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Dive into the research topics where Anabella F. Lodeyro is active.

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Featured researches published by Anabella F. Lodeyro.


Current Opinion in Biotechnology | 2014

Novel perspectives for the engineering of abiotic stress tolerance in plants.

Julieta Virginia Cabello; Anabella F. Lodeyro; Matias D. Zurbriggen

Adverse environmental conditions pose serious limitations to agricultural production. Classical biotechnological approaches towards increasing abiotic stress tolerance focus on boosting plant endogenous defence mechanisms. However, overexpression of regulatory elements or effectors is usually accompanied by growth handicap and yield penalties due to crosstalk between developmental and stress-response networks. Herein we offer an overview on novel strategies with the potential to overcome these limitations based on the engineering of regulatory systems involved in the fine-tuning of the plant response to environmental hardships, including post-translational modifications, small RNAs, epigenetic control of gene expression and hormonal networks. The development and application of plant synthetic biology tools and approaches will add new functionalities and perspectives to genetic engineering programs for enhancing abiotic stress tolerance.


Plant Physiology | 2006

Transgenic Tobacco Plants Overexpressing Chloroplastic Ferredoxin-NADP(H) Reductase Display Normal Rates of Photosynthesis and Increased Tolerance to Oxidative Stress

Ramiro E. Rodriguez; Anabella F. Lodeyro; Hugo O. Poli; Matias D. Zurbriggen; Martin Peisker; Javier F. Palatnik; Vanesa B. Tognetti; Henning Tschiersch; Mohammad-Reza Hajirezaei; Estela M. Valle; Néstor Carrillo

Ferredoxin-NADP(H) reductase (FNR) catalyzes the last step of photosynthetic electron transport in chloroplasts, driving electrons from reduced ferredoxin to NADP+. This reaction is rate limiting for photosynthesis under a wide range of illumination conditions, as revealed by analysis of plants transformed with an antisense version of the FNR gene. To investigate whether accumulation of this flavoprotein over wild-type levels could improve photosynthetic efficiency and growth, we generated transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) plants expressing a pea (Pisum sativum) FNR targeted to chloroplasts. The alien product distributed between the thylakoid membranes and the chloroplast stroma. Transformants grown at 150 or 700 μmol quanta m−2 s−1 displayed wild-type phenotypes regardless of FNR content. Thylakoids isolated from plants with a 5-fold FNR increase over the wild type displayed only moderate stimulation (approximately 20%) in the rates of electron transport from water to NADP+. In contrast, when donors of photosystem I were used to drive NADP+ photoreduction, the activity was 3- to 4-fold higher than the wild-type controls. Plants expressing various levels of FNR (from 1- to 3.6-fold over the wild type) failed to show significant differences in CO2 assimilation rates when assayed over a range of light intensities and CO2 concentrations. Transgenic lines exhibited enhanced tolerance to photooxidative damage and redox-cycling herbicides that propagate reactive oxygen species. The results suggest that photosynthetic electron transport has several rate-limiting steps, with FNR catalyzing just one of them.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

Identification of new microRNA-regulated genes by conserved targeting in plant species

Uciel Chorostecki; Valeria A. Crosa; Anabella F. Lodeyro; Nicolás G. Bologna; Ana Paula Martin; Néstor Carrillo; Carla Schommer; Javier F. Palatnik

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are major regulators of gene expression in multicellular organisms. They recognize their targets by sequence complementarity and guide them to cleavage or translational arrest. It is generally accepted that plant miRNAs have extensive complementarity to their targets and their prediction usually relies on the use of empirical parameters deduced from known miRNA–target interactions. Here, we developed a strategy to identify miRNA targets which is mainly based on the conservation of the potential regulation in different species. We applied the approach to expressed sequence tags datasets from angiosperms. Using this strategy, we predicted many new interactions and experimentally validated previously unknown miRNA targets in Arabidopsis thaliana. Newly identified targets that are broadly conserved include auxin regulators, transcription factors and transporters. Some of them might participate in the same pathways as the targets known before, suggesting that some miRNAs might control different aspects of a biological process. Furthermore, this approach can be used to identify targets present in a specific group of species, and, as a proof of principle, we analyzed Solanaceae-specific targets. The presented strategy can be used alone or in combination with other approaches to find miRNA targets in plants.


Plant Journal | 2015

Expression of the tetrahydrofolate-dependent nitric oxide synthase from the green alga Ostreococcus tauri increases tolerance to abiotic stresses and influences stomatal development in Arabidopsis.

Noelia Foresi; Martín L. Mayta; Anabella F. Lodeyro; Denise Scuffi; Natalia Correa-Aragunde; Carlos García-Mata; Claudia A. Casalongué; Néstor Carrillo; Lorenzo Lamattina

Nitric oxide (NO) is a signaling molecule with diverse biological functions in plants. NO plays a crucial role in growth and development, from germination to senescence, and is also involved in plant responses to biotic and abiotic stresses. In animals, NO is synthesized by well-described nitric oxide synthase (NOS) enzymes. NOS activity has also been detected in higher plants, but no gene encoding an NOS protein, or the enzymes required for synthesis of tetrahydrobiopterin, an essential cofactor of mammalian NOS activity, have been identified so far. Recently, an NOS gene from the unicellular marine alga Ostreococcus tauri (OtNOS) has been discovered and characterized. Arabidopsis thaliana plants were transformed with OtNOS under the control of the inducible short promoter fragment (SPF) of the sunflower (Helianthus annuus) Hahb-4 gene, which responds to abiotic stresses and abscisic acid. Transgenic plants expressing OtNOS accumulated higher NO concentrations compared with siblings transformed with the empty vector, and displayed enhanced salt, drought and oxidative stress tolerance. Moreover, transgenic OtNOS lines exhibited increased stomatal development compared with plants transformed with the empty vector. Both in vitro and in vivo experiments indicate that OtNOS, unlike mammalian NOS, efficiently uses tetrahydrofolate as a cofactor in Arabidopsis plants. The modulation of NO production to alleviate abiotic stress disturbances in higher plants highlights the potential of genetic manipulation to influence NO metabolism as a tool to improve plant fitness under adverse growth conditions.


FEBS Letters | 2012

The importance of flavodoxin for environmental stress tolerance in photosynthetic microorganisms and transgenic plants. Mechanism, evolution and biotechnological potential

Anabella F. Lodeyro; Romina D. Ceccoli; Juan J. Pierella Karlusich; Néstor Carrillo

Ferredoxins are electron shuttles harboring iron–sulfur clusters which participate in oxido‐reductive pathways in organisms displaying very different lifestyles. Ferredoxin levels decline in plants and cyanobacteria exposed to environmental stress and iron starvation. Flavodoxin is an isofunctional flavoprotein present in cyanobacteria and algae (not plants) which is induced and replaces ferredoxin under stress. Expression of a chloroplast‐targeted flavodoxin in plants confers tolerance to multiple stresses and iron deficit. We discuss herein the bases for functional equivalence between the two proteins, the reasons for ferredoxin conservation despite its susceptibility to aerobic stress and for the loss of flavodoxin as an adaptive trait in higher eukaryotes. We also propose a mechanism to explain the tolerance conferred by flavodoxin when expressed in plants.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2014

The long goodbye: the rise and fall of flavodoxin during plant evolution

Juan J. Pierella Karlusich; Anabella F. Lodeyro; Néstor Carrillo

Ferredoxins are electron shuttles harbouring iron-sulfur clusters that connect multiple oxido-reductive pathways in organisms displaying different lifestyles. Some prokaryotes and algae express an isofunctional electron carrier, flavodoxin, which contains flavin mononucleotide as cofactor. Both proteins evolved in the anaerobic environment preceding the appearance of oxygenic photosynthesis. The advent of an oxygen-rich atmosphere proved detrimental to ferredoxin owing to iron limitation and oxidative damage to the iron-sulfur cluster, and many microorganisms induced flavodoxin expression to replace ferredoxin under stress conditions. Paradoxically, ferredoxin was maintained throughout the tree of life, whereas flavodoxin is absent from plants and animals. Of note is that flavodoxin expression in transgenic plants results in increased tolerance to multiple stresses and iron deficit, through mechanisms similar to those operating in microorganisms. Then, the question remains open as to why a trait that still confers plants such obvious adaptive benefits was not retained. We compare herein the properties of ferredoxin and flavodoxin, and their contrasting modes of expression in response to different environmental stimuli. Phylogenetic analyses suggest that the flavodoxin gene was already absent in the algal lineages immediately preceding land plants. Geographical distribution of phototrophs shows a bias against flavodoxin-containing organisms in iron-rich coastal/freshwater habitats. Based on these observations, we propose that plants evolved from freshwater macroalgae that already lacked flavodoxin because they thrived in an iron-rich habitat with no need to back up ferredoxin functions and therefore no selective pressure to keep the flavodoxin gene. Conversely, ferredoxin retention in the plant lineage is probably related to its higher efficiency as an electron carrier, compared with flavodoxin. Several lines of evidence supporting these contentions are presented and discussed.


FEBS Open Bio | 2011

An in vivo system involving co-expression of cyanobacterial flavodoxin and ferredoxin-NADP + reductase confers increased tolerance to oxidative stress in plants

Mariana Giró; Romina D. Ceccoli; Hugo O. Poli; Néstor Carrillo; Anabella F. Lodeyro

Oxidative stress in plants causes ferredoxin down‐regulation and NADP+ shortage, over‐reduction of the photosynthetic electron transport chain, electron leakage to oxygen and generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Expression of cyanobacterial flavodoxin in tobacco chloroplasts compensates for ferredoxin decline and restores electron delivery to productive routes, resulting in enhanced stress tolerance. We have designed an in vivo system to optimize flavodoxin reduction and NADP+ regeneration under stress using a version of cyanobacterial ferredoxin–NADP+ reductase without the thylakoid‐binding domain. Co‐expression of the two soluble flavoproteins in the chloroplast stroma resulted in lines displaying maximal tolerance to redox‐cycling oxidants, lower damage and decreased ROS accumulation. The results underscore the importance of chloroplast redox homeostasis in plants exposed to adverse conditions, and provide a tool to improve crop tolerance toward environmental hardships.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2001

Inhibition of steady-state mitochondrial ATP synthesis by bicarbonate, an activating anion of ATP hydrolysis.

Anabella F. Lodeyro; Nora B. Calcaterra; Oscar A. Roveri

Bicarbonate, an activating anion of ATP hydrolysis, inhibited ATP synthesis coupled to succinate oxidation in beef heart submitochondrial particles but diminished the lag time and increased the steady-state velocity of the (32)Pi-ATP exchange reaction. The latter effects exclude the possibility that bicarbonate is inducing an intrinsic uncoupling between ATP hydrolysis and proton translocation at the level of F(1)F(o) ATPase. The inhibition of ATP synthesis was competitive with respect to ADP at low fixed [Pi], mixed at high [Pi] and non-competitive towards Pi at any fixed [ADP]. From these results we can conclude that (i) bicarbonate does not bind to a Pi site in the mitochondrial F(1); (ii) it competes with the binding of ADP to a low-affinity site, likely the low-affinity non-catalytic nucleotide binding site. It is postulated that bicarbonate stimulates ATP hydrolysis and inhibits ATP synthesis by modulating the relative affinities of the catalytic site for ATP and ADP.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Suppression of Reactive Oxygen Species Accumulation in Chloroplasts Prevents Leaf Damage but Not Growth Arrest in Salt-Stressed Tobacco Plants.

Anabella F. Lodeyro; Mariana Giró; Hugo O. Poli; Gabriel R. Bettucci; Adriana Cortadi; Alejandro M. Ferri; Néstor Carrillo

Crop yield reduction due to salinity is a growing agronomical concern in many regions. Increased production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in plant cells accompanies many abiotic stresses including salinity, acting as toxic and signaling molecules during plant stress responses. While ROS are generated in various cellular compartments, chloroplasts represent a main source in the light, and plastid ROS synthesis and/or elimination have been manipulated to improve stress tolerance. Transgenic tobacco plants expressing a plastid-targeted cyanobacterial flavodoxin, a flavoprotein that prevents ROS accumulation specifically in chloroplasts, displayed increased tolerance to many environmental stresses, including drought, excess irradiation, extreme temperatures and iron starvation. Surprisingly, flavodoxin expression failed to protect transgenic plants against NaCl toxicity. However, when high salt was directly applied to leaf discs, flavodoxin did increase tolerance, as reflected by preservation of chlorophylls, carotenoids and photosynthetic activities. Flavodoxin decreased salt-dependent ROS accumulation in leaf tissue from discs and whole plants, but this decline did not improve tolerance at the whole plant level. NaCl accumulation in roots, as well as increased osmotic pressure and salt-induced root damage, were not prevented by flavodoxin expression. The results indicate that ROS formed in chloroplasts have a marginal effect on plant responses during salt stress, and that sensitive targets are present in roots which are not protected by flavodoxin.


Archive | 2015

Salt Stress in Higher Plants: Mechanisms of Toxicity and Defensive Responses

Anabella F. Lodeyro; Néstor Carrillo

Soil salinity is a major constraint to crop performance. The main contributors to salt toxicity at a global scale are Na+ and Cl− ions which affect up to 50 % of irrigated soils. Effects of salt exposure occur at the organismic, cellular, and molecular levels and are pleiotropic, involving (1) osmotic and water deficit syndromes, (2) specific Na+ and Cl− inhibitions, (3) nutritional imbalance, and (4) oxidative stress. We review herein the responses elicited by salt-stressed plants to face all these challenges. With the only exception of halobacteria, all other organisms are not halotolerant at the molecular level. Instead, they have developed strategies to keep salts out of the cell. Then, induction of systems for salt extrusion to the rhizosphere and salt compartmentation into the vacuole play key roles in salt tolerance, aided by the synthesis and accumulation of compatible osmolytes and of antioxidant enzymes and metabolites. Expression of these effector genes is modulated by a complex network of salt-responsive transcription factors and signaling molecules. We discuss the progress made towards increasing salt tolerance in crops by engineering genes whose products operate at all these stages, from sensing and regulation to effector proteins, and identify key open questions that remain to be addressed.

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Néstor Carrillo

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Oscar A. Roveri

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Hugo O. Poli

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Javier F. Palatnik

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Juan J. Pierella Karlusich

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Mariana Giró

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Martín L. Mayta

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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María V. Castelli

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Romina D. Ceccoli

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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