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Dive into the research topics where J. Ramón De Lucas is active.

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Featured researches published by J. Ramón De Lucas.


Archives of Microbiology | 1996

Induction of β-oxidation enzymes and microbody proliferation in Aspergillus nidulans

Susana Valenciano; J. Ramón De Lucas; A.M. Pedregosa; Inmaculada F. Monistrol; Fernando Laborda

Aspergillus nidulans is able to grow on oleic acid as sole carbon source. Characterization of the oleate-induced β-oxidation pathway showed the presence of the two enzyme activities involved in the first step of this catabolic system: acyl-CoA oxidase and acyl-CoA dehydrogenase. After isopicnic centrifugation in a linear sucrose gradient, microbodies (peroxisomes) housing the β-oxidation enzymes, isocitrate lyase and catalase were clearly resolved from the mitochondrial fraction, which contained fumarase. Growth on oleic acid was associated with the development of many microbodies that were scattered throughout the cytoplasm of the cells. These microbodies (peroxisomes) were round to elongated, made up 6% of the cytoplasmic volume, and were characterized by the presence of catalase. The β-oxidation pathway was also induced in acetate-grown cells, although at lower levels; these cells lacked acyl-CoA oxidase activity. Nevertheless, growth on acetate did not cause a massive proliferation of microbodies in A. nidulans.


Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2003

The Aspergillus nidulans alcA promoter drives tightly regulated conditional gene expression in Aspergillus fumigatus permitting validation of essential genes in this human pathogen

Beatriz Romero; Geoffrey Turner; Israel Olivas; Fernando Laborda; J. Ramón De Lucas

Aspergillus fumigatus causes invasive aspergillosis, a mycosis that is usually fatal in immunocompromised patients. Functional genomics in this fungus will aid the discovery of novel antifungal drugs to treat invasive aspergillosis. However, there is still a need for appropriate molecular genetic tools to facilitate such functional studies. Here, we describe the use of a conditional gene expression system allowing the identification of novel therapeutic targets through validation of essential genes in A. fumigatus. This system is based on the capacity of the Aspergillus nidulans alcA promoter (alcA(p)) to tightly regulate gene expression in this fungus. Conditionally regulated gene expression in A. fumigatus was demonstrated by transcriptional and phenotypic analyses of strains expressing a nuclear migration gene with a terminal phenotype, the A. fumigatus nudC gene, under control of this promoter. This conditional expression system, the first one described in A. fumigatus, will also be useful for investigating the function of essential genes by altering the threonine/glucose ratio in the growth medium.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2012

A New Approach to Drug Discovery High-Throughput Screening of Microbial Natural Extracts against Aspergillus fumigatus Using Resazurin

Maria Cândida Monteiro; Mercedes de la Cruz; Juan Cantizani; Catalina Moreno; José R. Tormo; Emilia Mellado; J. Ramón De Lucas; Francisco Asensio; Vito Valiante; Axel A. Brakhage; Jean-Paul Latgé; Olga Genilloud; Francisca Vicente

Natural products are an inexhaustible source for drug discovery. However, the validation and selection of primary screening assays are vital to guarantee a selection of extracts or molecules with relevant pharmacological action and worthy of following up. The assay must be rapid, simple, easy to implement, and produce quick results and preferably at a low cost. In this work, we developed and validated a colorimetric microtiter assay using the resazurin viability dye. The parameters of the resazurin method for high-throughput screening (HTS) using natural extracts against Aspergillus fumigatus were optimized and set up. The extracts plus RPMI-1640 modified medium containing the spores and 0.002% resazurin were added per well. The fluorescence was read after 24 to 30 h of incubation. The resazurin proved to be as suitable as Alamar Blue for determining the minimal inhibitory concentration of different antifungals against A. fumigatus and effective to analyze fungicidal and fungistatic compounds. An HTS of 12 000 microbial extracts was carried out against two A. fumigatus strains, and 2.7% of the extracts displayed antifungal activity. Our group has been the first to use this methodology for screening a collection of natural extracts to identify compounds with antifungal activity against the medically important human pathogen A. fumigatus.


Archives of Microbiology | 1999

The acuH gene of Aspergillus nidulans, required for growth on acetate and long-chain fatty acids, encodes a putative homologue of the mammalian carnitine/acylcarnitine carrier.

J. Ramón De Lucas; Ana I. Domínguez; Susana Valenciano; Geoffrey Turner; Fernando Laborda

Abstract The Aspergillus nidulans acuH gene, required for growth on acetate and long-chain fatty acids, was cloned by complementation of the acuH13 mutation. Northern blotting analysis showed that transcription of the acuH gene occurs in acetate-grown mycelium and at higher levels in oleate-grown mycelium, but not during growth on glucose minimal medium. The acuH gene encodes a protein of 326 amino acids that belongs to the mitochondrial carrier family. The ACUH protein contains three related segments of approximately 100 amino acids in length, each segment comprising two hydrophobic domains that are probably folded into two transmembrane α-helices linked by an extensive polar region. Sequence comparisons suggest that the acuH gene of A. nidulans encodes the homologue of the carnitine/acylcarnitine carrier of rat and man. The uncharacterised proteins YOR100C of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, COLT of Drosophila melanogaster, and DIF-1 of Caenorhabditis elegans also seem to be homologues of ACUH. In addition to the motifs present in all members of the mitochondrial carrier family, we propose the highly conserved motif R(A,S)(V,F)PANAA(T,C)F within the sixth hydrophobic domain of these proteins as the characteristic feature of the carnitine carrier subfamily. The proposed function of the ACUH protein is the transport of acetylcarnitine molecules from the cytosol to the mitochondrial matrix, a process required during growth on acetate or on long-chain fatty acids.


Archives of Microbiology | 1998

Characterization of Aspergillus nidulans peroxisomes by immunoelectron microscopy

Susana Valenciano; J. Ramón De Lucas; Ida J. van der Klei; Marten Veenhuis; Fernando Laborda

Abstract In previous work, we have demonstrated that oleate induces a massive proliferation of microbodies (peroxisomes) in Aspergillus nidulans. Although at a lower level, proliferation of peroxisomes also occurrs in cells growing under conditions that induce penicillin biosynthesis. Here, microbodies in oleate-grown A. nidulans cells were characterized by using several antibodies that recognize peroxisomal enzymes and peroxins in a broad spectrum of eukaryotic organisms such as yeast, and plant, and mammalian cells. Peroxisomes were immunolabeled by anti-SKL and anti-thiolase antibodies, which suggests that A. nidulans conserves both PTS1 and PTS2 import mechanisms. Isocitrate lyase and malate synthase, the two key enzymes of the glyoxylate cycle, were also localized in these organelles. In contrast to reports of Neurospora crassa, our results demonstrate that A. nidulans contains only one type of microbody (peroxisomes) that carry out the glyoxylate cycle and contain 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase and proteins with the C-terminal SKL tripeptide.


Archives of Microbiology | 2000

The catabolite inactivation of Aspergillus nidulans isocitrate lyase occurs by specific autophagy of peroxisomes

Cristina Amor; Ana I. Domínguez; J. Ramón De Lucas; Fernando Laborda

Abstract. In Aspergillus nidulans, activity of the glyoxylate cycle enzyme isocitrate lyase is finely regulated. Isocitrate lyase is induced by growth on C2 compounds and long-chain fatty acids and repressed by glucose. In addition, activity of isocitrate lyase is subject to a second mechanism of catabolite control, glucose-induced inactivation. Here, we demonstrate that the catabolite inactivation of A. nidulans isocitrate lyase, a process that takes place during glucose adaptation of cells grown under gluconeogenic conditions, occurs by proteolysis of the enzyme. Ultrastructural analyses were carried out in order to investigate the cellular processes that govern the catabolite inactivation of this peroxisomal enzyme. Addition of glucose to oleate-induced cells triggered the specific engulfment and sequestration of peroxisomes by the vacuoles. Sequestration of various peroxisomes by a single vacuole was a frequently observed phenomenon. Results obtained by immunoelectron microscopy using antibodies against A. nidulans isocitrate lyase showed that degradation of this peroxisomal enzyme occurred inside the vacuole. In addition, ultrastructural studies demonstrated that microautophagy was the autophagic pathway involved in degradation of redundant peroxisomes during glucose adaptation of oleate-induced cells of A. nidulans.


Archives of Microbiology | 1997

Characterization of oleate-nonutilizing mutants of Aspergillus nidulans isolated by the 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole positive selection method

J. Ramón De Lucas; Susana Valenciano; Ana I. Domínguez; Geoffrey Turner; Fernando Laborda

Conidia of Aspergillus nidulans were mutagenized with ultraviolet light and were incubated on a special selective medium containing the catalase inhibitor 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole. From approximately 5 × 107  viable UV-irradiated conidia tested, 423 stable mutants resistant to 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole were recovered, of which 40 were unable to grow on minimal medium with oleic acid as the sole carbon source. These oleate-nonutilizing (Ole–) mutants did not grow on medium with carbon sources requiring functional peroxisomes (oleate, butyrate, acetate, or ethanol), but grew well on medium with carbon sources supposedly not requiring such organelles (glucose, glycerol, l-glutamate, or l-proline). The Ole– mutants carried mutations in one of five nuclear genes affecting acetate utilization: acuJ, acuH, acuE, acuL, and perA. The perA21 strain (DL21) carried a mutation in a gene that is not allelic with any of the known acu loci and displayed a phenotype resembling that described in the Pim– (peroxisome import defective) mutants of Hansenula polymorpha. Hyphae of the perA21 mutant contained a few small peroxisomes with the bulk of peroxisomal enzymes remaining in the 20,000 ×g supernatant, but produced wild-type levels of penicillin.


Archives of Microbiology | 1994

Glucose-induced inactivation of isocitrate lyase in Aspergillus nidulans

J. Ramón De Lucas; Susana Valenciano; Fernando Laborda; Geoffrey Turner

The existence of a second mechanism of catabolite control of isocitrate lyase of Aspergillus nidulans, in addition to the carbon catabolite repression phenomenon recently reported was analysed. Isocitrate lyase was rapidly and specifically inactivated by glucose. The inactivation was irreversible at all stages in the presence of cycloheximide, showing that reactivation depends on de novo protein synthesis. In addition, analysis of glucose-induced inactivation of isocitrate lyase in a creAd-30 strain showed that the creA gene is not involved in this process.


Molecular Membrane Biology | 2008

Functional characterization of residues within the carnitine/acylcarnitine translocase RX2PANAAXF distinct motif

J. Ramón De Lucas; Cesare Indiveri; Annamaria Tonazzi; Patricia Pérez; Nicola Giangregorio; Vito Iacobazzi; Ferdinando Palmieri

The mitochondrial carnitine/acylcarnitine carrier (CAC) is characterized by the presence of a distinct motif, RXXPANAAXF, within its sixth transmembrane α-helix. In this study, we analysed the role of the amino acids of this motif in the structure-function relationships of the human CAC by using two complementary approaches. First, we performed functional analysis in the model fungus Aspergillus nidulans of selected mutations with structural and functional relevance. Second, similar mutant human CACs were biochemically characterized after their reconstitution into liposomes. Both analyses have provided relevant information on the importance and role of the CAC motif residues in the activity and metabolic function of CAC. Only the two adjacent alanines, Ala281 and Ala282 in the human CAC, have been found not to be crucial for transport activity and in vivo function. Results obtained from amino acid substitutions of residues Arg275, Asn280 and Phe284 of human CAC together with structural analysis using molecular modelling of the carrier suggest that R275, N280 and F284 are involved in substrate binding during acylcarnitine/carnitine translocation. Furthermore, functional analysis of mutations of residues Pro278 and Ala279 in A. nidulans, together with kinetic data in reconstituted liposomes, suggest a predominant structural role for these amino acids.


Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2003

Functional analysis of mutations in the human carnitine/acylcarnitine translocase in Aspergillus nidulans

Patricia Pérez; Óscar Martínez; Beatriz Romero; Israel Olivas; A.M. Pedregosa; Ferdinando Palmieri; Fernando Laborda; J. Ramón De Lucas

Deficiency of the carnitine/acylcarnitine translocase (CACT), the most severe disorder of fatty acid beta-oxidation, is usually lethal in both humans and animals, precluding the development of animal models of the disease. In contrast, CACT deficiency is conditionally lethal in the fungus Aspergillus nidulans, since loss-of-function mutations in acuH, the translocase structural gene, do not prevent growth on carbon sources other than ketogenic compounds, such as fatty acids. Here, we describe the molecular characterization of extant acuH alleles and the development of a fungal model for CACT deficiency based on the ability of human CACT to fully complement, when expressed at physiological levels, the growth defect of an A. nidulans DeltaacuH strain on acetate and long-chain fatty acids. By using growth tests and in vitro assays this model enabled us to carry out a functional characterization of human CACT mutations showing that it may be useful for distinguishing potentially pathogenic human CACT missense mutations from neutral, single residue substitution-causing polymorphisms.

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