Iraida Amaya
University of Málaga
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Featured researches published by Iraida Amaya.
FEBS Letters | 1999
Iraida Amaya; Miguel A. Botella; Mercedes de la Calle; María I. Medina; Antonio Heredia; Ray A. Bressan; Paul M. Hasegawa; Miguel A. Quesada; Victoriano Valpuesta
The cell wall is a fundamental component in the response of plants to environmental changes. To directly assess the role of the cell wall we have increased the expression and activity of a cell wall associated peroxidase (TPX2), an enzyme involved in modifying cell wall architecture. Overexpression of TPX2 had no effect on wild‐type development, but greatly increased the germination rate under high salt or osmotic stress. Differential scanning calorimetry showed that transgenic seeds were able to retain more water available for germination than wild‐type seeds. Thermoporometry calculations indicated that this could be due to a lower mean pore size in the walls of transgenic seeds. Therefore, the higher capacity of transgenic seeds in retaining water could result in higher germination rates in conditions where the availability of water is restricted.
Plant Physiology | 2012
Yasmín Zorrilla-Fontanesi; José Luis Rambla; Amalia Cabeza; Juan Jesús Medina; José F. Sánchez-Sevilla; Victoriano Valpuesta; Miguel A. Botella; Antonio Granell; Iraida Amaya
Improvement of strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa) fruit flavor is an important goal in breeding programs. To investigate genetic factors controlling this complex trait, a strawberry mapping population derived from genotype ‘1392’, selected for its superior flavor, and ‘232’ was profiled for volatile compounds over 4 years by headspace solid phase microextraction coupled to gas chromatography and mass spectrometry. More than 300 volatile compounds were detected, of which 87 were identified by comparison of mass spectrum and retention time to those of pure standards. Parental line ‘1392’ displayed higher volatile levels than ‘232’, and these and many other compounds with similar levels in both parents segregated in the progeny. Cluster analysis grouped the volatiles into distinct chemically related families and revealed a complex metabolic network underlying volatile production in strawberry fruit. Quantitative trait loci (QTL) detection was carried out over 3 years based on a double pseudo-testcross strategy. Seventy QTLs covering 48 different volatiles were detected, with several of them being stable over time and mapped as major QTLs. Loci controlling γ-decalactone and mesifurane content were mapped as qualitative traits. Using a candidate gene approach we have assigned genes that are likely responsible for several of the QTLs. As a proof of concept we show that one homoeolog of the O-methyltransferase gene (FaOMT) is the locus responsible for the natural variation of mesifurane content. Sequence analysis identified 30 bp in the promoter of this FaOMT homoeolog containing putative binding sites for basic/helix-loop-helix, MYB, and BZIP transcription factors. This polymorphism fully cosegregates with both the presence of mesifurane and the high expression of FaOMT during ripening.
Biotechnology Journal | 2012
Eduardo Cruz-Rus; Iraida Amaya; Victoriano Valpuesta
The term “vitamin” is used to define a number of organic compounds that have to be obtained from different foods because the organism itself cannot synthesize them in the quantities needed to sustain life. Vitamin C is the common name for L‐ascorbic acid. In humans, the principal role of this molecule is to scavenge reactive oxygen species, due to its antioxidant capacity, and to serve as cofactor for many enzymes. A deficiency of L‐ascorbic acid is traditionally linked to human diseases such as scurvy. Plant foods are the principal source of L‐ascorbic acid for humans. There is a high variability of L‐ascorbic acid content in the various plant organs that are used for human consumption. This diversity is related to the specific functions played by L‐ascorbic acid in the different plant tissues. The net content of L‐ascorbic acid in plants is determined through a balance of the activities of different biosynthetic, recycling, and catabolic pathways. Here we review the importance of L‐ascorbic acid for human health, the current knowledge on its metabolism and function in plants, and the efforts that have already been made by genetic modification to improve its content in plant organs used for human food. We provide a current and forward looking perspective of how plant science can contribute to improving the L‐ascorbic acid content in crop species using gene transformation, quantitative trait loci and association mapping‐based approaches.
Scientific Reports | 2017
José F. Sánchez-Sevilla; José G. Vallarino; Sonia Osorio; Aureliano Bombarely; David Posé; Catharina Merchante; Miguel A. Botella; Iraida Amaya; Victoriano Valpuesta
RNA-seq has been used to perform global expression analysis of the achene and the receptacle at four stages of fruit ripening, and of the roots and leaves of strawberry (Fragaria × ananassa). About 967 million reads and 191 Gb of sequence were produced, using Illumina sequencing. Mapping the reads in the related genome of the wild diploid Fragaria vesca revealed differences between the achene and receptacle development program, and reinforced the role played by ethylene in the ripening receptacle. For the strawberry transcriptome assembly, a de novo strategy was followed, generating separate assemblies for each of the ten tissues and stages sampled. The Trinity program was used for these assemblies, resulting in over 1.4 M isoforms. Filtering by a threshold of 0.3 FPKM, and doing Blastx (E-value < 1 e-30) against the UniProt database of plants reduced the number to 472,476 isoforms. Their assembly with the MIRA program (90% homology) resulted in 26,087 contigs. From these, 91.34 percent showed high homology to Fragaria vesca genes and 87.30 percent Fragaria iinumae (BlastN E-value < 1 e-100). Mapping back the reads on the MIRA contigs identified polymorphisms at nucleotide level, using FREEBAYES, as well as estimate their relative abundance in each sample.
Biotechnology Journal | 2015
Iraida Amaya; Sonia Osorio; Elsa Martinez-Ferri; Viviana Lima-Silva; Veronica G. Doblas; Rafael Fernández-Muñoz; Alisdair R. Fernie; Miguel A. Botella; Victoriano Valpuesta
Increasing L-ascorbic acid (AsA, vitamin C) content in fruits is a common goal in current breeding programs due to its beneficial effect on human health. Attempts to increase AsA content by genetic engineering have resulted in variable success likely due to AsAs complex regulation. Here, we report the effect of ectopically expressing in tomato the D-galacturonate reductase (FaGalUR) gene from strawberry, involved in AsA biosynthesis, either under the control of the constitutive 35S or the tomato fruit-specific polygalucturonase (PG) promoters. Although transgenic lines showed a moderate increase on AsA content, complex changes in metabolites were found in transgenic fruits. Metabolomic analyses of ripe fruits identified a decrease in citrate, glutamate, asparagine, glucose, and fructose, accompanied by an increase of sucrose, galactinol, and chlorogenic acid. Significant metabolic changes also occurred in leaves of 35S-FaGalUR lines, which showed higher non-photochemical fluorescence quenching (NPQ), indicative of a higher constitutive photo-protective capacity. Overall, overexpression of FaGalUR increased total antioxidant capacity in fruits and the results suggest a tight control of AsA content, probably linked to a complex regulation of cellular redox state and metabolic adjustment.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2018
Francesca Giampieri; Massimiliano Gasparrini; Tamara Y. Forbes-Hernandez; Luca Mazzoni; Franco Capocasa; Silvia Sabbadini; José M. Alvarez-Suarez; Sadia Afrin; Carlo Rosati; Tiziana Pandolfini; Barbara Molesini; José F. Sánchez-Sevilla; Iraida Amaya; Bruno Mezzetti; Maurizio Battino
Food fortification through the increase and/or modulation of bioactive compounds has become a major goal for preventing several diseases, including cancer. Here, strawberry lines of cv. Calypso transformed with a construct containing an anthocyanidin synthase (ANS) gene were produced to study the effects on anthocyanin biosynthesis, metabolism, and transcriptome. Three strawberry ANS transgenic lines (ANS L5, ANS L15, and ANS L18) were analyzed for phytochemical composition and total antioxidant capacity (TAC), and their fruit extracts were assessed for cytotoxic effects on hepatocellular carcinoma. ANS L18 fruits had the highest levels of total phenolics and flavonoids, while those of ANS L15 had the highest anthocyanin concentration; TAC positively correlated with total polyphenol content. Fruit transcriptome was also specifically affected in the polyphenol biosynthesis and in other related metabolic pathways. Fruit extracts of all lines exerted cytotoxic effects in a dose/time-dependent manner, increasing cellular apoptosis and free radical levels and impairing mitochondrial functionality.
Molecular Breeding | 2017
Eduardo Cruz-Rus; Rafael Sesmero; José A. Ángel-Pérez; José F. Sánchez-Sevilla; Detlef Ulrich; Iraida Amaya
Flavor improvement is currently one of the most important goals for strawberry breeders. At the same time, it is one of the most complex traits to improve, involving the balanced combination of several desired characteristics such as high sweetness, moderate acidity, and the appropriate combination of aroma compounds that are beginning to be delineated in consumer tests. DNA-informed breeding will expedite the selection of complex traits, such as flavor, over traditional phenotypic evaluation, particularly when markers linked to several traits of interests are combined during the breeding process. Natural variation in mesifurane and γ-decalactone, two key volatile compounds providing sweet Sherry and fresh peach-like notes to strawberry fruits, is controlled by the FaOMT and FaFAD1 genes, respectively. In this study, we have optimized a simple PCR test for combined analysis of these genes and determined a prediction accuracy above 91% using a set of 71 diverse strawberry accessions. This high accuracy in predicting the presence of these important volatiles combined with the simplicity of the analytical methodology makes this DNA test an efficient tool for its implementation in current strawberry-breeding programs for the selection of new strawberry cultivars with superior flavor.
Archive | 2018
Delphine Pott; José G. Vallarino; Sonia Osorio; Iraida Amaya
Fruit development and ripening is a unique developmental process to flowering plants that ensures the propagation of seeds and plant survival. In addition, fruits are an essential part of human diet. In particular, strawberry is a rich source of nutraceuticals such as vitamin C, folate and phenolic compounds. Strawberry production and breeding is becoming an extremely competing area of economic development worldwide. Cost of production in many countries is increasing due to a number of challenges such as rising labour costs, pest control or water availability. One way to increase competiveness is increasing fruit quality of new strawberry cultivars. Amazing advances have been made in our knowledge of the different metabolic pathways that take place in the final stages of fruit development and that lead to a flavourful and ripe strawberry fruit. Similarly, different genes involved in gene regulation during ripening have been discovered and characterized. In parallel, the discovery of loci responsible for natural variation among strawberry germplasm is producing a growing amount of DNA markers that after validation could be used in accelerating the selection of new cultivars with improved fruit quality. This chapter summarizes main advances in the study of fruit ripening in the octoploid strawberry and QTL controlling fruit quality traits.
Plant Physiology | 2000
Mónica Quiroga; Consuelo Guerrero; Miguel A. Botella; Araceli Barceló; Iraida Amaya; María I. Medina; Francisco J. Alonso; Silvia Milrad de Forchetti; Horacio A. Tigier; Victoriano Valpuesta
BMC Genomics | 2015
Nahla V. Bassil; Thomas M. Davis; Hailong Zhang; Stephen P. Ficklin; Mike Mittmann; Teresa Webster; Lise L. Mahoney; David Wood; Elisabeth S Alperin; Umesh R. Rosyara; Herma Koehorst-vanc Putten; Amparo Monfort; Daniel J. Sargent; Iraida Amaya; Béatrice Denoyes; Luca Bianco; Thijs van Dijk; Ali Pirani; Amy F. Iezzoni; Dorrie Main; Cameron Peace; Yilong Yang; Vance M. Whitaker; Sujeet Verma; Laurent Bellon; Fiona Brew; Raúl Herrera; Eric van de Weg