Manuel Fernández-López
Spanish National Research Council
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Featured researches published by Manuel Fernández-López.
Molecular Microbiology | 1996
Peter Mergaert; Wim D'Haeze; Manuel Fernández-López; Danny Geelen; Koen Goethals; Jean-Claude Promé; Marc Van Montagu; Marcelle Holsters
The DNA region downstream of the nodABCSUIJ operon of Azorhizobium caulinodans was further characterized and two new genes, nodZ and noeC were identified in the same operon. The A. caulinodans wild‐type strain produces a population of Nod factors that, at the reducing end, are either unmodified or carry a D‐arabinosyl and/or an L‐fucosyl branch. Nod factors produced by Tn5‐insertion mutants in nodZnoeC, and the separate nolK locus, were analysed by thin‐layer chromatography and mass spectrometry. Fucosylation of Nod factors depended on both nodZ and nolK. Arabinosylation depended on noeC and/or downstream genes. Protein extracts of A. caulinodans contained an enzymatic activity for fucose transfer from GDP‐fucose to chitooligosaccharides and to Nod factors. By mutant analysis and expression of nodZ in Escherichia coli, the fucosyltransferase activity was ascribed to the protein encoded by nodZ. In addition, a Nod factor fucosyltransferase activity, independent of nodZ or other known nod genes, was detected in A. caulinodans. Finally, on the basis of sequence similarity of the nolK gene product, and mass spectrometric analysis of Nod factors produced by a nolK mutant, we propose that this gene is involved in the synthesis of GDP‐fucose.
International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2002
En Tao Wang; Zhi Yuan Tan; Anne Willems; Manuel Fernández-López; Barbara Reinhold-Hurek; Esperanza Martínez-Romero
Sinorhizobium morelense sp. nov. is described to designate a group of bacteria isolated from root nodules of Leucaena leucocephala. S. morelense shows 98% 16S rRNA gene sequence similarity to some Sinorhizobium species and to Ensifer adhaerens. This novel species is distinguished from other Sinorhizobium species and from E. adhaerens by DNA-DNA hybridization, 165 rRNA gene restriction fragments and sequence and some distinctive phenotypic features. Strains of this species are highly resistant to some antibiotics, such as carbenicillin (1 mg ml(-1)), kanamycin (500 microg ml(-1)) and erythromycin (300 microg ml(-1)). They do not form nodules, but a nodulating strain, Lc57, is closely related to the novel species. Strain Lc04T (= LMG 21331T = CFN E1007T) is designated as the type strain of this novel species.
Gene | 2002
Nicolás Toro; Ma Dolores Molina-Sánchez; Manuel Fernández-López
Group II introns are catalytic RNAs and mobile genetic elements. Phylogenetic characterization of group II intron-encoded reverse transcriptases (RTs) established seven classes: the mitochondrial class, chloroplast-like classes 1 and 2, and bacterial classes A, B, C, and D. In this study, we identified and characterized a new bacterial class of group II introns, bacterial class E, on the basis of phylogenetic analysis of the intron-encoded protein (IEP) RT and determination of a consensus intron RNA structure.
Molecular Microbiology | 1996
Manuel Fernández-López; Wim D'Haeze; Peter Mergaert; Christa Verplancke; Jean-Claude Promé; Marc Van Montagu; Marcelle Holsters
Lipo‐chitooligosaccharide (LCO) Nod factors are produced and secreted by rhizobia and trigger nodule development in leguminous host plants. The products of the bacterial nodlJ genes are related to transporters of capsular polysaccharides and were proposed to be involved in LCO transport. We have studied nodlJ of Azorhizobium caulinodans ORS571 by analysis of cell‐associated and secreted radioactively labelled Nod factors in wild‐type ORS571, a nodJ mutant and a complemented strain. Secretion was strongly reduced in the nodJ mutant, and restored to wild‐type levels after complementation. Constructs were made for expression of combinations of different nod genes in Escherichia coli DH5a. The strain DH5α(pUCNABCSU) synthesized LCOs, but they were only secreted when a plasmid containing both nodl and nodJ was supplied in trans, nodi or nodJ alone was not sufficient. In E. coli as well as in Azorhizobium, the nod/J‐encoded transporter showed a specificity for more hydrophilic LCOs.
Systematic and Applied Microbiology | 2014
José F. Cobo-Díaz; Pilar Martínez-Hidalgo; Antonio José Fernández-González; Eustoquio Martínez-Molina; Nicolás Toro; Encarna Velázquez; Manuel Fernández-López
Genista versicolor is an endemic legume from Sierra Nevada National Park which constitutes one of the UNESCO-recognized Biosphere Reserves. In the present study, a collection of strains nodulating this legume was analysed in characteristic soils of this ecosystem. Most strains nodulating G. versicolor belonged to rrs group I within the genus Bradyrhizobium and only one strain, named GV137, belonged to rrs group II from which only a single species, B. retamae, has been described in Europe to date. Strain GV137, and some strains from rrs group I, belonged to putative new species of Bradyrhizobium, although most strains from group I belonged to B. canariense, according to the ITS fragment and atpD gene analysis. This result contrasted with those obtained in Genista tinctoria in Northeast Europe whose endosymbionts were identified as B. japonicum. The analysis of the symbiotic nodC and nifH genes carried by G. versicolor-nodulating strains showed that most of them belonged to symbiovar genistearum, as did those isolated from G. tinctoria. Nevertheless, strain GV137, belonging to rrs group II, formed a divergent lineage that constituted a novel symbiovar within the genus Bradyrhizobium for which the name sierranevadense is proposed. This finding showed that the Genisteae are not restrictive legumes only nodulated by symbiovar genistearum, since Genista is a promiscuous legume nodulated by at least two symbiovars of Bradyrhizobium, as occurs in Retama species.
Ecology and Evolution | 2012
Jorge Curiel Yuste; Josep Barba; Antonio José Fernández-González; Manuel Fernández-López; Stefania Mattana; Jordi Martínez-Vilalta; Pau Nolis; Francisco Lloret
The aim of this study was to understand how drought-induced tree mortality and subsequent secondary succession would affect soil bacterial taxonomic composition as well as soil organic matter (SOM) quantity and quality in a mixed Mediterranean forest where the Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) population, affected by climatic drought-induced die-off, is being replaced by Holm-oaks (HO; Quercus ilex). We apply a high throughput DNA pyrosequencing technique and 13C solid-state Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (CP-MAS 13C NMR) to soils within areas of influence (defined as an surface with 2-m radius around the trunk) of different trees: healthy and affected (defoliated) pines, pines that died a decade ago and healthy HOs. Soil respiration was also measured in the same spots during a spring campaign using a static close-chamber method (soda lime). A decade after death, and before aerial colonization by the more competitive HOs have even taken place, we could not find changes in soil C pools (quantity and/or quality) associated with tree mortality and secondary succession. Unlike C pools, bacterial diversity and community structure were strongly determined by tree mortality. Convergence between the most abundant taxa of soil bacterial communities under dead pines and colonizer trees (HOs) further suggests that physical gap colonization was occurring below-ground before above-ground colonization was taken place. Significantly higher soil respiration rates under dead trees, together with higher bacterial diversity and anomalously high representation of bacteria commonly associated with copiotrophic environments (r-strategic bacteria) further gives indications of how drought-induced tree mortality and secondary succession were influencing the structure of microbial communities and the metabolic activity of soils.
Plant and Soil | 2012
G. Torres-Cortés; V. Millán; Antonio José Fernández-González; José Félix Aguirre-Garrido; Hugo Ramírez-Saad; Manuel Fernández-López; Nicolás Toro; Francisco Martínez-Abarca
Background and aimsThe Tehuacán-Cuitcatlán reserve is an area of unique plant biodiversity mostly in the form of xerophytes, with exceptionally high numbers of rare and endemic species. This endemism results partly from the characteristics of the climate of this area, with two distinct seasons: rainy and dry seasons. Although rhizosphere communities must be critical in the function of this ecosystem, understanding the structure of these communities is currently limited. This is the first molecular study of the microbial diversity present in the rhizosphere of Mamillaria carnea.MethodsTotal DNA was obtained from soil and rhizosphere samples at three locations in the Tehuacán Cuicatlán Reserve, during dry and rainy seasons. Temperature gradient gel electrophoresisis (TGGE) fingerprinting, 16S rRNA gene libraries and pyrosequencing were used to investigate bacterial diversity in the rhizosphere of Mammillaria carnea and changes in the microbial community between seasons.ResultsDeep sequencing data reveal a higher level of biodiversity in the dry season. Statistical analyses based on these data indicates that the composition of the bacterial community differed between both seasons affecting to members of the phyla Acidobacteria, Cyanobacteria, Gemmatimonadetes, Plantomycetes, Actinobacteria and Firmicutes. In addition, the depth of sequencing performed (>24,000 reads) enables detection of changes in the relative abundance of lower bacterial taxa (novel bacterial phylotypes) indicative of the increase of specific bacterial populations due to the season.ConclusionsThis study states the basis of the bacterial diversity in the rhizosphere of cacti in semi-arid environments and it is a sequence-based demonstration of community shifts in different seasons.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2011
Fernando M. García-Rodríguez; Antonio Barrientos-Durán; Vanessa Díaz-Prado; Manuel Fernández-López; Nicolás Toro
ABSTRACT The group IIA intron Ll.LtrB from Lactococcus lactis and the group IIB intron EcI5 from Escherichia coli have intron-encoded proteins (IEP) with a DNA-binding domain (D) and an endonuclease domain (En). Both have been successfully retargeted to invade target DNAs other than their wild-type target sites. RmInt1, a subclass IIB3/D intron with an IEP lacking D and En domains, is highly active in retrohoming in its host, Sinorhizobium meliloti. We found that RmInt1 was also mobile in E. coli and that retrohoming in this heterologous host depended on temperature, being more efficient at 28°C than at 37°C. Furthermore, we programmed RmInt1 to recognize target sites other than its wild-type site. These retargeted introns efficiently and specifically retrohome into a recipient plasmid target site or a target site present as a single copy in the chromosome, generating a mutation in the targeted gene. Our results extend the range of group II introns available for gene targeting.
Frontiers in Plant Science | 2016
David Correa-Galeote; Eulogio J. Bedmar; Antonio José Fernández-González; Manuel Fernández-López; Gregorio J. Arone
Maize (Zea mays L.) is the staple diet of the native peasants in the Quechua region of the Peruvian Andes who continue growing it in small plots called chacras following ancestral traditions. The abundance and structure of bacterial communities associated with the roots of amilaceous maize has not been studied in Andean chacras. Accordingly, the main objective of this study was to describe the rhizospheric bacterial diversity of amilaceous maize grown either in the presence or the absence of bur clover cultivated in soils from the Quechua maize belt. Three 16S rRNA gene libraries, one corresponding to sequences of bacteria from bulk soil of a chacra maintained under fallow conditions, the second from the rhizosphere of maize-cultivated soils, and the third prepared from rhizospheric soil of maize cultivated in intercropping with bur clover were examined using pyrosequencing tags spanning the V4 and V5 hypervariable regions of the gene. A total of 26031 sequences were found that grouped into 5955 distinct operational taxonomic units which distributed in 309 genera. The numbers of OTUs in the libraries from the maize-cultivated soils were significantly higher than those found in the libraries from bulk soil. One hundred ninety seven genera were found in the bulk soil library and 234 and 203 were in those from the maize and maize/bur clover-cultivated soils. Sixteen out of the 309 genera had a relative abundance higher than 0.5% and the were (in decreasing order of abundance) Gp4, Gp6, Flavobacterium, Subdivision3 genera incertae sedis of the Verrucomicrobia phylum, Gemmatimonas, Dechloromonas, Ohtaekwangia, Rhodoferax, Gaiella, Opitutus, Gp7, Spartobacteria genera incertae sedis, Terrimonas, Gp5, Steroidobacter and Parcubacteria genera incertae sedis. Genera Gp4 and Gp6 of the Acidobacteria, Gemmatimonas and Rhodoferax were the most abundant in bulk soil, whereas Flavobacterium, Dechloromonas and Ohtaekwangia were the main genera in the rhizosphere of maize intercropped with bur clover, and Gp4, Subdivision3 genera incertae sedis of phylum Verrucomicrobia, Gp6 and Rhodoferax were the main genera in the rhizosphere of maize plants. Taken together, our results suggest that bur clover produces specific changes in rhizospheric bacterial diversity of amilaceous maize plants.
Microbial Ecology | 2007
Pablo J. Villadas; Manuel Fernández-López; Hugo Ramírez-Saad; Nicolás Toro
The rainforest of French Guiana is still largely unaffected by human activity. Various pristine sites like the Paracou Research Station are devoted to study this tropical ecosystem. We used culture-independent techniques, like polymerase chain reaction-temperature gradient gel electrophoresis, and construction of clone libraries of partial 16S rRNA and nifH genes, to analyze the composition of the bacterial community in the rhizosphere of mature trees of Eperua falcata and Dicorynia guianensis, both species within the Caesalpiniaceae family. E. falcata is one of the more abundant pioneer tree species in this ecosystem and so far, no root nodules have ever been found. However, its nitrogen-fixing status is regarded as “uncertain”, whereas D. guianensis is clearly considered a non-nitrogen-fixing plant. The rhizospheres of these mature trees contain specific bacterial communities, including several currently found uncultured microorganisms. In these communities, there are putative nitrogen-fixing bacteria specifically associated to each tree: D. guianensis harbors several Rhizobium spp. and E. falcata members of the genera Burkholderia and Bradyrhizobium. In addition, nifH sequences in the rhizosphere of the latter tree were very diverse. Retrieved sequences were related to bacteria belonging to the α-, β-, and γ-Proteobacteria in the E. falcata rhizoplane, whereas only two sequences related to γ-Proteobacteria were found in D. guianensis. Differences in the bacterial communities and the abundance and diversity of nifH sequences in E. falcata rhizosphere suggest that this tree could obtain nitrogen through a nonnodulating bacterial interaction.