Dolors Verdaguer
University of Girona
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Featured researches published by Dolors Verdaguer.
Plant Science | 1998
Maria Pla; Gemma Huguet; Dolors Verdaguer; Pere Puigderrajols; Blanca Llompart; Anna Nadal; Marisa Molinas
Abstract We report the cloning of a small heat shock protein, Qs HSP17, and an osmotin like protein, Qs_OLP, from cork oak phellem tissue (cork cells). Both genes are expressed in suberizing cells and in other cells subject to endogenous stress associated with free radicals. We provide evidence that smHSPs and OLPs accumulate in overwintering buds and speculate that their role is similar to that in seed dormancy. We also show that both stress proteins are mainly located in the region of the quiescent center in root apex and in central meristem in the shoot apex. We emphasize that smHSPs and OLPs are expressed in cells growing under endogenous stress or facing long life-span. We discuss a possible role of these stress proteins against oxidative stress.
Plant and Soil | 2003
Bouchra El Omari; Xavier Aranda; Dolors Verdaguer; Gemma Pascual; Isabel Fleck
We studied the source of the nitrogen used for the growth and resprouting of holm-oak (Quercus ilexL.), and the contribution of nitrogen and carbohydrate root reserves to these processes. Three-year-old plants were grown in a greenhouse with either a sufficient or restricted nitrogen supply for one year. Half the individuals were subjected to shoot excision to provoke resprouting, and a 15N solution was given to these plants and to controls for two months. Nitrogen, Total Non-structural Carbohydrate (TNC), Total Soluble Protein content, and 15N and 13C composition were determined, and histological analyses of woody tissue were performed. Our results show that N-deprived plants used nitrogen from root reserves to support a growth rate similar to that of non-deprived plants. However, deprived plants lost their resprouting capacity in spite of the high TNC accumulation and nitrogen resupply to the soil. After the supply of nitrogen was restored to N-deprived plants, this nutrient mainly accumulated in under-ground organs, which limited the above-ground growth. Resprouting plants first remobilized the nitrogen stored in roots, and thereafter took it up from the solution. The root-crown region did not behave as a specialised reserve organ in three-year-old Quercus ilex L. plants.
American Journal of Botany | 2002
Gemma Pascual; Marisa Molinas; Dolors Verdaguer
Anatomical changes at the cotyledonary node from the embryo to the seedling stage in Quercus coccifera, Q. ilex, and Q. humilis were investigated by light and scanning electron microscopy techniques. Mature embryos of Q. humilis possess 2-3 pairs of leaf primordia and a pair of cotyledonary buds, whereas in Q. coccifera and Q. ilex there are two incipient primordia, and cotyledonary buds are not observed until 1 wk after germination. In all three species the cotyledonary buds multiply, forming bud clusters, and a vascular connection is well established within 5-6 wk after germination. As development proceeds, the cotyledonary region becomes woody, but buds, which are exogenous in origin, never become embedded in the periderm. In comparison with Q. suber, another native Mediterranean Basin oak, the cotyledonary node is short and axillary buds are not present below the insertion of cotyledons. In addition, starch accumulation in the cotyledonary region is not observed from histological analysis in the three oaks. Therefore, in Q. coccifera, Q. ilex, and Q. humilis seedlings the cotyledonary node can be considered to be an important regenerative structure enabling them to resprout after the elimination of the shoot above the cotyledons, despite the absence of a lignotuberous structure.
Plant Science | 2017
Dolors Verdaguer; Marcel A. K. Jansen; Laura Llorens; Luis O. Morales; Susanne Neugart
Ultraviolet-A radiation (UV-A: 315-400nm) is a component of solar radiation that exerts a wide range of physiological responses in plants. Currently, field attenuation experiments are the most reliable source of information on the effects of UV-A. Common plant responses to UV-A include both inhibitory and stimulatory effects on biomass accumulation and morphology. UV-A effects on biomass accumulation can differ from those on root: shoot ratio, and distinct responses are described for different leaf tissues. Inhibitory and enhancing effects of UV-A on photosynthesis are also analysed, as well as activation of photoprotective responses, including UV-absorbing pigments. UV-A-induced leaf flavonoids are highly compound-specific and species-dependent. Many of the effects on growth and development exerted by UV-A are distinct to those triggered by UV-B and vary considerably in terms of the direction the response takes. Such differences may reflect diverse UV-perception mechanisms with multiple photoreceptors operating in the UV-A range and/or variations in the experimental approaches used. This review highlights a role that various photoreceptors (UVR8, phototropins, phytochromes and cryptochromes) may play in plant responses to UV-A when dose, wavelength and other conditions are taken into account.
Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B-biology | 2015
Nikolaos Nenadis; Laura Llorens; Agathi Koufogianni; Laura Díaz; Joan Nogué i Font; Josep Abel Gonzalez; Dolors Verdaguer
The effects of UV radiation and rainfall reduction on the seasonal leaf phenolic content/composition and antioxidant activity of the Mediterranean shrub Arbutus unedo were studied. Naturally growing plants of A. unedo were submitted to 97% UV-B reduction (UVA), 95% UV-A+UV-B reduction (UV0) or near-ambient UV levels (UVBA) under two precipitation regimes (natural rainfall or 10-30% rainfall reduction). Total phenol, flavonol and flavanol contents, levels of eight phenols and antioxidant activity [DPPH(●) radical scavenging and Cu (II) reducing capacity] were measured in sun-exposed leaves at the end of four consecutive seasons. Results showed a significant seasonal variation in the leaf content of phenols of A. unedo, with the lowest values found in spring and the highest in autumn and/or winter. Leaf ontogenetic development and/or a possible effect of low temperatures in autumn/winter may account for such findings. Regardless of the watering regime and the sampling date, plant exposure to UV-B radiation decreased the total flavanol content of leaves, while it increased the leaf content in quercitrin (the most abundant quercetin derivative identified). By contrast, UV-A radiation increased the leaf content of theogallin, a gallic acid derivative. Other phenolic compounds (two quercetin derivatives, one of them being avicularin, and one kaempferol derivative, juglanin), as well as the antioxidant activity of the leaves, showed different responses to UV radiation depending on the precipitation regime. Surprisingly, reduced rainfall significantly decreased the total amount of quantified quercetin derivatives as well as the DPPH scavenging activity in A. unedo leaves. To conclude, present findings indicate that leaves of A. unedo can be a good source of antioxidants throughout the year, but especially in autumn and winter.
Physiologia Plantarum | 2013
Meritxell Bernal; Laura Llorens; Jordi Badosa; Dolors Verdaguer
To assess the effects of UV radiation and its interaction with water availability on Mediterranean plants, we performed an experiment with seedlings of six Mediterranean species (three mesophytes vs three xerophytes) grown in a glasshouse from May to October under three UV conditions (without UV, with UVA and with UVA+UVB) and two irrigation levels (watered to saturation and low watered). Morphological, physiological and biochemical measures were taken. Exposure to UVA+UVB increased the overall leaf mass per area (LMA) and the leaf carotenoids/chlorophyll a + b ratio of plants in relation to plants grown without UV or with UVA, respectively. In contrast, we did not find a general effect of UV on the leaf content of phenols or UVB-absorbing compounds of the studied species. Regarding plant growth, UV inhibited the above-ground biomass production of well-watered plants of Pistacia lentiscus. Conversely, under low irrigation, UVA tended to abolish the reduction in growth experienced by P. lentiscus plants growing in a UV-free environment, in accordance with UVA-enhanced apparent electron transport rate (ETR) values under drought in this species. UVA also induced an overall increase in root biomass when plants of the studied species were grown under a low water supply. In conclusion, while plant exposition to UVA favored root growth under water shortage, UVB addition only gave rise to photoprotective responses, such as the increase in LMA or in the leaf carotenoids/chlorophyll a + b ratio of plants. Species-specific responses to UV were not related with the xerophytic or mesophytic character of the studied species.
Physiologia Plantarum | 2012
David Comont; Javier Martínez Abaigar; Andreas Albert; Pedro J. Aphalo; David R. Causton; Félix L. Figueroa; Alenka Gaberščik; Laura Llorens; Marie-Theres Hauser; Marcel A. K. Jansen; Majlis Kardefelt; Paqui de la Coba Luque; Susanne Neubert; Encarnación Núñez-Olivera; Jorunn E. Olsen; Matthew Robson; Monika Schreiner; Ruben Sommaruga; Åke Strid; Sissel Torre; Minna Turunen; Sonja Veljovic-Jovanovic; Dolors Verdaguer; Marija Vidović; Johanna Wagner; Jana Barbro Winkler; Gaetano Zipoli; Dylan Gwynn-Jones
Lolium perenne (cv. AberDart) was grown at 14 locations along a latitudinal gradient across Europe (37-68°N) to study the impact of ultraviolet radiation (UV) and climate on aboveground growth and foliar UV-B absorbing compounds. At each location, plants were grown outdoors for 5 weeks in a replicated UV-B filtration experiment consisting of open, UV-B transparent (cellulose diacetate) and UV-B opaque (polyester) environments. Fourier transform-infrared spectroscopy was used to compare plant metabolite profiles in relation to treatment and location. UV radiation and climatic parameters were determined for each location from online sources and the data were assessed using a combination of anova and multiple regression analyses. Most of the variation in growth between the locations was attributable to the combination of climatic parameters, with minimum temperature identified as an important growth constraint. However, no single environmental parameter could consistently account for the variability in plant growth. Concentrations of foliar UV-B absorbing compounds showed a positive trend with solar UV across the latitudinal gradient; however, this relationship was not consistent in all treatments. The most striking experimental outcome from this study was the effect of presence or absence of filtration frames on UV-absorbing compounds. Overall, the study demonstrates the value of an European approach in studying the impacts of natural UV across a large latitudinal gradient. We have shown the feasibility of coordinated UV filtration at multiple sites but have also highlighted the need for open controls and careful interpretation of plant responses.
International Journal of Plant Sciences | 1999
Dolors Verdaguer; Marisa Molinas
Using histological techniques, we investigated the development and organization of the primary root and the root apex of Quercus suber L. (cork oak), a Mediterranean woody species growing in semiarid conditions. The presence of a quiescent center was also investigated. The histogenesis of the vascular system begins with the maturation of the protophloem elements. Primary phloem and xylem strands form alternately, and maturation proceeds centripetally, although xylem differentiation does not reach the center of the root, which is occupied by a pith. Most protoxylem elements were fully mature well before the endodermis entered State I with the formation of the Casparian strip. A continuous vascular cambium forms before the initiation of the phellogen in the outermost pericyclic layer. In the primary root the apex has an open organization with four groups of initials: vascular cylinder initials, cortical initials, lateral root‐cap initials, and columella initials. The quiescent center includes the vascular initials and some derivatives. These features contrast with the radicle in mature and germinating embryos that have a closed organization with three groups of initials and a wider quiescent center.
Plant Cell and Environment | 2017
Antonella Castagna; Kristóf Csepregi; Susanne Neugart; Gaetano Zipoli; Kristýna Večeřová; Gabor Jakab; Tjaša Jug; Laura Llorens; Javier Martínez-Abaigar; Johann Martínez-Lüscher; Encarnación Núñez-Olivera; Annamaria Ranieri; Katharina Schoedl-Hummel; Monika Schreiner; Péter Teszlák; Susanne Tittmann; Otmar Urban; Dolors Verdaguer; Marcel A. K. Jansen; Éva Hideg
A 2-year study explored metabolic and phenotypic plasticity of sun-acclimated Vitis vinifera cv. Pinot noir leaves collected from 12 locations across a 36.69-49.98°N latitudinal gradient. Leaf morphological and biochemical parameters were analysed in the context of meteorological parameters and the latitudinal gradient. We found that leaf fresh weight and area were negatively correlated with both global and ultraviolet (UV) radiation, cumulated global radiation being a stronger correlator. Cumulative UV radiation (sumUVR) was the strongest correlator with most leaf metabolites and pigments. Leaf UV-absorbing pigments, total antioxidant capacities, and phenolic compounds increased with increasing sumUVR, whereas total carotenoids and xanthophylls decreased. Despite of this reallocation of metabolic resources from carotenoids to phenolics, an increase in xanthophyll-cycle pigments (the sum of the amounts of three xanthophylls: violaxanthin, antheraxanthin, and zeaxanthin) with increasing sumUVR indicates active, dynamic protection for the photosynthetic apparatus. In addition, increased amounts of flavonoids (quercetin glycosides) and constitutive β-carotene and α-tocopherol pools provide antioxidant protection against reactive oxygen species. However, rather than a continuum of plant acclimation responses, principal component analysis indicates clusters of metabolic states across the explored 1,500-km-long latitudinal gradient. This study emphasizes the physiological component of plant responses to latitudinal gradients and reveals the physiological plasticity that may act to complement genetic adaptations.
Journal of Experimental Botany | 2002
Pere Puigderrajols; Anna Jofré; Gisela Mir; Maria Pla; Dolors Verdaguer; Gemma Huguet; Marisa Molinas