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Dive into the research topics where Adriana Garay-Arroyo is active.

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Featured researches published by Adriana Garay-Arroyo.


Yeast | 1999

Three genes whose expression is induced by stress in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Adriana Garay-Arroyo; Alejandra A. Covarrubias

In this work we report the isolation and characterization of three genes induced by different stress conditions in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. These genes, named GRE1, GRE2 and GRE3, were identified by the differential display technique using total RNAs obtained from yeast grown under hyperosmotic conditions. Northern analysis of RNA obtained from different growth conditions shows that their corresponding transcripts accumulate not only in response to osmotic stress but also to ionic, oxidative and heat stress. Analysis of the deduced amino acid sequences indicated that GRE1, GRE2 and GRE3 correspond to ORFs YPL223C, YOL151W and YHR104W, respectively. Additionally, it suggested that GRE1 encodes a hydrophilic polypeptide that it is not homologous to any known protein but has features resembling the late embryogenesis abundant (LEA) proteins characterized in higher plants; GRE2 encodes a putative reductase with similarity to plant dihydroflavonol‐4‐reductases; and GRE3 codifies for a keto‐aldose reductase highly related to fungal xylose‐reductases. The three genes are induced in the late growth phases in agreement with the presence of PDS elements in their promoter regions. The three of them are under the control of the HOG pathway, even though GRE1 and GRE2 promoter regions do not present the consensus core STRE sequence. In addition, GRE1 and GRE3 are regulated negatively by the cAMP–PKA transduction pathway and positively by the transcriptional factors Msn2p and Msn4p. Gene disruptions of the GRE genes did not show a phenotype in any of the tested stress conditions. Copyright


Plant Physiology | 2008

An AGAMOUS -Related MADS-Box Gene, XAL1 ( AGL12 ), Regulates Root Meristem Cell Proliferation and Flowering Transition in Arabidopsis

Rosalinda Tapia-López; Berenice García-Ponce; Joseph G. Dubrovsky; Adriana Garay-Arroyo; Rigoberto V. Pérez-Ruíz; Sun-Hyung Kim; Francisca Acevedo; Soraya Pelaz; Elena R. Alvarez-Buylla

MADS-box genes are key components of the networks that control the transition to flowering and flower development, but their role in vegetative development is poorly understood. This article shows that the sister gene of the AGAMOUS (AG) clade, AGL12, has an important role in root development as well as in flowering transition. We isolated three mutant alleles for AGL12, which is renamed here as XAANTAL1 (XAL1): Two alleles, xal1-1 and xal1-2, are in Columbia ecotype and xal1-3 is in Landsberg erecta ecotype. All alleles have a short-root phenotype with a smaller meristem, lower rate of cell production, and abnormal root apical meristem organization. Interestingly, we also encountered a significantly longer cell cycle in the strongest xal1 alleles with respect to wild-type plants. Expression analyses confirmed the presence of XAL1 transcripts in roots, particularly in the phloem. Moreover, XAL1∷β-glucuronidase expression was specifically up-regulated by auxins in this tissue. In addition, mRNA in situ hybridization showed that XAL1 transcripts were also found in leaves and floral meristems of wild-type plants. This expression correlates with the late-flowering phenotypes of the xal1 mutants grown under long days. Transcript expression analysis suggests that XAL1 is an upstream regulator of SOC, FLOWERING LOCUS T, and LFY. We propose that XAL1 may have similar roles in both root and aerial meristems that could explain the xal1 late-flowering phenotype.


Developmental Dynamics | 2012

Hormone Symphony During Root Growth and Development

Adriana Garay-Arroyo; María de la Paz Sánchez; Berenice García-Ponce; Eugenio Azpeitia; Elena R. Álvarez-Buylla

Hormones regulate plant growth and development in response to external environmental stimuli via complex signal transduction pathways, which in turn form complex networks of interaction. Several classes of hormones have been reported, and their activity depends on their biosynthesis, transport, conjugation, accumulation in the vacuole, and degradation. However, the activity of a given hormone is also dependent on its interaction with other hormones. Indeed, there is a complex crosstalk between hormones that regulates their biosynthesis, transport, and/or signaling functionality, although some hormones have overlapping or opposite functions. The plant root is a particularly useful system in which to study the complex role of plant hormones in the plastic control of plant development. Physiological, cellular, and molecular genetic approaches have been used to study the role of plant hormones in root meristem homeostasis. In this review, we discuss recent findings on the synthesis, signaling, transport of hormones and role during root development and examine the role of hormone crosstalk in maintaining homeostasis in the apical root meristem. Developmental Dynamics, 2012.


The EMBO Journal | 2013

The MADS transcription factor XAL2/AGL14 modulates auxin transport during Arabidopsis root development by regulating PIN expression

Adriana Garay-Arroyo; Enrique Ortiz-Moreno; María de la Paz Sánchez; Angus S. Murphy; Berenice García-Ponce; Nayelli Marsch-Martínez; Stefan de Folter; Adriana Corvera-Poiré; Fabiola Jaimes-Miranda; Mario A. Pacheco-Escobedo; Joseph G. Dubrovsky; Soraya Pelaz; Elena R. Alvarez-Buylla

Elucidating molecular links between cell‐fate regulatory networks and dynamic patterning modules is a key for understanding development. Auxin is important for plant patterning, particularly in roots, where it establishes positional information for cell‐fate decisions. PIN genes encode plasma membrane proteins that serve as auxin efflux transporters; mutations in members of this gene family exhibit smaller roots with altered root meristems and stem‐cell patterning. Direct regulators of PIN transcription have remained elusive. Here, we establish that a MADS‐box gene (XAANTAL2, XAL2/AGL14) controls auxin transport via PIN transcriptional regulation during Arabidopsis root development; mutations in this gene exhibit altered stem‐cell patterning, root meristem size, and root growth. XAL2 is necessary for normal shootward and rootward auxin transport, as well as for maintaining normal auxin distribution within the root. Furthermore, this MADS‐domain transcription factor upregulates PIN1 and PIN4 by direct binding to regulatory regions and it is required for PIN4‐dependent auxin response. In turn, XAL2 expression is regulated by auxin levels thus establishing a positive feedback loop between auxin levels and PIN regulation that is likely to be important for robust root patterning.


The Plant Cell | 2010

B-Function Expression in the Flower Center Underlies the Homeotic Phenotype of Lacandonia schismatica (Triuridaceae)

Elena R. Alvarez-Buylla; Barbara A. Ambrose; Eduardo Flores-Sandoval; Francisco Vergara-Silva; Marie Englund; Adriana Garay-Arroyo; Berenice García-Ponce; Eduardo de la Torre-Bárcena; Silvia Espinosa-Matías; Esteban Martínez; Alma Piñeyro-Nelson; Peter Engström; Elliot M. Meyerowitz

This article shows that the peculiar expression pattern of a functionally conserved floral gene (APETALA3-like) in the center of the Lacandonia schismatica flower underlies its unique inside-out arrangement (i.e., central stamens surrounded by carpels). Thus, relatively simple genetic alterations may underlie large morphological shifts fixed in extant natural populations. Spontaneous homeotic transformations have been described in natural populations of both plants and animals, but little is known about the molecular-genetic mechanisms underlying these processes in plants. In the ABC model of floral organ identity in Arabidopsis thaliana, the B- and C-functions are necessary for stamen morphogenesis, and C alone is required for carpel identity. We provide ABC model-based molecular-genetic evidence that explains the unique inside-out homeotic floral organ arrangement of the monocotyledonous mycoheterotroph species Lacandonia schismatica (Triuridaceae) from Mexico. Whereas a quarter million flowering plant species bear central carpels surrounded by stamens, L. schismatica stamens occur in the center of the flower and are surrounded by carpels. The simplest explanation for this is that the B-function is displaced toward the flower center. Our analyses of the spatio-temporal pattern of B- and C-function gene expression are consistent with this hypothesis. The hypothesis is further supported by conservation between the B-function genes of L. schismatica and Arabidopsis, as the former are able to rescue stamens in Arabidopsis transgenic complementation lines, and Ls-AP3 and Ls-PI are able to interact with each other and with the corresponding Arabidopsis B-function proteins in yeast. Thus, relatively simple molecular modifications may underlie important morphological shifts in natural populations of extant plant taxa.


New Phytologist | 2015

The impact of Polycomb group (PcG) and Trithorax group (TrxG) epigenetic factors in plant plasticity

María de la Paz Sánchez; Pamela Aceves-García; Emilio Petrone; Stefan Steckenborn; Rosario Vega-León; Elena R. Alvarez-Buylla; Adriana Garay-Arroyo; Berenice García-Ponce

Current advances indicate that epigenetic mechanisms play important roles in the regulatory networks involved in plant developmental responses to environmental conditions. Hence, understanding the role of such components becomes crucial to understanding the mechanisms underlying the plasticity and variability of plant traits, and thus the ecology and evolution of plant development. We now know that important components of phenotypic variation may result from heritable and reversible epigenetic mechanisms without genetic alterations. The epigenetic factors Polycomb group (PcG) and Trithorax group (TrxG) are involved in developmental processes that respond to environmental signals, playing important roles in plant plasticity. In this review, we discuss current knowledge of TrxG and PcG functions in different developmental processes in response to internal and environmental cues and we also integrate the emerging evidence concerning their function in plant plasticity. Many such plastic responses rely on meristematic cell behavior, including stem cell niche maintenance, cellular reprogramming, flowering and dormancy as well as stress memory. This information will help to determine how to integrate the role of epigenetic regulation into models of gene regulatory networks, which have mostly included transcriptional interactions underlying various aspects of plant development and its plastic response to environmental conditions.


FEBS Letters | 2003

Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is required for resistance to hyperosmosis

Adriana Garay-Arroyo; Fernando Lledías; Wilhelm Hansberg; Alejandra A. Covarrubias

Here we analyzed the role of the antioxidant response in Saccharomyces cerevisiae adaptation to hyperosmotic stress. We show that Cu,Zn‐superoxide dismutase (SOD1) plays a fundamental role in this adaptation process since under hyperosmosis SOD1 mutants lead to high protein oxidation levels and show a sensitive phenotype, which is reversed by the addition of N‐acetylcysteine to the medium. Pretreatment with MnCl2, a superoxide scavenger, improves the survival of the sod1 strain upon hyperosmosis. Additionally, we show that upon hyperosmotic shock there is a small and transient increase in SOD1 transcript levels, regulated by the protein kinase A‐cAMP and SKN7 pathways.


Molecular Plant | 2015

XAANTAL2 (AGL14) Is an Important Component of the Complex Gene Regulatory Network that Underlies Arabidopsis Shoot Apical Meristem Transitions

Rigoberto V. Pérez-Ruíz; Berenice García-Ponce; Nayelli Marsch-Martínez; Yamel Ugartechea-Chirino; Mitzi Villajuana-Bonequi; Stefan de Folter; Eugenio Azpeitia; Jose Davila-Velderrain; David Cruz-Sánchez; Adriana Garay-Arroyo; María de la Paz Sánchez; Juan M. Estévez-Palmas; Elena R. Álvarez-Buylla

In Arabidopsis thaliana, multiple genes involved in shoot apical meristem (SAM) transitions have been characterized, but the mechanisms required for the dynamic attainment of vegetative, inflorescence, and floral meristem (VM, IM, FM) cell fates during SAM transitions are not well understood. Here we show that a MADS-box gene, XAANTAL2 (XAL2/AGL14), is necessary and sufficient to induce flowering, and its regulation is important in FM maintenance and determinacy. xal2 mutants are late flowering, particularly under short-day (SD) condition, while XAL2 overexpressing plants are early flowering, but their flowers have vegetative traits. Interestingly, inflorescences of the latter plants have higher expression levels of LFY, AP1, and TFL1 than wild-type plants. In addition we found that XAL2 is able to bind the TFL1 regulatory regions. On the other hand, the basipetal carpels of the 35S::XAL2 lines lose determinacy and maintain high levels of WUS expression under SD condition. To provide a mechanistic explanation for the complex roles of XAL2 in SAM transitions and the apparently paradoxical phenotypes of XAL2 and other MADS-box (SOC1, AGL24) overexpressors, we conducted dynamic gene regulatory network (GRN) and epigenetic landscape modeling. We uncovered a GRN module that underlies VM, IM, and FM gene configurations and transition patterns in wild-type plants as well as loss and gain of function lines characterized here and previously. Our approach thus provides a novel mechanistic framework for understanding the complex basis of SAM development.


Developmental Dynamics | 2015

Role of transcriptional regulation in the evolution of plant phenotype: A dynamic systems approach.

Emiliano Rodríguez-Mega; Alma Piñeyro‐Nelson; Crisanto Gutierrez; Berenice García-Ponce; María de la Paz Sánchez; Estephania Zluhan-Martínez; Elena R. Alvarez-Buylla; Adriana Garay-Arroyo

A growing body of evidence suggests that alterations in transcriptional regulation of genes involved in modulating development are an important part of phenotypic evolution, and this can be documented among species and within populations. While the effects of differential transcriptional regulation in organismal development have been preferentially studied in animal systems, this phenomenon has also been addressed in plants. In this review, we summarize evidence for cis‐regulatory mutations, trans‐regulatory changes and epigenetic modifications as molecular events underlying important phenotypic alterations, and thus shaping the evolution of plant development. We postulate that a mechanistic understanding of why such molecular alterations have a key role in development, morphology and evolution will have to rely on dynamic models of complex regulatory networks that consider the concerted action of genetic and nongenetic components, and that also incorporate the restrictions underlying the genotype to phenotype mapping process. Developmental Dynamics 244:1074–1095, 2015.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2012

When ABC becomes ACB

Adriana Garay-Arroyo; Alma Piñeyro-Nelson; Berenice García-Ponce; María de la Paz Sánchez; Elena R. Alvarez-Buylla

Understanding how the information contained in genes is mapped onto the phenotypes, and deriving formal frameworks to search for generic aspects of developmental constraints and evolution remains one of the main challenges of contemporary biological research. The Mexican endemic triurid Lacandonia schismatica (Lacandoniaceae), a mycoheterotrophic monocotyledonous plant with hermaphroditic reproductive axes is alone among 250,000 species of angiosperms, as it has central stamens surrounded by a peripheral gynoecium, representing a natural instance of a homeotic mutant. Based on the classical ABC model of flower development, it has recently been shown that the B-function gene APETALA3 (AP3), essential for stamen identity, was displaced toward the flower centre in L. schismatica (ABC to ACB) from the early stages of flower development. A functional conservation of B-function genes from L. schismatica through the rescue of B-gene mutants in Arabidopsis thaliana, as well as conserved protein interactions, has also been demonstrated. Thus, it has been shown that relatively simple genetic alterations may underlie large morphological shifts fixed in extant natural populations. Nevertheless, critical questions remain in order to have a full and sufficient explanation of the molecular genetic mechanisms underlying L. schismaticas unique floral arrangement. Evolutionary approaches to developmental mechanisms and systems biology, including high-throughput functional genomic studies and models of complex developmental gene regulatory networks, constitute two main approaches to meet such a challenge. In this review, the aim is to address some of the pending questions with the ultimate goal of investigating further the mechanisms of L. schismaticas unique homeotic flower arrangement and its evolution.

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Elena R. Alvarez-Buylla

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Berenice García-Ponce

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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María de la Paz Sánchez

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Alejandra A. Covarrubias

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Alma Piñeyro-Nelson

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Eduardo Flores-Sandoval

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Fernando Lledías

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Joseph G. Dubrovsky

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Mario A. Pacheco-Escobedo

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Crisanto Gutierrez

Spanish National Research Council

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