top of page
3D MITIG.jpg

mitig

Addressing MITochondrial Import by Glioblastoma cells to rewire respiratory metabolism

MARIE SkŁodowska-CURIE ACTIONS (MSCA)

H2020-MSCA-IF-EF-ST-2017

by Rubén Quintana-Cabrera, PhD

HOME
VER MÁS
IMG-20210508-WA0011.jpg

Universitary Province

How neurons are generated in the adult brain? A talk with people from Huerta, in Salamanca (Castille and León) to discover how and what is the impact of adult neurogenesis. 

VER MÁS
EQsDOdhW4AAG9GU.jfif

International day of women and girls in science

Talk at the Hispanic-Japanese Cultural Center of the University of Salamanca:

"Rita Levi-Montalcini, from clandestine to Nobel Prize in Medicine: A story of neuroscience"

VER MÁS
Premio Arquímedes 1.jpg

Archimedes prize

Sara Yunta Sánchez, supervised by Rubén Quintana-Cabrera and J.P. Bolaños is awarded the Arquímedes Prize for her Master Thesis work on mitochondrial transfer in glioblastoma

VER MÁS
Khondrion.jpg

MITIG Secondment

The MSCA project MITIG lead by Rubén Quintana-Cabrera, moves to The Netherlands to partner with Khondrion, a dutch Pharmaceutical company interested in mitochondrial-based therapies, to uncover new molecular mechanisms in the impact of mitochondrial transfer and exogenous acquisition in glioblastoma.

VER MÁS
Foto Sara La Gaceta premio poster SEBBM.jpg

SEBBM Award

Sara Yunta Sánchez receives the best poster award at the 42 Meeting of the Spanish Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, on her work ‘Exogenous organelle acquisition remodels the native mitochondrial network in glioblastoma cells’ 

VER MÁS
IMG_20190522_002438 - copia.jpg

Pint of Science

Rubén Quintana-Cabrera coordinates and participates as a speaker in the 'Wonderful Mind' group of the International Festival of Science dissemination 'Pint of Science'

TNT EM.jpg

THE PROJECT

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) represents the most frequent and aggressive type of primary brain tumours in adults. Despite significant advances, current treatments involving resection and radiation/chemotherapy only partially mitigate the dire prognosis for GBM, hence avidly seeking for novel therapeutic approaches against a disease with still no virtual cure and a high socio-economic impact in the EU.
A common feature in GBM, as in many other cancers, is their escape to the retrograde signalling and metabolic regulation exerted by mitochondria -the bioenergetic central of the cell. Modulation of mitochondrial function thus represents a primary target to rewire metabolism and counteract tumour progression and chemotherapy resistance. MITIG capitalizes on the recent reported ability of gliomas to import exogenous mitochondria, either isolated or transferred from surrounding neural cells in the brain, to foster tumour development and malignancy in vivo. MITIG targets both paths for mitochondrial importation to remodel organelle content and address i) how incorporation of exogenous mitochondria impacts respiratory metabolism in GBM cells and iii) the relevance of this metabolic rewiring for tumour development in vivo. Departing from mitochondrial acquisition as a novel tool to redefine respiration and metabolism in cancer, MITIG develops a comprehensive training program fostering MSCA and EU values on research, dissemination and public engagement. An international network of experts supports the training in the intersectorial, multidisciplinary facets of MITIG. In sum, while paving the way for a promising novel biomedical field, MITIG aims at providing novel therapeutic targets and overcoming long lasting questions on respiratory metabolism in GBM and cancer as a whole.

dissemination & outreach

THE PROJECT
DISSEMINATION & OUTREACH
C6 58 Mitocondria OK 09 SELECT_edited.jpg

Yunta-Sánchez S, Bolaños JP, Quintana-Cabrera, R.

CONBIOPREVAL. IV National Meeting of Young Investigators in Biomedicine. On-line

Yunta-Sánchez S, Bolaños JP, Quintana-Cabrera, R.

XVIII Archimedes University Contest. Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities. Madrid (Spain)

November, 2019

Mitochondrial transfer: dynamics beyond the cellular edges.

 Quintana-Cabrera R.

Center for Aging and Regeneration (CARE). Molecular Neurobiology Lab. Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. Santiago de Chile (Chile).

September, 2019

Connexin 43 impacts exogenous mitochondrial acquisition by glioblastoma cells.

Yunta-Sánchez, S., Luengo-Gutiérrez, L., Bolaños JP., Quintana-Cabrera R.

MAC'19 Meeting (6th Biannual Meeting on Mitochondria, Apoptosis & Cancer. Prague (Czech Republic)

July, 2019

Exogenous organelle acquisition remodels the native mitochondrial network in glioblastoma cells

Yunta-Sánchez S, Bolaños JP, Quintana-Cabrera, R.

42 Meeting of the Spanish Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (SEBBM). Madrid (Spain)

March, 2019

Extending the boundaries of mitochondrial dynamics

Quintana-Cabrera, R.

NeuroCenter Megendie, INSERM, University of Bordeaux. Bordeaux (France)

January, 2019

Extending the boundaries of mitochondrial dynamics

Quintana-Cabrera, R.

Vential Institute of Oncology (IOV). Padua (Italy)

COMMUNICATIONS

November, 2020

Dissecting the role of connexin 43 on exogenous mitochondrial acquisition in glioblastoma

November, 2019

Role of connexin 43 in membrane nanotube-mediated mitochondrial exchange in glioblastoma

CONTACT

Rubén Quintana Cabrera, Ph.D.

Neuroenergetic and Metabolism Group,

Institute of Functional Biology and Genomics,

University of Salamanca-CSIC,

C/ Zacarías González, 2,

37007 Salamanca (Spain)

Sent

  • Twitter
PUBLICATIONS
CONTACTO
Marie Curie.png
bottom of page