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Dive into the research topics where Hernán Pablo Burrieza is active.

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Featured researches published by Hernán Pablo Burrieza.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Nuclear Import and Dimerization of Tomato ASR1, a Water Stress-Inducible Protein Exclusive to Plants

Martiniano M. Ricardi; Francisco Guaimas; Rodrigo M González; Hernán Pablo Burrieza; María P. López-Fernández; Elizabeth A. Jares-Erijman; José M. Estevez; Norberto D. Iusem

The ASR (for ABA/water stress/ripening) protein family, first described in tomato as nuclear and involved in adaptation to dry climates, is widespread in the plant kingdom, including crops of high agronomic relevance. We show both nuclear and cytosolic localization for ASR1 (the most studied member of the family) in histological plant samples by immunodetection, typically found in small proteins readily diffusing through nuclear pores. Indeed, a nuclear localization was expected based on sorting prediction software, which also highlight a monopartite nuclear localization signal (NLS) in the primary sequence. However, here we prove that such an “NLS” of ASR1 from tomato is dispensable and non-functional, being the transport of the protein to the nucleus due to simple diffusion across nuclear pores. We attribute such a targeting deficiency to the misplacing in that cryptic NLS of two conserved contiguous lysine residues. Based on previous in vitro experiments regarding quaternary structure, we also carried out live cell imaging assays through confocal microscopy to explore dimer formation in planta. We found homodimers in both the cytosol and the nucleus and demonstrated that assembly of both subunits together can occur in the cytosol, giving rise to translocation of preformed dimers. The presence of dimers was further corroborated by means of in vivo crosslinking of nuclei followed by SDS-PAGE.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2014

Analogous reserve distribution and tissue characteristics in quinoa and grass seeds suggest convergent evolution

Hernán Pablo Burrieza; María P. López-Fernández; Sara Maldonado

Quinoa seeds are highly nutritious due to the quality of their proteins and lipids and the wide range of minerals and vitamins they store. Three compartments can be distinguished within the mature seed: embryo, endosperm, and perisperm. The distribution of main storage reserves is clearly different in those areas: the embryo and endosperm store proteins, lipids, and minerals, and the perisperm stores starch. Tissues equivalent (but not homologous) to those found in grasses can be identified in quinoa, suggesting the effectiveness of this seed reserve distribution strategy; as in cells of grass starchy endosperm, the cells of the quinoa perisperm endoreduplicate, increase in size, synthesize starch, and die during development. In addition, both systems present an extra-embryonic tissue that stores proteins, lipids and minerals: in gramineae, the aleurone layer(s) of the endosperm; in quinoa, the micropylar endosperm; in both cases, the tissues are living. Moreover, the quinoa micropylar endosperm and the coleorhiza in grasses play similar roles, protecting the root in the quiescent seed and controlling dormancy during germination. This investigation is just the beginning of a broader and comparative study of the development of quinoa and grass seeds. Several questions arise from this study, such as: how are synthesis and activation of seed proteins and enzymes regulated during development and germination, what are the genes involved in these processes, and lastly, what is the genetic foundation justifying the analogy to grasses.


Plant Science | 2015

Cellular and molecular aspects of quinoa leaf senescence.

María Paula López-Fernández; Hernán Pablo Burrieza; Axel Joel Rizzo; Leandro Julián Martínez-Tosar; Sara Maldonado

During leaf senescence, degradation of chloroplasts precede to changes in nuclei and other cytoplasmic organelles, RuBisCO stability is progressively lost, grana lose their structure, plastidial DNA becomes distorted and degraded, the number of plastoglobuli increases and abundant senescence-associated vesicles containing electronically dense particles emerge from chloroplasts pouring their content into the central vacuole. This study examines quinoa leaf tissues during development and senescence using a range of well-established markers of programmed cell death (PCD), including: morphological changes in nuclei and chloroplasts, degradation of RuBisCO, changes in chlorophyll content, DNA degradation, variations in ploidy levels, and changes in nuclease profiles. TUNEL reaction and DNA electrophoresis demonstrated that DNA fragmentation in nuclei occurs at early senescence, which correlates with induction of specific nucleases. During senescence, metabolic activity is high and nuclei endoreduplicate, peaking at 4C. At this time, TEM images showed some healthy nuclei with condensed chromatin and nucleoli. We have found that DNA fragmentation, induction of senescence-associated nucleases and endoreduplication take place during leaf senescence. This provides a starting point for further research aiming to identify key genes involved in the senescence of quinoa leaves.


Journal of The Torrey Botanical Society | 2007

Pollen Grain Morphology of Selected Allergenic Species Native to Southern South America

Luis Palazzesi; Roberto R. Pujana; Hernán Pablo Burrieza; Alberto Penas Steinhardt

Abstract Pollen grains of Celtis tala (Celtidaceae), Phytolacca dioica (Phytolaccaceae), Schinopsis balansae (Anacardiaceae) and Solidago chilensis (Asteraceae) are examined with light and scanning electron microscopy, described, and illustrated. These four unrelated species are native to southern South America and considered an important source of skin prick allergy tests. Most relevant pollen characters are compared to those of their closest relatives. Celtis tala (3-, 4-, or 5- porate, verrucate) shares characters with the Celtis africana type in lacking a sunken area around the ora and in having the sculptural elements regularly arranged; Phytolacca dioica (3-colpate) with the Phytolacceae type in being microechinate and microperforate; Schinopsis balansae (3-colporate, striato-reticulate) with some members of the Lithraea molleoides subtype (Anacardiaceae) in having high muri and long striae; Solidago chilensis (3-colporate, echinate) with the Solidago type in being caveate. This study contributes to a better understanding of pollen morphology in species that are especially common to southern South America.


Revista del Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales | 2017

Use of UV-curable acrylates gels as mounting media for palynological samples

Sol Noetinger; Roberto R. Pujana; Alfredo Burrieza; Hernán Pablo Burrieza

UV-curable acrylate are used as an easy, economic and rapid mounting media (m.m.). After the palynological specimens kept in water are dehydrated with Ethanol, they can be mounted in UV-curable acrylate such as Trabasil NR2 and Acrysoft urethane acrylates. These m.m. have advantages over other m.m.: specimens are not displaced in time, they are not attacked by any organism or modified by any environmental conditions such as humidity and heat. In addition refraction index is similar to that of sporopollenin and glass.


Plant Science | 2016

Death of embryos from 2300-year-old quinoa seeds found in an archaeological site

Hernán Pablo Burrieza; Agustín Sanguinetti; Catalina Teresa Michieli; Hector Daniel Bertero; Sara Maldonado

In the 1970s, during excavations at Los Morrillos, San Juan, Argentina, quinoa seeds were found within ancient pumpkin crocks protected from the light and high temperatures, and preserved in the very dry conditions of the region. The radiocarbon dates confirmed the age of these seeds at around 2300 years. Sectioning of some of these seeds showed reddish-brown embryos, different from the white embryos of recently harvested quinoa seeds. The ancient seeds did not germinate. The structure of the embryo cells was examined using light and transmission electron microscopy; proteins were analyzed by electrophoresis followed by Coomassie blue and periodic acid Schiff staining and fatty acids by gas chromatography. The state of nuclear DNA was investigated by TUNEL assay, DAPI staining, ladder agarose electrophoresis and flow cytometry. Results suggest that, although the embryo tissues contained very low water content, death occurred by a cell death program in which heterochromatin density was dramatically reduced, total DNA was degraded into small fragments of less than 500bp, and some proteins were modified by non-enzymatic glycation, generating Maillard products. Polyunsaturated fatty acids decreased and became fragmented, which could be attributable to the extensive oxidation of the most sensitive species (linolenic and linoleic acids) and associated with a collapse of lipid bodies.


Geobios | 2009

Evidence of fungal activity in silicified gymnosperm wood from the Eocene of southern Patagonia (Argentina)

Roberto R. Pujana; Juan Leandro García Massini; Rafael Rodríguez Brizuela; Hernán Pablo Burrieza


Archive | 2013

Tolerance to saline conditions

Stefania Biondi; Karina B. Ruiz; Enrique A. Martinez; Andrés Zurita-Silva; Francesco Orsini; Fabiana Antognoni; Giovanni Dinelli; Giorgio Gianquinto; Sara Maldonado; Hernán Pablo Burrieza; Didier Bazile; Verena Isabelle Adolf; Sven-Erik Jacobsen


Archive | 2015

Seed physiology and response to germination conditions

Diana Ceccato; José Delatorre-Herrera; Hernán Pablo Burrieza; Hector Daniel Bertero; Enrique A. Martinez; Ignacio Delfino; Sandra Moncada; Didier Bazile; Martina Castellión


Archive | 2014

Fisiología de las semillas y respuesta a las condiciones de germinación

Diana Ceccato; José Delatorre-Herrera; Hernán Pablo Burrieza; Hector Daniel Bertero; Enrique A. Martinez; Ignacio Delfino; Sandra Moncada; Didier Bazile; Martina Castellión

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Sara Maldonado

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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Didier Bazile

Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement

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Roberto R. Pujana

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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María P. López-Fernández

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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