Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Davide Sosso is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Davide Sosso.


Science | 2012

Sucrose efflux mediated by SWEET proteins as a key step for phloem transport.

Li Qing Chen; Xiao Qing Qu; Bi Huei Hou; Davide Sosso; Sonia Osorio; Alisdair R. Fernie; Wolf B. Frommer

That Sweet Sensation Photosynthesis in the leaf generates sucrose that must be transported via the phloem to other parts of the plant in order, for example, to be incorporated into harvestable produce. Studying Arabidopsis and rice, Chen et al. (p. 207, published online 8 December; see the Perspective by Braun) identified the SWEET family of sucrose efflux transporters that are responsible for carrying sucrose out of the leaf cells. When the transporters were disabled, sucrose accumulated in the leaves. Functioning properly, the SWEET transporters carry sucrose across the plasma membrane and other transporters move it further into the phloem. Transporters hand off sucrose from production cell to transport cell. Plants transport fixed carbon predominantly as sucrose, which is produced in mesophyll cells and imported into phloem cells for translocation throughout the plant. It is not known how sucrose migrates from sites of synthesis in the mesophyll to the phloem, or which cells mediate efflux into the apoplasm as a prerequisite for phloem loading by the SUT sucrose–H+ (proton) cotransporters. Using optical sucrose sensors, we identified a subfamily of SWEET sucrose efflux transporters. AtSWEET11 and 12 localize to the plasma membrane of the phloem. Mutant plants carrying insertions in AtSWEET11 and 12 are defective in phloem loading, thus revealing a two-step mechanism of SWEET-mediated export from parenchyma cells feeding H+-coupled import into the sieve element–companion cell complex. We discuss how restriction of intercellular transport to the interface of adjacent phloem cells may be an effective mechanism to limit the availability of photosynthetic carbon in the leaf apoplasm in order to prevent pathogen infections.


Nature | 2014

Nectar secretion requires sucrose phosphate synthases and the sugar transporter SWEET9

I. Winnie Lin; Davide Sosso; Li Qing Chen; Klaus Gase; Sang-Gyu Kim; Danny Kessler; Peter M. Klinkenberg; Molly K. Gorder; Bi Huei Hou; Xiao Qing Qu; Clay J. Carter; Ian T. Baldwin; Wolf B. Frommer

Angiosperms developed floral nectaries that reward pollinating insects. Although nectar function and composition have been characterized, the mechanism of nectar secretion has remained unclear. Here we identify SWEET9 as a nectary-specific sugar transporter in three eudicot species: Arabidopsis thaliana, Brassica rapa (extrastaminal nectaries) and Nicotiana attenuata (gynoecial nectaries). We show that SWEET9 is essential for nectar production and can function as an efflux transporter. We also show that sucrose phosphate synthase genes, encoding key enzymes for sucrose biosynthesis, are highly expressed in nectaries and that their expression is also essential for nectar secretion. Together these data are consistent with a model in which sucrose is synthesized in the nectary parenchyma and subsequently secreted into the extracellular space via SWEET9, where sucrose is hydrolysed by an apoplasmic invertase to produce a mixture of sucrose, glucose and fructose. The recruitment of SWEET9 for sucrose export may have been a key innovation, and could have coincided with the evolution of core eudicots and contributed to the evolution of nectar secretion to reward pollinators.


Current Opinion in Plant Biology | 2015

SWEETs, transporters for intracellular and intercellular sugar translocation

Joon Seob Eom; Li Qing Chen; Davide Sosso; Benjamin T. Julius; I. W. Lin; Xiao Qing Qu; David M. Braun; Wolf B. Frommer

Three families of transporters have been identified as key players in intercellular transport of sugars: MSTs (monosaccharide transporters), SUTs (sucrose transporters) and SWEETs (hexose and sucrose transporters). MSTs and SUTs fall into the major facilitator superfamily; SWEETs constitute a structurally different class of transporters with only seven transmembrane spanning domains. The predicted topology of SWEETs is supported by crystal structures of bacterial homologs (SemiSWEETs). On average, angiosperm genomes contain ∼20 paralogs, most of which serve distinct physiological roles. In Arabidopsis, AtSWEET8 and 13 feed the pollen; SWEET11 and 12 provide sucrose to the SUTs for phloem loading; AtSWEET11, 12 and 15 have distinct roles in seed filling; AtSWEET16 and 17 are vacuolar hexose transporters; and SWEET9 is essential for nectar secretion. The remaining family members await characterization, and could play roles in the gametophyte as well as other important roles in sugar transport in the plant. In rice and cassava, and possibly other systems, sucrose transporting SWEETs play central roles in pathogen resistance. Notably, the human genome also contains a glucose transporting isoform. Further analysis promises new insights into mechanism and regulation of assimilate allocation and a new potential for increasing crop yield.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Functional role of oligomerization for bacterial and plant SWEET sugar transporter family

Yuan Hu Xuan; Yi Bing Hu; Li Qing Chen; Davide Sosso; Daniel C. Ducat; Bi Huei Hou; Wolf B. Frommer

Significance SWEET sugar transporter homologs from bacteria were identified and named SemiSWEETs. They are small proteins with only three transmembrane domains (TMs); they are too small to create pores by themselves, but likely, they assemble multiple 3-TMs into a complex. SemiSWEETs are related to SWEETs, which play important roles in intercellular and interorgan sugar translocation in plants, and they are found in animals. SWEETs have fused two 3-TM units through a linker. However, SWEETs seem to be too small to transport sugars on their own. Here, we show that SWEET function requires assembly into oligomers, indicating that a pore requires at least an SWEET dimer. Eukaryotic sugar transporters of the MFS and SWEET superfamilies consist of 12 and 7 α-helical transmembrane domains (TMs), respectively. Structural analyses indicate that MFS transporters evolved from a series of tandem duplications of an ancestral 3-TM unit. SWEETs are heptahelical proteins carrying a tandem repeat of 3-TM separated by a single TM. Here, we show that prokaryotes have ancestral SWEET homologs with only 3-TM and that the Bradyrhizobium japonicum SemiSWEET1, like Arabidopsis SWEET11, mediates sucrose transport. Eukaryotic SWEETs most likely evolved by internal duplication of the 3-TM, suggesting that SemiSWEETs form oligomers to create a functional pore. However, it remains elusive whether the 7-TM SWEETs are the functional unit or require oligomerization to form a pore sufficiently large to allow for sucrose passage. Split ubiquitin yeast two-hybrid and split GFP assays indicate that Arabidopsis SWEETs homo- and heterooligomerize. We examined mutant SWEET variants for negative dominance to test if oligomerization is necessary for function. Mutation of the conserved Y57 or G58 in SWEET1 led to loss of activity. Coexpression of the defective mutants with functional A. thaliana SWEET1 inhibited glucose transport, indicating that homooligomerization is necessary for function. Collectively, these data imply that the basic unit of SWEETs, similar to MFS sugar transporters, is a 3-TM unit and that a functional transporter contains at least four such domains. We hypothesize that the functional unit of the SWEET family of transporters possesses a structure resembling the 12-TM MFS structure, however, with a parallel orientation of the 3-TM unit.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Lateral organ boundaries 1 is a disease susceptibility gene for citrus bacterial canker disease.

Yang Hu; Junli Zhang; Hongge Jia; Davide Sosso; Ting Li; Wolf B. Frommer; Bing Yang; Frank F. White; Nian Wang; Jeffrey B. Jones

Significance Citrus bacterial canker, which is caused by several species in the genus Xanthomonas, is a severe disease with worldwide distribution affecting all the commercially important citrus species and cultivars. The mechanisms of canker development, involving erumpent pustule formation and bacterial growth, are not known. Our findings suggest that virulence determinants in several pathogens activate a single host disease susceptibility (S) gene that has a critical contribution to bacterial growth and host pustule development. The S gene represents an excellent candidate for control measures for the citrus bacterial canker. Citrus bacterial canker (CBC) disease occurs worldwide and incurs considerable costs both from control measures and yield losses. Bacteria that cause CBC require one of six known type III transcription activator-like (TAL) effector genes for the characteristic pustule formation at the site of infection. Here, we show that Xanthomonas citri subspecies citri strain Xcc306, with the type III TAL effector gene pthA4 or with the distinct yet biologically equivalent gene pthAw from strain XccAw, induces two host genes, CsLOB1 and CsSWEET1, in a TAL effector-dependent manner. CsLOB1 is a member of the Lateral Organ Boundaries (LOB) gene family of transcription factors, and CsSWEET1 is a homolog of the SWEET sugar transporter and rice disease susceptibility gene. Both TAL effectors drive expression of CsLOB1 and CsSWEET1 promoter reporter gene fusions when coexpressed in citrus or Nicotiana benthamiana. Artificially designed TAL effectors directed to sequences in the CsLOB1 promoter region, but not the CsSWEET1 promoter, promoted pustule formation and higher bacterial leaf populations. Three additional distinct TAL effector genes, pthA*, pthB, and pthC, also direct pustule formation and expression of CsLOB1. Unlike pthA4 and pthAw, pthB and pthC do not promote the expression of CsSWEET1. CsLOB1 expression was associated with the expression of genes associated with cell expansion. The results indicate that CBC-inciting species of Xanthomonas exploit a single host disease susceptibility gene by altering the expression of an otherwise developmentally regulated gene using any one of a diverse set of TAL effector genes in the pathogen populations.


The Plant Cell | 2015

A Cascade of Sequentially Expressed Sucrose Transporters in the Seed Coat and Endosperm Provides Nutrition for the Arabidopsis Embryo

Li Qing Chen; I. Winnie Lin; Xiao Qing Qu; Davide Sosso; Heather E. McFarlane; Alejandra Londoño; A. Lacey Samuels; Wolf B. Frommer

Triple mutants of three sucrose-transporting SWEETs show reduced seed yield, indicating that multiple sucrose translocation pathways move sugar from the maternal to the filial tissues. Developing plant embryos depend on nutrition from maternal tissues via the seed coat and endosperm, but the mechanisms that supply nutrients to plant embryos have remained elusive. Sucrose, the major transport form of carbohydrate in plants, is delivered via the phloem to the maternal seed coat and then secreted from the seed coat to feed the embryo. Here, we show that seed filling in Arabidopsis thaliana requires the three sucrose transporters SWEET11, 12, and 15. SWEET11, 12, and 15 exhibit specific spatiotemporal expression patterns in developing seeds, but only a sweet11;12;15 triple mutant showed severe seed defects, which include retarded embryo development, reduced seed weight, and reduced starch and lipid content, causing a “wrinkled” seed phenotype. In sweet11;12;15 triple mutants, starch accumulated in the seed coat but not the embryo, implicating SWEET-mediated sucrose efflux in the transfer of sugars from seed coat to embryo. This cascade of sequentially expressed SWEETs provides the feeding pathway for the plant embryo, an important feature for yield potential.


Nature Genetics | 2015

Seed filling in domesticated maize and rice depends on SWEET-mediated hexose transport

Davide Sosso; Dangping Luo; Qin-Bao Li; Joelle Sasse; Jinliang Yang; Ghislaine Gendrot; Masaharu Suzuki; Karen E. Koch; Donald R. McCarty; Prem S. Chourey; Peter M. Rogowsky; Jeffrey Ross-Ibarra; Bing Yang; Wolf B. Frommer

Carbohydrate import into seeds directly determines seed size and must have been increased through domestication. However, evidence of the domestication of sugar translocation and the identities of seed-filling transporters have been elusive. Maize ZmSWEET4c, as opposed to its sucrose-transporting homologs, mediates transepithelial hexose transport across the basal endosperm transfer layer (BETL), the entry point of nutrients into the seed, and shows signatures indicative of selection during domestication. Mutants of both maize ZmSWEET4c and its rice ortholog OsSWEET4 are defective in seed filling, indicating that a lack of hexose transport at the BETL impairs further transfer of sugars imported from the maternal phloem. In both maize and rice, SWEET4 was likely recruited during domestication to enhance sugar import into the endosperm.


Current Opinion in Plant Biology | 2013

In vivo biochemistry: Applications for small molecule biosensors in plant biology

Alexander M. Jones; Guido Grossmann; Jonas åH Danielson; Davide Sosso; Li Qing Chen; Cheng-Hsun Ho; Wolf B. Frommer

Revolutionary new technologies, namely in the areas of DNA sequencing and molecular imaging, continue to impact new discoveries in plant science and beyond. For decades we have been able to determine properties of enzymes, receptors and transporters in vitro or in heterologous systems, and more recently been able to analyze their regulation at the transcriptional level, to use GFP reporters for obtaining insights into cellular and subcellular localization, and tp measure ion and metabolite levels with unprecedented precision using mass spectrometry. However, we lack key information on the location and dynamics of the substrates of enzymes, receptors and transporters, and on the regulation of these proteins in their cellular environment. Such information can now be obtained by transitioning from in vitro to in vivo biochemistry using biosensors. Genetically encoded fluorescent protein-based sensors for ion and metabolite dynamics provide highly resolved spatial and temporal information, and are complemented by sensors for pH, redox, voltage, and tension. They serve as powerful tools for identifying missing processes (e.g., glucose transport across ER membranes), components (e.g., SWEET sugar transporters for cellular sugar efflux), and signaling networks (e.g., from systematic screening of mutants that affect sugar transport or cytosolic and vacuolar pH). Combined with the knowledge of properties of enzymes and transporters and their interactions with the regulatory machinery, biosensors promise to be key diagnostic tools for systems and synthetic biology.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2012

Time-lapse Fluorescence Imaging of Arabidopsis Root Growth with Rapid Manipulation of The Root Environment Using The RootChip

Guido Grossmann; Matthias Meier; Heather N. Cartwright; Davide Sosso; Stephen R. Quake; David W. Ehrhardt; Wolf B. Frommer

The root functions as the physical anchor of the plant and is the organ responsible for uptake of water and mineral nutrients such as nitrogen, phosphorus, sulfate and trace elements that plants acquire from the soil. If we want to develop sustainable approaches to producing high crop yield, we need to better understand how the root develops, takes up a wide spectrum of nutrients, and interacts with symbiotic and pathogenic organisms. To accomplish these goals, we need to be able to explore roots in microscopic detail over time periods ranging from minutes to days. We developed the RootChip, a polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS)- based microfluidic device, which allows us to grow and image roots from Arabidopsis seedlings while avoiding any physical stress to roots during preparation for imaging1 (Figure 1). The device contains a bifurcated channel structure featuring micromechanical valves to guide the fluid flow from solution inlets to each of the eight observation chambers2. This perfusion system allows the root microenvironment to be controlled and modified with precision and speed. The volume of the chambers is approximately 400 nl, thus requiring only minimal amounts of test solution. Here we provide a detailed protocol for studying root biology on the RootChip using imaging-based approaches with real time resolution. Roots can be analyzed over several days using time lapse microscopy. Roots can be perfused with nutrient solutions or inhibitors, and up to eight seedlings can be analyzed in parallel. This system has the potential for a wide range of applications, including analysis of root growth in the presence or absence of chemicals, fluorescence-based analysis of gene expression, and the analysis of biosensors, e.g. FRET nanosensors3.


Plant Physiology | 2016

MtSWEET11, a Nodule-Specific Sucrose Transporter of Medicago truncatula

Igor Kryvoruchko; Senjuti Sinharoy; Ivone Torres-Jerez; Davide Sosso; Catalina I. Pislariu; Dian Guan; Jeremy D. Murray; Vagner A. Benedito; Wolf B. Frommer; Michael K. Udvardi

SWEET11 is a nodule-specific sucrose transporter of Medicago truncatula. Optimization of nitrogen fixation by rhizobia in legumes is a key area of research for sustainable agriculture. Symbiotic nitrogen fixation (SNF) occurs in specialized organs called nodules and depends on a steady supply of carbon to both plant and bacterial cells. Here we report the functional characterization of a nodule-specific Suc transporter, MtSWEET11 from Medicago truncatula. MtSWEET11 belongs to a clade of plant SWEET proteins that are capable of transporting Suc and play critical roles in pathogen susceptibility. When expressed in mammalian cells, MtSWEET11 transported sucrose (Suc) but not glucose (Glc). The MtSWEET11 gene was found to be expressed in infected root hair cells, and in the meristem, invasion zone, and vasculature of nodules. Expression of an MtSWEET11-GFP fusion protein in nodules resulted in green fluorescence associated with the plasma membrane of uninfected cells and infection thread and symbiosome membranes of infected cells. Two independent Tnt1-insertion sweet11 mutants were uncompromised in SNF. Therefore, although MtSWEET11 appears to be involved in Suc distribution within nodules, it is not crucial for SNF, probably because other Suc transporters can fulfill its role(s).

Collaboration


Dive into the Davide Sosso's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Wolf B. Frommer

Carnegie Institution for Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Li Qing Chen

Carnegie Institution for Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bing Yang

Iowa State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Xiao Qing Qu

Carnegie Institution for Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bi Huei Hou

Carnegie Institution for Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yi Bing Hu

Nanjing Agricultural University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David W. Ehrhardt

Carnegie Institution for Science

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge