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Dive into the research topics where M. Rosario Espuny is active.

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Featured researches published by M. Rosario Espuny.


Research in Microbiology | 2013

Rice and bean AHL-mimic quorum-sensing signals specifically interfere with the capacity to form biofilms by plant-associated bacteria.

Francisco Pérez-Montaño; Irene Jiménez-Guerrero; Rocío Contreras Sánchez-Matamoros; Francisco Javier López-Baena; Francisco Javier Ollero; Miguel A. Rodríguez-Carvajal; Ramón A. Bellogín; M. Rosario Espuny

Many bacteria regulate their gene expression in response to changes in their population density in a process called quorum sensing (QS), which involves communication between cells mediated by small diffusible signal molecules termed autoinducers. n-acyl-homoserine-lactones (AHLs) are the most common autoinducers in proteobacteria. QS-regulated genes are involved in complex interactions between bacteria of the same or different species and even with some eukaryotic organisms. Eukaryotes, including plants, can interfere with bacterial QS systems by synthesizing molecules that interfere with bacterial QS systems. In this work, the presence of AHL-mimic QS molecules in diverse Oryza sativa (rice) and Phaseolus vulgaris (bean) plant-samples were detected employing three biosensor strains. A more intensive analysis using biosensors carrying the lactonase enzyme showed that bean and rice seed-extract contain molecules that lack the typical lactone ring of AHLs. Interestingly, these molecules specifically alter the QS-regulated biofilm formation of two plant-associated bacteria, Sinorhizobium fredii SMH12 and Pantoea ananatis AMG501, suggesting that plants are able to enhance or to inhibit the bacterial QS systems depending on the bacterial strain. Further studies would contribute to a better understanding of plant-bacteria relationships at the molecular level.


Research in Microbiology | 2011

Nodulation-gene-inducing flavonoids increase overall production of autoinducers and expression of N-acyl homoserine lactone synthesis genes in rhizobia ☆

Francisco Pérez-Montaño; Beatriz Guasch-Vidal; Sergio González-Barroso; Francisco Javier López-Baena; Teresa Cubo; Francisco Javier Ollero; Antonio M. Gil-Serrano; Miguel A. Rodríguez-Carvajal; Ramón A. Bellogín; M. Rosario Espuny

Legume-nodulating rhizobia use N-acyl homoserine lactones (AHLs) to regulate several physiological traits related to the symbiotic plant-microbe interaction. In this work, we show that Sinorhizobium fredii SMH12, Rhizobium etli ISP42 and Rhizobium sullae IS123, three rhizobial strains with different nodulation ranges, produced a similar pattern of AHL molecules, sharing, in all cases, production of N-octanoyl homoserine lactone and its 3-oxo and/or 3-hydroxy derivatives. Interestingly, production of AHLs was enhanced when these three rhizobia were grown in the presence of their respective nod-gene-inducing flavonoid, while a new molecule, C14-HSL, was produced by S. fredii SMH12 upon genistein induction. In addition, expression of AHL synthesis genes traI from S. fredii SMH12 and cinI and raiI from R. etli ISP42 increased when induced with flavonoids, as demonstrated by qRT-PCR analysis.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2002

Sinorhizobium fredii HH103 has a truncated nolO gene due to a -1 frameshift mutation that is conserved among other geographically distant S. fredii strains.

Nuria Madinabeitia; Ramón A. Bellogín; Ana M. Buendía-Clavería; M. Camacho; Teresa Cubo; M. Rosario Espuny; Antonio M. Gil-Serrano; María C. C. P. Lyra; Ahmed Moussaid; F. Javier Ollero; M. Eugenia Soria-Díaz; José M. Vinardell; Jing Zeng; José E. Ruiz-Sainz

Strain SVQ121 is a mutant derivative of Sinorhizobium fredii HH103 carrying a transposon Tn5-lacZ insertion into the nolO-coding region. Sequence analysis of the wild-type gene revealed that it is homologous to that of Rhizobium sp. NGR234, which is involved in the 3 (or 4)-O-carbamoylation of the nonreducing terminus of Nod factors. Downstream of nolO, as in Rhizobium sp. NGR234, the noeI gene responsible for methylation of the fucose moiety of Nod factors was found. SVQ121 Nod factors showed lower levels of methylation into the fucosyl residue than those of HH103-suggesting a polar effect of the transposon insertion into nolO over the noel gene. A noeI HH103 mutant was constructed. This mutant, SVQ503, produced Nod factors devoid of methyl groups, confirming that the S. fredii noeI gene is functional. Neither the nolO nor the noeI mutation affected the ability of HH103 to nodulate several host plants, but both mutations reduced competitiveness to nodulate soybean. The Nod factors produced by strain HH103, like those of other S. fredii isolates, lack carbamoyl residues. By using specific polymerase chain reaction primers, we sequenced the nolO gene of S. fredii strains USDA192, USDA193, USDA257, and 042B(s). All the analyzed strains showed the same -1 frameshift mutation that is present in the HH103 nolO-coding region. From these results, it is concluded that, regardless of their geographical origin, S. fredii strains carry the nolO-coding region but that it is truncated by the same base-pair deletion.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2012

Photorespiratory Metabolism and Nodule Function: Behavior of Lotus japonicus Mutants Deficient in Plastid Glutamine Synthetase

Margarita García-Calderón; Maurizio Chiurazzi; M. Rosario Espuny; Antonio J. Márquez

Two photorespiratory mutants of Lotus japonicus deficient in plastid glutamine synthetase (GS(2)) were examined for their capacity to establish symbiotic association with Mesorhizobium loti bacteria. Biosynthetic glutamine synthetase (GS) activity was reduced by around 40% in crude nodule extracts from mutant plants as compared with the wild type (WT). Western blot analysis further confirmed the lack of GS(2) polypeptide in mutant nodules. The decrease in GS activity affected the nodular carbon metabolism under high CO(2) (suppressed photorespiration) conditions, although mutant plants were able to form nodules and fix atmospheric nitrogen. However, when WT and mutant plants were transferred to an ordinary air atmosphere (photorespiratory active conditions) the nodulation process and nitrogen fixation were substantially affected, particularly in mutant plants. The number and fresh weight of mutant nodules as well as acetylene reduction activity showed a strong inhibition compared with WT plants. Optical microscopy studies from mutant plant nodules revealed the anticipated senescence phenotype linked to an important reduction in starch and sucrose levels. These results show that, in Lotus japonicus, photorespiration and, particularly, GS(2) deficiency result in profound limitations in carbon metabolism that affect the nodulation process and nitrogen fixation.


Systematic and Applied Microbiology | 1989

Mobilization of the symbiotic plasmid from a strain of Rhizobium sp. (Hedysarum coronarium)

F. Javier Ollero; M. Rosario Espuny; Ramón A. Bellogín

Summary The symbiotic plasmid (pSym) of Rhizobium sp. (Hedysarum coronarium) IS123 has been marked and mobilized to Nod - derivatives (cured of its pSym), which restored its symbiotic properties. When this pSym was transferred to the non-nodulating Rhizobium leguminosarum biovar trifolii RS169NA3, the transconjugants were able to induce delayed nodulation on Trifolium pratense as the strain IS123 did. One of these transconjugants had a deletion in the transferred pSym that affected nod genes. This deleted plasmid was similar in size to the deleted one present in a Nod - derivative of IS123, which was obtained after a SDS treatment.


Systematic and Applied Microbiology | 2015

Rhizobial strains isolated from nodules of Medicago marina in southwest Spain are abiotic-stress tolerant and symbiotically diverse

Cynthia Alías-Villegas; M. Teresa Cubo; Victoria Lara-Dampier; Ramón A. Bellogín; M. Camacho; Francisco Temprano; M. Rosario Espuny

The isolation and characterisation of nitrogen-fixing root nodule bacteria from Medicago marina, a tolerant legume species, were studied in two areas from southwest Spain. A total of 30 out of 82 isolates with distinct ERIC-PCR fingerprints were analysed on the basis of molecular (PCR-RFLP of the 16S-23S rDNA intergenic spacer region (IGS) with two endonucleases, analysis of the 16S rDNA and symbiotic nodC gene sequences, plasmid profiles and SDS-PAGE of LPS, including the partial sequence of the housekeeping gene glnII and the symbiotic gene nodA of some representatives), physiological (utilisation of sole carbon sources, tolerance to antibiotics, NaCl, heavy metals, temperature and pH) and symbiotic parameters (efficacy on M. marina, M. minima, M. murex, M. orbicularis, M. polymorpha, M. sativa and M. truncatula). All the bacteria isolated from M. marina nodules belonged to Ensifer meliloti, except for one strain that belonged to E. medicae. To determine the nodulation range of M. marina, 10 different Ensifer species were tested for their ability to nodulate on this plant. E. kummerowiae CCBAU 71714 and the E. medicae control strain M19.1 were the only Ensifer species tested that developed nitrogen-fixing nodules on this plant. Most of the M. marina-nodulating strains showed tolerance to stress factors and all of them shared the presence of a gene similar to cadA, a gene that encodes for a PIB-type ATPase, which is a transporter belonging to the large superfamily of ATP-driven pumps involved in the transport of metals across cell membranes.


Current Microbiology | 1989

Selection and symbiotic properties ofRhizobium leguminosarum biovarphaseoli strains harboring pRtr5a

M. Rosario Espuny; F. Javier Ollero; Ramón A. Bellogín

TheRhizobium leguminosarum biovartrifolii symbiotic plasmid pRtr5a has been transferred toR. leguminosarum biovarphaseoli RCR 3644-S1. The transconjugant selection had been done byTrifolium pratense plants. All transconjugants lacked the resident pSym, but had complete pRtr5a, and were Fix+ onT. repens andT. alexandrinum, Fix− onT. subterraneum, and formed a few small white and Fix− nodules onPhaseolus vulgaris. It is shown that this nodulation onP. vulgaris is due to pRtr5a. The presence of pRtr5a and/or the passage throughTrifolium pratense nodules provoke(s) the recipient strain symbiotic plasmid loss.


Carbohydrate Research | 2018

Structure of surface polysaccharides from Aeromonas sp. AMG272, a plant-growth promoting rhizobacterium isolated from rice rhizosphere.

Rocío Contreras Sánchez-Matamoros; Antonio M. Gil-Serrano; M. Rosario Espuny; Francisco Javier Ollero; Manuel Megías; Miguel A. Rodríguez-Carvajal

Aeromonas sp. AMG272 is a Gram-negative bacterium that has been isolated from agricultural soil and studied for its plant growth-promoting activities. Structures of the O-specific polysaccharide chain of the AMG272 lipopolysaccharide and its capsular polysaccharide were elucidated using GLC-MS and NMR spectroscopy. The structure of the O-specific polysaccharide, →4)-α-l-Rhap-(1 → 3)-β-d-GlcpNAc-(1→, has been found in other Aeromonas strains and related bacteria, whereas the structure of the capsular polysaccharide has not been reported before: →6)[β-d-Fucp3NAc4Ac-(1 → 3)]-α-d-GlcpNAc-(1 → 4)-α-d-Galp-(1 → 3)-α-d-GalpNAc-(1 → 4)-α-d-Galp-(1 → .


Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2008

Effect of Azospirillum brasilense coinoculated with Rhizobium on Phaseolus vulgaris flavonoids and Nod factor production under salt stress

Marta S. Dardanelli; Francisco J. Fernández de Córdoba; M. Rosario Espuny; Miguel Ángel Rodríguez Carvajal; María E. Soria Díaz; Antonio Miguel Gil Serrano; Yaacov Okon; Manuel Megías


Fems Microbiology Letters | 1993

In vivo formation of R‐prime plasmids harbouring nod genes of Rhizobium “hedysari”

F. Javier Ollero; M. Angeles Valverde; M. Rosario Espuny; Ramón A. Bellogín

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