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Dive into the research topics where Juan Carbonell is active.

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Featured researches published by Juan Carbonell.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1995

Expression of arginine decarboxylase is induced during early fruit development and in young tissues of Pisum sativum (L.)

Miguel A. Perez-Amador; Juan Carbonell; Antonio Granell

A cDNA coding for arginine decarboxylase (ADC, EC 4.1.1.19) has been isolated from a cDNA library of parthenocarpic young fruits of Pisum sativum (L.). The deduced aminoacid sequence is 74%, 46% and 35% identical to ADCs from tomato, oat and Escherichia coli, respectively. When the pea ADC cDNA was put under the control of the galactose inducible yeast promoter CYC1-GAL10 and introduced into Saccharomyces cerevisiae, it conferred galactose-regulated expression of the ADC activity. The ADC activity expressed in S. cerevisiae was inhibited 99% by α-DL-difluoromethylarginine (DFMA), a specific inhibitor of ADC activity. No activity was detected in the untransformed S. cerevisiae, nor when it was transformed with an antisense ADC construct. This provides direct evidence that the ADC cDNA from pea encoded a functional, specific ADC activity and that S. cerevisiae is able to process correctly the protein. In the pea plant, gene expression of the ADC is high in young developing tissues like shoot tips, young leaflets and flower buds. Fully expanded leaflets and roots have much lower, but still detectable, levels of the ADC transcript. In the ovary and fruit, they are developmentally regulated, showing high levels of expression during the early stages of fruit growth, which in pea is mainly due to cell expansion. The observed changes in the steady-state levels of ADC mRNA alone, however, cannot account for the differences in ADC activity suggesting that other regulatory mechanisms must be acting.


Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 2010

Role of polyamines in plant vascular development.

Francisco Vera-Sirera; Eugenio G. Minguet; Sunil Kumar Singh; Karin Ljung; Hannele Tuominen; Miguel A. Blázquez; Juan Carbonell

Several pieces of evidence suggest a role for polyamines in the regulation of plant vascular development. For instance, polyamine oxidase gene expression has been shown to be associated with lignification, and downregulation of S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase causes dwarfism and enlargement of the vasculature. Recent evidence from Arabidopsis thaliana also suggests that the active polyamine in the regulation of vascular development is the tetraamine thermospermine. Thermospermine biosynthesis is catalyzed by the aminopropyl transferase encoded by ACAULIS5, which is specifically expressed in xylem vessel elements. Both genetic and molecular evidence support a fundamental role for thermospermine in preventing premature maturation and death of the xylem vessel elements. This safeguard action of thermospermine has significant impact on xylem cell morphology, cell wall patterning and cell death as well as on plant growth in general. This manuscript reviews recent reports on polyamine function and places polyamines in the context of the known regulatory mechanisms that govern vascular development.


Planta | 1980

Fruit-set of unpollinated ovaries of Pisum sativum L. Influence of vegetative parts.

Juan Carbonell; José L. García-Martínez

The influence of removing the apical shoot and different leaves above and below the flower on the fruit-set of unpollinated pea ovaries (Pisum sativum L. cv. Alaska) has been studied. Unpollinated ovaries were induced to set and develop either by topping or by removing certain developing leaves of the shoot. Topping had a maximum effect when carried out before or on the day of anthesis, and up to four consecutive ovaries were induced to set in the same plant. The inhibition of fruit-set was due to the developing leaves and not to the apex. The third leaf above the first flower, which had a simultaneous development to the ovary, had the stronger inhibitory effect on parthenocarpic fruit-set. The application of different plant-growth regulators (indoleacetic acid, naphthylacetic acid, 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid, gibberellic acid, benzyladenine and abscisic acid) did not mimic the negative effect of the shoot.


Planta | 1989

Correlation of spermine levels with ovary senescence and with fruit set and development inPisum sativum L.

Juan Carbonell; José L. Navarro

Separation and quantitation of polyamines from unpollinated pea (Pisum sativum L.) ovaries and young fruits induced by application of gibberellic acid to unpollinated ovaries showed, in both cases, a decrease in putrescine and spermidine levels between anthesis and 4 d later. By contrast, spermine levels increased prior to the onset of senescence of the unpollinated ovaries (3 d post anthesis) and decreased during fruit development. Low levels of putrescine, spermidine and spermine were also observed in young fruits obtained by self-pollination and by treatment of unpollinated ovaries with 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid. In-vitro culture of ovary explants in a medium containing spermine showed that a reduction of the growth of gibberellic acid-treated unpollinated ovaries was associated with a rise in the level of spermine in the fruits. The results obtained indicate that changes in spermine levels are involved in the control of ovary senescence and of fruit set and development.


Planta | 1985

Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase and fruit set or degeneration of unpollinated ovaries of Pisum sativum L.

Juan Carbonell; José-Luis García-Martínez

The polypeptide patterns obtained by sodium dodecylsulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of undigested and autodigested extracts from pea (Pisum sativum L.) ovaries at the early stages of development or degeneration have been studied. Development of unpollinated ovaries was stimulated by application of different plant growth regulators (gibberellic acid, 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid, and N6-benzyladenine) or by plant topping. Polypeptide bands of similar mobility to ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (RuBPCase) subunits (16 and 55 kDa) could be detected in all types of autodigested extracts from stimulated ovaries. However these bands were absent in electrophoretic patterns of autodigested extracts from unstimulated ovaries after 3 d post anthesis and in patterns of autodigested mixtures of these extracts with either those from stimulated ovaries or those from unstimulated ovaries before day 3. These observations indicate that a proteolytic activity which promotes the hydrolysis of RuBPCase appears in unstimulated ovaries about 3 d after anthesis. This event coincides with the loss of the capacity of unpollinated ovaries to develop in response to gibberellic acid and with the degeneration of the ovary wall.


Plant Science Letters | 1984

Structural changes in the ovary of Pisum sativum L. induced by pollination and gibberellic acid

Y. Vercher; A. Molowny; C. López; J.L. García-Martínez; Juan Carbonell

Abstract Early changes in the morphological organization of the ovary wall of Pisum sativum L. cv. Alaska during the transformation of the ovary into young developing fruit were studied. Changes in either pollinated or unpollinated and gibberellic acid (GA 3 )-treated ovaries were very similar and were characterized by a rapid enlargement of mesocarpic cells and an increase in the number of cell ‘layers’ in the endocarp. Unpollinated and untreated ovaries in emasculated flowers continued growing slowly until 2 days after anthesis and then began to degenerate. Degeneration was initiated in the endocarp, and on day 4 after anthesis the endocarp cells were completely wrinkled and no cellular ‘layers’ were distinguishable. The beginning of endocarp degeneration was coincident with the loss of sensitivity of unpollinated ovaries in response to GA 3 .


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1971

Allosteric properties of adipose tissue pyruvate kinase

Roberto Marco; Juan Carbonell; Pilar Llorente

Summary The pyruvate kinase of rat adipose tissue is strongly inhibited by physiological concentrations of alanine. This inhibition is counteracted by FDP + in the μmolar range of concentrations. These effects can be observed independently of the homogenization medium employed and in partially purified preparations of the enzyme. Aging of the preparations tends to produce the loss of the inhibitory and activatory effects, pointing to their allosteric nature.


Genes & Genomics | 2009

Regulatory mechanisms of polyamine biosynthesis in plants

Juan Carbonell; Miguel A. Blázquez

Polyamines are small positively charged molecules with a widespread presence in all living organisms. In plants they modulate several aspects of growth and differentiation, and they also participate in the response to abiotic stress. Here we review the molecular mechanisms involved in the regulation of polyamine biosynthesis, which is exerted at different levels including gene expression, protein synthesis, and formation of multienzyme complexes. The importance of polyamines both in development and in stress resistance is also subtended by the phenotype of loss-of-function mutants and of overexpressing lines affecting the different genes that encode polyamine metabolism enzymes.


Developmental Biology | 2009

Antagonistic interactions between Arabidopsis K-homology domain genes uncover PEPPER as a positive regulator of the central floral repressor FLOWERING LOCUS C

Juan José Ripoll; Encarnación Rodríguez-Cazorla; Santiago González-Reig; Alfonso Andújar; Hugo Alonso-Cantabrana; Miguel A. Perez-Amador; Juan Carbonell; Antonio Martínez-Laborda; Antonio Vera

Plant floral transition is a major developmental switch regulated by an integrated network of pathways. Arabidopsis FLOWERING LOCUS K (FLK), a protein with three KH RNA-binding domains, operates in the autonomous flowering-promotive pathway by decreasing the transcript levels of the key flowering repressor FLOWERING LOCUS C (FLC). Here we report that PEPPER (PEP), an FLK paralog previously shown to affect vegetative and pistil development, antagonizes FLK by positively regulating FLC. Lack of PEP function rescues the flk late-flowering phenotype with a concomitant decrease in FLC RNA levels. Loss of HUA2, another FLC activator encoding an RNA-binding protein, further rescues flk, being flk hua2 pep triple mutants virtually wild-type regarding flowering time. Consistently, PEP overexpression determines high levels of FLC transcripts and flowering delay. Genetic and molecular analyses indicate that FLK and PEP act independently of FCA, another important FLC repressor in the autonomous pathway. In addition, we present data suggesting that PEP may affect FLC expression at both transcriptional and post-transcriptional levels. Overall, our results uncover PEP as a new factor for FLC upregulation, underscoring the importance of RNA-binding activities during developmental timing of flowering.


Journal of Plant Growth Regulation | 1985

Induction of fruit set and development in pea ovary explants by gibberellic acid

José L. García-Martínez; Juan Carbonell

The response of unpollinated ovary explants ofPisum sativum L. cv. Alaska No. 7 to several plant growth regulators and nutrients has been studied. Explants consisted of a segment of stem and an emasculated flower with or without the adjacent leaf. They were made on the day equivalent to anthesis and were cultured in a liquid medium. Growth regulators were applied either in the solution or directly to the ovaries. Giberellic acid (GA3) in the presence of sucrose, but not indole-3-acetic acid or N6-(Δ2-isopentenyl)-adenine (2iP), induced fruit set and development of parthenocarpic fruits, the final length of these being a function of the intensity of the GA3 treatment. The capacity of ovaries to respond fully to GA3 was not lost after incubation of explants in water or 50 mM sucrose for 1 day and was similar in explants made between the day of anthesis and 3 days later. Limited growth was obtained with 100 mM sucrose alone but this effect was counteracted by 2′-isopropyl-4′-(trimethyl ammonium chloride)-5′-methylphenyl piperidine-1-carboxylate (AMO-1618). This inhibitor was ineffective when GA3 was applied to the ovary. The development of the fruit was proportional to the length of the segment of stem up to 5 cm. The presence of the leaf in the explant enhanced the development of the fruit. These results indicate that a gibberellin is necessary for setting and development of fruits from cultured ovaries and that this effect depends on an appropriate source of nutrients. The course of development of parthenocarpic fruits on explants was similar to that of seeded fruits on the intact plant. The cultured pea ovary systemoffers convenient means to investigate the role of gibberellins and nutrients in fruit set and development.

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Antonio Granell

Polytechnic University of Valencia

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José L. García-Martínez

Polytechnic University of Valencia

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Miguel A. Blázquez

Spanish National Research Council

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Miguel A. Perez-Amador

Polytechnic University of Valencia

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José Pío Beltrán

Spanish National Research Council

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Manuel Cercos

Spanish National Research Council

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Roberto Marco

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Yolanda Vercher

Spanish National Research Council

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A. Molowny

University of Valencia

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