Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Eulàlia de Nadal is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Eulàlia de Nadal.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

The transcriptional response of yeast to saline stress.

Francesc Posas; James R. Chambers; John A. Heyman; James P. Hoeffler; Eulàlia de Nadal; Joaquín Ariño

Adaptation to changes in extracellular salinity is a critical event for cell survival. Genome-wide DNA chip analysis has been used to analyze the transcriptional response of yeast cells to saline stress. About 7% of the genes encoded in the yeast genome are induced more than 5-fold after a mild and brief saline shock (0.4m NaCl, 10 min). Interestingly, most responsive genes showed a very transient expression pattern, as mRNA levels dramatically declined after 20 min in the presence of stress. A quite similar set of genes increased expression in cells subjected to higher saline concentrations (0.8 m NaCl), although in this case the response was delayed. Therefore, our data show that cells respond to saline stress by inducing the expression of a very large number of genes and suggest that stress adaptation requires regulation of many cellular aspects. The transcriptional induction of most genes that are strongly responsive to salt stress was highly or fully dependent on the presence of the stress-activated mitogen-activated protein kinase Hog1, indicating that the Hog1-mediated signaling pathway plays a key role in global gene regulation under saline stress conditions.


Nature Reviews Genetics | 2011

Controlling gene expression in response to stress

Eulàlia de Nadal; Gustav Ammerer; Francesc Posas

Acute stress puts cells at risk, and rapid adaptation is crucial for maximizing cell survival. Cellular adaptation mechanisms include modification of certain aspects of cell physiology, such as the induction of efficient changes in the gene expression programmes by intracellular signalling networks. Recent studies using genome-wide approaches as well as single-cell transcription measurements, in combination with classical genetics, have shown that rapid and specific activation of gene expression can be accomplished by several different strategies. This article discusses how organisms can achieve generic and specific responses to different stresses by regulating gene expression at multiple stages of mRNA biogenesis from chromatin structure to transcription, mRNA stability and translation.


Nature | 2004

The MAPK Hog1 recruits Rpd3 histone deacetylase to activate osmoresponsive genes

Eulàlia de Nadal; Meritxell Zapater; Paula M. Alepuz; Lauro Sumoy; Gloria Mas; Francesc Posas

Regulation of gene expression by mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) is essential for proper cell adaptation to extracellular stimuli. Exposure of yeast cells to high osmolarity results in rapid activation of the MAPK Hog1, which coordinates the transcriptional programme required for cell survival on osmostress. The mechanisms by which Hog1 and MAPKs in general regulate gene expression are not completely understood, although Hog1 can modify some transcription factors. Here we propose that Hog1 induces gene expression by a mechanism that involves recruiting a specific histone deacetylase complex to the promoters of genes regulated by osmostress. Cells lacking the Rpd3–Sin3 histone deacetylase complex are sensitive to high osmolarity and show compromised expression of osmostress genes. Hog1 interacts physically with Rpd3 in vivo and in vitro and, on stress, targets the deacetylase to specific osmostress-responsive genes. Binding of the Rpd3–Sin3 complex to specific promoters leads to histone deacetylation, entry of RNA polymerase II and induction of gene expression. Together, our data indicate that targeting of the Rpd3 histone deacetylase to osmoresponsive promoters by the MAPK Hog1 is required to induce gene expression on stress.


Nature | 2011

Distributed biological computation with multicellular engineered networks

Sergi Regot; Javier Macía; Núria Conde; Kentaro Furukawa; Jimmy Kjellén; Tom Peeters; Stefan Hohmann; Eulàlia de Nadal; Francesc Posas; Ricard V. Solé

Ongoing efforts within synthetic and systems biology have been directed towards the building of artificial computational devices using engineered biological units as basic building blocks. Such efforts, inspired in the standard design of electronic circuits, are limited by the difficulties arising from wiring the basic computational units (logic gates) through the appropriate connections, each one to be implemented by a different molecule. Here, we show that there is a logically different form of implementing complex Boolean logic computations that reduces wiring constraints thanks to a redundant distribution of the desired output among engineered cells. A practical implementation is presented using a library of engineered yeast cells, which can be combined in multiple ways. Each construct defines a logic function and combining cells and their connections allow building more complex synthetic devices. As a proof of principle, we have implemented many logic functions by using just a few engineered cells. Of note, small modifications and combination of those cells allowed for implementing more complex circuits such as a multiplexer or a 1-bit adder with carry, showing the great potential for re-utilization of small parts of the circuit. Our results support the approach of using cellular consortia as an efficient way of engineering complex tasks not easily solvable using single-cell implementations.


EMBO Reports | 2002

Dealing with osmostress through MAP kinase activation

Eulàlia de Nadal; Paula M. Alepuz; Francesc Posas

In response to changes in the extracellular environment, cells coordinate intracellular activities to maximize their probability of survival and proliferation. Eukaryotic cells, from yeast to mammals, transduce diverse extracellular stimuli through the cell by multiple mitogen‐activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades. Exposure of cells to increases in extracellular osmolarity results in rapid activation of a highly conserved family of MAPKs, known as stress‐activated MAPKs (SAPKs). Activation of SAPKs is essential for the induction of adaptive responses required for cell survival upon osmostress. Recent studies have begun to shed light on the broad effects of SAPK activation in the modulation of several aspects of cell physiology, ranging from the control of gene expression to the regulation of cell division.


The EMBO Journal | 2001

Regulation of the Sko1 transcriptional repressor by the Hog1 MAP kinase in response to osmotic stress

Markus Proft; Amparo Pascual-Ahuir; Eulàlia de Nadal; Joaquín Ariño; Ramón Serrano; Francesc Posas

Exposure of yeast to increases in extracellular osmolarity activates the Hog1 mitogen‐activated protein kinase (MAPK), which is essential for the induction of gene expression required for cell survival upon osmotic stress. Several genes are regulated in response to osmotic stress by Sko1, a transcriptional repressor of the ATF/CREB family. We show by in vivo coprecipitation and phosphorylation studies that Sko1 and Hog1 interact and that Sko1 is phosphorylated upon osmotic stress in a Hog1‐dependent manner. Hog1 phosphorylates Sko1 in vitro at multiple sites within the N‐terminal region. Phosphorylation of Sko1 disrupts the Sko1–Ssn6–Tup1 repressor complex, and consistently, a mutant allele of Sko1, unphosphorylatable by Hog1, exhibits less derepression than the wild type. Interestingly, Sko1 repressor activity is further enhanced in strains with high protein kinase A (PKA) activity. PKA phosphorylates Sko1 near the bZIP domain and mutation of these sites eliminates modulation of Sko1 responses to high PKA activity. Thus, Sko1 transcriptional repression is controlled directly by the Hog1 MAPK in response to stress, and this effect is further modulated by an independent signaling mechanism through the PKA pathway.


The EMBO Journal | 2003

Osmostress‐induced transcription by Hot1 depends on a Hog1‐mediated recruitment of the RNA Pol II

Paula M. Alepuz; Eulàlia de Nadal; Meritxell Zapater; Gustav Ammerer; Francesc Posas

In budding yeast, the mitogen‐activated protein kinase (MAPK) Hog1 coordinates the transcriptional program required for cell survival upon osmostress. The Hot1 transcription factor acts downstream of the MAPK and regulates a subset of Hog1‐responsive genes. In response to high osmolarity, Hot1 targets Hog1 to specific osmostress‐responsive promoters. Here, we show that assembly of the general transcription machinery at Hot1‐dependent promoters depends on the presence of Hot1 and active Hog1 MAPK. Unexpectedly, recruitment of RNA polymerase (Pol) II complex to target promoters does not depend on the phosphorylation of the Hot1 activator by the MAPK. Hog1 interacts with the RNA Pol II and with general components of the transcription machinery. More over, when tethered to a promoter as a LexA fusion protein, Hog1 activates transcription in a stress‐ regulated manner. Thus, anchoring of active Hog1 to promoters by the Hot1 activator is essential for recruitment and activation of RNA Pol II. The mammalian p38 also interacts with the RNA Pol II, which might suggest a conserved mechanism for regulation of gene expression by SAPKs among eukaryotic cells.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2003

Targeting the MEF2-Like Transcription Factor Smp1 by the Stress-Activated Hog1 Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase

Eulàlia de Nadal; Laura Casadomé; Francesc Posas

ABSTRACT Exposure of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to increases in extracellular osmolarity activates the stress-activated Hog1 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), which is essential for cell survival upon osmotic stress. Yeast cells respond to osmotic stress by inducing the expression of a very large number of genes, and the Hog1 MAPK plays a critical role in gene transcription upon stress. To understand how Hog1 controls gene expression, we designed a genetic screen to isolate new transcription factors under the control of the MAPK and identified the MEF2-like transcription factor, Smp1, as a target for Hog1. Overexpression of SMP1 induced Hog1-dependent expression of osmoresponsive genes such as STL1, whereas smp1Δ cells were defective in their expression. Consistently, smp1Δ cells displayed reduced viability upon osmotic shock. In vivo coprecipitation and phosphorylation studies showed that Smp1 and Hog1 interact and that Smp1 is phosphorylated upon osmotic stress in a Hog1-dependent manner. Hog1 phosphorylated Smp1 in vitro at the C-terminal region. Phosphorylation of Smp1 by the MAPK is essential for its function, since a mutant allele unable to be phosphorylated by the MAPK displays impaired stress responses. Thus, our data indicate that Smp1 acts downstream of Hog1, controlling a subset of the responses induced by the MAPK. Moreover, Smp1 concentrates in the nucleus during the stationary phase, and the lack of SMP1 results in cells that lose viability in the stationary phase. Localization of Smp1 depends on HOG1, and consistently, hog1Δ cells also lose viability during this growth phase. These data suggest that Smp1 could be mediating a role for the Hog1 MAPK during the stationary phase.


The EMBO Journal | 2010

Multilayered control of gene expression by stress-activated protein kinases

Eulàlia de Nadal; Francesc Posas

Stress‐activated protein kinases (SAPKs) are key elements for intracellular signalling networks that serve to respond and adapt to extracellular changes. Exposure of yeast to high osmolarity results in the activation of p38‐related SAPK, Hog1, which is essential for reprogramming the gene expression capacity of the cell by regulation of several steps of the transcription process. At initiation, active Hog1 not only directly phosphorylates several transcription factors to alter their activities, but also associates at stress‐responsive promoters through such transcription factors. Once at the promoters, Hog1 serves as a platform to recruit general transcription factors, chromatin‐modifying activities and RNA Pol II. In addition, the SAPK pathway has a role in elongation. At the stress‐responsive ORFs, Hog1 recruits the RSC chromatin‐remodelling complex to modify nucleosome organization. Several SAPKs from yeast to mammals have maintained some of the regulatory abilities of Hog1. Thus, elucidating the control of gene expression by the Hog1 SAPK should help to understand how eukaryotic cells implement a massive and rapid change on their transcriptional capacity in response to adverse conditions.


The EMBO Journal | 2006

Phosphorylation of Hsl1 by Hog1 leads to a G2 arrest essential for cell survival at high osmolarity

Josep Clotet; Xavier Escoté; Miquel Àngel Adrover; Gilad Yaakov; Eloi Garí; Martí Aldea; Eulàlia de Nadal; Francesc Posas

Control of cell cycle progression by stress‐activated protein kinases (SAPKs) is essential for cell adaptation to extracellular stimuli. Exposure of yeast to osmostress leads to activation of the Hog1 SAPK, which controls cell cycle at G1 by the targeting of Sic1. Here, we show that survival to osmostress also requires regulation of G2 progression. Activated Hog1 interacts and directly phosphorylates a residue within the Hsl7‐docking site of the Hsl1 checkpoint kinase, which results in delocalization of Hsl7 from the septin ring and leads to Swe1 accumulation. Upon Hog1 activation, cells containing a nonphosphorylatable Hsl1 by Hog1 are unable to promote Hsl7 delocalization, fail to arrest at G2 and become sensitive to osmostress. Together, we present a novel mechanism that regulates the Hsl1–Hsl7 complex to integrate stress signals to mediate cell cycle arrest and, demonstrate that a single MAPK coordinately modulates different cell cycle checkpoints to improve cell survival upon stress.

Collaboration


Dive into the Eulàlia de Nadal's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Carme Solé

Pompeu Fabra University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joaquín Ariño

Autonomous University of Barcelona

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alba Duch

Pompeu Fabra University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Josep Clotet

Autonomous University of Barcelona

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gustav Ammerer

Max F. Perutz Laboratories

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gloria Mas

Pompeu Fabra University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge