León P. Martínez-Castilla
National Autonomous University of Mexico
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Featured researches published by León P. Martínez-Castilla.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003
León P. Martínez-Castilla; Elena R. Alvarez-Buylla
Gene duplication is a substrate of evolution. However, the relative importance of positive selection versus relaxation of constraints in the functional divergence of gene copies is still under debate. Plant MADS-box genes encode transcriptional regulators key in various aspects of development and have undergone extensive duplications to form a large family. We recovered 104 MADS sequences from the Arabidopsis genome. Bayesian phylogenetic trees recover type II lineage as a monophyletic group and resolve a branching sequence of monophyletic groups within this lineage. The type I lineage is comprised of several divergent groups. However, contrasting gene structure and patterns of chromosomal distribution between type I and II sequences suggest that they had different evolutionary histories and support the placement of the root of the gene family between these two groups. Site-specific and site-branch analyses of positive Darwinian selection (PDS) suggest that different selection regimes could have affected the evolution of these lineages. We found evidence for PDS along the branch leading to flowering time genes that have a direct impact on plant fitness. Sites with high probabilities of having been under PDS were found in the MADS and K domains, suggesting that these played important roles in the acquisition of novel functions during MADS-box diversification. Detected sites are targets for further experimental analyses. We argue that adaptive changes in MADS-domain protein sequences have been important for their functional divergence, suggesting that changes within coding regions of transcriptional regulators have influenced phenotypic evolution of plants.
Plant Physiology | 2012
Ángel G. Díaz-Sánchez; Lilian González-Segura; Carlos Mújica-Jiménez; Enrique Rudiño-Piñera; Carmina Montiel; León P. Martínez-Castilla; Rosario A. Muñoz-Clares
Plant Aldehyde Dehydrogenase10 (ALDH10) enzymes catalyze the oxidation of ω-primary or ω-quaternary aminoaldehydes, but, intriguingly, only some of them, such as the spinach (Spinacia oleracea) betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase (SoBADH), efficiently oxidize betaine aldehyde (BAL) forming the osmoprotectant glycine betaine (GB), which confers tolerance to osmotic stress. The crystal structure of SoBADH reported here shows tyrosine (Tyr)-160, tryptophan (Trp)-167, Trp-285, and Trp-456 in an arrangement suitable for cation-π interactions with the trimethylammonium group of BAL. Mutation of these residues to alanine (Ala) resulted in significant Km(BAL) increases and Vmax/Km(BAL) decreases, particularly in the Y160A mutant. Tyr-160 and Trp-456, strictly conserved in plant ALDH10s, form a pocket where the bulky trimethylammonium group binds. This space is reduced in ALDH10s with low BADH activity, because an isoleucine (Ile) pushes the Trp against the Tyr. Those with high BADH activity instead have Ala (Ala-441 in SoBADH) or cysteine, which allow enough room for binding of BAL. Accordingly, the mutation A441I decreased the Vmax/Km(BAL) of SoBADH approximately 200 times, while the mutation A441C had no effect. The kinetics with other ω-aminoaldehydes were not affected in the A441I or A441C mutant, demonstrating that the existence of an Ile in the second sphere of interaction of the aldehyde is critical for discriminating against BAL in some plant ALDH10s. A survey of the known sequences indicates that plants have two ALDH10 isoenzymes: those known to be GB accumulators have a high-BAL-affinity isoenzyme with Ala or cysteine in this critical position, while non GB accumulators have low-BAL-affinity isoenzymes containing Ile. Therefore, BADH activity appears to restrict GB synthesis in non-GB-accumulator plants.
Molecular BioSystems | 2007
Lourdes Teresa Agredano-Moreno; Homero Reyes De La Cruz; León P. Martínez-Castilla; Estela Sánchez de Jiménez
TOR (Target of rapamycin) kinase is a central component of a signal transduction pathway that regulates cellular growth in response to nutrients, mitogens and growth factors in eukaryotes. Knowledge of the TOR pathway in plants is scarce, and reports in agronomical relevant plants are lacking. Previous studies indicate that Arabidopsis thaliana TOR (AtTOR) activity is resistant to rapamycin whereas maize TOR (ZmTOR) is not, suggesting that plants might have different regulation mechanisms for this signal transduction pathway. In the present work maize ZmTOR cDNA was identified and its expression regulation was analyzed during germination on different tissues at various stages of differentiation and by the main ZmTOR regulators. Our results show that ZmTOR contains all functional domains characteristic of metazoan TOR kinase. ZmTOR expression is highly regulated during germination, a critical plant development period, but not on other tissues of contrasting physiological characteristics. Bioinformatic analyses indicated that maize FKBP12 and rapamycin form a functional structure capable of targeting the ZmTOR protein, similar to other non-plant eukaryotes, further supporting its regulation by rapamycin (in contrast with the rapamycin insensitivity of Arabidopsis thaliana) and the conservation of rapamycin regulation through plant evolution.
Journal of Phycology | 2000
Francisco Vergara-Silva; León P. Martínez-Castilla; Elena R. Alvarez-Buylla
We review functional data on MADS‐box genes, recent phylogenetic analyses of these coding regions, and their roles in the development and evolution of key morphological innovations in plants. We map the origin of important morphological structures in particular diverse stages of the life cycle in different plant clades onto organismal phylogenies, and present relevant molecular genetic aspects of development related to the MADS‐box genes. We focus on reproductive structures of the sporophyte because most functional characterizations have been done of MADS‐box genes involved in flower development. We discuss MADS‐box evolution in flowering plants, but we also review studies in the other nonflowering vascular plants, gymnosperms (conifers and gnetales), and ferns and preliminary data from the algae. We suggest that floral (e.g. flowering time, inflorescence, and flower meristem identity) MADS‐box and nonfloral plant MADS‐box genes should be the focus of future comparative research. Cloning and functional analyses of MADS‐box genes in bryophytes, particularly in the experimental system Physcomitrella patens (Hedw.) B.S.G., are needed. The ABC model of floral organ specification is an excellent general representation of an important network of genes; however, formal analytical tools are required to integrate data on complex gene interaction in comparative analyses. This and other analytical approaches to constructing gene network models will help to frame homology hypotheses in an evolutionary and developmental framework.
Physiologia Plantarum | 2011
Manuel Buendía-Monreal; Ilenia Rentería-Canett; Octavio Guerrero-Andrade; Carlos E. Bravo-Alberto; León P. Martínez-Castilla; Elpidio García; Jorge M. Vázquez-Ramos
Cyclin proteins, associated to cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs), play fundamental roles in cell cycle control as they constitute a very important driving force to allow cell cycle progression. D-type cyclins (CycDs) are important both for interpreting external mitogenic signals and in the control of the G1 phase. The maize (Zea mays) genome appears to contain at least 17 different CycD genes, and they fall into the subgroups previously described for other plants. Maize CycDs have been named according to identity percentages of the corresponding orthologs in rice and Arabidopsis. In silico analysis confirmed the presence of characteristic cyclin domains in each maize CycD gene and showed that their genomic organization is similar to their orthologs in rice and Arabidopsis. The expression of maize CycD genes was followed in seeds, during germination in the presence/absence of exogenously added hormones, and also in different plantlet tissues (mesocotyl, root tips and first leaf). Most cyclins were expressed in germinating seeds and at least in one of the plantlet tissues tested; almost all of the detected cyclins show an accumulating pattern of mRNA along germination (0-24 h) and higher levels in root tissue. Interestingly, some cyclins show high levels in non-proliferating tissues as leaf. Addition of auxins or cytokinins does not seem to importantly modify transcript levels; on the other hand, addition of abscisic acid repressed the expression of several cyclins. The role of each CycD during germination and plant growth and its interaction with other cell cycle proteins becomes a topic of the highest interest.
Ecological Psychology | 2010
Mayo Martínez-Kahn; León P. Martínez-Castilla
More than 20 years ago, Swenson (1988) proposed and elaborated the Law of Maximum Entropy Production (LMEP) as the missing piece of physical or universal law that would account for the ubiquitous and opportunistic transformation from disordered, or less ordered, to more highly ordered states. Given Boltzmanns (1974) interpretation, the Second Law of Thermodynamics has generally been interpreted as a “law of disorder.” Schrödinger (1945) and Bertalanffy (1952) had shown, however, that the Second Law, viewed from the classical perspective of Clausius (1865) and Thomson (1852), was not anathema to order. Ordered flow, including life, was permissible as long as it produced enough entropy to compensate for its own internal entropy reduction. The central problem remained, however: If the spontaneous production of order was “infinitely improbable,” as Boltzmann had surmised, then why were ordered systems such a fundamental and characteristic property of the visible world? LMEP provided the answer: Order production is inexorable because order produces entropy faster than disorder. In Swenson (1989d), LMEP was given expression as a precise law that could be demonstrated in falsifiable, experimental, physical terms. In Swenson and Turvey (1991), LMEP was tied explicitly to the progressive emergence of living things with their perception–action capabilities.
Journal of Experimental Zoology | 2017
Juan A. Arias Del Angel; Ana E. Escalante; León P. Martínez-Castilla; Mariana Benítez
The transition to multicellularity, recognized as one the major transitions in evolution, has occurred independently several times. While multicellular development has been extensively studied in zygotic organisms including plant and animal groups, just a few aggregative multicellular organisms have been employed as model organisms for the study of multicellularity. Studying different evolutionary origins and modes of multicellularity enables comparative analyses that can help identifying lineage-specific aspects of multicellular evolution and generic factors and mechanisms involved in the transition to multicellularity. Among aggregative multicellular organisms, myxobacteria are a valuable system to explore the particularities that aggregation confers to the evolution of multicellularity and mechanisms shared with clonal organisms. Moreover, myxobacteria species develop fruiting bodies displaying a range of morphological diversity. In this review, we aim to synthesize diverse lines of evidence regarding myxobacteria development and discuss them in the context of Evo-Devo concepts and approaches. First, we briefly describe the developmental processes in myxobacteria, present an updated comparative analysis of the genes involved in their developmental processes and discuss these and other lines of evidence in terms of co-option and developmental system drift, two concepts key to Evo-Devo studies. Next, as has been suggested from Evo-Devo approaches, we discuss how broad comparative studies and integration of diverse genetic, physicochemical, and environmental factors into experimental and theoretical models can further our understanding of myxobacterial development, phenotypic variation, and evolution.
Physiologia Plantarum | 2008
Yolanda Camacho; León P. Martínez-Castilla; Selene Fragoso; Sonia Vázquez; Eleazar Martínez-Barajas; Patricia Coello
Type A response regulators are a family of genes in Arabidopsis thaliana involved primarily in cytokinin signal transduction. A member of this family was isolated from a cDNA library constructed from bean plants (Phaseolus vulgaris) grown under conditions of phosphate starvation. The complete cDNA sequence showed the presence of the DDK domain, which is the hallmark of the response regulator family. Expression of the P. vulgaris response regulator 1 (PvRR1) showed clear regulation based on phosphate availability because transcript levels increased during phosphate starvation and returned to basal levels after resupplementation with phosphorus. Nitrogen and potassium starvation also upregulated PvRR1, indicating that cross talk with other nutrient signaling pathways might occur. Addition of cytokinins to plants growing under phosphate-sufficient conditions stimulated PvRR1 transcript levels both in detached leaves and in roots. However, cytokinins strongly inhibited PvRR1 expression in phosphate-starved plants after 24 h of incubation. At the protein level, subcellular localization of PvRR1 indicated that it is a nuclear protein and that phosphate starvation modified protein levels but not the localization.
Development Growth & Differentiation | 2018
Juan A. Arias Del Angel; Ana E. Escalante; León P. Martínez-Castilla; Mariana Benítez
Myxococcus xanthus is a myxobacterium that exhibits aggregation and cellular differentiation during the formation of fruiting bodies. Therefore, it has become a valuable model system to study the transition to multicellularity via cell aggregation. Although there is a vast set of experimental information for the development on M. xanthus, the dynamics behind cell‐fate determination in this organisms development remain unclear. We integrate the currently available evidence in a mathematical network model that allows to test the set of molecular elements and regulatory interactions that are sufficient to account for the specification of the cell types that are observed in fruiting body formation. Besides providing a dynamic mechanism for cell‐fate determination in the transition to multicellular aggregates of M. xanthus, this model enables the postulation of specific mechanisms behind some experimental observations for which no explanations have been provided, as well as new regulatory interactions that can be experimentally tested. Finally, this model constitutes a formal basis on which the continuously emerging data for this system can be integrated and interpreted.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2018
Lilian González-Segura; Carlos Mújica-Jiménez; Javier Andrés Juárez-Díaz; Rodrigo Güémez-Toro; León P. Martínez-Castilla; Rosario A. Muñoz-Clares
The isozymes of photosynthetic phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase from C4 plants (PEPC-C4) play a critical role in their atmospheric CO2 assimilation and productivity. They are allosterically activated by phosphorylated trioses or hexoses, such as d-glucose 6-phosphate, and inhibited by l-malate or l-aspartate. Additionally, PEPC-C4 isozymes from grasses are activated by glycine, serine, or alanine, but the allosteric site for these compounds remains unknown. Here, we report a new crystal structure of the isozyme from Zea mays (ZmPEPC-C4) with glycine bound at the monomer–monomer interfaces of the two dimers of the tetramer, making interactions with residues of both monomers. This binding site is close to, but different from, the one proposed to bind glucose 6-phosphate. Docking experiments indicated that d/l-serine or d/l-alanine could also bind to this site, which does not exist in the PEPC-C4 isozyme from the eudicot plant Flaveria, mainly because of a lysyl residue at the equivalent position of Ser-100 in ZmPEPC-C4. Accordingly, the ZmPEPC-C4 S100K mutant is not activated by glycine, serine, or alanine. Amino acid sequence alignments showed that PEPC-C4 isozymes from the monocot family Poaceae have either serine or glycine at this position, whereas those from Cyperaceae and eudicot families have lysine. The size and charge of the residue equivalent to Ser-100 are not only crucial for the activation of PEPC-C4 isozymes by neutral amino acids but also affect their affinity for the substrate phosphoenolpyruvate and their allosteric regulation by glucose 6-phosphate and malate, accounting for the reported kinetic differences between PEPC-C4 isozymes from monocot and eudicot plants.