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Dive into the research topics where Cristina Barrero-Sicilia is active.

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Featured researches published by Cristina Barrero-Sicilia.


Nature plants | 2015

Genome expansion of Arabis alpina linked with retrotransposition and reduced symmetric DNA methylation

Eva Maria Willing; Vimal Rawat; Terezie Mandáková; Florian Maumus; Geo Velikkakam James; Karl Nordström; Claude Becker; Norman Warthmann; Claudia Chica; Bogna Szarzynska; Matthias Zytnicki; Maria C. Albani; Christiane Kiefer; Sara Bergonzi; Loren Castaings; Julieta L. Mateos; Markus C. Berns; Nora Bujdoso; Thomas Piofczyk; Laura de Lorenzo; Cristina Barrero-Sicilia; Isabel Mateos; Mathieu Piednoël; Jörg Hagmann; Romy Chen-Min-Tao; Raquel Iglesias-Fernández; Stephan C. Schuster; Carlos Alonso-Blanco; François Roudier; Pilar Carbonero

Despite evolutionary conserved mechanisms to silence transposable element activity, there are drastic differences in the abundance of transposable elements even among closely related plant species. We conducted a de novo assembly for the 375 Mb genome of the perennial model plant, Arabis alpina. Analysing this genome revealed long-lasting and recent transposable element activity predominately driven by Gypsy long terminal repeat retrotransposons, which extended the low-recombining pericentromeres and transformed large formerly euchromatic regions into repeat-rich pericentromeric regions. This reduced capacity for long terminal repeat retrotransposon silencing and removal in A. alpina co-occurs with unexpectedly low levels of DNA methylation. Most remarkably, the striking reduction of symmetrical CG and CHG methylation suggests weakened DNA methylation maintenance in A. alpina compared with Arabidopsis thaliana. Phylogenetic analyses indicate a highly dynamic evolution of some components of methylation maintenance machinery that might be related to the unique methylation in A. alpina.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2012

Arabidopsis thaliana DOF6 negatively affects germination in non-after-ripened seeds and interacts with TCP14

Paloma Rueda-Romero; Cristina Barrero-Sicilia; Aurelio Gómez-Cadenas; Pilar Carbonero; Luis Oñate-Sánchez

Seed dormancy prevents seeds from germinating under environmental conditions unfavourable for plant growth and development and constitutes an evolutionary advantage. Dry storage, also known as after-ripening, gradually decreases seed dormancy by mechanisms not well understood. An Arabidopsis thaliana DOF transcription factor gene (DOF6) affecting seed germination has been characterized. The transcript levels of this gene accumulate in dry seeds and decay gradually during after-ripening and also upon seed imbibition. While constitutive over-expression of DOF6 produced aberrant growth and sterility in the plant, its over-expression induced upon seed imbibition triggered delayed germination, abscisic acid (ABA)-hypersensitive phenotypes and increased expression of the ABA biosynthetic gene ABA1 and ABA-related stress genes. Wild-type germination and gene expression were gradually restored during seed after-ripening, despite of DOF6-induced over-expression. DOF6 was found to interact in a yeast two-hybrid system and in planta with TCP14, a previously described positive regulator of seed germination. The expression of ABA1 and ABA-related stress genes was also enhanced in tcp14 knock-out mutants. Taken together, these results indicate that DOF6 negatively affects seed germination and opposes TCP14 function in the regulation of a specific set of ABA-related genes.


BMC Plant Biology | 2012

The family of DOF transcription factors in Brachypodium distachyon: phylogenetic comparison with rice and barley DOFs and expression profiling

Sara Hernando-Amado; Virginia González-Calle; Pilar Carbonero; Cristina Barrero-Sicilia

BackgroundTranscription factors (TFs) are proteins that have played a central role both in evolution and in domestication, and are major regulators of development in living organisms. Plant genome sequences reveal that approximately 7% of all genes encode putative TFs. The DOF (DNA binding with One Finger) TF family has been associated with vital processes exclusive to higher plants and to their close ancestors (algae, mosses and ferns). These are seed maturation and germination, light-mediated regulation, phytohormone and plant responses to biotic and abiotic stresses, etc. In Hordeum vulgare and Oryza sativa, 26 and 30 different Dof genes, respectively, have been annotated. Brachypodium distachyon has been the first Pooideae grass to be sequenced and, due to its genomic, morphological and physiological characteristics, has emerged as the model system for temperate cereals, such as wheat and barley.ResultsThrough searches in the B. distachyon genome, 27 Dof genes have been identified and a phylogenetic comparison with the Oryza sativa and the Hordeum vulgare DOFs has been performed. To explore the evolutionary relationship among these DOF proteins, a combined phylogenetic tree has been constructed with the Brachypodium DOFs and those from rice and barley. This phylogenetic analysis has classified the DOF proteins into four Major Cluster of Orthologous Groups (MCOGs). Using RT-qPCR analysis the expression profiles of the annotated BdDof genes across four organs (leaves, roots, spikes and seeds) has been investigated. These results have led to a classification of the BdDof genes into two groups, according to their expression levels. The genes highly or preferentially expressed in seeds have been subjected to a more detailed expression analysis (maturation, dry stage and germination).ConclusionsComparison of the expression profiles of the Brachypodium Dof genes with the published functions of closely related DOF sequences from the cereal species considered here, deduced from the phylogenetic analysis, indicates that although the expression profile has been conserved in many of the putative orthologs, in some cases duplication followed by subsequent divergence may have occurred (neo-functionalization).


Plant Journal | 2013

Arabidopsis thaliana bZIP44: a transcription factor affecting seed germination and expression of the mannanase‐encoding gene AtMAN7

Raquel Iglesias-Fernández; Cristina Barrero-Sicilia; Néstor Carrillo-Barral; Luis Oñate-Sánchez; Pilar Carbonero

Endo-β-mannanases (MAN; EC. 3.2.1.78) catalyze the cleavage of β1→4 bonds in mannan polymers and have been associated with the process of weakening the tissues surrounding the embryo during seed germination. In germinating Arabidopsis thaliana seeds, the most highly expressed MAN gene is AtMAN7 and its transcripts are restricted to the micropylar endosperm and to the radicle tip just before radicle emergence. Mutants with a T-DNA insertion in AtMAN7 have a slower germination than the wild type. To gain insight into the transcriptional regulation of the AtMAN7 gene, a bioinformatic search for conserved non-coding cis-elements (phylogenetic shadowing) within the Brassicaceae MAN7 gene promoters has been done, and these conserved motifs have been used as bait to look for their interacting transcription factors (TFs), using as a prey an arrayed yeast library from A. thaliana. The basic-leucine zipper TF AtbZIP44, but not the closely related AtbZIP11, has thus been identified and its transcriptional activation upon AtMAN7 has been validated at the molecular level. In the knock-out lines of AtbZIP44, not only is the expression of the AtMAN7 gene drastically reduced, but these mutants have a significantly slower germination than the wild type, being affected in the two phases of the germination process, both in the rupture of the seed coat and in the breakage of the micropylar endosperm cell walls. In the over-expression lines the opposite phenotype is observed.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2014

The AtCathB3 gene, encoding a cathepsin B-like protease, is expressed during germination of Arabidopsis thaliana and transcriptionally repressed by the basic leucine zipper protein GBF1

Raquel Iglesias-Fernández; Dorothee Wozny; Maite Iriondo-de Hond; Luis Oñate-Sánchez; Pilar Carbonero; Cristina Barrero-Sicilia

Summary The cathepsin B-like protease-encoding gene AtCathB3 positively influences germination in Arabidopsis seeds, and GBF1 has been identified as its transcriptional repressor that negatively affects the process.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2015

Mannans and endo-β-mannanases (MAN) in Brachypodium distachyon: expression profiling and possible role of the BdMAN genes during coleorhiza-limited seed germination

Virginia González-Calle; Cristina Barrero-Sicilia; Pilar Carbonero; Raquel Iglesias-Fernández

Highlight Mannans present in the coleorhiza and root of Brachypodium seeds disappear early during germination sensu-stricto, while mannanase activity increases and three BdMAN transcripts are localized in these tissues.


Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2011

Molecular analysis of endo-β-mannanase genes upon seed imbibition suggest a cross-talk between radicle and micropylar endosperm during germination of Arabidopsis thaliana

Raquel Iglesias-Fernández; María del Carmen Rodríguez-Gacio; Cristina Barrero-Sicilia; Pilar Carbonero; Angel J. Matilla

The endo-β-mannanase (MAN) family is represented in the Arabidopsis genome by eight members, all with canonical signal peptides and only half of them being expressed in germinating seeds. The transcripts of these genes were localized in the radicle and micropylar endosperm (ME) before radicle protrusion and this expression disappears as soon as the endosperm is broken by the emerging radicle tip. However, only three of these MAN genes, AtMAN5, AtMAN7 and especially AtMAN6 influence the germination time (t50) as assessed by the analysis of the corresponding knock-out lines. The data suggest a possible interaction between embryo and ME regarding the role of MAN during the Arabidopsis germination process.


Planta | 2014

The BdGAMYB protein from Brachypodium distachyon interacts with BdDOF24 and regulates transcription of the BdCathB gene upon seed germination

Virginia González-Calle; Raquel Iglesias-Fernández; Pilar Carbonero; Cristina Barrero-Sicilia

AbstractMain conclusionBdDOF24 interacting with BdGAMYB regulates theBdCathBgene upon germination. During barley seed germination, hydrolytic enzymes (α-amylases, proteases, etc.) synthesized in the aleurone layer in response to gibberellins (GA), catalyse the mobilization of storage reserves accumulated in the endosperm during seed maturation. In Brachypodium distachyon, the BdCathB gene that encodes a Cathepsin B-like thiol-protease, orthologous to the wheat Al21 and barley HvCathB, is highly induced in germinating seeds and its expression is regulated by transcription factors (TFs) encoded by genes BdGamyb and BdDof24, orthologous to the barley HvGamyb and BPBF-HvDof24, respectively. Transcripts of both TF genes increase during germination and treatments with abscisic acid (ABA) or paclobutrazol (PAC, an inhibitor of GA biosynthesis) decrease mRNA expression of BdGamyb but do not affect that of BdDof24. Besides, proteins BdDOF24 and BdGAMYB interact in yeast-2 hybrid systems and in plant nuclei, and in transient expression assays in aleurone layers BdDOF24 is a transcriptional repressor and BdGAMYB is an activator of the BdCathB promoter, as occurs with the putative orthologous in barley BPBF-HvDOF24 and HvGAMYB. However, when both TFs are co-bombarded, BdDOF24 enhances the activation driven by BdGAMYB while BPBF-HvDOF24 strongly decreases the HvGAMYB-mediated activation of the BdCathB promoter. The different results obtained when BdDOF24 and BPBF-HvDOF24 interact with BdGAMYB and HvGAMYB are discussed.


Plant Science | 2017

Lipid remodelling: unravelling the response to cold stress in Arabidopsis and its extremophile relative Eutrema salsugineum

Cristina Barrero-Sicilia; Susana Silvestre; Richard P. Haslam; Louise V. Michaelson

Highlights • Higher plants rapidly remodel cellular lipids in response to environmental perturbation and abiotic stress.• Lipids in plants perform many important functions including information exchange, protection, energy storage, signalling and light capture.• Increases in unsaturation are a common response to cold stress, but not the only mechanism of adaptation.• An increased understanding of lipid turnover is essential to establish the contribution made by the lipidome to plant stress resilience.• Opportunities exist to improve the resilience of crops by manipulating the lipidome.


Planta | 2011

Three endo-β-mannanase genes expressed in the micropylar endosperm and in the radicle influence germination of Arabidopsis thaliana seeds

Raquel Iglesias-Fernández; María del Carmen Rodríguez-Gacio; Cristina Barrero-Sicilia; Pilar Carbonero; Angel J. Matilla

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Pilar Carbonero

Technical University of Madrid

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Luis Oñate-Sánchez

Technical University of Madrid

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Angel J. Matilla

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Sara Hernando-Amado

Technical University of Madrid

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Carlos Alonso-Blanco

Spanish National Research Council

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Dorothee Wozny

Technical University of Madrid

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Isabel Mateos

Spanish National Research Council

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