Fernandez-Santos, JM

@us.es

Citología e Histología Normal y Patológica. Faculta de Medicina
Universidad de Sevilla

RESEARCH, TEACHING, or OTHER INTERESTS

Histology, Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
38

Scopus Publications

Scopus Publications

  • The role of the primary cilium in thyroid function and dysfunction with implications for thyroid disease
    Inés Martín-Lacave, Victoria Vázquez-Román, Beatriz Pérez-Fernández, José María Fernández-Santos
    Histochemistry and Cell Biology, 2025
    The thyroid gland is a unique endocrine organ, composed of morpho-functional units called thyroid follicles, which are responsible for thyroid hormone (TH) biosynthesis, an iodination process demanding a highly oxidative yet protected environment. Despite primary cilium (PC) being observed in the thyroid gland more than a century ago, its precise role in thyroid activity remains rather unexplored. Given its strategic position at the apical surface of follicular epithelium, projecting into the lumen, PCs are crucial for the regulation of TH biosynthetic processes. Consequently, changes in thyroid function, either physiological or pathological, are reflected in PC characteristics. Similarly, defects in ciliogenesis are expected to lead to different pathological thyroid alterations. This review summarizes the current understanding of PC’s involvement in regulating normal thyroid activity and its modifications in functional and neoplastic thyroid diseases. Particular focus will be given to the notable loss of PCs in certain types of thyroid cancer and the promising potential of their restoration as a tumor suppressor strategy in thyroid tumorigenesis.
  • Characterization of primary cilia in different epithelial cells of thyroid gland
    B. Pérez-Fernández, V. Vázquez-Román, J. M. Fernández-Santos, I. Martín-Lacave
    Histochemistry and Cell Biology, 2025
  • Anti-obesogenic effect of lupin-derived protein hydrolysate through modulation of adiposopathy, insulin resistance and gut dysbiosis in a diet-induced obese mouse
    Eduardo Ponce-España, Ivan Cruz-Chamorro, Guillermo Santos-Sánchez, Ana Isabel Álvarez-López, José María Fernández-Santos, Justo Pedroche, María Carmen Millán-Linares, Ignacio Bejarano, Patricia Judith Lardone, Antonio Carrillo-Vico
    Biomedicine and Pharmacotherapy, 2024
    The prevalence of obesity is increasingly widespread, resembling a global epidemic. Lifestyle changes, such as consumption of high-energy-dense diets and physical inactivity, are major contributors to obesity. Common features of this metabolic pathology involve an imbalance in lipid and glucose homeostasis including dyslipidemia, insulin resistance and adipose tissue dysfunction. Moreover, the importance of the gut microbiota in the development and susceptibility to obesity has recently been highlighted. In recent years, new strategies based on the use of functional foods, in particular bioactive peptides, have been proposed to counteract obesity outcomes. In this context, the present study examines the effects of a lupin protein hydrolysate (LPH) on obesity, dyslipidemia and gut dysbiosis in mice fed a high-fat diet (HFD). After 12 weeks of LPH treatment, mice gained less weight and showed decreased adipose dysfunction compared to the HFD-fed group. HFD-induced dyslipidemia (increased triglycerides, cholesterol and LDL concentration) and insulin resistance were both counteracted by LPH consumption. Discriminant analysis differentially distributed LPH-treated mice compared to non-treated mice. HFD reduced gut ecological parameters, promoted the blooming of deleterious taxa and reduced the abundance of commensal members. Some of these changes were corrected in the LPH group. Finally, correlation analysis suggested that changes in this microbial population could be responsible for the improvement in obesity outcomes. In conclusion, this is the first study to show the effect of LPH on improving weight gain, adiposopathy and gut dysbiosis in the context of diet-induced obesity, pointing to the therapeutic potential of bioactive peptides in metabolic diseases.
  • Dietary oleacein, a secoiridoid from extra virgin olive oil, prevents collagen-induced arthritis in mice
    María Ángeles Rosillo, Isabel Villegas, Victoria Vázquez-Román, José María Fernández-Santos, Juan Ortega-Vidal, Sofía Salido, María Luisa González-Rodríguez, Catalina Alarcón-de-la-Lastra
    Food and Function, 2024
    Nutritional therapy has been considered a promising approach in RA management. OLA might provide a new dietary strategy in immunoinflammatory-mediated diseases.
  • C-cell differentiation in the wall of an aberrant ultimobranchial sinus in the thyroid gland of an old rat
    Victoria Vázquez‐Román, José M. Fernández‐Santos, Inés Martín‐Lacave
    Veterinary Medicine and Science, 2023
    Background In mammals, the thyroid gland possesses two types of endocrine cells, follicular cells and C cells, which have different functions but share a similar endodermal origin (although from different regions of the primitive pharynx). Specifically, follicular cells derive from the ventral pharyngeal floor, while C cells derive from the fourth pair of pharyngeal pouches through the ultimobranchial bodies (UBBs). Disruptions to human midline thyroid morphogenesis are relatively frequent and known as thyroid dysgenesis, which is the leading cause of congenital hypothyroidism. In contrast, fourth branchial apparatus anomalies are very rare clinical entities. Objectives The aim of this study was to analyze the morphological features and the immunohistochemical pattern of an aberrant ultimobranchial remnant, align with its persistent contribution to the formation of new C cells. Methods The thyroid gland of an old rat was serially sectioned and immunostained for the following markers: calcitonin, thyroglobulin, cytokeratins, PCNA, P63 , E‐cadherin, beta‐tubulin and CD3. Results We detected a spontaneous congenital defect in the organogenesis of the UBB in an old rat, giving rise to an ‘ultimobranchial sinus’, which was accompanied by thymic tissue and an abscess. The epithelium contained basal/stem cells and contributed to the formation of abundant C cells and scarce follicular cells. Conclusions The ultimobranchial sinus is an exceptional finding for representing the first spontaneous abnormality in the development of UBB reported in rats, and the opportunity to observe sustained C‐cell differentiation from stem cells in an old rat. These findings are consistent with a common origin of both C cells and follicular cells from UBB.
  • Histopathological Features of Pendred Syndrome Thyroids Align with Differences in the Expression of Thyroid-Specific Markers, Apical Iodide Transporters, and Ciliogenesis Process
    V. Vázquez-Román, J. M. Cameselle-Teijeiro, J. M. Fernández-Santos, M. J. Ríos-Moreno, L. Loidi, T. Ortiz, I. Martín-Lacave
    Endocrine Pathology, 2022
    Pendred syndrome (PDS) is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by mutations in the gene that encodes pendrin. Pendred thyroid tissue is supposedly altered by the absence of functional pendrin, but it is still unknown whether other iodide exchangers could compensate for the loss of the protein. Moreover, we have recently described that primary cilium, a conserved structure present at the apical surface of normal follicular cells, suffers different alterations in functional thyroid diseases. We aimed (1) to better understand the histopathological changes experienced by PDS thyroids, (2) to analyze the expression of different thyroid-specific genes and alternative iodide transporters and, finally, (3) to determine whether those changes may alter the morphological pattern of primary cilia in follicular cells. Thyroid samples from a series of four PDS patients were analyzed by immunohistochemistry, double immunofluorescence, and morphometry to evaluate changes in primary cilia frequency and length. We found thyroid follicular nodular disease in all PDS thyroids, frequently in association with follicular adenomas. There were only slight changes in the expression of thyroid-specific markers. Although no positivity for pendrin was found, cytoplasmic immunostaining for ANO-1, CLC-5, and CFTR was stronger in diffuse hyperplastic areas when compared to areas with highly cellular follicular nodules (HCFNs). HCFNs and follicular adenomas always showed diminished ciliary frequency and length. Our results suggest a direct relationship between the absence of functional pendrin and the loss of the normal thyroid architecture in PDS patients, which was also accompanied by differences in the expression of specific immunohistochemical markers and altered ciliogenesis. The present data may help the pathologist in screening for PDS.
  • Lupinus angustifolius protein hydrolysates reduce abdominal adiposity and ameliorate metabolic associated fatty liver disease (Mafld) in western diet fed-apoe−/− mice
    Guillermo Santos-Sánchez, Ivan Cruz-Chamorro, Ana Isabel Álvarez-Ríos, José María Fernández-Santos, María Victoria Vázquez-Román, Beatriz Rodríguez-Ortiz, Nuria Álvarez-Sánchez, Ana Isabel Álvarez-López, María del Carmen Millán-Linares, Francisco Millán, Justo Pedroche, María Soledad Fernández-Pachón, Patricia Judith Lardone, Juan Miguel Guerrero, Ignacio Bejarano, Antonio Carrillo-Vico
    Antioxidants, 2021
    Metabolic-associated fatty liver disease (MAFLD) is the most important cause of liver disease worldwide. It is characterized by the accumulation of fat in the liver and is closely associated with abdominal obesity. In addition, oxidative stress and inflammation are significant features involved in MAFLD. Recently, our group demonstrated that lupin protein hydrolysates (LPHs) had lipid lowering, antioxidant, and anti-inflammatory effects. Sixty male mice fed with a Western diet were intragastrically treated with LPHs (or vehicle) for 12 weeks. Liver and adipose tissue lipid accumulation and hepatic inflammatory and oxidant status were evaluated. A significant decrease in steatosis was observed in LPHs-treated mice, which presented a decreased gene expression of CD36 and LDL-R, crucial markers in MAFLD. In addition, LPHs increased the hepatic total antioxidant capacity and reduced the hepatic inflammatory status. Moreover, LPHs-treated mice showed a significant reduction in abdominal adiposity. This is the first study to show that the supplementation with LPHs markedly ameliorates the generation of the steatotic liver caused by the intake of a Western diet and reduces abdominal obesity in ApoE−/− mice. Future clinical trials should shed light on the effects of LPHs on MAFLD.
  • Primary Cilium in the Human Thyrocyte: Changes in Frequency and Length in Relation to the Functional Pathology of the Thyroid Gland
    José María Fernández-Santos, José Carmelo Utrilla, Victoria Vázquez-Román, José Luis Villar-Rodríguez, Lorenzo Gutiérrez-Avilés, Inés Martín-Lacave
    Thyroid, 2019
    BACKGROUND: Primary cilia (PC) are conserved structures in the adult thyroid gland of different mammals. It was recently described that in humans, PC are usually present as a single copy per follicular cell emerging from the follicular cell apex into the follicular lumen. METHODS: To understand the role developed by PC in thyroid hormonogenesis better, their changes in different human functional thyroid diseases (diffuse toxic hyperplasia/Graves' disease [GD] and nodular hyperplasia [NH]/nodular goiter), in comparison to normal thyroid tissue, were investigated using immunofluorescence, morphometry, and electron microscopy analyses. RESULTS: Significantly decreased ciliary frequencies were found in both NH (51.16 ± 11.69%) and GD (44.43 ± 23.70%) compared to normal thyroid tissue (76.09 ± 7.31%). Similarly, PC lengths were also significantly decreased in both NH (2.02 ± 0.35 μm) and GD (2.4 ± 0.48 μm) compared to normal glands (3.93 ± 0.90 μm). Moreover, in GD patients, hyperactive-follicle foci always showed diminished ciliary frequency and length compared to any other thyroid follicle pattern, independent of their thyroid status. Finally, in GD, the percentage of thyrocytes exhibiting PC in the "normal-appearance areas" was significantly lower in correspondence with the subsistence of signs of thyroid biosynthetic hyperactivity after long-term antithyroid drug treatment. CONCLUSIONS: The results suggest a direct relationship between ciliogenesis and both follicle activity and tissue heterogeneity in the functional pathology of the thyroid gland.
  • Immunohistochemical profiling of the ultimobranchial remnants in the rat postnatal thyroid gland
    Victoria Vázquez‐Román, José C. Utrilla, José M. Fernández‐Santos, Inés Martín‐Lacave
    Journal of Morphology, 2017
    Ultimobranchial (UB) remnants are a constant presence in the thyroid throughout rat postnatal life; however, the difficulty in identifying the most immature forms from the surrounding thyroid tissue prompted us to search for a specific marker. With that objective, we applied a panel of antibodies reported to be specific for their human counterpart, solid cell nests (SCNs), using double immunohistochemistry and immunofluorescence. Our results demonstrated that cytokeratin 34βE12 and p63 are highly sensitive markers for the immunohistologic screening of UB‐remnants, independently of their maturity or size. Furthermore, rat UB‐follicles (UBFs) coincided with human SCNs in the immunohistochemical pattern exhibited by both antigens. In contrast, the pattern displayed for calcitonin and thyroglobulin differs considerably but confirm the hypothesis that rat UB‐cells can differentiate into both types of thyroid endocrine cells. This hypothesis agrees with recent findings that thyroid C‐cells share an endodermic origin with follicular cells in rodents. We suggest that the persistence of p63‐positive undifferentiated cells in UB‐remnants may constitute a reservoir of basal/stem cells that persist beyond embryogenesis from which, in certain unknown conditions, differentiated thyroid cells or even unusual tumors may arise.
  • Melatonin controls experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis by altering the T effector/regulatory balance
    Nuria Álvarez-Sánchez, Ivan Cruz-Chamorro, Antonio López-González, José C. Utrilla, José M. Fernández-Santos, Alicia Martínez-López, Patricia J. Lardone, Juan M. Guerrero, Antonio Carrillo-Vico
    Brain Behavior and Immunity, 2015
  • Melatonin in the thyroid gland: Regulation by thyroid-stimulating hormone and role in thyroglobulin gene expression
    Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology, 2015
  • Comparative study of the primary cilia in thyrocytes of adult mammals
    J. C. Utrilla, F. Gordillo‐Martínez, A. Gómez‐Pascual, J. M. Fernández‐Santos, C. Garnacho, V. Vázquez‐Román, J. Morillo‐Bernal, R. García‐Marín, A. Jiménez‐García, I. Martín‐Lacave
    Journal of Anatomy, 2015
  • Postnatal fate of the ultimobranchial remnants in the rat thyroid gland
    Victoria Vázquez‐Román, José C. Utrilla, José M. Fernández‐Santos, Esperanza Conde, Reyes Bernabé, Consuelo Sampedro, Inés Martín‐Lacave
    Journal of Morphology, 2013
  • Expression of hypothalamic regulatory peptides in thyroid C cells of different mammals
    José C. Utrilla, Jesús Morillo-Bernal, Flora Gordillo-Martínez, Rocío García-Marín, Juan L. Herrera, José M. Fernández-Santos, Eduardo Díaz-Parrado, Carmen Garnacho, Manuel De Miguel, Inés Martín-Lacave
    General and Comparative Endocrinology, 2013
  • Melatonin-synthesizing enzymes and melatonin receptor in rat thyroid cells
    Histology and Histopathology, 2012
  • Melatonin synthesized by T lymphocytes as a ligand of the retinoic acid-related orphan receptor
    Patricia J. Lardone, Juan M. Guerrero, José M. Fernández-Santos, Amalia Rubio, Inés Martín-Lacave, Antonio Carrillo-Vico
    Journal of Pineal Research, 2011
  • Ghrelin potentiates TSH-induced expression of the thyroid tissue-specific genes thyroglobulin, thyroperoxidase and sodium-iodine symporter, in rat PC-Cl3 Cells
    J. Morillo-Bernal, J.M. Fernández-Santos, M. De Miguel, R. García-Marín, F. Gordillo-Martínez, E. Díaz-Parrado, J.C. Utrilla, I. Martín-Lacave
    Peptides, 2011
  • Functional expression of the thyrotropin receptor in C cells: New insights into their involvement in the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis
    Jesús Morillo‐Bernal, José M. Fernández‐Santos, José C. Utrilla, Manuel De Miguel, Rocío García‐Marín, Inés Martín‐Lacave
    Journal of Anatomy, 2009
  • C cells evolve at the same rhythm as follicular cells when thyroidal status changes in rats
    Inés Martín‐Lacave, María J. Borrero, José C. Utrilla, José M. Fernández‐Santos, Manuel De Miguel, Jesús Morillo, Juan M. Guerrero, Rocío García‐Marín, Esperanza Conde
    Journal of Anatomy, 2009
  • W43X SDHD mutation in sporadic head and neck paraganglioma
    Analytical and Quantitative Cytology and Histology, 2008
  • Sex-dependent effect of melatonin on systemic erythematosus lupus developed in Mrl/Mpj-Faslpr mice: It ameliorates the disease course in females, whereas it exacerbates it in males
    Antonio J. Jimenez-Caliani, Silvia Jimenez-Jorge, Patrocinio Molinero, Jose M. Fernandez-Santos, Ines Martin-Lacave, Amalia Rubio, Juan M. Guerrero, Carmen Osuna
    Endocrinology, 2006
  • Beneficial pleiotropic actions of melatonin in an experimental model of septic shock in mice: Regulation of pro-/anti-inflammatory cytokine network, protection against oxidative damage and anti-apoptotic effects
    Antonio Carrillo‐Vico, Patricia J. Lardone, Latifa Naji, José M. Fernández‐Santos, Inés Martín‐Lacave, Juan M. Guerrero, Juan R. Calvo
    Journal of Pineal Research, 2005
  • Thyrotropin-releasing hormone receptor expression in thyroid follicular cells: A new paracrine role of C-cells?
    Histology and Histopathology, 2005
  • Dual effect of melatonin as proinflammatory and antioxidant in collagen-induced arthritis in rats
    Antonio J. Jiménez‐Caliani, Silvia Jiménez‐Jorge, Patrocinio Molinero, Juan M. Guerrero, Jose M. Fernández‐Santos, Inés Martín‐Lacave, Carmen Osuna
    Journal of Pineal Research, 2005
  • Human lymphocyte-synthesized melatonin is involved in the regulation of the interleukin-2/interleukin-2 receptor system
    Antonio Carrillo-Vico, Patricia J. Lardone, José M. Fernández-Santos, Inés Martín-Lacave, Juan R. Calvo, Michal Karasek, Juan M. Guerrero
    Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, 2005
  • Ki-ras mutational analysis in rat follicular-cell proliferative lesions of the thyroid gland induced by radioactive iodine and potassium perchlorate
    J. M. Fernández-Santos, M. De-Miguel, R. González-Cámpora, M. Salguero-Villadiego, J. J. Cabrera, H. Galera-Davidson
    Journal of Endocrinological Investigation, 2004
  • The Ret proto-oncogene in the WAG/Rij rat strain: An animal model for inherited C-cell carcinoma?
    M. De Miguel, J. M. Fernández-Santos, I. Trigo-Sánchez, I. Matera, I. Ceccherini, I. Martín, G. Romeo, H. Galera-Davidson
    Laboratory Animals, 2003
  • The expression of Sam68, a protein involved in insulin signal transduction, is enhanced by insulin stimulation
    V. S�nchez-Margalet, C. Gonz�lez-Yanes, S. Najib, J. M. Fern�ndez-Santos, I. Mart�n-Lacave
    Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences, 2003
  • Comparative immunohistochemical study of normal, hyperplastic and neoplastic C cells of the rat thyroid gland
    Martín-Lacave I., Rojas F., Bernabé R., Utrilla J., Fernández-Santos J., M. de Miguel, Conde E.
    Cell and Tissue Research, 2002
  • Long-term melatonin administration increases polyunsaturated fatty acid percentage in plasma lipids of hypercholesterolemic rats
    María L. Pita, Marta Hoyos, Inés Martin‐Lacave, Carmen Osuna, Jose M. Fernández‐Santos, Juan M. Guerrero
    Journal of Pineal Research, 2002
  • Decrease in calcitonin and parathyroid hormone mRNA levels and hormone secretion under long-term hypervitaminosis D3 in rats
    Histology and Histopathology, 2001
  • CDNA sequence and genomic structure of the rat RET proto-oncogene
    Ivana Matera, Manuel De Miguel-rodríguez, José Maria Fernández-santos, Giuseppe Santamaria, Aldamaria Puliti, Roberto Ravazzolo, Giovanni Romeo, Hugo Galera-davidson, Isabella Ceccherini
    Mitochondrial DNA, 2000
  • Detection of different mRNAs expressed in the thyro-parathyroid complex of the rat by in situ hybridization using digoxigenin-labelled oligonucleotide probes
    José M. Fernández-Santos, Inés Martín-Lacave
    Histochemical Journal, 2000
  • Apoptosis in breast carcinoma
    Ricardo González-Cámpora, María Rosa Galera Ruiz, Francisco Vázquez Ramírez, Juan José Ríos Martín, José María Fernández Santos, María del Mar Ramos Martos, Amparo Gómez Pascual
    Pathology Research and Practice, 2000
  • P-glycoprotein, metallothionein and nm23 protein expressions in breast carcinoma
    F.J. Vazquez-Ramirez, J.J. Gonzalez-Campora, E. Hevia-Alvarez, J.M. Fernandez-Santos, J.J. Rios-Martin, C. Otal-Salaverri, R. Gonzalez-Campora
    Pathology Research and Practice, 2000
  • Correlation between gender and spontaneous C-cell tumors in the thyroid gland of the Wistar rat
    I. Martín-Lacave, R. Bernabé, C. Sampedro, E. Conde, J. M. Fernández-Santos, M. V. San Martín, A. Beato, H. Galera-Davidson
    Cell and Tissue Research, 1999
  • Chronic hypervitaminosis D3 determines a decrease in C-cell numbers and calcitonin levels in rats
    I. Martín-Lacave, F. Ramos, J. C. Utrilla, E. Conde, A. Hevia, R. Fernández, A. Ma. Moreno, J. Ma. Fernández-Santos, H. Galera-Davidson
    Journal of Endocrinological Investigation, 1998
  • Expression of the Mel(1a)-melatonin receptor mRNA in T and B subsets of lymphocytes from rat thymus and spleen
    David Pozo, Mario Delgado, Jose M. Fernandez‐Santos, Juan R. Calvo, Rosa P. Gomariz, Ines Martin‐Lacave, Genaro G. Ortiz, Juan M. Guerrero
    FASEB Journal, 1997