Elena Baena-González
Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência
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Featured researches published by Elena Baena-González.
Nature | 2007
Elena Baena-González; Filip Rolland; Johan M. Thevelein; Jen Sheen
Photosynthetic plants are the principal solar energy converter sustaining life on Earth. Despite its fundamental importance, little is known about how plants sense and adapt to darkness in the daily light–dark cycle, or how they adapt to unpredictable environmental stresses that compromise photosynthesis and respiration and deplete energy supplies. Current models emphasize diverse stress perception and signalling mechanisms. Using a combination of cellular and systems screens, we show here that the evolutionarily conserved Arabidopsis thaliana protein kinases, KIN10 and KIN11 (also known as AKIN10/At3g01090 and AKIN11/At3g29160, respectively), control convergent reprogramming of transcription in response to seemingly unrelated darkness, sugar and stress conditions. Sensing and signalling deprivation of sugar and energy, KIN10 targets a remarkably broad array of genes that orchestrate transcription networks, promote catabolism and suppress anabolism. Specific bZIP transcription factors partially mediate primary KIN10 signalling. Transgenic KIN10 overexpression confers enhanced starvation tolerance and lifespan extension, and alters architecture and developmental transitions. Significantly, double kin10 kin11 deficiency abrogates the transcriptional switch in darkness and stress signalling, and impairs starch mobilization at night and growth. These studies uncover surprisingly pivotal roles of KIN10/11 in linking stress, sugar and developmental signals to globally regulate plant metabolism, energy balance, growth and survival. In contrast to the prevailing view that sucrose activates plant SnRK1s (Snf1-related protein kinases), our functional analyses of Arabidopsis KIN10/11 provide compelling evidence that SnRK1s are inactivated by sugars and share central roles with the orthologous yeast Snf1 and mammalian AMPK in energy signalling.
Trends in Plant Science | 2008
Elena Baena-González; Jen Sheen
Plants are constantly confronted by multiple types of stress. Despite their distinct origin and mode of perception, nutrient deprivation and most stresses have an impact on the overall energy status of the plant, leading to convergent downstream responses that include largely overlapping transcriptional patterns. The emerging view is that this transcriptome reprogramming in energy and stress signaling is partly regulated by the evolutionarily conserved energy sensor protein kinases, SNF1 (sucrose non-fermenting 1) in yeast, AMPK (AMP-activated protein kinase) in mammals and SnRK1 (SNF1-related kinase 1) in plants. Upon sensing the energy deficit associated with stress, nutrient deprivation and darkness, SnRK1 triggers extensive transcriptional changes that contribute to restoring homeostasis, promoting cell survival and elaborating longer-term responses for adaptation, growth and development.
Planta | 1999
Elena Baena-González; Roberto Barbato; Eva-Mari Aro
Abstract. The role of PSII protein phosphorylation in the oligomeric structure of the complex and in the repair of photodamaged PSII centers was studied with intact thylakoids and thylakoid membrane subfractions isolated from differentially light-treated pumpkin (Cucurbita pepo L.) leaves. A combination of sucrose gradient fractionation of thylakoid protein complexes and immunodetection with phosphothreonine and protein-specific antibodies was used. We report in this study that the extent of phosphorylation of PSII core proteins is equivalent in dimers and monomers, and directly depends on light intensity. Phosphorylated PSII monomers migrate to the stroma-exposed thylakoids, probably following damage of the D1 protein and the dissociation of the light-harvesting complex of PSII. Once in the stroma lamellae, monomers are gradually dephosphorylated to allow the reparation of the complex. First, CP43 is dephosphorylated and as a consequence of this modification it detaches from the PSII core. In addition to D1, D2 is also thereafter dephosphorylated. Phosphorylation of PSII core polypeptides probably ensures the integrity of the monomers until repair can proceed. Dephosphorylation, on the other hand, might serve the need for opening the complex and coordinating D1 proteolysis and the attachment of ribosomes.
The Plant Cell | 2013
Americo Rodrigues; Mattia Adamo; Pierre Crozet; Leonor Margalha; Ana Confraria; Cláudia Martinho; Alexandre Elias; Agnese Rabissi; Victoria Lumbreras; Miguel González-Guzmán; Regina Antoni; Pedro L. Rodriguez; Elena Baena-González
SnRK1 protein kinases are negatively regulated by the same PP2C phosphatases that repress the action of the central phytohormone abscisic acid (ABA). During environmental stress, ABA releases PP2C repression, thereby activating two key and complementary pathways and providing better protection against stress through the joined modulation of metabolism and gene expression. Plant survival under environmental stress requires the integration of multiple signaling pathways into a coordinated response, but the molecular mechanisms underlying this integration are poorly understood. Stress-derived energy deprivation activates the Snf1-related protein kinases1 (SnRK1s), triggering a vast transcriptional and metabolic reprogramming that restores homeostasis and promotes tolerance to adverse conditions. Here, we show that two clade A type 2C protein phosphatases (PP2Cs), established repressors of the abscisic acid (ABA) hormonal pathway, interact with the SnRK1 catalytic subunit causing its dephosphorylation and inactivation. Accordingly, SnRK1 repression is abrogated in double and quadruple pp2c knockout mutants, provoking, similarly to SnRK1 overexpression, sugar hypersensitivity during early seedling development. Reporter gene assays and SnRK1 target gene expression analyses further demonstrate that PP2C inhibition by ABA results in SnRK1 activation, promoting SnRK1 signaling during stress and once the energy deficit subsides. Consistent with this, SnRK1 and ABA induce largely overlapping transcriptional responses. Hence, the PP2C hub allows the coordinated activation of ABA and energy signaling, strengthening the stress response through the cooperation of two key and complementary pathways.
Frontiers in Plant Science | 2014
Pierre Crozet; Leonor Margalha; Ana Confraria; Americo Rodrigues; Cláudia Martinho; Mattia Adamo; Carlos A. Elias; Elena Baena-González
The SNF1 (sucrose non-fermenting 1)-related protein kinases 1 (SnRKs1) are the plant orthologs of the budding yeast SNF1 and mammalian AMPK (AMP-activated protein kinase). These evolutionarily conserved kinases are metabolic sensors that undergo activation in response to declining energy levels. Upon activation, SNF1/AMPK/SnRK1 kinases trigger a vast transcriptional and metabolic reprograming that restores energy homeostasis and promotes tolerance to adverse conditions, partly through an induction of catabolic processes and a general repression of anabolism. These kinases typically function as a heterotrimeric complex composed of two regulatory subunits, β and γ, and an α-catalytic subunit, which requires phosphorylation of a conserved activation loop residue for activity. Additionally, SNF1/AMPK/SnRK1 kinases are controlled by multiple mechanisms that have an impact on kinase activity, stability, and/or subcellular localization. Here we will review current knowledge on the regulation of SNF1/AMPK/SnRK1 by upstream components, post-translational modifications, various metabolites, hormones, and others, in an attempt to highlight both the commonalities of these essential eukaryotic kinases and the divergences that have evolved to cope with the particularities of each one of these systems.
FEBS Letters | 1998
Saijaliisa Pursiheimo; Eevi Rintamäki; Elena Baena-González; Eva-Mari Aro
Phosphothreonine antibody was used to explore reversible thylakoid protein phosphorylation in vivo in evolutionally divergent organisms with oxygenic photosynthesis. Three distinct groups of organisms were found. Cyanobacteria and red algae, both with phycobilisome antenna system, did not show phosphorylation of any of the photosystem II (PSII) proteins and belong to group 1. Group 2 species, consisting of a moss, a liverwort and a fern, phosphorylated both the light‐harvesting chlorophyll a/b proteins (LHCII) and the PSII core proteins D2 and CP43, but not the D1 protein. Reversible phosphorylation of the D1 protein seems to be the latest event in the evolution of PSII protein phosphorylation and was found only in seed plants, in group 3 species. Light‐intensity‐dependent regulation of LHCII protein phosphorylation was similar in group 2 and 3 species, with maximal phosphorylation of LHCII at low light and nearly complete dephosphorylation at high light.
Current Biology | 2014
Ignacio Rubio-Somoza; Chuan-Miao Zhou; Ana Confraria; Cláudia Martinho; Patrick von Born; Elena Baena-González; Jia-Wei Wang; Detlef Weigel
The tremendous diversity of leaf shapes has caught the attention of naturalists for centuries. In addition to interspecific and intraspecific differences, leaf morphologies may differ in single plants according to age, a phenomenon known as heteroblasty. In Arabidopsis thaliana, the progression from the juvenile to the adult phase is characterized by increased leaf serration. A similar trend is seen in species with more complex leaves, such as the A. thaliana relative Cardamine hirsuta, in which the number of leaflets per leaf increases with age. Although the genetic changes that led to the overall simpler leaf architecture in A. thaliana are increasingly well understood, less is known about the events underlying age-dependent changes within single plants, in either A. thaliana or C. hirsuta. Here, we describe a conserved miRNA transcription factor regulon responsible for an age-dependent increase in leaf complexity. In early leaves, miR319-targeted TCP transcription factors interfere with the function of miR164-dependent and miR164-independent CUC proteins, preventing the formation of serrations in A. thaliana and of leaflets in C. hirsuta. As plants age, accumulation of miR156-regulated SPLs acts as a timing cue that destabilizes TCP-CUC interactions. The destabilization licenses activation of CUC protein complexes and thereby the gradual increase of leaf complexity in the newly formed organs. These findings point to posttranslational interaction between unrelated miRNA-targeted transcription factors as a core feature of these regulatory circuits.
eLife | 2015
Andrea Mair; Lorenzo Pedrotti; Bernhard Wurzinger; Dorothea Anrather; Andrea Simeunovic; Christoph Weiste; Concetta Valerio; Katrin Dietrich; Tobias Kirchler; Jesús Vicente Carbajosa; Johannes Hanson; Elena Baena-González; Christina Chaban; Wolfram Weckwerth; Wolfgang Dröge-Laser; Markus Teige
Metabolic adjustment to changing environmental conditions, particularly balancing of growth and defense responses, is crucial for all organisms to survive. The evolutionary conserved AMPK/Snf1/SnRK1 kinases are well-known metabolic master regulators in the low-energy response in animals, yeast and plants. They act at two different levels: by modulating the activity of key metabolic enzymes, and by massive transcriptional reprogramming. While the first part is well established, the latter function is only partially understood in animals and not at all in plants. Here we identified the Arabidopsis transcription factor bZIP63 as key regulator of the starvation response and direct target of the SnRK1 kinase. Phosphorylation of bZIP63 by SnRK1 changed its dimerization preference, thereby affecting target gene expression and ultimately primary metabolism. A bzip63 knock-out mutant exhibited starvation-related phenotypes, which could be functionally complemented by wild type bZIP63, but not by a version harboring point mutations in the identified SnRK1 target sites. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.05828.001
Frontiers in Plant Science | 2013
Ana Confraria; Cláudia Martinho; Alexandre Elias; Ignacio Rubio-Somoza; Elena Baena-González
The SnRK1 protein kinase, the plant ortholog of mammalian AMPK and yeast Snf1, is activated by the energy depletion caused by adverse environmental conditions. Upon activation, SnRK1 triggers extensive transcriptional changes to restore homeostasis and promote stress tolerance and survival partly through the inhibition of anabolism and the activation of catabolism. Despite the identification of a few bZIP transcription factors as downstream effectors, the mechanisms underlying gene regulation, and in particular gene repression by SnRK1, remain mostly unknown. microRNAs (miRNAs) are 20–24 nt RNAs that regulate gene expression post-transcriptionally by driving the cleavage and/or translation attenuation of complementary mRNA targets. In addition to their role in plant development, mounting evidence implicates miRNAs in the response to environmental stress. Given the involvement of miRNAs in stress responses and the fact that some of the SnRK1-regulated genes are miRNA targets, we postulated that miRNAs drive part of the transcriptional reprogramming triggered by SnRK1. By comparing the transcriptional response to energy deprivation between WT and dcl1-9, a mutant deficient in miRNA biogenesis, we identified 831 starvation genes misregulated in the dcl1-9 mutant, out of which 155 are validated or predicted miRNA targets. Functional clustering analysis revealed that the main cellular processes potentially co-regulated by SnRK1 and miRNAs are translation and organelle function and uncover TCP transcription factors as one of the most highly enriched functional clusters. TCP repression during energy deprivation was impaired in miR319 knockdown (MIM319) plants, demonstrating the involvement of miR319 in the stress-dependent regulation of TCPs. Altogether, our data indicates that miRNAs are components of the SnRK1 signaling cascade contributing to the regulation of specific mRNA targets and possibly tuning down particular cellular processes during the stress response.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001
Elena Baena-González; John C. Gray; E Tyystjärvi; Eva-Mari Aro; Pirkko Mäenpää
The ycf9 (orf62) gene of the plastid genome encodes a 6.6-kDa protein (ORF62) of thylakoid membranes. To elucidate the role of the ORF62 protein, the coding region of the gene was disrupted with an aadAcassette, yielding mutant plants that were nearly (more than 95%) homoplasmic for ycf9 inactivation. Theycf9 mutant had no altered phenotype under standard growth conditions, but its growth rate was severely reduced under suboptimal irradiances. On the other hand, it was less susceptible to photodamage than the wild type. ycf9 inactivation resulted in a clear reduction in protein amounts of CP26, the NAD(P)H dehydrogenase complex, and the plastid terminal oxidase. Furthermore, depletion of ORF62 led to a faster flow of electrons to photosystem I without a change in the maximum electron transfer capacity of photosystem II. Despite the reduction of CP26 in the mutant thylakoids, no differences in PSII oxygen evolution rates were evident even at low light intensities. On the other hand, the ycf9mutant presented deficiencies in the capacity for PSII-independent electron transport (ferredoxin-dependent cyclic electron transport and NAD(P)H dehydrogenase-mediated plastoquinone reduction). Altogether, it is shown that depletion of ORF62 leads to anomalies in the photosynthetic electron transfer chain and in the regulation of electron partitioning among the different routes of electron transport.