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Dive into the research topics where Estela M. Valle is active.

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Featured researches published by Estela M. Valle.


Plant Molecular Biology | 2008

Generation of superoxide anion in chloroplasts of Arabidopsis thaliana during active photosynthesis: a focus on rapidly induced genes

Telma E. Scarpeci; María Inés Zanor; Néstor Carrillo; Bernd Mueller-Roeber; Estela M. Valle

The antioxidant defense system involves complex functional coordination of multiple components in different organelles within the plant cell. Here, we have studied the Arabidopsis thaliana early response to the generation of superoxide anion in chloroplasts during active photosynthesis. We exposed plants to methyl viologen (MV), a superoxide anion propagator in the light, and performed biochemical and expression profiling experiments using Affymetrix ATH1 GeneChip® microarrays under conditions in which photosynthesis and antioxidant enzymes were active. Data analysis identified superoxide-responsive genes that were compared with available microarray results. Examples include genes encoding proteins with unknown function, transcription factors and signal transduction components. A common GAAAAGTCAAAC motif containing the W-box consensus sequence of WRKY transcription factors, was found in the promoters of genes highly up-regulated by superoxide. Band shift assays showed that oxidative treatments enhanced the specific binding of leaf protein extracts to this motif. In addition, GUS reporter gene fused to WRKY30 promoter, which contains this binding motif, was induced by MV and H2O2. Overall, our study suggests that genes involved in signalling pathways and with unknown functions are rapidly activated by superoxide anion generated in photosynthetically active chloroplasts, as part of the early antioxidant response of Arabidopsis leaves.


Plant Molecular Biology | 2003

MADS-box genes expressed during tomato seed and fruit development

Maria V. Busi; Claudia A. Bustamante; Cecilia D'Angelo; Mauricio Hidalgo-Cuevas; Silvana B. Boggio; Estela M. Valle; Eduardo Zabaleta

MADS-box genes in plants are putative transcription factors involved in regulating numerous developmental processes, such as meristem and organ identity in inflorescences and in flowers. Recent reports indicate that they are involved in other processes than flower development such as the establishment of developing embryos, seed coat and ultimately in root and fruit development. We have identified seven tomato MADS-box genes that are highly expressed during the first steps of tomato fruit development. According to comparisons of their deduced amino acid sequences, they were classified into two groups: (1) already identified tomato MADS-box genes previously defined as flower identity genes (TAG1, TDR4 and TDR6) and (2) new tomato MADS-box genes (TAGL1, TAGL2, TAGL11 and TAGL12). With the exception of TAGL12, which is expressed near uniformly in every tissue, the other genes show an induction during the tomato fruit development phase I (anthesis) and phase II, when active cell division occurs. In situ hybridization analyses show a specific expression pattern for each gene within the fruit and embryo sac tissues suggesting an important role in the establishment of tissue identity. Yeast two-hybrid analyses indicate that some of these proteins could potentially form dimers suggesting they could act together to accomplish their proposed role.


The Plant Cell | 2006

Functional replacement of ferredoxin by a cyanobacterial flavodoxin in tobacco confers broad-range stress tolerance.

Vanesa B. Tognetti; Javier F. Palatnik; María F. Fillat; Michael Melzer; Mohammad-Reza Hajirezaei; Estela M. Valle; Néstor Carrillo

Chloroplast ferredoxin (Fd) plays a pivotal role in plant cell metabolism by delivering reducing equivalents to various essential oxidoreductive pathways. Fd levels decrease under adverse environmental conditions in many microorganisms, including cyanobacteria, which share a common ancestor with chloroplasts. Conversely, stress situations induce the synthesis of flavodoxin (Fld), an electron carrier flavoprotein not found in plants, which can efficiently replace Fd in most electron transfer processes. We report here that chloroplast Fd also declined in plants exposed to oxidants or stress conditions. A purified cyanobacterial Fld was able to mediate plant Fd-dependent reactions in vitro, including NADP+ and thioredoxin reduction. Tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) plants expressing Fld in chloroplasts displayed increased tolerance to multiple sources of stress, including redox-cycling herbicides, extreme temperatures, high irradiation, water deficit, and UV radiation. Oxidant buildup and oxidative inactivation of thioredoxin-dependent plastidic enzymes were decreased in stressed plants expressing plastid-targeted Fld, suggesting that development of the tolerant phenotype relied on productive interaction of this flavoprotein with Fd-dependent oxidoreductive pathways of the host, most remarkably, thioredoxin reduction. The use of Fld provides new tools to investigate the requirements of photosynthesis in planta and to increase plant stress tolerance based on the introduction of a cyanobacterial product that is free from endogenous regulation in higher plants.


Plant Physiology | 2008

Generation of Hydrogen Peroxide in Chloroplasts of Arabidopsis Overexpressing Glycolate Oxidase as an Inducible System to Study Oxidative Stress

Holger Fahnenstich; Telma E. Scarpeci; Estela M. Valle; Ulf-Ingo Flügge; Veronica G. Maurino

Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) overexpressing glycolate oxidase (GO) in chloroplasts accumulates both hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and glyoxylate. GO-overexpressing lines (GO plants) grown at 75 μmol quanta m−2 s−1 show retarded development, yellowish rosettes, and impaired photosynthetic performance, while at 30 μmol quanta m−2 s−1, this phenotype virtually disappears. The GO plants develop oxidative stress lesions under photorespiratory conditions but grow like wild-type plants under nonphotorespiratory conditions. GO plants coexpressing enzymes that further metabolize glyoxylate but still accumulate H2O2 show all features of the GO phenotype, indicating that H2O2 is responsible for the GO phenotype. The GO plants can complete their life cycle, showing that they are able to adapt to the stress conditions imposed by the accumulation of H2O2 during the light period. Moreover, the data demonstrate that a response to oxidative stress is installed, with increased expression and/or activity of known oxidative stress-responsive components. Hence, the GO plants are an ideal noninvasive model system in which to study the effects of H2O2 directly in the chloroplasts, because H2O2 accumulation is inducible and sustained perturbations can reproducibly be provoked by exposing the plants to different ambient conditions.


Plant Science | 2000

Changes in amino acid composition and nitrogen metabolizing enzymes in ripening fruits of Lycopersicon esculentum Mill

Silvana B. Boggio; Javier F. Palatnik; Hans W. Heldt; Estela M. Valle

The free amino acid content of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) fruits from cultivars Platense, Vollendung and Cherry were determined during ripening. It was found that glutamate markedly increased in red fruits of the three cultivars under study. At this stage, the cv Cherry had the highest relative glutamate molar content (52%) of all the analyzed tomato fruit cultivars. Measurements of nitrogen-assimilating enzyme activities of these fruits showed a decrease in glutamine synthetase (GS, EC 6.3.1.2) during fruit ripening and a concomitant increase in NADH-glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH, EC 1.4.1.3) and aspartate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.1) activities. Western blot analysis of protein extracts revealed that while GS was principally present in green fruit extracts, GDH was almost exclusively observed in the extracts of red fruits. These results suggest a reciprocal pattern of induction between GS and GDH during tomato fruit ripening.


Plant Physiology | 1997

Oxidative Stress Causes Ferredoxin-NADP+ Reductase Solubilization from the Thylakoid Membranes in Methyl Viologen-Treated Plants

Javier F. Palatnik; Estela M. Valle; Néstor Carrillo

The flavoenzyme ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase (FNR) is a member of the cellular defense barrier against oxidative damage in Escherichia coli. We evaluated the responses of chloroplast FNR to methyl viologen, a superoxide radical propagator, in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) plants and chloroplasts. Treatments with the herbicide showed little effect on the levels of FNR protein or transcripts, indicating that expression of this reductase is not up-regulated by oxidants in plants. Viologens and peroxides caused solubilization of active FNR from the thylakoids into the stroma, converting the enzyme from a membrane-bound NADPH producer to a soluble NADPH consumer. This response appeared specific for FNR, since other thylakoid proteins were unaffected by the treatments. The reductase-binding protein was released together with FNR, suggesting that it might be the target of oxidative modification. Stromal accumulation of a functional NADPH reductase in response to oxidative stress is formally analogous to the induction of FNR synthesis observed in E. coli under similar conditions. FNR solubilization may be playing a crucial role in maintaining the NADPH/NADP+ homeostasis of the stressed plastid. The unchecked accumulation of NADPH might otherwise increase the risks of oxidative damage through a rise in the Mehler reaction rates and/or the production of hydroxyl radicals.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Enhanced plant tolerance to iron starvation by functional substitution of chloroplast ferredoxin with a bacterial flavodoxin

Vanesa B. Tognetti; Matias D. Zurbriggen; Eligio N. Morandi; María F. Fillat; Estela M. Valle; Mohammad-Reza Hajirezaei; Néstor Carrillo

Iron limitation affects one-third of the cultivable land on Earth and represents a major concern for agriculture. It causes decline of many photosynthetic components, including the Fe-S protein ferredoxin (Fd), involved in essential oxidoreductive pathways of chloroplasts. In cyanobacteria and some algae, Fd down-regulation under Fe deficit is compensated by induction of an isofunctional electron carrier, flavodoxin (Fld), a flavin mononucleotide-containing protein not found in plants. Transgenic tobacco lines expressing a cyanobacterial Fld in chloroplasts were able to grow in Fe-deficient media that severely compromised survival of WT plants. Fld expression did not improve Fe uptake or mobilization, and stressed transformants elicited a normal deficit response, including induction of ferric-chelate reductase and metal transporters. However, the presence of Fld did prevent decrease of several photosynthetic proteins (but not Fd) and partially protected photosynthesis from inactivation. It also preserved the activation state of enzymes depending on the Fd-thioredoxin pathway, which correlated with higher levels of intermediates of carbohydrate metabolism and the Calvin cycle, as well as increased contents of sucrose, glutamate, and other amino acids. These metabolic routes depend, directly or indirectly, on the provision of reduced Fd. The results indicate that Fld could compensate Fd decline during episodes of Fe deficiency by productively interacting with Fd-dependent pathways of the host, providing fresh genetic resources for the design of plants able to survive in Fe-poor lands.


Plant Physiology | 2006

Transgenic Tobacco Plants Overexpressing Chloroplastic Ferredoxin-NADP(H) Reductase Display Normal Rates of Photosynthesis and Increased Tolerance to Oxidative Stress

Ramiro E. Rodriguez; Anabella F. Lodeyro; Hugo O. Poli; Matias D. Zurbriggen; Martin Peisker; Javier F. Palatnik; Vanesa B. Tognetti; Henning Tschiersch; Mohammad-Reza Hajirezaei; Estela M. Valle; Néstor Carrillo

Ferredoxin-NADP(H) reductase (FNR) catalyzes the last step of photosynthetic electron transport in chloroplasts, driving electrons from reduced ferredoxin to NADP+. This reaction is rate limiting for photosynthesis under a wide range of illumination conditions, as revealed by analysis of plants transformed with an antisense version of the FNR gene. To investigate whether accumulation of this flavoprotein over wild-type levels could improve photosynthetic efficiency and growth, we generated transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) plants expressing a pea (Pisum sativum) FNR targeted to chloroplasts. The alien product distributed between the thylakoid membranes and the chloroplast stroma. Transformants grown at 150 or 700 μmol quanta m−2 s−1 displayed wild-type phenotypes regardless of FNR content. Thylakoids isolated from plants with a 5-fold FNR increase over the wild type displayed only moderate stimulation (approximately 20%) in the rates of electron transport from water to NADP+. In contrast, when donors of photosystem I were used to drive NADP+ photoreduction, the activity was 3- to 4-fold higher than the wild-type controls. Plants expressing various levels of FNR (from 1- to 3.6-fold over the wild type) failed to show significant differences in CO2 assimilation rates when assayed over a range of light intensities and CO2 concentrations. Transgenic lines exhibited enhanced tolerance to photooxidative damage and redox-cycling herbicides that propagate reactive oxygen species. The results suggest that photosynthetic electron transport has several rate-limiting steps, with FNR catalyzing just one of them.


Amino Acids | 2010

Free amino acid production during tomato fruit ripening: a focus on l -glutamate

Augusto Sorrequieta; Gisela Ferraro; Silvana B. Boggio; Estela M. Valle

In tomato, free amino acids increase dramatically during fruit ripening and their abundance changed differentially. More evident is l-glutamate which gives the characteristic “umami” flavor. Glutamate is the principal free amino acid of ripe fruits of cultivated varieties. In this paper, we examined the capacity of tomato fruits to process endogenous as well as exogenous polypeptides during the ripening transition, in order to analyze their contribution to the free amino acid pool. In addition, the activity of some enzymes involved in glutamate metabolism such as γ-glutamyl transpeptidase (γ-GTase), glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH), α-ketoglutarate-dependent γ-aminobutyrate transaminase (GABA-T), alanine and aspartate aminotransferases was evaluated. Results showed that peptidases were very active in ripening fruits, and they were able to release free amino acids from endogenous proteins and glutamate from exogenously added glutamate-containing peptides. In addition, red fruit contained enough γ-GTase activity to sustain glutamate liberation from endogenous substrates such as glutathione. From all the glutamate metabolizing enzymes, GDH and GABA-T showed the higher increase in activities when the ripening process starts. In summary, tomato fruits increase free amino acid content during ripening, most probably due to the raise of different peptidase activities. However, glutamate level of ripe fruit seems to be mostly related to GDH and GABA-T activities that could contribute to increase l-glutamate level during the ripening transition.


Trends in Biotechnology | 2008

Combating stress with flavodoxin: a promising route for crop improvement

Matias D. Zurbriggen; Vanesa B. Tognetti; María F. Fillat; Mohammad-Reza Hajirezaei; Estela M. Valle; Néstor Carrillo

Environmental stresses and iron limitation are the primary causes of crop losses worldwide. Engineering strategies aimed at gaining stress tolerance have focused on overexpression of endogenous genes belonging to molecular networks for stress perception or responses. Based on the typical response of photosynthetic microorganisms to stress, an alternative approach has been recently applied with considerable success. Ferredoxin, a stress-sensitive target, was replaced in tobacco chloroplasts by an isofunctional protein, a cyanobacterial flavodoxin, which is absent in plants. Resulting transgenic lines showed wide-range tolerance to drought, chilling, oxidants, heat and iron starvation. The survival of plants under such adverse conditions would be an enormous agricultural advantage and makes this novel strategy a potentially powerful biotechnological tool for the generation of multiple-tolerant crops in the near future.

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Néstor Carrillo

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Silvana B. Boggio

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Telma E. Scarpeci

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Javier F. Palatnik

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Guillermo Raúl Pratta

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Liliana Amelia Picardi

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Roxana Zorzoli

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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