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Dive into the research topics where Luiz Gustavo Guedes Corrêa is active.

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Featured researches published by Luiz Gustavo Guedes Corrêa.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

PlnTFDB: updated content and new features of the plant transcription factor database

Paulino Pérez-Rodríguez; Diego Mauricio Riaño-Pachón; Luiz Gustavo Guedes Corrêa; Stefan A. Rensing; Birgit Kersten; Bernd Mueller-Roeber

The Plant Transcription Factor Database (PlnTFDB; http://plntfdb.bio.uni-potsdam.de/v3.0/) is an integrative database that provides putatively complete sets of transcription factors (TFs) and other transcriptional regulators (TRs) in plant species (sensu lato) whose genomes have been completely sequenced and annotated. The complete sets of 84 families of TFs and TRs from 19 species ranging from unicellular red and green algae to angiosperms are included in PlnTFDB, representing >1.6 billion years of evolution of gene regulatory networks. For each gene family, a basic description is provided that is complemented by literature references, and multiple sequence alignments of protein domains. TF or TR gene entries include information of expressed sequence tags, 3D protein structures of homologous proteins, domain architecture and cross-links to other computational resources online. Moreover, the different species in PlnTFDB are linked to each other by means of orthologous genes facilitating cross-species comparisons.


PLOS ONE | 2008

The role of bZIP transcription factors in green plant evolution: adaptive features emerging from four founder genes.

Luiz Gustavo Guedes Corrêa; Diego Mauricio Riaño-Pachón; Carlos G. Schrago; Renato Vicentini dos Santos; Bernd Mueller-Roeber; Michel Vincentz

Background Transcription factors of the basic leucine zipper (bZIP) family control important processes in all eukaryotes. In plants, bZIPs are regulators of many central developmental and physiological processes including photomorphogenesis, leaf and seed formation, energy homeostasis, and abiotic and biotic stress responses. Here we performed a comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of bZIP genes from algae, mosses, ferns, gymnosperms and angiosperms. Methodology/Principal Findings We identified 13 groups of bZIP homologues in angiosperms, three more than known before, that represent 34 Possible Groups of Orthologues (PoGOs). The 34 PoGOs may correspond to the complete set of ancestral angiosperm bZIP genes that participated in the diversification of flowering plants. Homologous genes dedicated to seed-related processes and ABA-mediated stress responses originated in the common ancestor of seed plants, and three groups of homologues emerged in the angiosperm lineage, of which one group plays a role in optimizing the use of energy. Conclusions/Significance Our data suggest that the ancestor of green plants possessed four bZIP genes functionally involved in oxidative stress and unfolded protein responses that are bZIP-mediated processes in all eukaryotes, but also in light-dependent regulations. The four founder genes amplified and diverged significantly, generating traits that benefited the colonization of new environments.


Genome Biology and Evolution | 2010

Genome-wide phylogenetic comparative analysis of plant transcriptional regulation: a timeline of loss, gain, expansion, and correlation with complexity.

Daniel Lang; Benjamin Weiche; Gerrit Timmerhaus; Sandra Richardt; Diego Mauricio Riaño-Pachón; Luiz Gustavo Guedes Corrêa; Ralf Reski; Bernd Mueller-Roeber; Stefan A. Rensing

Evolutionary retention of duplicated genes encoding transcription-associated proteins (TAPs, comprising transcription factors and other transcriptional regulators) has been hypothesized to be positively correlated with increasing morphological complexity and paleopolyploidizations, especially within the plant kingdom. Here, we present the most comprehensive set of classification rules for TAPs and its application for genome-wide analyses of plants and algae. Using a dated species tree and phylogenetic comparative (PC) analyses, we define the timeline of TAP loss, gain, and expansion among Viridiplantae and find that two major bursts of gain/expansion occurred, coinciding with the water-to-land transition and the radiation of flowering plants. For the first time, we provide PC proof for the long-standing hypothesis that TAPs are major driving forces behind the evolution of morphological complexity, the latter in Plantae being shaped significantly by polyploidization and subsequent biased paleolog retention. Principal component analysis incorporating the number of TAPs per genome provides an alternate and significant proxy for complexity, ideally suited for PC genomics. Our work lays the ground for further interrogation of the shaping of gene regulatory networks underlying the evolution of organism complexity.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Potassium (K+) gradients serve as a mobile energy source in plant vascular tissues

Pawel Gajdanowicz; Erwan Michard; Michael Sandmann; Marcio Rocha; Luiz Gustavo Guedes Corrêa; Santiago J. Ramírez-Aguilar; Judith Lucia Gomez-Porras; Wendy González; Jean-Baptiste Thibaud; J. T. van Dongen; Ingo Dreyer

The essential mineral nutrient potassium (K+) is the most important inorganic cation for plants and is recognized as a limiting factor for crop yield and quality. Nonetheless, it is only partially understood how K+ contributes to plant productivity. K+ is used as a major active solute to maintain turgor and to drive irreversible and reversible changes in cell volume. K+ also plays an important role in numerous metabolic processes, for example, by serving as an essential cofactor of enzymes. Here, we provide evidence for an additional, previously unrecognized role of K+ in plant growth. By combining diverse experimental approaches with computational cell simulation, we show that K+ circulating in the phloem serves as a decentralized energy storage that can be used to overcome local energy limitations. Posttranslational modification of the phloem-expressed Arabidopsis K+ channel AKT2 taps this “potassium battery,” which then efficiently assists the plasma membrane H+-ATPase in energizing the transmembrane phloem (re)loading processes.


Genetics | 2008

Green Transcription Factors: A Chlamydomonas Overview

Diego Mauricio Riaño-Pachón; Luiz Gustavo Guedes Corrêa; Raúl Trejos-Espinosa; Bernd Mueller-Roeber

Transcription factors (TFs) control gene expression by interacting with cis-elements in target gene promoters. Transcription regulators (TRs) assist in controlling gene expression through interaction with TFs, chromatin remodeling, or other mechanisms. Both types of proteins thus constitute master controllers of dynamic transcriptional networks. To uncover such control elements in the photosynthetic green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, we performed a comprehensive analysis of its genome sequence. In total, we identified 234 genes encoding 147 TFs and 87 TRs of ∼40 families. The set of putative TFs and TRs, including their transcript and protein sequences, domain architectures, and supporting information about putative orthologs, is available at http://plntfdb.bio.uni-potsdam.de/v2.0/. Twelve of 34 plant-specific TF families were found in at least one algal species, indicating their early evolutionary origin. Twenty-two plant-specific TF families and one plant-specific TR family were not observed in algae, suggesting their specific association with developmental or physiological processes characteristic to multicellular plants. We also analyzed the occurrence of proteins that constitute the light-regulated transcriptional network in angiosperms and found putative algal orthologs for most of them. Our analysis provides a solid ground for future experimental studies aiming at deciphering the transcriptional regulatory networks in green algae.


Plant Physiology | 2011

The Arabidopsis bZIP Gene AtbZIP63 Is a Sensitive Integrator of Transient Abscisic Acid and Glucose Signals

Cleverson Carlos Matiolli; Juarez Pires Tomaz; Gustavo Turqueto Duarte; Fernanda M. Prado; Luiz Eduardo Vieira Del Bem; Amanda Bortolini Silveira; Luciane Gauer; Luiz Gustavo Guedes Corrêa; Rodrigo Duarte Drumond; Américo José Carvalho Viana; Paolo Di Mascio; Christian Meyer; Michel Vincentz

Glucose modulates plant metabolism, growth, and development. In Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), Hexokinase1 (HXK1) is a glucose sensor that may trigger abscisic acid (ABA) synthesis and sensitivity to mediate glucose-induced inhibition of seedling development. Here, we show that the intensity of short-term responses to glucose can vary with ABA activity. We report that the transient (2 h/4 h) repression by 2% glucose of AtbZIP63, a gene encoding a basic-leucine zipper (bZIP) transcription factor partially involved in the Snf1-related kinase KIN10-induced responses to energy limitation, is independent of HXK1 and is not mediated by changes in ABA levels. However, high-concentration (6%) glucose-mediated repression appears to be modulated by ABA, since full repression of AtbZIP63 requires a functional ABA biosynthetic pathway. Furthermore, the combination of glucose and ABA was able to trigger a synergistic repression of AtbZIP63 and its homologue AtbZIP3, revealing a shared regulatory feature consisting of the modulation of glucose sensitivity by ABA. The synergistic regulation of AtbZIP63 was not reproduced by an AtbZIP63 promoter-5′-untranslated region::β-glucuronidase fusion, thus suggesting possible posttranscriptional control. A transcriptional inhibition assay with cordycepin provided further evidence for the regulation of mRNA decay in response to glucose plus ABA. Overall, these results indicate that AtbZIP63 is an important node of the glucose-ABA interaction network. The mechanisms by which AtbZIP63 may participate in the fine-tuning of ABA-mediated abiotic stress responses according to sugar availability (i.e., energy status) are discussed.


Bioinformatics | 2005

MamMiBase: a mitochondrial genome database for mammalian phylogenetic studies

Ana Tereza Ribeiro de Vasconcelos; Ana Carolina R. Guimarães; Carlos Henrique M. Castelletti; Célia S. Caruso; Cristina Ribeiro; Fabiano Yokaichiya; Geraldo R. G. Armôa; Gislaine da Silva P. Pereira; Israel T. Silva; Carlos G. Schrago; Adélia L. V. Fernandes; Aline R. da Silveira; André G. Carneiro; Bruno M. Carvalho; Carlos Juliano M. Viana; Daniel Gramkow; Franklin J. Lima; Luiz Gustavo Guedes Corrêa; Maurício de Alvarenga Mudado; Pablo Nehab-Hess; Rangel de Souza; Régis L. Corrêa; Claudia A. M. Russo

UNLABELLED MamMiBase, the mammalian mitochondrial genome database, is a relational database of complete mitochondrial genome sequences of mammalian species. The database is useful for phylogenetic analysis, since it allows a ready retrieval of nucleotide and aminoacid individual alignments, in three different formats (NEXUS for PAUP program, for MEGA program and for PHYLIP program) of the 13 protein coding mitochondrial genes. The user may download the sequences that are useful for him/her based on their parameters values, such as sequence length, p-distances, base content, transition transversion ratio, gamma, which are also given by MamMiBase. A simple phylogenetic tree (neighbor-joining tree with Jukes Cantor distance) is also available for download, useful for parameter calculations and other simple tasks. AVAILABILITY MamMiBase is available at http://www.mammibase.lncc.br


Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2011

The K+ battery-regulating Arabidopsis K+ channel AKT2 is under the control of multiple post-translational steps

Michael Sandmann; Kamil Sklodowski; Pawel Gajdanowicz; Erwan Michard; Marcio Rocha; Judith Lucia Gomez-Porras; Wendy González; Luiz Gustavo Guedes Corrêa; Santiago J. Ramírez-Aguilar; Tracey Ann Cuin; Joost T. van Dongen; Jean-Baptiste Thibaud; Ingo Dreyer

Potassium (K+) is an important nutrient for plants. It serves as a cofactor of various enzymes and as the major inorganic solute maintaining plant cell turgor. In a recent study, an as yet unknown role of K+ in plant homeostasis was shown. It was demonstrated that K+ gradients in vascular tissues can serve as an energy source for phloem (re)loading processes and that the voltage-gated K+ channels of the AKT2-type play a unique role in this process. The AKT2 channel can be converted by phosphorylation of specific serine residues (S210 and S329) into a non-rectifying channel that allows a rapid efflux of K+ from the sieve element/companion cells (SE/CC) complex. The energy of this flux is used by other transporters for phloem (re)loading processes. Nonetheless, the results do indicate that post-translational modifications at S210 and S329 alone cannot explain AKT2 regulation. Here, we discuss the existence of multiple post-translational modification steps that work in concert to convert AKT2 from an inward-rectifying into a non-rectifying K+ channel.


Plant Molecular Biology | 2010

Microarray analysis of the moss Physcomitrella patens reveals evolutionarily conserved transcriptional regulation of salt stress and abscisic acid signalling

Sandra Richardt; Gerrit Timmerhaus; Daniel Lang; Enas Qudeimat; Luiz Gustavo Guedes Corrêa; Ralf Reski; Stefan A. Rensing; Wolfgang Frank


New Biotechnology | 2009

Gene regulatory networks and transcription factor transcriptomics

Bernd Mueller-Roeber; Samuel Arvidsson; Salma Balazadeh; Luiz Gustavo Guedes Corrêa; Paulino Pérez-Rodríguez; Diego Mauricio Riaño-Pachón

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Daniel Lang

University of Freiburg

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Ralf Reski

University of Freiburg

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