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Dive into the research topics where Lorena Sigaut is active.

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Featured researches published by Lorena Sigaut.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Loop A Is Critical for the Functional Interaction of Two Beta vulgaris PIP Aquaporins

Cintia Jozefkowicz; Pablo Rosi; Lorena Sigaut; Gabriela Soto; Lía I. Pietrasanta; Gabriela Amodeo; Karina Alleva

Research done in the last years strongly support the hypothesis that PIP aquaporin can form heterooligomeric assemblies, specially combining PIP2 monomers with PIP1 monomers. Nevertheless, the structural elements involved in the ruling of homo versus heterooligomeric organization are not completely elucidated. In this work we unveil some features of monomer-monomer interaction in Beta vulgaris PIP aquaporins. Our results show that while BvPIP2;2 is able to interact with BvPIP1;1, BvPIP2;1 shows no functional interaction. The lack of functional interaction between BvPIP2;1 and BvPIP1;1 was further corroborated by dose-response curves of water permeability due to aquaporin activity exposed to different acidic conditions. We also found that BvPIP2;1 is unable to translocate BvPIP1;1-ECFP from an intracellular position to the plasma membrane when co-expressed, as BvPIP2;2 does. Moreover we postulate that the first extracellular loop (loop A) of BvPIP2;1, could be relevant for the functional interaction with BvPIP1;1. Thus, we investigate BvPIP2;1 loop A at an atomic level by Molecular Dynamics Simulation (MDS) and by direct mutagenesis. We found that, within the tetramer, each loop A presents a dissimilar behavior. Besides, BvPIP2;1 loop A mutants restore functional interaction with BvPIP1;1. This work is a contribution to unravel how PIP2 and PIP1 interact to form functional heterooligomeric assemblies. We postulate that BvPIP2;1 loop A is relevant for the lack of functional interaction with BvPIP1;1 and that the monomer composition of PIP assemblies determines their functional properties.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2015

Rab27a controls HIV-1 assembly by regulating plasma membrane levels of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate.

Pehuén Pereyra Gerber; Mercedes Cabrini; Carolina Jancic; Luciana Paoletti; Claudia Banchio; Catalina von Bilderling; Lorena Sigaut; Lía I. Pietrasanta; Gabriel Duette; Eric O. Freed; Geneviève de Saint Basile; Catarina Moita; Luis F. Moita; Sebastian Amigorena; Philippe Benaroch; Jorge Geffner; Matias Ostrowski

Rab27a controls the recruitment of phosphatidylinositol 4-kinase type 2α from endosomes to the plasma membrane, which promotes high levels of PI(4)P, fuels PI(4,5)P2 production, and favors the recruitment of Pr55Gag and HIV-1 assembly.


Biophysical Journal | 2016

PIP Water Transport and Its pH Dependence Are Regulated by Tetramer Stoichiometry

Cintia Jozefkowicz; Lorena Sigaut; Florencia Scochera; Gabriela Soto; Nicolás Daniel Ayub; Lía I. Pietrasanta; Gabriela Amodeo; F. Luis González Flecha; Karina Alleva

Many plasma membrane channels form oligomeric assemblies, and heterooligomerization has been described as a distinctive feature of some protein families. In the particular case of plant plasma membrane aquaporins (PIPs), PIP1 and PIP2 monomers interact to form heterotetramers. However, the biological properties of the different heterotetrameric configurations formed by PIP1 and PIP2 subunits have not been addressed yet. Upon coexpression of tandem PIP2-PIP1 dimers in Xenopus oocytes, we can address, for the first time to our knowledge, the functional properties of single heterotetrameric species having 2:2 stoichiometry. We have also coexpressed PIP2-PIP1 dimers with PIP1 and PIP2 monomers to experimentally investigate the localization and biological activity of each tetrameric assembly. Our results show that PIP2-PIP1 heterotetramers can assemble with 3:1, 1:3, or 2:2 stoichiometry, depending on PIP1 and PIP2 relative expression in the cell. All PIP2-PIP1 heterotetrameric species localize at the plasma membrane and present the same water transport capacity. Furthermore, the contribution of any heterotetrameric assembly to the total water transport through the plasma membrane doubles the contribution of PIP2 homotetramers. Our results also indicate that plasma membrane water transport can be modulated by the coexistence of different tetrameric species and by intracellular pH. Moreover, all the tetrameric species present similar cooperativity behavior for proton sensing. These findings throw light on the functional properties of PIP tetramers, showing that they have flexible stoichiometry dependent on the quantity of PIP1 and PIP2 molecules available. This represents, to our knowledge, a novel regulatory mechanism to adjust water transport across the plasma membrane.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2016

Loop B serine of a plasma membrane aquaporin type PIP2 but not PIP1 plays a key role in pH sensing.

Agustín Yaneff; Lorena Sigaut; Natalia Gomez; Cecilia Aliaga Fandiño; Karina Alleva; Lía I. Pietrasanta; Gabriela Amodeo

In the plant kingdom, the plasma membrane intrinsic aquaporins (PIPs) constitute a highly conserved group of water channels with the capacity of rapidly adjusting the water permeability (Pf) of a cell by a gating response. Most evidence regarding this mechanism was obtained by different biophysical approaches including the crystallization of a Spinaca olaracea PIP2 aquaporin (SoPIP2;1) in an open and close conformation. A close state seems to prevail under certain stimuli such as cytosolic pH decrease, intracellular Ca2+ concentration increase and dephosphorylation of specific serines. In this work we decided to address whether the state of phosphorylation of a loop B serine - highly conserved in all PIPs - combined with cytosolic acidification can jointly affect the gating response. To achieve this goal we generated loop B serine mutants of two PIP types of Fragaria×ananassa (FaPIP2;1S121A and FaPIP1;1S131A) in order to simulate a dephosphorylated state and characterize their behavior in terms of Pf and pH sensitivities. The response was tested for different co-expressions of PIPs (homo and heterotetramers combining wild-type and mutant PIPs) in Xenopus oocytes. Our results show that loop B serine phosphorylation status affects pH gating of FaPIP2;1 but not of FaPIP1;1 by changing its sensitivity to more alkaline pHs. Therefore, we propose that a counterpoint of different regulatory mechanisms - heterotetramerization, serine phosphorylation status and pH sensitivity - affect aquaporin gating thus ruling the Pf of a membrane that expresses PIPs when fast responses are mandatory.


Cell Calcium | 2015

Ca2+ images obtained in different experimental conditions shed light on the spatial distribution of IP3 receptors that underlie Ca2+ puffs

Estefanía Piegari; Lorena Sigaut; Silvina Ponce Dawson

Many intracellular Ca(2+) signals involve Ca(2+) release from the endoplasmic reticulum through inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptors (IP3Rs). The open probability of IP3Rs depends on cytosolic Ca(2+) so that these signals involve Ca(2+)-induced Ca(2+)-release (CICR). IP3Rs are organized in clusters. The signals they mediate are observed using single-wavelength dyes and, often, a slow Ca(2+) buffer (EGTA) is added to disrupt CICR between clusters and keep the signals spatially restricted. It is assumed that the presence of the dye or of EGTA does not alter the intra-cluster Ca(2+) dynamics. In this paper we analyze this issue combining experiments and numerical simulations. We compare the properties of local signals known as puffs observed with different dyes and EGTA concentrations. We determine that although the dye or EGTA does not alter the intra-cluster dynamics, the set of observable events is different depending on the degree of inter-cluster uncoupling of the experiment. An analysis of the observations shows that the events that are missed for insufficient inter-cluster uncoupling are those of fastest amplitude growth rate. This agrees with a spatial organization in which the largest amplitude events correspond to clusters with densely packed active IP3Rs.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Live cell imaging reveals focal adhesions mechanoresponses in mammary epithelial cells under sustained equibiaxial stress

Lorena Sigaut; Catalina von Bilderling; Micaela Bianchi; Juan Eduardo Burdisso; Laura Gastaldi; Lía I. Pietrasanta

Mechanical stimuli play a key role in many cell functions such as proliferation, differentiation and migration. In the mammary gland, mechanical signals such as the distension of mammary epithelial cells due to udder filling are proposed to be directly involved during lactation and involution. However, the evolution of focal adhesions -specialized multiprotein complexes that mechanically connect cells with the extracellular matrix- during the mammary gland development, as well as the influence of the mechanical stimuli involved, remains unclear. Here we present the use of an equibiaxial stretching device for exerting a sustained normal strain to mammary epithelial cells while quantitatively assessing cell responses by fluorescence imaging techniques. Using this approach, we explored changes in focal adhesion dynamics in HC11 mammary cells in response to a mechanical sustained stress, which resembles the physiological stimuli. We studied the relationship between a global stress and focal adhesion assembly/disassembly, observing an enhanced persistency of focal adhesions under strain as well as an increase in their size. At a molecular level, we evaluated the mechanoresponses of vinculin and zyxin, two focal adhesion proteins postulated as mechanosensors, observing an increment in vinculin molecular tension and a slower zyxin dynamics while increasing the applied normal strain.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2017

FCS experiments to quantify Ca2+ diffusion and its interaction with buffers

Lorena Sigaut; Cecilia Villarruel; Silvina Ponce Dawson

Ca2+ signals are ubiquitous. One of the key factors for their versatility is the variety of spatio-temporal distributions that the cytosolic Ca2+ can display. In most cell types Ca2+ signals not only depend on Ca2+ entry from the extracellular medium but also on Ca2+ release from internal stores, a process which is in turn regulated by cytosolic Ca2+ itself. The rate at which Ca2+ is transported, the fraction that is trapped by intracellular buffers, and with what kinetics are thus key features that affect the time and spatial range of action of Ca2+ signals. The quantification of Ca2+ diffusion in intact cells is quite challenging because the transport rates that can be inferred using optical techniques are intricately related to the interaction of Ca2+ with the dye that is used for its observation and with the cellular buffers. In this paper, we introduce an approach that uses Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy (FCS) experiments performed at different conditions that in principle allows the quantification of Ca2+ diffusion and of its reaction rates with unobservable (non-fluorescent) Ca2+ buffers. To this end, we develop the necessary theory to interpret the experimental results and then apply it to FCS experiments performed in a set of solutions containing Ca2+, a single wavelength Ca2+ dye, and a non-fluorescent Ca2+ buffer. We show that a judicious choice of the experimental conditions and an adequate interpretation of the fitting parameters can be combined to extract information on the free diffusion coefficient of Ca2+ and of some of the properties of the unobservable buffer. We think that this approach can be applied to other situations, particularly to experiments performed in intact cells.


PLOS Computational Biology | 2014

Messages Do Diffuse Faster than Messengers: Reconciling Disparate Estimates of the Morphogen Bicoid Diffusion Coefficient

Lorena Sigaut; John E. Pearson; Alejandro Colman-Lerner; Silvina Ponce Dawson


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2011

Custom-made modification of a commercial confocal microscope to photolyze caged compounds using the conventional illumination module and its application to the observation of Inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate-mediated calcium signals

Lorena Sigaut; Mariano Barella; Rocío Espada; María Laura Ponce; Silvina Ponce Dawson


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2015

Rab27a controls HIV-1 assembly by regulating plasma membrane levels of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate

P. Pereyra Gerber; Mercedes Cabrini; Carolina Jancic; Luciana Paoletti; Claudia Banchio; C. von Bilderling; Lorena Sigaut; Lía I. Pietrasanta; Gabriel Duette; E Freed; G. de Saint Basile; C. Ferreira Moita; L. Ferreira Moita; Sebastian Amigorena; Philippe Benaroch; Jorge Geffner; Matias Ostrowski

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Lía I. Pietrasanta

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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Gabriela Amodeo

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Karina Alleva

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Silvina Ponce Dawson

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Cintia Jozefkowicz

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Carolina Jancic

University of Buenos Aires

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Catalina von Bilderling

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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Claudia Banchio

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Florencia Scochera

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Gabriel Duette

University of Buenos Aires

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