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Featured researches published by Carla Caputo.


Physiologia Plantarum | 2012

Senescence‐associated proteases in plants

Irma N. Roberts; Carla Caputo; Maria V. Criado; Christiane Funk

Senescence is the final developmental stage of every plant organ, which leads to cell death. It is a highly regulated process, involving differential gene expression and outstanding increment in the rate of protein degradation. Senescence-associated proteolysis enables the remobilization of nutrients, such as nitrogen (N), from senescent tissues to developing organs or seeds. In addition to the nutrient recycling function, senescence-associated proteases are also involved in the regulation of the senescence process. Nearly, all protease families have been associated with some aspects of plant senescence, and numerous reports addressing the new identification of senescence-associated proteases are published every year. Here, we provide an updated report with the most recent information published in the field, focusing on senescence-associated proteases presumably involved in N remobilization.


Oecologia | 2006

Solar ultraviolet-B radiation alters the attractiveness of Arabidopsis plants to diamondback moths (Plutella xylostella L.): impacts on oviposition and involvement of the jasmonic acid pathway

Carla Caputo; Mariana Rutitzky; Carlos L. Ballaré

Solar ultraviolet-B radiation (UV-B) can have large impacts on the interactions between plants and herbivorous insects. Several studies have documented effects of UV-B-induced changes in plant tissue quality on the feeding performance of insect larvae. In contrast, the effects of UV-B-induced plant responses on the behavior of adult insects have received little attention. We carried out a series of field and glasshouse experiments using the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana L. and the crucifer-specialist insect Plutella xylostella L. (diamondback moth) to investigate the effects of UV-B on natural herbivory and plant–insect interactions. Natural herbivory under field conditions was less severe on plants exposed to ambient UV-B than on plants grown under filters that attenuated the UV-B component of solar radiation. This reduced herbivory could not be accounted for by effects of UV-B on larval feeding preference and performance, as P. xylostella caterpillars did not respond to changes in plant quality induced by UV-B. In contrast, at the adult stage, the insects presented clear behavioral responses: P. xylostella moths deposited significantly more eggs on plants grown under attenuated UV-B levels than on plants exposed to ambient UV-B. The deterring effect of UV-B exposure on insect oviposition was absent in jar1-1, a mutant with impaired jasmonic acid (JA) sensitivity, but it was conserved in mutants with altered ethylene signaling. The jar1-1 mutant also presented reduced levels of UV-absorbing phenolic compounds than the other genotypes that we tested. Our results suggest that variations in UV-B exposure under natural conditions can have significant effects on insect herbivory by altering plant traits that female adults use as sources of information during the process of host selection for oviposition. These effects of natural UV-B on plant quality appear to be mediated by activation of signaling circuits in which the defense-related hormone JA plays a functional role.


Journal of Plant Physiology | 2009

Cytokinin-induced changes of nitrogen remobilization and chloroplast ultrastructure in wheat (Triticum aestivum).

Maria V. Criado; Carla Caputo; Irma N. Roberts; María A. Castro; Atilio J. Barneix

Nitrogen (N) remobilization in wheat (Triticum aestivum) plants is crucial because it determines the grain protein concentration and the baking quality of flour. In order to evaluate the influence of cytokinins on N remobilization during N starvation, we analyzed various N remobilization parameters in wheat plants that were watered with 6-benzylaminopurine (BAP) either with or without KNO(3). Besides, the effects of BAP on protein synthesis were evaluated, and the size and ultrastructure of chloroplasts of BAP-treated plants were studied. BAP supply inhibited N remobilization of plants independently of N supply as shown by the increase in protein, Rubisco, chlorophyll, sugar and starch concentrations in the older leaves, the decrease in amino acid and sugar export to the phloem, and the decrease in protein, Rubisco and chlorophyll concentrations in the younger leaves. Besides, BAP supply increased nitrate reductase activity and decreased nitrate concentration, thus suggesting an increased assimilatory capacity. The increase in protein concentration could be explained mainly by a significant decrease in protein degradation and, to a lesser extent, by an increase in protein synthesis. Finally, an increase both in the size of the chloroplast and in the plastoglobuli and starch contents in BAP-supplied plants was observed. We propose that cytokinins retain the sink activity of the older leaves by inhibiting amino acid and sugar export to the phloem and stimulating assimilate accumulation in the chloroplasts of the older leaves. Besides, BAP may increase protein concentration of the older leaves both by decreasing protein degradation and maintaining protein synthesis even under stress conditions.


Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 2009

Regulation of glutamine synthetase 1 and amino acids transport in the phloem of young wheat plants.

Carla Caputo; M. Victoria Criado; Irma N. Roberts; M. Alejandra Gelso; Atilio J. Barneix

The possible regulation of amino acid remobilization via the phloem in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) by the primary enzyme in nitrogen (N) assimilation and re-assimilation, glutamine synthetase (GS, E.C. 6.3.1.2) was studied using two conditions known to alter N phloem transport, N deficiency and cytokinins. The plants were grown for 15 days in controlled conditions with optimum N supply and then N was depleted from and/or 6-benzylaminopurine was added to the nutrient solution. Both treatments generated an induction of GS1, monitored at the level of gene expression, protein accumulation and enzyme activity, and a decrease in the exudation of amino acids to the phloem, obtained with EDTA technique, which correlated negatively. GS inhibition by metionine sulfoximide (MSX) produced an increase of amino acids exudation and the inhibitor successfully reversed the effect of N deficiency and cytokinin addition over phloem exudation. Our results point to an important physiological role for GS1 in the modulation of amino acids export levels in wheat plants.


Plant Growth Regulation | 2017

Phloem transport of amino acids is differentially altered by phosphorus deficiency according to the nitrogen availability in young barley plants

Maria V. Criado; Cintia G. Veliz; Irma N. Roberts; Carla Caputo

The phloem transport of amino acids is a key step in the efficient use of nitrogen (N). Despite the importance of this issue, little information is known about the regulation of phloem transport of amino acids in plants with low phosphorus (P) supply and even less in relation to N availability. To this end, we studied not only the assimilate partitioning in young barley plants grown with low N or/and P supply, but also we analyzed the implications of the different isoforms of glutamine synthetase, cytokinin oxidase/dehydrogenase 2 and several senescence-related proteases. Our results demonstrated that low P supply causes an accumulation of different nitrogenous compounds in expanded leaves depending on N availability and an inhibition of the phloem exudation rate of amino acids only in high-N plants, indicating an interaction between N and P in the establishment of N-partitioning. The accumulation of nitrogenous compounds in leaves of low-P plants without the accompaniment in amino acid export to the phloem was not related to an increase in nitrate assimilation pathway neither with the modulation of glutamine synthetase 1_1 expression, as it had been observed for N availability. But, these results could be explained as a consequence of a delay in the transition from sink to source of leaves, thus keeping the older leaves as sink organs, as indicated by the increase in cytokinin oxidase/dehydrogenase 2 expression and the repression of several senescence-related proteases in low-P plants with good availability of N.


Mycorrhiza | 2015

Post-anthesis N and P dynamics and its impact on grain yield and quality in mycorrhizal barley plants.

Maria V. Criado; Flavio H. Gutierrez Boem; Irma N. Roberts; Carla Caputo

An essential goal for modern agriculture is the simultaneous improvement of productivity efficiency and nutrient use efficiency. One way to achieve this goal in crops is to enhance nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) acquisition through the mycorrhizal association. This study examined the effect of mycorrhization on post-anthesis N and P dynamics and its impact on grain yield and quality in barley. In addition, the efficiency of both N and P utilization and remobilization was evaluated. With those purposes, barley plants inoculated or not with Rhizophagus intraradices were grown in a soil poor in N and P under greenhouse conditions. Inoculation with R. intraradices in barley enhanced both N and P content in grain and vegetative tissue and reduced phloem amino acid export rate. On the other hand, both N and P vegetative tissue content and phloem amino acid and P export rates decreased during grain filling, whereas N and P grain content increased in both treatments according to the senescence process. However, whereas N grain concentration decreased during grain filling, P grain concentration did not vary, thus suggesting a differential regulation on grain filling. Inoculation with R. intraradices improved the yield and grain quality, thus demonstrating that inoculation with R. intraradices in barley is beneficial, but mycorrhization caused a diminution in nutrient utilization efficiency. As the phloem remobilization rate of amino acids and P did not decrease during grain filling in R. intraradices-inoculated plants compared to non-inoculated ones, these results suggest that nutrient utilization efficiency is most probably regulated by sink strength rather by a mycorrhizal effect.


Journal of Plant Physiology | 2017

Identification and expression analysis of 11 subtilase genes during natural and induced senescence of barley plants

Irma N. Roberts; Cintia G. Veliz; Maria V. Criado; Ana Signorini; Ester Simonetti; Carla Caputo

Subtilases are one of the largest groups of the serine protease family and are involved in many aspects of plant development including senescence. In wheat, previous reports demonstrate an active participation of two senescence-induced subtilases, denominated P1 and P2, in nitrogen remobilization during whole plant senescence. The aim of the present study was to examine the participation of subtilases in senescence-associated proteolysis of barley leaves while comparing different senescence types. With this purpose, subtilase enzymatic activity, immunodetection with a heterologous antiserum and gene expression of 11 subtilase sequences identified in barley databases by homology to P1 were analyzed in barley leaves undergoing dark-induced or natural senescence at the vegetative or reproductive growth phase. Results showed that subtilase specific activity as well as two inmunoreactive bands representing putative subtilases increased in barley leaves submitted to natural and dark-induced senescence. Gene expression analysis showed that two of the eleven subtilase genes analyzed, HvSBT3 and HvSBT6, were up-regulated in all the senescence conditions tested while HvSBT2 was expressed and up-regulated only during dark-induced senescence. On the other hand, HvSBT1, HvSBT4 and HvSBT7 were down-regulated during senescence and two other subtilase genes (HvSBT10 and HvSBT11) showed no significant changes. The remaining subtilase genes were not detected. Results demonstrate an active participation of subtilases in protein degradation during dark-induced and natural leaf senescence of barley plants both at the vegetative and reproductive stage, and, based on their expression profile, postulate HvSBT3 and HvSBT6 as key components of senescence-associated proteolysis.


Archives of Agronomy and Soil Science | 2018

Phloem transport of assimilates in relation to flowering time and senescence in barley grown with different availabilities of nitrogen and phosphorus

Maria V. Criado; Irma N. Roberts; Cintia G. Veliz; Mariela Echeverria; Flavio H. Gutierrez Boem; Carla Caputo

ABSTRACT Understanding the way in which N and P availability affects the transport of sugar and amino acids is crucial to improve grain quality and yield. Thus, in the present study, two greenhouse and field experiments were conducted with barley plants grown with different N and P availabilities to assess the dynamics of the phloem transport of assimilates in relation to the beginning of flowering and senescence. The phloem transport of assimilates decreased before the beginning of protein degradation in all treatments, but the onset of flowering and senescence varied according to the N and P availability, as evidenced by the concentrations of proteins, amino acids, and sugar and the gene expression of senescence-related proteases and all glutamine synthetase isoforms. In N-deficient plants, the phloem transport decreased before flowering, but only when P was not limiting; in N- and P-sufficient plants it decreased at flowering; and in P-deficient plants it decreased after flowering. Therefore, only N-deficient but P-sufficient plants have a post-anthesis period with high export rate of assimilates. This alteration of phenology in relation to phloem leads to important consequences in assimilate utilization, as shown by the higher yield and N content of the former compared to P-deficient plants.


Physiologia Plantarum | 1997

Export of amino acids to the phloem in relation to N supply in wheat

Carla Caputo; Atilio J. Barneix


Physiologia Plantarum | 2003

Purification and characterization of a subtilisin‐like serine protease induced during the senescence of wheat leaves

Irma N. Roberts; Pedro Fernández Murray; Carla Caputo; Susana Passeron; Atilio J. Barneix

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Irma N. Roberts

University of Buenos Aires

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Atilio J. Barneix

University of Buenos Aires

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Maria V. Criado

University of Buenos Aires

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Cintia G. Veliz

University of Buenos Aires

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Mariana Rutitzky

University of Buenos Aires

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Nora Fatta

University of Buenos Aires

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