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Dive into the research topics where Claudia Díaz-Camino is active.

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Featured researches published by Claudia Díaz-Camino.


Plant Molecular Biology | 2005

Expressed sequence tags from the Yukon ecotype of Thellungiella reveal that gene expression in response to cold, drought and salinity shows little overlap

Chui E. Wong; Yong Li; B.R. Whitty; Claudia Díaz-Camino; S.R. Akhter; Jim Brandle; G.B. Golding; Elizabeth A. Weretilnyk; Barbara A. Moffatt; Marilyn Griffith

Thellungiella salsuginea (also known as T. halophila) is a close relative of Arabidopsis that is very tolerant of drought, freezing, and salinity and may be an appropriate model to identify the molecular mechanisms underlying abiotic stress tolerance in plants. We produced 6578 ESTs, which represented 3628 unique genes (unigenes), from cDNA libraries of cold-, drought-, and salinity-stressed plants from the Yukon ecotype of Thellungiella. Among the unigenes, 94.1% encoded products that were most similar in amino acid sequence to Arabidopsis and 1.5% had no match with a member of the family Brassicaceae. Unigenes from the cold library were more similar to Arabidopsis sequences than either drought- or salinity-induced sequences, indicating that latter responses may be more divergent between Thellungiella and Arabidopsis. Analysis of gene ontology using the best matched Arabidopsis locus showed that the Thellungiella unigenes represented all biological processes and all cellular components, with the highest number of sequences attributed to the chloroplast and mitochondria. Only 140 of the unigenes were found in all three abiotic stress cDNA libraries. Of these common unigenes, 70% have no known function, which demonstrates that Thellungiella can be a rich resource of genetic information about environmental responses. Some of the ESTs in this collection have low sequence similarity with those in Genbank suggesting that they may encode functions that may contribute to Thellungiella’s high degree of stress tolerance when compared with Arabidopsis. Moreover, Thellungiella is a closer relative of agriculturally important Brassica spp. than Arabidopsis, which may prove valuable in transferring information to crop improvement programs.


Nature Protocols | 2007

Fast, efficient and reproducible genetic transformation of Phaseolus spp. by Agrobacterium rhizogenes

Georgina Estrada-Navarrete; Xochitl Alvarado-Affantranger; Juan-Elías Olivares; Gabriel Guillén; Claudia Díaz-Camino; Francisco Campos; Carmen Quinto; Peter M. Gresshoff; Federico Sánchez

This transformation procedure generates, with high efficiency (70–90%), hairy roots in cultivars, landraces and accessions of Phaseolus vulgaris (common bean) and other Phaseolus spp. Hairy roots rapidly develop after wounding young plantlets with Agrobacterium rhizogenes, at the cotyledon node, and keeping the plants in high-humidity conditions. Callogenesis always precedes hairy-root formation, and after 15 days, when roots develop at wounded sites, the stem with the normal root is cleaved below the hairy root zone. Transgenic roots and nodules co-transformed with a binary vector can be easily identified using a reporter gene. This procedure, in addition to inducing robust transgenic hairy roots that are susceptible to being nodulated by rhizobia and to fixing nitrogen efficiently, sets the foundation for a high-throughput functional genomics approach on the study of root biology and root–microbe interactions. This protocol can be completed within 30 days.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2006

Agrobacterium rhizogenes Transformation of the Phaseolus spp.: A Tool for Functional Genomics

Georgina Estrada-Navarrete; Xochitl Alvarado-Affantranger; Juan-Elías Olivares; Claudia Díaz-Camino; Olivia Santana; Enrique Murillo; Gabriel Guillén; Nayeli Sánchez-Guevara; Jorge Acosta; Carmen Quinto; Dongxue Li; Peter M. Gresshoff; Federico Sánchez

A fast, reproducible, and efficient transformation procedure employing Agrobacterium rhizogenes was developed for Phaseolus vulgaris L. wild accessions, landraces, and cultivars and for three other species belonging to the genus Phaseolus: P. coccineus, P. lunatus, and P. acutifolius. Induced hairy roots are robust and grow quickly. The transformation frequency is between 75 and 90% based on the 35-S promoter-driven green fluorescent protein and beta-glucuronidase expression reporter constructs. When inoculated with Rhizobium tropici, transgenic roots induce normal determinate nodules that fix nitrogen as efficiently as inoculated standard roots. The A. rhizogenes-induced hairy root transformation in the genus Phaseolus sets the foundation for functional genomics programs focused on root physiology, root metabolism, and root-microbe interactions.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2003

A high-throughput system for two-hybrid screening based on growth curve analysis in microtiter plates.

Claudia Díaz-Camino; Eddy P. Risseeuw; Enwu Liu; William L. Crosby

The yeast two-hybrid system is a powerful tool for identifying novel protein-protein interactions. In general, biochemical marker genes such as lacZ are exploited for indirect quantification of the interaction, and commonly involve the conduct of rather laborious beta-galactosidase assays. This paper describes a simple alternative method based on growth curve analysis of yeast cultures that is amenable to microtiter plate format, and therefore allows the quantification of large numbers of yeast two-hybrid combinations. The analyzed results of yeast cultures grown in microtiter plates were compared with those obtained from the classical beta-galactosidase assay. We conclude that the method presented here is reproducible, of equal or greater sensitivity than the beta-galactosidase assay, and can be further adapted for application to the conduct of large-scale, automated yeast two-hybrid experiments.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2013

Detailed analysis of putative genes encoding small proteins in legume genomes

Gabriel Guillén; Claudia Díaz-Camino; Carlos A. Loyola-Torres; Rosaura Aparicio-Fabre; Alejandrina Hernández-López; Mauricio Díaz-Sánchez; Federico Sánchez

Diverse plant genome sequencing projects coupled with powerful bioinformatics tools have facilitated massive data analysis to construct specialized databases classified according to cellular function. However, there are still a considerable number of genes encoding proteins whose function has not yet been characterized. Included in this category are small proteins (SPs, 30–150 amino acids) encoded by short open reading frames (sORFs). SPs play important roles in plant physiology, growth, and development. Unfortunately, protocols focused on the genome-wide identification and characterization of sORFs are scarce or remain poorly implemented. As a result, these genes are underrepresented in many genome annotations. In this work, we exploited publicly available genome sequences of Phaseolus vulgaris, Medicago truncatula, Glycine max, and Lotus japonicus to analyze the abundance of annotated SPs in plant legumes. Our strategy to uncover bona fide sORFs at the genome level was centered in bioinformatics analysis of characteristics such as evidence of expression (transcription), presence of known protein regions or domains, and identification of orthologous genes in the genomes explored. We collected 6170, 10,461, 30,521, and 23,599 putative sORFs from P. vulgaris, G. max, M. truncatula, and L. japonicus genomes, respectively. Expressed sequence tags (ESTs) available in the DFCI Gene Index database provided evidence that ~one-third of the predicted legume sORFs are expressed. Most potential SPs have a counterpart in a different plant species and counterpart regions or domains in larger proteins. Potential functional sORFs were also classified according to a reduced set of GO categories, and the expression of 13 of them during P. vulgaris nodule ontogeny was confirmed by qPCR. This analysis provides a collection of sORFs that potentially encode for meaningful SPs, and offers the possibility of their further functional evaluation.


BMC Plant Biology | 2011

Nodulin 41, a novel late nodulin of common bean with peptidase activity

Juan Elías Olivares; Claudia Díaz-Camino; Georgina Estrada-Navarrete; Xochitl Alvarado-Affantranger; Margarita Rodríguez-Kessler; Fernando Z. Zamudio; Timoteo Olamendi-Portugal; Yamile Márquez; Luis Eduardo Servín; Federico Sánchez

BackgroundThe legume-rhizobium symbiosis requires the formation of root nodules, specialized organs where the nitrogen fixation process takes place. Nodule development is accompanied by the induction of specific plant genes, referred to as nodulin genes. Important roles in processes such as morphogenesis and metabolism have been assigned to nodulins during the legume-rhizobium symbiosis.ResultsHere we report the purification and biochemical characterization of a novel nodulin from common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) root nodules. This protein, called nodulin 41 (PvNod41) was purified through affinity chromatography and was partially sequenced. A genomic clone was then isolated via PCR amplification. PvNod41 is an atypical aspartyl peptidase of the A1B subfamily with an optimal hydrolytic activity at pH 4.5. We demonstrate that PvNod41 has limited peptidase activity against casein and is partially inhibited by pepstatin A. A PvNod41-specific antiserum was used to assess the expression pattern of this protein in different plant organs and throughout root nodule development, revealing that PvNod41 is found only in bean root nodules and is confined to uninfected cells.ConclusionsTo date, only a small number of atypical aspartyl peptidases have been characterized in plants. Their particular spatial and temporal expression patterns along with their unique enzymatic properties imply a high degree of functional specialization. Indeed, PvNod41 is closely related to CDR1, an Arabidopsis thaliana extracellular aspartyl protease involved in defense against bacterial pathogens. PvNod41s biochemical properties and specific cell-type localization, in uninfected cells of the common bean root nodule, strongly suggest that this aspartyl peptidase has a key role in plant defense during the symbiotic interaction.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2014

Nodulin 22, a Novel Small Heat-Shock Protein of the Endoplasmic Reticulum, Is Linked to the Unfolded Protein Response in Common Bean

Jonathan Rodriguez-López; Cynthia Martínez-Centeno; Annamalai Padmanaban; Gabriel Guillén; Juan Elías Olivares; Giovanni Stefano; Fernando Lledías; Fernando Ramos; Said A. Ghabrial; Federica Brandizzi; Mario Rocha-Sosa; Claudia Díaz-Camino; Federico Sánchez

The importance of plant small heat shock proteins (sHsp) in multiple cellular processes has been evidenced by their unusual abundance and diversity; however, little is known about their biological role. Here, we characterized the in vitro chaperone activity and subcellular localization of nodulin 22 of Phaseolus vulgaris (PvNod22; common bean) and explored its cellular function through a virus-induced gene silencing-based reverse genetics approach. We established that PvNod22 facilitated the refolding of a model substrate in vitro, suggesting that it acts as a molecular chaperone in the cell. Through microscopy analyses of PvNod22, we determined its localization in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Furthermore, we found that silencing of PvNod22 resulted in necrotic lesions in the aerial organs of P. vulgaris plants cultivated under optimal conditions and that downregulation of PvNod22 activated the ER-unfolded protein response (UPR) and cell death. We also established that PvNod22 expression in wild-type bean plants was modulated by abiotic stress but not by chemicals that trigger the UPR, indicating PvNod22 is not under UPR control. Our results suggest that the ability of PvNod22 to suppress protein aggregation contributes to the maintenance of ER homeostasis, thus preventing the induction of cell death via UPR in response to oxidative stress during plant-microbe interactions.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2016

The Class II Trehalose 6-phosphate Synthase Gene PvTPS9 Modulates Trehalose Metabolism in Phaseolus vulgaris Nodules

Aarón Barraza; Cecilia Contreras-Cubas; Georgina Estrada-Navarrete; José Luis Reyes; Marco A. Juárez-Verdayes; Nelson Avonce; Carmen Quinto; Claudia Díaz-Camino; Federico Sánchez

Legumes form symbioses with rhizobia, producing nitrogen-fixing nodules on the roots of the plant host. The network of plant signaling pathways affecting carbon metabolism may determine the final number of nodules. The trehalose biosynthetic pathway regulates carbon metabolism and plays a fundamental role in plant growth and development, as well as in plant-microbe interactions. The expression of genes for trehalose synthesis during nodule development suggests that this metabolite may play a role in legume-rhizobia symbiosis. In this work, PvTPS9, which encodes a Class II trehalose-6-phosphate synthase (TPS) of common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris), was silenced by RNA interference in transgenic nodules. The silencing of PvTPS9 in root nodules resulted in a reduction of 85% (± 1%) of its transcript, which correlated with a 30% decrease in trehalose contents of transgenic nodules and in untransformed leaves. Composite transgenic plants with PvTPS9 silenced in the roots showed no changes in nodule number and nitrogen fixation, but a severe reduction in plant biomass and altered transcript profiles of all Class II TPS genes. Our data suggest that PvTPS9 plays a key role in modulating trehalose metabolism in the symbiotic nodule and, therefore, in the whole plant.


Plant Methods | 2011

An effective virus-based gene silencing method for functional genomics studies in common bean

Claudia Díaz-Camino; Padmanaban Annamalai; Federico Sánchez; Aardra Kachroo; Said A. Ghabrial


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2005

Actin expression is induced and three isoforms are differentially expressed during germination in Zea mays

Claudia Díaz-Camino; Renaud CondeR. Conde; Nick Ovsenek; Marco A. Villanueva

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Federico Sánchez

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Gabriel Guillén

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Georgina Estrada-Navarrete

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Carmen Quinto

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Xochitl Alvarado-Affantranger

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Juan Elías Olivares

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Juan-Elías Olivares

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Marco A. Villanueva

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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