiden MCJ, Martin I, Martiny D, Mattheus W, McCarthy ND, Meehan M, Meiring S, Mölling P, Morfeldt E, Morgan J, Mulhall R, Muñoz-Almagro C, Murdoch D, Murphy J, Musilek M, Mzabi A, Novakova L, Oftadeh S, Perez-Argüello A, Pérez-Vázquez M, Perrin M, Perry M, Prevost B, Roberts M, Rokney A, Ron M, Sanabria OM, Scott KJ, Sheppard C, Siira L, Sintchenko V, Skoczyńska A, Sloan M, Slotved HC, Smith AJ, Steens A, Taha MK, Toropainen M, Tzanakaki G, Vainio A, van der Linden MPG, van Sorge NM, Varon E, Vohrnova S, von Gottberg A, Yuste J, Zanella R, Zhou F, Brueggemann AB. Lancet Digit Health. 2023 Sep;5(9):e582-e593.
PUBMED DOIPaenibacillus spp. isolated from human and environmental samples in Spain: detection of 11 new species.
Sáez-Nieto JA, Medina-Pascual MJ, Carrasco G, Garrido N, Fernandez-Torres MA, Villalón P, Valdezate S. Paenibacillus spp. isolated from human and environmental samples in Spain: detection of 11 new species. New Microbes New Infect. 2017. 24;19:19-27.
PUBMED DOIGenomic analysis of community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) causing infections in children-a Spanish multicenter study.
10. Genomic analysis of community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) causing infections in children-a Spanish multicenter study. Autores: García-Cobos S, Seco Alberca N, Bravo-Queipo-de-Llano B, Casquero-García V, Ramírez de Arellano E, Calvo C, Ruíz-Carrascoso G, Falces-Romero I, Larrosa Escartín N, Viñado-Perez B, Martínez-López MÁ, Melendo Pérez S, Ruíz de Gopegui E, Pérez Vázquez S, Carrasco-Colom J, Aracil García B, Pérez-Vázquez M, Méndez-Echevarría A, Oteo Iglesias Revista: J. Front Microbiol. 2025 May 9;16:1534840.
PUBMED DOIDefinition of the viral targets of protective HIV-1-specific T cell responses
Mothe B, Llano A, Ibarrondo J, Daniels M, Miranda C, Zamarreno J, Bach V, Zuniga R, Perez-Alvarez S, Berger CT, Puertas MC, Martinez-Picado J, Rolland M, Farfan M, Szinger JJ, Hildebrand WH, Yang OO, Sanchez-Merino V, Brumme CJ, Brumme ZL, Heckerman D, Allen TM, Mullins JI, Gomez G, Goulder PJ, Walker BD, Gatell JM, Clotet B, Korber BT, Sanchez J, Brander C; J Transl Med. 2011 Dec 7;9:208
PUBMED DOIShortcomings of the commercial MALDI-TOF MS database and use of MLSA as an arbiter in the identification of Nocardia species
Carrasco G, de Dios Caballero J, Garrido N, Valdezate S, Cantón R, Sáez-Nieto JA. Shortcomings of the commercial MALDI-TOF MS database and use of MLSA as an arbiter in the identification of Nocardia species. Front Microbiol. 2016 21;7:542.
PUBMED DOIWidespread Detection of Yersiniabactin Gene Cluster and Its Encoding Integrative Conjugative Elements (ICEKp) among Nonoutbreak OXA-48-Producing Klebsiella pneumoniae Clinical Isolates from Spain and the Netherlands.
11. Widespread Detection of Yersiniabactin Gene Cluster and Its Encoding Integrative Conjugative Elements (ICEKp) among Nonoutbreak OXA-48-Producing Klebsiella pneumoniae Clinical Isolates from Spain and the Netherlands. Autores: Jati AP, Sola-Campoy PJ, Bosch T, Schouls LM, Hendrickx APA, Bautista V, Lara N, Raangs E, Aracil B, Rossen JWA, Friedrich AW, Navarro Riaza AM, Cañada-García JE, Ramírez de Arellano E, Oteo-Iglesias J, Pérez-Vázquez M, García-Cobos S; Dutch and Spanish Collaborative Working Groups on Surveillance on Carbapenemase-Producing Enterobacterales; Sánchez AMF, Pulido MA, Armas M. Revista: Microbiol Spectr. 2023 Aug 17;11(4):e0471622.
PUBMED DOIBroadly cross-neutralizing antibodies in HIV-1 patients with undetectable viremia
Medina-Ramirez M, Sanchez-Merino V, Sanchez-Palomino S, Merino-Mansilla A, Ferreira CB, Perez I, Gonzalez N, Alvarez A, Alcocer-Gonzalez JM, Garcia F, Gatell JM, Alcami J, Yuste E; J Virol. 2011 Jun;85(12):5804-13.
PUBMED DOIEffectiveness of a Meningococcal Group B Vaccine (4CMenB) in Children
Castilla J, García Cenoz M, Abad R, Sánchez-Cambronero L, Lorusso N, Izquierdo C, Cañellas Llabrés S, Roig J, Malvar A, González Carril F, Boone ALD, Pérez Martín J, Rodríguez Recio MJ, Galmés A, Caballero A, García Rojas A, Juanas F, Nieto M, Viloria Raymundo LJ, Martínez Ochoa E, Rivas AI, Castrillejo D, Moreno Pérez D, Martínez A, Borràs E, Sánchez Gómez A, Pastor E, Nartallo V, Arteagoitia JM, Álvarez-Fernández B, García Pina R, Fernández Arribas S, Vanrell J, García Hernández S, Mendoza RM, Méndez M, López-Tercero MM, Fernández-Rodríguez Á, Blanco Á, Carrillo de Albornoz FJ, Ruiz Olivares J, Ruiz-Montero R, Limia A, Navarro-Alonso JA, Vázquez JA, Barricarte A. N Engl J Med. 2023 Feb 2;388(5):427-438
PUBMED DOIIncrease in isolation of Burkholderia contaminans from Spanish patients with cystic fibrosis.
Medina-Pascual MJ, Valdezate S, Carrasco G, Villalón P, Garrido N, Saéz-Nieto JA. (2015) Increase in isolation of Burkholderia contaminans from Spanish patients with cystic fibrosis. Clin Microbiol Infect. ;21(2):150-6
PUBMED DOIContent with Investigacion .
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Horacio Gil Gil
Research Scientist
ORCID code: 0000-0002-7114-6686
Degree in Veterinary Medicine in 1995 and PhD in Veterinary Medicine in 2002 from the University of Zaragoza. He did his PhD thesis at NEIKER Tecknalia (Derio, Vizcaya) and the National Center for Microbiology of Instituto de Salud Carlos III (CNM-ISCIII, Majadahonda, Madrid) on the biological cycle of Lyme disease in the Basque Country. After that, he developed his postdoctoral training in different aspects of the pathogenesis of tularemia at the Center for Infectious Diseases, Stony Brook University, New York (USA) for 3 years. In December 2005, he joined the Reference and Research Laboratory in Special Pathogens of the CNM-ISCIII where he developed diagnostic, reference and research activities, in Bartonella, Leptospira and pathogens of interest in bioterrorism. Between 2014-2016 he participated in the European Program for the Training of Microbiologists in Public Health (EUPHEM), organized by the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control. During this program, he participated in an international mission for the investigation of a cholera outbreak in Ghana, proposed by the Bernhard Nocht Institute for Tropical Diseases in Hamburg (Germany). In December 2016, he worked as a laboratory consultant for the World Health Organization at their office in Phnom Penh (Cambodia). Subsequently, he worked one year with Médecins Sans Frontières as director and quality manager of the TB laboratory in Nukus (Uzbekistan).
In 2019, he joined the HIV Variability and Biology Unit at CNM-ISCIII, where he developed different reference and research activities, including his contribution to the molecular epidemiological surveillance of HIV-1 in Spain and the study of HIV-1 antiretroviral resistance. Since September 2022 he has been leading the Human Papillomavirus Unit at the CNM-ISCIII. -
Alicia Inés García Señán
Predoctoral Student UNED
Degree in Pharmacy in 2013 from the Complutense University of Madrid. She completed specialized health training in Microbiology and Parasitology at the Complejo Asistencial Universitario de Salamanca (2014-2018). During this period he studied a master's degree in Tropical Diseases at the University of Salamanca (2016). She has developed her professional activity as a clinical microbiologist at the Hospital de Santa Bárbara (Soria) (2018), Hospital Universitario Vall d'Hebrón (Barcelona) (2019-2022), and Hospital Central de la Defensa (Gómez Ulla) C.S.V.E, since 2022. In September 2024 she has started PhD studies at the Human Papillomavirus Unit of the CNM-ISCIII.
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Manuela Rodríguez Vargas
Técnico de Laboratorio
List of staff
Additional Information
Induction of allograft tolerance remains a goal to be achieved in organ transplantation. Most therapeutic strategies focus on inhibition of the adaptive immune system, but recent data demonstrate that allogeneic recognition of myeloid cells initiates transplant rejection. Therapies targeting myeloid cells “in vivo” represent a potential target to induce immunological tolerance, but remain clinically unexplored.
Our laboratory uses a revolutionary nanoimmunotherapy of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) nanoparticles loaded with rapamycin (mTORi-HDL) that prevents epigenetic modifications associated with trained immunity, a recently discovered functional state of macrophages. Using an experimental mouse transplant model, our results demonstrate that the administration of this immunotherapy with mTORi-HDL prevents the immune response and promotes tolerance to the transplanted organ.
Our laboratory shows a multidisciplinary research approach articulated in three different objectives to evaluate the clinical relevance and therapeutic effects of immunotherapy in preparation for a clinical trial in organ transplantation. The general objectives will be aimed at confirming the identification of trained immunity as a biomarker and analytical value to predict the risk of rejection in transplant patients under three conditions: prolonged periods of ischemic reperfusion (IRI) (objective 1), allosensitization (objective 2) and infection (objective 3).
Induction of allograft tolerance remains a goal to be achieved in organ transplantation. Most therapeutic strategies focus on inhibition of the adaptive immune system, but recent data demonstrate that allogeneic recognition of myeloid cells initiates transplant rejection. Therapies targeting myeloid cells “in vivo” represent a potential target to induce immunological tolerance, but remain clinically unexplored.
Our laboratory uses a revolutionary nanoimmunotherapy of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) nanoparticles loaded with rapamycin (mTORi-HDL) that prevents epigenetic modifications associated with trained immunity, a recently discovered functional state of macrophages. Using an experimental mouse transplant model, our results demonstrate that the administration of this immunotherapy with mTORi-HDL prevents the immune response and promotes tolerance to the transplanted organ.
Our laboratory shows a multidisciplinary research approach articulated in three different objectives to evaluate the clinical relevance and therapeutic effects of immunotherapy in preparation for a clinical trial in organ transplantation. The general objectives will be aimed at confirming the identification of trained immunity as a biomarker and analytical value to predict the risk of rejection in transplant patients under three conditions: prolonged periods of ischemic reperfusion (IRI) (objective 1), allosensitization (objective 2) and infection (objective 3).