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Dive into the research topics where Ana Martín-González is active.

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Featured researches published by Ana Martín-González.


PLOS ONE | 2007

Tetrahymena Metallothioneins Fall into Two Discrete Subfamilies

Silvia Díaz; Francisco Amaro; Daniel Rico; Virginia Campos; Laura Benítez; Ana Martín-González; Eileen P. Hamilton; Eduardo Orias; Juan Carlos Gutiérrez

Background Metallothioneins are ubiquitous small, cysteine-rich, multifunctional proteins which can bind heavy metals. Methodology/Principal Findings We report the results of phylogenetic and gene expression analyses that include two new Tetrahymena thermophila metallothionein genes (MTT3 and MTT5). Sequence alignments of all known Tetrahymena metallothioneins have allowed us to rationalize the structure of these proteins. We now formally subdivide the known metallothioneins from the ciliate genus Tetrahymena into two well defined subfamilies, 7a and 7b, based on phylogenetic analysis, on the pattern of clustering of Cys residues, and on the pattern of inducibility by the heavy metals Cd and Cu. Sequence alignment also reveals a remarkably regular, conserved and hierarchical modular structure of all five subfamily 7a MTs, which include MTT3 and MTT5. The former has three modules, while the latter has only two. Induction levels of the three T. thermophila genes were determined using quantitative real time RT-PCR. Various stressors (including heavy metals) brought about dramatically different fold-inductions for each gene; MTT5 showed the highest fold-induction. Conserved DNA motifs with potential regulatory significance were identified, in an unbiased way, upstream of the start codons of subfamily 7a MTs. EST evidence for alternative splicing in the 3′ UTR of the MTT5 mRNA with potential regulatory activity is reported. Conclusion/Significance The small number and remarkably regular structure of Tetrahymena MTs, coupled with the experimental tractability of this model organism for studies of in vivo function, make it an attractive system for the experimental dissection of the roles, structure/function relationships, regulation of gene expression, and adaptive evolution of these proteins, as well as for the development of biotechnological applications for the environmental monitoring of toxic substances.


European Journal of Protistology | 2003

Ciliates as a potential source of cellular and molecular biomarkers/biosensors for heavy metal pollution

Juan Carlos Gutiérrez; Ana Martín-González; Silvia Díaz; Ruth Ortega

Ciliates can be valuable eukaryotic micro-organisms for use as whole-cell biosensors or as a potential cellular source of molecular biomarkers/biosensors to detect pollutants (such as heavy metals) in environmental samples. Here, we report the advantages of using ciliates in biomonitoring of heavy metals, in comparison with other micro-organisms. The diversity of experimental conditions and methodological approaches in heavy metal bioassays using ciliates are also discussed. Finally, we show several examples of the suitability of ciliates as potential whole-cell or molecular biosensors to detect bioavailable heavy metals in environmental samples.


Microbial Biotechnology | 2011

Whole-cell biosensors for detection of heavy metal ions in environmental samples based on metallothionein promoters from Tetrahymena thermophila

Francisco Amaro; Aaron P. Turkewitz; Ana Martín-González; Juan-Carlos Gutiérrez

Heavy metals are among the most serious pollutants, and thus there is a need to develop sensitive and rapid biomonitoring methods for heavy metals in the environment. Critical parameters such as bioavailability, toxicity and genotoxicity cannot be tested using chemical analysis, but only can be assayed using living cells. A whole‐cell biosensor uses the whole cell as a single reporter incorporating both bioreceptor and transducer elements. In the present paper, we report results with two gene constructs using the Tetrahymena thermophila MTT1 and MTT5 metallothionein promoters linked with the eukaryotic luciferase gene as a reporter. This is the first report of a ciliated protozoan used as a heavy metal whole‐cell biosensor. T. thermophila transformed strains were created as heavy metal whole‐cell biosensors, and turn on bioassays were designed to detect, in about 2 h, the bioavailable heavy metals in polluted soil or aquatic samples. Validation of these whole‐cell biosensors was carried out using both artificial and natural samples, including methods for detecting false positives and negatives. Comparison with other published cell biosensors indicates that the Tetrahymena metallothionein promoter‐based biosensors appear to be the most sensitive eukaryotic metal biosensors and compare favourably with some prokaryotic biosensors as well.


Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry | 2011

Ciliate metallothioneins: unique microbial eukaryotic heavy-metal-binder molecules

Juan Carlos Gutiérrez; Francisco Amaro; Silvia Díaz; P. de Francisco; L. L. Cubas; Ana Martín-González

This article represents an updated review of ciliate metallothioneins (Tetrahymena species) including a comparative analysis with regard to well-known metallothioneins (MTs) from other organisms and discussion of their exclusive features. It opens with an introduction to ciliates, summarizing the main characteristics of these eukaryotic microorganisms and their use as cellular models to study metallothioneins and metal–eukaryotic cell interactions. It has been experimentally proved that at least three different metal resistance mechanisms exist in ciliates, of which bioaccumulation is the most studied. Structural comparative analysis reveals that Tetrahymena MTs have unique characteristics, such as longer length, a considerably higher cysteine content, different metal–MT stoichiometry values, the presence of new cysteine clusters, and a strictly conserved modular–submodular structure. Gene expression analysis reveals a multistress and differential response to diverse metals and other environmental stressors, which corroborates the classification of these MTs. An in silico analysis of the promoter sequences of some MT genes reveals the presence of conserved motifs that are probably involved in gene expression regulation. We also discuss the great advantages of the first ciliate whole-cell biosensors based on MT promoters from Tetrahymena thermophila to detect heavy metal ions in environmental samples.


BioEssays | 2009

From heavy metal-binders to biosensors: Ciliate metallothioneins discussed

Juan Carlos Gutiérrez; Francisco Amaro; Ana Martín-González

Metallothioneins (MTs) are ubiquitous proteins with the capacity to bind heavy metal ions (mainly Cd, Zn or Cu), and they have been found in animals, plants, eukaryotic and prokaryotic micro‐organisms. We have carried out a comparative analysis of ciliate MTs (Tetrahymena species) to well‐known MTs from other organisms, discussing their exclusive features, such as the presence of aromatic amino acid residues and almost exclusive cysteine clusters (CCC) present in cadmium‐binding metallothioneins (CdMTs), higher heavy metal‐MT stoichiometry values, and a strictly conserved modular–submodular structure. Based on this last feature and an extensive gene duplication, we propose a possible model for the evolutionary history of T. thermophila MTs. We also suggest possible functions for these MTs from consideration of their differential gene expressions and discuss the potential use of these proteins and/or their gene promoters for designing molecular or whole‐cell biosensors for a fast detection of heavy metals in diverse polluted ecosystems.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2015

Heavy metal whole-cell biosensors using eukaryotic microorganisms: an updated critical review

Juan Carlos Gutiérrez; Francisco Amaro; Ana Martín-González

This review analyzes the advantages and disadvantages of using eukaryotic microorganisms to design whole-cell biosensors (WCBs) for monitoring environmental heavy metal pollution in soil or aquatic habitats. Basic considerations for designing a eukaryotic WCB are also shown. A comparative analysis of the promoter genes used to design WCBs is carried out, and the sensitivity and reproducibility of the main reporter genes used is also reviewed. Three main eukaryotic taxonomic groups are considered: yeasts, microalgae, and ciliated protozoa. Models that have been widely analyzed as potential WCBs are the Saccharomyces cerevisiae model among yeasts, the Tetrahymena thermophila model for ciliates and Chlamydomonas model for microalgae. The advantages and disadvantages of each microbial group are discussed, and a ranking of sensitivity to the same type of metal pollutant from reported eukaryotic WCBs is also shown. General conclusions and possible future developments of eukaryotic WCBs are reported.


European Journal of Protistology | 1998

Nuclear changes, macronuclear chromatin reorganization and DNA modifications during ciliate encystment

Juan Carlos Gutiérrez; Ana Martín-González; Sergio Callejas

Summary In this paper we review one of the most important aspects of ciliate encystment; the nuclear and chromatin changes involved in the differentiation process that forms the resting cyst or cryptobiotic stage. All these changes are directed to obtain the main feature of any cryptobiotic form: the gene-silencing and the genome preservation. The nuclear changes include: macronuclear fusion and chromatin condensation, formation of chromatin crystal-like structures in some ciliates, nucleolar fusion and rDNA inactivation, macronuclear DNA loss and specific DNA modifications.


International Journal of Biological Sciences | 2015

Hints for metal-preference protein sequence determinants: different metal binding features of the five tetrahymena thermophila metallothioneins.

Anna Espart; Maribel Marín; Selene Gil-Moreno; Òscar Palacios; Francisco Amaro; Ana Martín-González; Juan Carlos Gutiérrez; Mercè Capdevila; Sílvia Atrian

The metal binding preference of metallothioneins (MTs) groups them in two extreme subsets, the Zn/Cd- and the Cu-thioneins. Ciliates harbor the largest MT gene/protein family reported so far, including 5 paralogs that exhibit relatively low sequence similarity, excepting MTT2 and MTT4. In Tetrahymena thermophila, three MTs (MTT1, MTT3 and MTT5) were considered Cd-thioneins and two (MTT2 and MTT4) Cu-thioneins, according to gene expression inducibility and phylogenetic analysis. In this study, the metal-binding abilities of the five MTT proteins were characterized, to obtain information about the folding and stability of their cognate- and non-cognate metal complexes, and to characterize the T. thermophila MT system at protein level. Hence, the five MTTs were recombinantly synthesized as Zn2+-, Cd2+- or Cu+-complexes, which were analyzed by electrospray mass spectrometry (ESI-MS), circular dichroism (CD), and UV-vis spectrophotometry. Among the Cd-thioneins, MTT1 and MTT5 were optimal for Cd2+ coordination, yielding unique Cd17- and Cd8- complexes, respectively. When binding Zn2+, they rendered a mixture of Zn-species. Only MTT5 was capable to coordinate Cu+, although yielding heteronuclear Zn-, Cu-species or highly unstable Cu-homometallic species. MTT3 exhibited poor binding abilities both for Cd2+ and for Cu+, and although not optimally, it yielded the best result when coordinating Zn2+. The two Cu-thioneins, MTT2 and MTT4 isoforms formed homometallic Cu-complexes (major Cu20-MTT) upon synthesis in Cu-supplemented hosts. Contrarily, they were unable to fold into stable Cd-complexes, while Zn-MTT species were only recovered for MTT4 (major Zn10-MTT4). Thus, the metal binding preferences of the five T. thermophila MTs correlate well with their previous classification as Cd- and Cu-thioneins, and globally, they can be classified from Zn/Cd- to Cu-thioneins according to the gradation: MTT1>MTT5>MTT3>MTT4>MTT2. The main mechanisms underlying the evolution and specialization of the MTT metal binding preferences may have been internal tandem duplications, presence of doublet and triplet Cys patterns in Zn/Cd-thioneins, and optimization of site specific amino acid determinants (Lys for Zn/Cd- and Asn for Cu-coordination).


Gene | 2008

Two new members of the Tetrahymena multi-stress-inducible metallothionein family: characterization and expression analysis of T. rostrata Cd/Cu metallothionein genes.

Francisco Amaro; María del Pilar de Lucas; Ana Martín-González; Juan Carlos Gutiérrez

We report the cloning and characterization of two new metallothionein (MT) genes (TrosMTT1 and TrosMTT2), isolated as cDNAs, from the ciliated protozoa Tetrahymena rostrata. The TrosMTT1 inferred protein has been identified as a CdMT and included into the 7a subfamily of Tetrahymena MTs, while TrosMTT2 has been identified as a CuMT (including it into 7b subfamily), due to its similarity to TpigMT-2 and its significant induction by copper. TrosMTT1 protein sequence reveals a remarkably regular and hierarchical modular organization, as it is known for other Tetrahymena CdMTs, showing a bi-modular structure. TrosMTT2 presents a structural organization based on CKCX(2-5)CKC repeats, like it occurs in other Tetrahymena CuMTs, indicating that an evolutionary history based on intra-gene duplications might be also possible. Both are also multi-stress-inducible genes because they are induced by other heavy metals and stressors, as it has been shown by quantitative real-time RT-PCR. It is the first time that the gene expression of a putative Tetrahymena CuMT is analyzed by quantitative PCR, confirming it as a CuMT. These two new Tetrahymena MTs complete, at present, the actual view of this protein superfamily, and corroborate the unique features of ciliate MTs. Furthermore, both, a comparative analysis of relative gene expression values obtained by quantitative RT-PCR on other Tetrahymena MT genes and an analysis of the different Tetrahymena MTs based on the different Cys clusters of these proteins are carried out, which show an update view of Tetrahymena MT gene family.


Cell Biology International | 1994

Macronuclear DNA demethylation is involved in the encystment process of the ciliate Colpoda inflata.

Gemma Palacios; Ana Martín-González; Juan Carlos Gutiérrez

Ciliate encystment is an eukaryotic cell differentiation process which involves a specific gene expression, to form the resting stage. In this study, we investigate, for first time, the DNA methylation pattern changes during encystment in the ciliate Colpoda inflata, and the 5‐azacytidine effect on growing cells and encystment. Results indicate that 5‐methylcytosine is present in macronuclear DNA of this ciliate and the 5‐azacytidine treatment induces encystment in growth conditions. From restriction enzyme digestion and 5‐azacytidine experiments, we conclude that a specific DNA demethylation is probably involved in the encystment gene expression of this ciliate.

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Juan Carlos Gutiérrez

Complutense University of Madrid

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Francisco Amaro

Complutense University of Madrid

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Silvia Díaz

Complutense University of Madrid

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Dimas Fernández-Galiano

Complutense University of Madrid

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Susana Serrano

Complutense University of Madrid

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Juan-Carlos Gutiérrez

Complutense University of Madrid

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Laura Benítez

Complutense University of Madrid

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Patricia de Francisco

Complutense University of Madrid

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Ruth Ortega

Complutense University of Madrid

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Sara Borniquel

Complutense University of Madrid

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