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Featured researches published by Juan C. Cuevas.


Biotechnology Letters | 2006

Involvement of polyamines in plant response to abiotic stress

Rubén Alcázar; Francisco Marco; Juan C. Cuevas; Macarena Patron; Alejandro Ferrando; Pedro Carrasco; Antonio F. Tiburcio; Teresa Altabella

Environmental stresses are the major cause of crop loss worldwide. Polyamines are involved in plant stress responses. However, the precise role(s) of polyamine metabolism in these processes remain ill-defined. Transgenic approaches demonstrate that polyamines play essential roles in stress tolerance and open up the possibility to exploit this strategy to improve plant tolerance to multiple environmental stresses. The use of Arabidopsis as a model plant enables us to carry out global expression studies of the polyamine metabolic genes under different stress conditions, as well as genome-wide expression analyses of insertional-mutants and plants over-expressing these genes. These studies are essential to dissect the polyamine mechanism of action in order to design new strategies to increase plant survival in adverse environments.


Plant Physiology | 2008

Putrescine Is Involved in Arabidopsis Freezing Tolerance and Cold Acclimation by Regulating Abscisic Acid Levels in Response to Low Temperature

Juan C. Cuevas; Rosa María López-Cobollo; Rubén Alcázar; Xavier Zarza; Csaba Koncz; Teresa Altabella; Julio Salinas; Antonio F. Tiburcio; Alejandro Ferrando

The levels of endogenous polyamines have been shown to increase in plant cells challenged with low temperature; however, the functions of polyamines in the regulation of cold stress responses are unknown. Here, we show that the accumulation of putrescine under cold stress is essential for proper cold acclimation and survival at freezing temperatures because Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) mutants defective in putrescine biosynthesis (adc1, adc2) display reduced freezing tolerance compared to wild-type plants. Genes ADC1 and ADC2 show different transcriptional profiles upon cold treatment; however, they show similar and redundant contributions to cold responses in terms of putrescine accumulation kinetics and freezing sensitivity. Our data also demonstrate that detrimental consequences of putrescine depletion during cold stress are due, at least in part, to alterations in the levels of abscisic acid (ABA). Reduced expression of NCED3, a key gene involved in ABA biosynthesis, and down-regulation of ABA-regulated genes are detected in both adc1 and adc2 mutant plants under cold stress. Complementation analysis of adc mutants with ABA and reciprocal complementation tests of the aba2-3 mutant with putrescine support the conclusion that putrescine controls the levels of ABA in response to low temperature by modulating ABA biosynthesis and gene expression.


Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 2010

Putrescine accumulation confers drought tolerance in transgenic Arabidopsis plants over-expressing the homologous Arginine decarboxylase 2 gene.

Rubén Alcázar; Joan Planas; Triambak Saxena; Xavier Zarza; Cristina Bortolotti; Juan C. Cuevas; Marta Bitrián; Antonio F. Tiburcio; Teresa Altabella

In Arabidopsis, a model genus missing a functional ornithine decarboxylase pathway, most of the key genes involved in polyamine biosynthesis are duplicated. This gene redundancy has been related to the involvement of certain gene isoforms in the response to specific environmental stimuli. We have previously shown that drought stress induces Arginine decarboxlase 2 expression, while transcript levels for Arginine decarboxlase 1 remain constant. Accumulation of putrescine and increased arginine decarboxlase activity (EC 4.1.1.19) levels in response to different abiotic stresses have been reported in many different plant systems, but the biological meaning of this increase remains unclear. To get a new insight into these questions, we have studied the response to drought of transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana lines constitutively expressing the homologous Arginine decarboxlase 2 gene. These lines contain high levels of putrescine with no changes in spermidine and spermine content even under drought stress. Drought tolerance experiments indicate that the different degree of resistance to dehydration correlates with Put content. Although no significant differences were observed in the number of stomata between wild-type and transgenic plants, a reduction in transpiration rate and stomata conductance was observed in the ADC2 over-expressor lines. These results indicate that one of the mechanisms involved in the drought tolerance of transgenic plants over-producing Put is related to a reduction of water loss by transpiration.


Plant Science | 2011

Integration of polyamines in the cold acclimation response.

Rubén Alcázar; Juan C. Cuevas; Joan Planas; Xavier Zarza; Cristina Bortolotti; Pedro Carrasco; Julio Salinas; Antonio F. Tiburcio; Teresa Altabella

Temperature is one of the most important environmental factors limiting the geographical distribution of plants and accounts for significant reductions in the yield of agriculturally important crops. Low temperature damages many plant species, especially those adapted to tropical climates. In contrast, some species from temperate regions are able to develop freezing tolerance in response to low-non-freezing temperature, an adaptive process named cold acclimation. Numerous molecular, biochemical and physiological changes occur during cold acclimation, most of them being associated with significant changes in gene expression and metabolite profiles. During recent years, transcriptomic and metabolomic approaches have allowed the identification of cold-responsive genes and main metabolites which accumulate in plants exposed to cold. The obtained data support the previously held idea that polyamines (PAs) are involved in plant responses to cold, although their specific role is still not well understood. In this review, we synthesize published data regarding PA-responses to cold stress and integrate them with global transcriptional and metabolic changes. The potential of PA genetic engineering for the development of plants resistant to cold and freezing temperatures, and their plausible mechanisms of action are also discussed.


Plant Science | 2012

New insights into the role of spermine in Arabidopsis thaliana under long-term salt stress ☆

Analía I. Alet; Diego H. Sánchez; Juan C. Cuevas; María Marina; Pedro Carrasco; Teresa Altabella; Antonio F. Tiburcio; Oscar A. Ruiz

Polyamines (putrescine, spermidine and spermine) are traditionally implicated in the response of plants to environmental cues. Free spermine accumulation has been suggested as a particular feature of long-term salt stress, and in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana the spermine synthase gene (AtSPMS) has been reported as inducible by abscisic acid (ABA) and acute salt stress treatments. With the aim to unravel the physiological role of free spermine during salinity, we analyzed polyamine metabolism in A. thaliana salt-hypersensitive sos mutants (salt overlay sensitive; sos1-1, sos2-1 and sos3-1), and studied the salt stress tolerance of the mutants in spermine and thermospermine synthesis (acl5-1, spms-1 and acl5-1/spms-1). Results presented here indicate that induction in polyamine metabolism is a SOS-independent response to salinity and is globally over-induced in a sensitive background. In addition, under long-term salinity, the mutants in the synthesis of spermine and thermospermine (acl5-1, spms-1 and double acl5-1/spms-1) accumulated more Na(+) and performed worst than WT in survival experiments. Therefore, support is given to a role for these higher polyamines in salt tolerance mechanisms.


Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2011

Putrescine accumulation in Arabidopsis thaliana transgenic lines enhances tolerance to dehydration and freezing stress

Analía I. Alet; Diego H. Sanchez; Juan C. Cuevas; Secundino del Valle; Teresa Altabella; Antonio F. Tiburcio; Francisco Marco; Alejandro Ferrando; Fabiana Daniela Espasandin; María Elisa Gonzalez; Pedro Carrasco; Oscar A. Ruiz

Polyamines have been globally associated to plant responses to abiotic stress. Particularly, putrescine has been related to a better response to cold and dehydration stresses. It is known that this polyamine is involved in cold tolerance, since Arabidopsis thaliana plants mutated in the key enzyme responsible for putrescine synthesis (arginine decarboxilase, ADC; EC 4.1.1.19) are more sensitive than the wild type to this stress. Although it is speculated that the over-expression of ADC genes may confer tolerance, this is hampered by pleiotropic effects arising from the constitutive expression of enzymes from the polyamine metabolism. Here, we present our work using A. thaliana transgenic plants harboring the ADC gene from oat under the control of a stress-inducible promoter (pRD29A) instead of a constitutive promoter. The transgenic lines presented in this work were more resistant to both cold and dehydration stresses, associated with a concomitant increment in endogenous putrescine levels under stress. Furthermore, the increment in putrescine upon cold treatment correlated with the induction of known stress-responsive genes, and suggested that putrescine may be directly or indirectly involved in ABA metabolism and gene expression.


Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2009

Putrescine as a signal to modulate the indispensable ABA increase under cold stress

Juan C. Cuevas; Rosa María López-Cobollo; Rubén Alcázar; Xavier Zarza; Csaba Koncz; Teresa Altabella; Julio Salinas; Antonio F. Tiburcio; Alejandro Ferrando

Polyamines have been found to correlate frequently with biotic and abiotic insults, and their functional involvement in the plant responses to several stresses has been shown genetically with both gain and loss of function mutations. In spite of a large body of physiological and genetic data, the mode of action for polyamines at the molecular level still remains elusive. We have recently performed a detailed integrated analysis of polyamine metabolism under cold stress by means of metabolic studies, quantitative gene expression analyses, and gene inactivations, to characterize in more detail the role of polyamines in response to low temperature. Our data show a unique accumulation profile for putrescine compared to other polyamines, with a progressive increase upon cold stress treatment coincident with a similar transcriptional upregulation for the two arginine decarboxylase genes ADC1 and ADC2. Loss of function mutants adc1 and adc2 display reduced freezing tolerance and alterations in ABA content and ABA-dependent signalling pathways under low temperature, compared to wild type plants. Phenotypical reverse complementation tests for both adc and ABA-defective mutants support our conclusion that putrescine modulates ABA biosynthesis at the transcriptional level in response to low temperature thus uncovering a novel mode of action for polyamines as regulators of hormone biosynthesis.


Archive | 2004

Integrated Molecular Analysis of the Polyamine Metabolic Pathway in Abiotic Stress Signalling

Alejandro Ferrando; Pedro Carrasco; Juan C. Cuevas; Teresa Altabella; Antonio F. Tiburcio

Land plants experience constant fluctuations in the availability of water, thus they have evolved adaptive features to mine and absorb water through the root system, to prevent excessive transpiration water loss using cuticles and stomata on the shoot, and to adjust physiology and metabolism for continued growth and survival in the case of osmotic stress (Levitt 1972). Osmotic stress is broadly used to refer to situations where insufficient water availability limits plant growth and development; it can result from drought or from excessive salt in water. Chilling and freezing may also lead to osmotic stress due to reduced water absorption and cellular dehydration induced by ice formation (Zhu et al. 1997). Global effects of desertification, soil salinisation, atmospheric CO2 enrichment and effects of other pollutants are predicted to cause dramatic changes in the climatic conditions of arable lands in this century. These abiotic stresses together represent the primary cause of crop loss worldwide, reducing average yields for major crop plants by more than 50% (Bray et al. 2000). Breeding of crops and trees with enhanced tolerance to osmotic and other abiotic stresses is therefore one of the major goals of current developments in agronomy, forestry and environmental protection. Classical breeding approaches are time consuming and often yield unpredictable results. Therefore, it is a widely accepted consensus that a considerable improvement of stress tolerance traits requires the identification and modification of regulatory genes that play a key role in the control of plant stress responses (Zhu 2002). Numerous signals and signal-like molecules have been identified and


Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2011

Homeostatic control of polyamine levels under long-term salt stress in Arabidopsis: changes in putrescine content do not alleviate ionic toxicity.

Analía I. Alet; Diego H. Sánchez; Alejandro Ferrando; Antonio F. Tiburcio; Rubén Alcázar; Juan C. Cuevas; Teresa Altabella; Francisco Marco Pico; Pedro Carrasco-Sorli; Ana Bernardina Menéndez; Oscar A. Ruiz

Salt stress has been frequently studied in its first osmotic phase. Very often, data regarding the second ionic phase is missing. It has also been suggested that Putrescine or/and Spermine could be responsible for salt resistance. In order to test this hypothesis under long-term salt stress, we obtained Arabidopsis thaliana transgenic plants harboring pRD29A::oatADC or pRD29A::GUS construction. Although Putrescine was the only polyamine significantly increased after salt acclimation in pRD29A::oatADC transgenic lines, this rendered in no advantage to this kind of stress. The higher Spermine levels found in WT and transgenic lines when compared to control conditions along with no increment on Putrescine levels in WT plants under salt acclimation, leads us to analyze Spermine effect on pADC1 and pADC2 expression. Increasing levels of this polyamine inhibits these promoters expression while enhances pRD29A expression, making Spermine the polyamine responsible for salt acclimation, and the transgenic lines developed in this work suitable for studying Putrescine roles in conditions where its biosynthesis would be inhibited in the WT genotype.


Plant Journal | 2005

Overexpression of ADC2 in Arabidopsis induces dwarfism and late-flowering through GA deficiency.

Rubén Alcázar; José L. García-Martínez; Juan C. Cuevas; Antonio F. Tiburcio; Teresa Altabella

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Oscar A. Ruiz

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Xavier Zarza

University of Amsterdam

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Julio Salinas

Spanish National Research Council

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Analía I. Alet

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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