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Dive into the research topics where Julio Paez-Valencia is active.

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Featured researches published by Julio Paez-Valencia.


Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2011

Expression of an Arabidopsis vacuolar H+-pyrophosphatase gene (AVP1) in cotton improves drought- and salt tolerance and increases fibre yield in the field conditions

Vijaya Pasapula; Guoxin Shen; Sundaram Kuppu; Julio Paez-Valencia; Marisol Mendoza; Pei Hou; Jian Chen; Xiaoyun Qiu; Longfu Zhu; Xianlong Zhang; Dick L. Auld; Eduardo Blumwald; Hong Zhang; Roberto A. Gaxiola; Paxton Payton

The Arabidopsis gene AVP1 encodes a vacuolar pyrophosphatase that functions as a proton pump on the vacuolar membrane. Overexpression of AVP1 in Arabidopsis, tomato and rice enhances plant performance under salt and drought stress conditions, because up-regulation of the type I H+-PPase from Arabidopsis may result in a higher proton electrochemical gradient, which facilitates enhanced sequestering of ions and sugars into the vacuole, reducing water potential and resulting in increased drought- and salt tolerance when compared to wild-type plants. Furthermore, overexpression of AVP1 stimulates auxin transport in the root system and leads to larger root systems, which helps transgenic plants absorb water more efficiently under drought conditions. Using the same approach, AVP1-expressing cotton plants were created and tested for their performance under high-salt and reduced irrigation conditions. The AVP1-expressing cotton plants showed more vigorous growth than wild-type plants in the presence of 200 mM NaCl under hydroponic growth conditions. The soil-grown AVP1-expressing cotton plants also displayed significantly improved tolerance to both drought and salt stresses in greenhouse conditions. Furthermore, the fibre yield of AVP1-expressing cotton plants is at least 20% higher than that of wild-type plants under dry-land conditions in the field. This research indicates that AVP1 has the potential to be used for improving crops drought- and salt tolerance in areas where water and salinity are limiting factors for agricultural productivity.


Plant Physiology | 2012

Genetic Manipulation of a "Vacuolar" H+ -PPase: From Salt Tolerance to Yield Enhancement under Phosphorus-Deficient Soils

Roberto A. Gaxiola; C. A. Sanchez; Julio Paez-Valencia; Brian G. Ayre; James J. Elser

Plant scientists face the difficult challenge of increasing food production without further degradation of the environment. In order to protect drinking water resources and prevent the proliferation of harmful algal blooms and “dead zones” in coastal marine ecosystems, it is imperative to reduce


Plant Physiology | 2013

Enhanced Proton Translocating Pyrophosphatase Activity Improves Nitrogen Use Efficiency in Romaine Lettuce

Julio Paez-Valencia; Jonathan Sanchez-Lares; Ellen L. Marsh; Liane T. Dorneles; Mirella P. Santos; Diego Sanchez; Alexander Winter; Sean Murphy; Jennifer Cox; Marcin Trzaska; Jason Metler; Alex Kozic; Arnoldo Rocha Façanha; Daniel Schachtman; C. A. Sanchez; Roberto A. Gaxiola

A simple genetic manipulation triggers enhanced nitrogen use efficiency in lettuce. Plant nitrate (NO3−) acquisition depends on the combined activities of root high- and low-affinity NO3− transporters and the proton gradient generated by the plasma membrane H+-ATPase. These processes are coordinated with photosynthesis and the carbon status of the plant. Here, we present the characterization of romaine lettuce (Lactuca sativa ‘Conquistador’) plants engineered to overexpress an intragenic gain-of-function allele of the type I proton translocating pyrophosphatase (H+-PPase) of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). The proton-pumping and inorganic pyrophosphate hydrolytic activities of these plants are augmented compared with control plants. Immunohistochemical data show a conspicuous increase in H+-PPase protein abundance at the vasculature of the transgenic plants. Transgenic plants displayed an enhanced rhizosphere acidification capacity consistent with the augmented plasma membrane H+-ATPase proton transport values, and ATP hydrolytic capacities evaluated in vitro. These transgenic lines outperform control plants when challenged with NO3− limitations in laboratory, greenhouse, and field scenarios. Furthermore, we report the characterization of a lettuce LsNRT2.1 gene that is constitutive up-regulated in the transgenic plants. Of note, the expression of the LsNRT2.1 gene in control plants is regulated by NO3− and sugars. Enhanced accumulation of 15N-labeled fertilizer by transgenic lettuce compared with control plants was observed in greenhouse experiments. A negative correlation between the level of root soluble sugars and biomass is consistent with the strong root growth that characterizes these transgenic plants.


Plant Science | 2011

Plasma membrane localization of the type I H + -PPase AVP1 in sieve element-companion cell complexes from Arabidopsis thaliana

Julio Paez-Valencia; Alejandra Rodriguez-Leviz; Jonathan Sanchez-Lares; Concepción Sánchez-Gómez; Pedro Valencia-Mayoral; Guadalupe Diaz-Rosas; Roberto A. Gaxiola

Previous literature has shown the presence of a plasma membrane (PM) localized type I H(+)-PPase in sieve elements of Ricinus communis. Unfortunately, the physiological relevance of these findings remains obscure due to the lack of genetic and molecular reagents to study R. communis. The availability of H(+)-PPase gain and loss-of-function mutants in Arabidopsis thaliana makes this plant an attractive genetic model to address the question, but data on the PM localization of this H(+)-PPase in A. thaliana are limited to two proteomic approaches. Here we present the first report on the localization of the type I H(+)-PPase AVP1 in sieve element-companion cell complexes (SE-CCc) from A. thaliana. Double epifluorescence and immunogold labeling experiments are consistent with the co-localization of AVP1 and PIP1 (a bona fide PM maker) in PM of SE-CCc from A. thaliana.


Plant Physiology | 2015

Arabidopsis type I proton-pumping pyrophosphatase expresses strongly in phloem, where it is required for pyrophosphate metabolism and photosynthate partitioning.

Gastón A. Pizzio; Julio Paez-Valencia; Aswad Khadilkar; Kamesh Regmi; Araceli Patrón-Soberano; Shangji Zhang; Jonathan Sanchez-Lares; Tara N. Furstenau; Jisheng Li; Concepción Sánchez-Gómez; Pedro Valencia-Mayoral; Umesh Yadav; Brian G. Ayre; Roberto A. Gaxiola

The type I H+-PPase is a key component of the sieve element-companion cell complexes and involved in phloem loading in Arabidopsis. Phloem loading is a critical process in plant physiology. The potential of regulating the translocation of photoassimilates from source to sink tissues represents an opportunity to increase crop yield. Pyrophosphate homeostasis is crucial for normal phloem function in apoplasmic loaders. The involvement of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) type I proton-pumping pyrophosphatase (AVP1) in phloem loading was analyzed at genetic, histochemical, and physiological levels. A transcriptional AVP1 promoter::GUS fusion revealed phloem activity in source leaves. Ubiquitous AVP1 overexpression (35S::AVP1 cassette) enhanced shoot biomass, photoassimilate production and transport, rhizosphere acidification, and expression of sugar-induced root ion transporter genes (POTASSIUM TRANSPORTER2 [KUP2], NITRATE TRANSPORTER2.1 [NRT2.1], NRT2.4, and PHOSPHATE TRANSPORTER1.4 [PHT1.4]). Phloem-specific AVP1 overexpression (Commelina Yellow Mottle Virus promoter [pCOYMV]::AVP1) elicited similar phenotypes. By contrast, phloem-specific AVP1 knockdown (pCoYMV::RNAiAVP1) resulted in stunted seedlings in sucrose-deprived medium. We also present a promoter mutant avp1-2 (SALK046492) with a 70% reduction of expression that did not show severe growth impairment. Interestingly, AVP1 protein in this mutant is prominent in the phloem. Moreover, expression of an Escherichia coli-soluble pyrophosphatase in the phloem (pCoYMV::pyrophosphatase) of avp1-2 plants resulted in severe dwarf phenotype and abnormal leaf morphology. We conclude that the Proton-Pumping Pyrophosphatase AVP1 localized at the plasma membrane of the sieve element-companion cell complexes functions as a synthase, and that this activity is critical for the maintenance of pyrophosphate homeostasis required for phloem function.


Archive | 2011

Plant Proton Pumps: Regulatory Circuits Involving H+-ATPase and H+-PPase

Anja T. Fuglsang; Julio Paez-Valencia; Roberto A. Gaxiola

Proton gradients are crucial for the transport of ions and solutes across the different membranes in plant cells. Several important developmental processes require a tightly controlled proton gradient across cellular membranes. This chapter focuses on two of the three primary proton transport proteins: the plasma membrane H+-ATPase and the H+-PPase.


Plant Science | 2012

Arabidopsis sodium dependent and independent phenotypes triggered by H+-PPase up-regulation are SOS1 dependent

Soledad F. Undurraga; Mirella P. Santos; Julio Paez-Valencia; Haibing Yang; Peter K. Hepler; Arnoldo Rocha Façanha; Kendal D. Hirschi; Roberto A. Gaxiola

Coordinate regulation of transporters at both the plasma membrane and vacuole contribute to plant cells ability to adapt to a changing environment and play a key role in the maintenance of the chemiosmotic circuits required for cellular growth. The plasma membrane (PM) Na⁺/H⁺ antiporter (SOS1) is involved in salt tolerance, presumably in sodium extrusion; the vacuolar type I H⁺-PPase AVP1 is involved in vacuolar sodium sequestration, but its overexpression has also been shown to alter the abundance and activity of the PM H⁺-ATPase. Here we investigate the relationship between these transporters utilizing loss-of-function mutants of SOS1 (sos1) and increased expression of AVP1 (AVP1OX). Heightened expression of AVP1 enhances pyrophosphate-dependent proton pump activity, salt tolerance, ion vacuolar sequestration, K⁺ uptake capacity, root hair development, osmotic responses, and PM ATPase hydrolytic and proton pumping activities. In sos1 lines overexpressing AVP1, these phenotypes are negatively affected demonstrating that sos1 is epistatic to AVP1. Enhanced AVP1 protein levels require SOS1 and this regulation appears to be post-translational.


Plant Physiology | 2016

Constitutive and Companion Cell-Specific Overexpression of AVP1, Encoding a Proton-Pumping Pyrophosphatase, Enhances Biomass Accumulation, Phloem Loading, and Long-Distance Transport

Aswad Khadilkar; Umesh Yadav; Carolina Salazar; Vladimir Shulaev; Julio Paez-Valencia; Gaston A. Pizzio; Roberto A. Gaxiola; Brian G. Ayre

H+-pumping pyrophosphatases appear to function in companion cells to increase phloem loading and long-distance transport, leading to more robust plants with enhanced growth. Plant productivity is determined in large part by the partitioning of assimilates between the sites of production and the sites of utilization. Proton-pumping pyrophosphatases (H+-PPases) are shown to participate in many energetic plant processes, including general growth and biomass accumulation, CO2 fixation, nutrient acquisition, and stress responses. H+-PPases have a well-documented role in hydrolyzing pyrophosphate (PPi) and capturing the released energy to pump H+ across the tonoplast and endomembranes to create proton motive force (pmf). Recently, an additional role for H+-PPases in phloem loading and biomass partitioning was proposed. In companion cells (CCs) of the phloem, H+-PPases localize to the plasma membrane rather than endomembranes, and rather than hydrolyzing PPi to create pmf, pmf is utilized to synthesize PPi. Additional PPi in the CCs promotes sucrose oxidation and ATP synthesis, which the plasma membrane P-type ATPase in turn uses to create more pmf for phloem loading of sucrose via sucrose-H+ symporters. To test this model, transgenic Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) plants were generated with constitutive and CC-specific overexpression of AVP1, encoding type 1 ARABIDOPSIS VACUOLAR PYROPHOSPHATASE1. Plants with both constitutive and CC-specific overexpression accumulated more biomass in shoot and root systems. 14C-labeling experiments showed enhanced photosynthesis, phloem loading, phloem transport, and delivery to sink organs. The results obtained with constitutive and CC-specific promoters were very similar, such that the growth enhancement mediated by AVP1 overexpression can be attributed to its role in phloem CCs. This supports the model for H+-PPases functioning as PPi synthases in the phloem by arguing that the increases in biomass observed with AVP1 overexpression stem from improved phloem loading and transport.


Plant Physiology | 2016

Role of SKD1 Regulators LIP5 and IST1-LIKE1 in Endosomal Sorting and Plant Development.

Rafael Buono; Julio Paez-Valencia; Nathan D. Miller; Kaija Goodman; Christoph Spitzer; Edgar P. Spalding; Marisa S. Otegui

Analysis of mutant plants points to a synergistic role of two regulators of the ESCRT components SKD1 during plant development. SKD1 is a core component of the mechanism that degrades plasma membrane proteins via the Endosomal Sorting Complex Required for Transport (ESCRT) pathway. Its ATPase activity and endosomal recruitment are regulated by the ESCRT components LIP5 and IST1. How LIP5 and IST1 affect ESCRT-mediated endosomal trafficking and development in plants is not known. Here we use Arabidopsis mutants to demonstrate that LIP5 controls the constitutive degradation of plasma membrane proteins and the formation of endosomal intraluminal vesicles. Although lip5 mutants were able to polarize the auxin efflux facilitators PIN2 and PIN3, both proteins were mis-sorted to the tonoplast in lip5 root cells. In addition, lip5 root cells over-accumulated PIN2 at the plasma membrane. Consistently with the trafficking defects of PIN proteins, the lip5 roots showed abnormal gravitropism with an enhanced response within the first 4 h after gravistimulation. LIP5 physically interacts with IST1-LIKE1 (ISTL1), a protein predicted to be the Arabidopsis homolog of yeast IST1. However, we found that Arabidopsis contains 12 genes coding for predicted IST1-domain containing proteins (ISTL1–12). Within the ISTL1–6 group, ISTL1 showed the strongest interaction with LIP5, SKD1, and the ESCRT-III-related proteins CHMP1A in yeast two hybrid assays. Through the analysis of single and double mutants, we found that the synthetic interaction of LIP5 with ISTL1, but not with ISTL2, 3, or 6, is essential for normal plant growth, repression of spontaneous cell death, and post-embryonic lethality.


Plant Physiology | 2014

The VASCULATURE COMPLEXITY AND CONNECTIVITY Gene Encodes a Plant-Specific Protein Required for Embryo Provasculature Development

Hannetz Roschzttardtz; Julio Paez-Valencia; Tejaswi Dittakavi; Sathya Jali; Francisca C. Reyes; Gary Baisa; Pauline Anne; Lionel Gissot; Jean-Christophe Palauqui; Patrick Masson; Sebastian Y. Bednarek; Marisa S. Otegui

A plant-specific protein controls the complexity and connectivity of veins in cotyledons. The molecular mechanisms by which vascular tissues acquire their identities are largely unknown. Here, we report on the identification and characterization of VASCULATURE COMPLEXITY AND CONNECTIVITY (VCC), a member of a 15-member, plant-specific gene family in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) that encodes proteins of unknown function with four predicted transmembrane domains. Homozygous vcc mutants displayed cotyledon vein networks of reduced complexity and disconnected veins. Similar disconnections or gaps were observed in the provasculature of vcc embryos, indicating that defects in vein connectivity appear early in mutant embryo development. Consistently, the overexpression of VCC leads to an unusually high proportion of cotyledons with high-complexity vein networks. Neither auxin distribution nor the polar localization of the auxin efflux carrier were affected in vcc mutant embryos. Expression of VCC was detected in developing embryos and procambial, cambial, and vascular cells of cotyledons, leaves, roots, hypocotyls, and anthers. To evaluate possible genetic interactions with other genes that control vasculature patterning in embryos, we generated a double mutant for VCC and OCTOPUS (OPS). The vcc ops double mutant embryos showed a complete loss of high-complexity vascular networks in cotyledons and a drastic increase in both provascular and vascular disconnections. In addition, VCC and OPS interact physically, suggesting that VCC and OPS are part of a complex that controls cotyledon vascular complexity.

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Brian G. Ayre

University of North Texas

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Marisa S. Otegui

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Aswad Khadilkar

University of North Texas

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Kaija Goodman

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Kamesh Regmi

Arizona State University

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