Gema Ancillo
Polytechnic University of Valencia
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Publication
Featured researches published by Gema Ancillo.
The EMBO Journal | 2003
José L. Carrasco; Gema Ancillo; Esther Mayda; Pablo Vera
In plants, expression of a disease‐resistance character following perception of a pathogen involves massive deployment of transcription‐dependent defenses. Thus, if rapid and effective defense responses have to be achieved, it is crucial that the pathogenic signal is transduced and amplified through pre‐existing signaling pathways. Reversible phosphorylation of specific transcription factors, by a concerted action of protein kinases and phosphatases, may represent a mechanism for rapid and flexible regulation of selective gene expression by environmental stimuli. Here we identified a novel DNA‐binding protein from tobacco plants, designated DBP1, with protein phosphatase activity, which binds in a sequence‐specific manner to a cis‐ acting element of a defense‐related gene and participates in its transcriptional regulation. This finding helps delineate a terminal event in a signaling pathway for the selective activation of early transcription‐dependent defense responses in plants, and suggests that stimulus‐dependent reversible phosphorylation of regulatory proteins may occur directly in a transcription protein–DNA complex.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Franck Curk; Gema Ancillo; Frédérique Ollitrault; Xavier Perrier; Jean-Pierre Jacquemoud-Collet; Andres Garcia-Lor; Luis Navarro; Patrick Ollitrault
Most cultivated Citrus species originated from interspecific hybridisation between four ancestral taxa (C. reticulata, C. maxima, C. medica, and C. micrantha) with limited further interspecific recombination due to vegetative propagation. This evolution resulted in admixture genomes with frequent interspecific heterozygosity. Moreover, a major part of the phenotypic diversity of edible citrus results from the initial differentiation between these taxa. Deciphering the phylogenomic structure of citrus germplasm is therefore essential for an efficient utilization of citrus biodiversity in breeding schemes. The objective of this work was to develop a set of species-diagnostic single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers for the four Citrus ancestral taxa covering the nine chromosomes, and to use these markers to infer the phylogenomic structure of secondary species and modern cultivars. Species-diagnostic SNPs were mined from 454 amplicon sequencing of 57 gene fragments from 26 genotypes of the four basic taxa. Of the 1,053 SNPs mined from 28,507 kb sequence, 273 were found to be highly diagnostic for a single basic taxon. Species-diagnostic SNP markers (105) were used to analyse the admixture structure of varieties and rootstocks. This revealed C. maxima introgressions in most of the old and in all recent selections of mandarins, and suggested that C. reticulata × C. maxima reticulation and introgression processes were important in edible mandarin domestication. The large range of phylogenomic constitutions between C. reticulata and C. maxima revealed in mandarins, tangelos, tangors, sweet oranges, sour oranges, grapefruits, and orangelos is favourable for genetic association studies based on phylogenomic structures of the germplasm. Inferred admixture structures were in agreement with previous hypotheses regarding the origin of several secondary species and also revealed the probable origin of several acid citrus varieties. The developed species-diagnostic SNP marker set will be useful for systematic estimation of admixture structure of citrus germplasm and for diverse genetic studies.
BMC Genetics | 2014
Franck Curk; Gema Ancillo; Andres Garcia-Lor; François Luro; Xavier Perrier; Jean-Pierre Jacquemoud-Collet; Luis Navarro; Patrick Ollitrault
BackgroundThe most economically important Citrus species originated by natural interspecific hybridization between four ancestral taxa (Citrus reticulata, Citrus maxima, Citrus medica, and Citrus micrantha) and from limited subsequent interspecific recombination as a result of apomixis and vegetative propagation. Such reticulate evolution coupled with vegetative propagation results in mosaic genomes with large chromosome fragments from the basic taxa in frequent interspecific heterozygosity. Modern breeding of these species is hampered by their complex heterozygous genomic structures that determine species phenotype and are broken by sexual hybridisation. Nevertheless, a large amount of diversity is present in the citrus gene pool, and breeding to allow inclusion of desirable traits is of paramount importance. However, the efficient mobilization of citrus biodiversity in innovative breeding schemes requires previous understanding of Citrus origins and genomic structures. Haplotyping of multiple gene fragments along the whole genome is a powerful approach to reveal the admixture genomic structure of current species and to resolve the evolutionary history of the gene pools. In this study, the efficiency of parallel sequencing with 454 methodology to decipher the hybrid structure of modern citrus species was assessed by analysis of 16 gene fragments on chromosome 2.Results454 amplicon libraries were established using the Fluidigm array system for 48 genotypes and 16 gene fragments from chromosome 2. Haplotypes were established from the reads of each accession and phylogenetic analyses were performed using the haplotypic data for each gene fragment. The length of 454 reads and the level of differentiation between the ancestral taxa of modern citrus allowed efficient haplotype phylogenetic assignations for 12 of the 16 gene fragments. The analysis of the mixed genomic structure of modern species and cultivars (i) revealed C. maxima introgressions in modern mandarins, (ii) was consistent with previous hypotheses regarding the origin of secondary species, and (iii) provided a new picture of the evolution of chromosome 2.Conclusions454 sequencing was an efficient strategy to establish haplotypes with significant phylogenetic assignations in Citrus, providing a new picture of the mixed structure on chromosome 2 in 48 citrus genotypes.
Plant Physiology | 2005
José L. Carrasco; Gema Ancillo; María José Castelló; Pablo Vera
A novel family of plant-specific transcription factors is described. They are structurally related to DBP1 (for DNA-binding protein phosphatase 1), a new transcription factor recently characterized in tobacco ( Nicotiana tabacum ), which exhibits both sequence-specific DNA-binding and protein
Annals of Botany | 2013
Mari-Cruz Castillo; Javier Forment; José Gadea; José L. Carrasco; José Juárez; Luis Navarro; Gema Ancillo
BACKGROUND AND AIMS The juvenile to adult transition (JAT) in higher plants is required for them to reach reproductive competence. However, it is a poorly understood process in woody plants, where only a few genes have been definitely identified as being involved in this transition. This work aims at increasing our understanding of the mechanisms regulating the JAT in citrus. METHODS Juvenile and adult plants from Pineapple sweet orange (Citrus sinensis) and Rough lemon (C. jambhiri) were used to screen for differentially expressed transcription factors (TFs) using a 1·15K microarray developed on the basis of the CitrusTF database. Murcott tangor (C. reticulata × C. sinensis) and Duncan grapefruit (C. paradisi) were incorporated into the quantitative real-time reverse transcription-PCR validation in order to select those genes whose phase-specific regulation was common to the four species. KEY RESULTS A browsable web database has been created with information about the structural and functional annotation related to 1152 unigenes of putative citrus TFs (CTFs). This database constitutes a valuable resource for research on transcriptional regulation and comparative genomics. Moreover, a microarray has been developed and used that contains these putative CTFs, in order to identify eight genes that showed differential expression in juvenile and adult meristems of four different species of citrus. Those genes have been characterized, and their expression pattern in vegetative and reproductive tissues has been analysed. Four of them are MADS-box genes, a family of TFs involved in developmental processes, whereas another one resembles MADS-box genes but lacks the MADS box itself. The other three showed high partial sequence similarity restricted to specific Arabidopsis protein domains but negligible outside those domains. CONCLUSIONS The work presented here indicates that the JAT in citrus could be controlled by mechanisms that are in part common to those of Arabidopsis, but also somehow different, since specific factors without Arabidopsis orthologues have also been characterized. The potential involvement of the genes in the JAT is discussed.
Annals of Botany | 2013
Andres Garcia-Lor; Franck Curk; Hager Snoussi-Trifa; Raphaël Morillon; Gema Ancillo; François Luro; Luis Navarro; Patrick Ollitrault
Plant Molecular Biology | 1999
Gema Ancillo; Bärbel Witte; Elmon Schmelzer; Erich Kombrink
Planta | 2003
Gema Ancillo; Erika Hoegen; Erich Kombrink
Acta Horticulturae | 2015
Franck Curk; Andrés Garcia-Lor; Hager Snoussi-Trifa; Yann Froelicher; Gema Ancillo; Luis Navarro; Patrick Ollitrault
Acta Horticulturae | 2015
Mikeal L. Roose; Frederick G. Gmitter; Richard F. Lee; Kim Hummer; Marcos Antonio Machado; Sarah Ashmore; Xiuxin Deng; Gema Ancillo; Mari C. Vives; Gayle M. Volk; Tracy L. Kahn; François Luro
Collaboration
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Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement
View shared research outputsCentre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement
View shared research outputsCentre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement
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