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Dive into the research topics where Margarita García-Calderón is active.

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Featured researches published by Margarita García-Calderón.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2012

Glutamine Synthetase in Legumes: Recent Advances in Enzyme Structure and Functional Genomics

Marco Betti; Margarita García-Calderón; Carmen M. Pérez-Delgado; Alfredo Credali; Guillermo Estivill; Francisco Galván; José M. Vega; Antonio J. Márquez

Glutamine synthetase (GS) is the key enzyme involved in the assimilation of ammonia derived either from nitrate reduction, N2 fixation, photorespiration or asparagine breakdown. A small gene family is encoding for different cytosolic (GS1) or plastidic (GS2) isoforms in legumes. We summarize here the recent advances carried out concerning the quaternary structure of GS, as well as the functional relationship existing between GS2 and processes such as nodulation, photorespiration and water stress, in this latter case by means of proline production. Functional genomic analysis using GS2-minus mutant reveals the key role of GS2 in the metabolic control of the plants and, more particularly, in carbon metabolism.


Plant and Cell Physiology | 2013

The K+-dependent asparaginase, NSE1, is crucial for plant growth and seed production in Lotus japonicus.

Alfredo Credali; Margarita García-Calderón; Svend Secher Dam; Jillian Perry; Antonio Díaz-Quintana; Martin Parniske; Trevor L. Wang; Jens Stougaard; José M. Vega; Antonio J. Márquez

The physiological role of K(+)-dependent and K(+)-independent asparaginases in plants remains unclear, and the contribution from individual isoforms during development is poorly understood. We have used reverse genetics to assess the phenotypes produced by the deficiency of K(+)-dependent NSE1 asparaginase in the model legume Lotus japonicus. For this purpose, four different mutants were identified by TILLING and characterized, two of which affected the structure and function of the asparaginase molecule and caused asparagine accumulation. Plant growth and total seed weight of mature mutant seeds as well as the level of both legumin and convicilin seed storage proteins were affected in the mutants. The mutants isolated in the present work are the first of their type in legumes and have enabled us to demonstrate the importance of asparagine and K(+)-dependent NSE1 asparaginase for nitrogen remobilization and seed production in L. japonicus plants.


Cells | 2012

Cellular Stress Following Water Deprivation in the Model Legume Lotus japonicus

Marco Betti; Carmen M. Pérez-Delgado; Margarita García-Calderón; Pedro Díaz; Jorge Monza; Antonio J. Márquez

Drought stress is one of the most important factors in the limitation of plant productivity worldwide. In order to cope with water deprivation, plants have adopted several strategies that produce major changes in gene expression. In this paper, the response to drought stress in the model legume Lotus japonicus was studied using a transcriptomic approach. Drought induced an extensive reprogramming of the transcriptome as related to various aspects of cellular metabolism, including genes involved in photosynthesis, amino acid metabolism and cell wall metabolism, among others. A particular focus was made on the genes involved in the cellular stress response. Key genes involved in the control of the cell cycle, antioxidant defense and stress signaling, were modulated as a consequence of water deprivation. Genes belonging to different families of transcription factors were also highly responsive to stress. Several of them were homologies to known stress-responsive genes from the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana, while some novel transcription factors were peculiar to the L. japonicus drought stress response.


Plant Physiology | 2013

Transcriptomic and Metabolic Changes Associated with Photorespiratory Ammonium Accumulation in the Model Legume Lotus japonicus

Carmen M. Pérez-Delgado; Margarita García-Calderón; Diego H. Sanchez; Michael K. Udvardi; Joachim Kopka; Antonio J. Márquez; Marco Betti

Transcriptomic and metabolomic analysis of a plastidic glutamine synthetase mutant shows a coordinate repression of photorespiratory genes and accumulation of several key metabolites. The transcriptomic and metabolic consequences of the lack of plastidic glutamine (Gln) synthetase in the model legume Lotus japonicus were investigated. Wild-type and mutant plants lacking the plastidic isoform of Gln synthetase were grown in conditions that suppress photorespiration and then transferred for different lengths of time to photorespiratory conditions. Transcript and metabolite levels were determined at the different time points considered. Under photorespiratory active conditions, the mutant accumulated high levels of ammonium, followed by its subsequent decline. A coordinate repression of the photorespiratory genes was observed in the mutant background. This was part of a greater modulation of the transcriptome, especially in the mutant, that was paralleled by changes in the levels of several key metabolites. The data obtained for the mutant represent the first direct experimental evidence for a coordinate regulation of photorespiratory genes over time. Metabolomic analysis demonstrated that mutant plants under active photorespiratory conditions accumulated high levels of several amino acids and organic acids, including intermediates of the Krebs cycle. An increase in Gln levels was also detected in the mutant, which was paralleled by an increase in cytosolic Gln synthetase1 gene transcription and enzyme activity levels. The global panoramic of the transcripts and metabolites that changed in L. japonicus plants during the transfer from photorespiration-suppressed to photorespiration-active conditions highlighted the link between photorespiration and several other cellular processes, including central carbon metabolism, amino acid metabolism, and secondary metabolism.


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.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2014

Reassimilation of ammonium in Lotus japonicus

Marco Betti; Margarita García-Calderón; Carmen M. Pérez-Delgado; Alfredo Credali; Peter Pal’ove-Balang; Guillermo Estivill; Miroslav Repčák; José M. Vega; Francisco Galván; Antonio J. Márquez

This review summarizes the most recent results obtained in the analysis of two important metabolic pathways involved in the release of internal sources of ammonium in the model legume Lotus japonicus: photorespiratory metabolism and asparagine breakdown mediated by aparaginase (NSE). The use of photorespiratory mutants deficient in plastidic glutamine synthetase (GS2) enabled us to investigate the transcriptomics and metabolomic changes associated with photorespiratory ammonium accumulation in this plant. The results obtained indicate the existence of a coordinate regulation of genes involved in photorespiratory metabolism. Other types of evidence illustrate the multiple interconnections existing among the photorespiratory pathway and other processes such as intermediate metabolism, nodule function, and secondary metabolism in this plant, all of which are substantially affected in GS2-deficient mutants because of the impairment of the photorespiratory cycle. Finally, the importance of asparagine metabolism in L. japonicus is highlighted because of the fact that asparagine constitutes the vast majority of the reduced nitrogen translocated between different organs of this plant. The different types of NSE enzymes and genes which are present in L. japonicus are described. There is a particular focus on the most abundant K(+)-dependent LjNSE1 isoform and how TILLING mutants were used to demonstrate by reverse genetics the importance of this particular isoform in plant growth and seed production.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Reassimilation of Photorespiratory Ammonium in Lotus japonicus Plants Deficient in Plastidic Glutamine Synthetase

Carmen M. Pérez-Delgado; Margarita García-Calderón; Antonio J. Márquez; Marco Betti

It is well established that the plastidic isoform of glutamine synthetase (GS2) is the enzyme in charge of photorespiratory ammonium reassimilation in plants. The metabolic events associated to photorespiratory NH4 + accumulation were analyzed in a Lotus japonicus photorespiratory mutant lacking GS2. The mutant plants accumulated high levels of NH4 + when photorespiration was active, followed by a sudden drop in the levels of this compound. In this paper it was examined the possible existence of enzymatic pathways alternative to GS2 that could account for this decline in the photorespiratory ammonium. Induction of genes encoding for cytosolic glutamine synthetase (GS1), glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) and asparagine synthetase (ASN) was observed in the mutant in correspondence with the diminishment of NH4 +. Measurements of gene expression, polypeptide levels, enzyme activity and metabolite levels were carried out in leaf samples from WT and mutant plants after different periods of time under active photorespiratory conditions. In the case of asparagine synthetase it was not possible to determine enzyme activity and polypeptide content; however, an increased asparagine content in parallel with the induction of ASN gene expression was detected in the mutant plants. This increase in asparagine levels took place concomitantly with an increase in glutamine due to the induction of cytosolic GS1 in the mutant, thus revealing a major role of cytosolic GS1 in the reassimilation and detoxification of photorespiratory NH4 + when the plastidic GS2 isoform is lacking. Moreover, a diminishment in glutamate levels was observed, that may be explained by the induction of NAD(H)-dependent GDH activity.


Archive | 2005

Nitrate and ammonium assimilatory enzymes

Antonio J. Márquez; Marco Betti; Margarita García-Calderón; Guillermo Estivill; Alfredo Credali; Purificación Pajuelo; Alicia Orea; M. Teresa Clemente; Eloísa Pajuelo; Francisco Galván

Protocols for extraction and assay of the key enzymes of nitrate and ammonium assimilation in Lotus japonicus are given in this chapter, together with the peculiarities observed for these assays in different organs and physiological situations of the plant.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2015

Modulation of phenolic metabolism under stress conditions in a Lotus japonicus mutant lacking plastidic glutamine synthetase

Margarita García-Calderón; Teresa Pons-Ferrer; Anna Mrázová; Peter Pal'ove-Balang; Mária Vilková; Carmen M. Pérez-Delgado; José M. Vega; Adriana Eliášová; Miroslav Repčák; Antonio J. Márquez; Marco Betti

This paper was aimed to investigate the possible implications of the lack of plastidic glutamine synthetase (GS2) in phenolic metabolism during stress responses in the model legume Lotus japonicus. Important changes in the transcriptome were detected in a GS2 mutant called Ljgln2-2, compared to the wild type, in response to two separate stress conditions, such as drought or the result of the impairment of the photorespiratory cycle. Detailed transcriptomic analysis showed that the biosynthesis of phenolic compounds was affected in the mutant plants in these two different types of stress situations. For this reason, the genes and metabolites related to this metabolic route were further investigated using a combined approach of gene expression analysis and metabolite profiling. A high induction of the expression of several genes for the biosynthesis of different branches of the phenolic biosynthetic pathway was detected by qRT-PCR. The extent of induction was always higher in Ljgln2-2, probably reflecting the higher stress levels present in this genotype. This was paralleled by accumulation of several kaempferol and quercetine glycosides, some of them described for the first time in L. japonicus, and of high levels of the isoflavonoid vestitol. The results obtained indicate that the absence of GS2 affects different aspects of phenolic metabolism in L. japonicus plants in response to stress.


Archive | 2014

Amino Acids and Drought Stress in Lotus: Use of Transcriptomics and Plastidic Glutamine Synthetase Mutants for New Insights in Proline Metabolism

Pedro Díaz; Marco Betti; Margarita García-Calderón; Carmen M. Pérez-Delgado; Santiago Signorelli; Omar Borsani; Antonio J. Márquez; Jorge Monza

SECTION I C INTRODUCTION 1. Environmental Change, and Plant Amino Acids and Their Derivatives - An Introduction SECTION II C AMINO ACIDS AND PEPTIDES, AND PLANT STRESS ADAPTATION 2. 5-Aminolevulinic Acid GBP5-ALA- A Multifunctional Amino Acid as A Plant Growth Stimulator and Stress Tolerance Factor 3. Cysteine - Jack of All Glutathione-based Plant Stress Defense Trades 4. Amino Acids and Drought Stress in Lotus: Use of Transcriptomics and Plastidic Glutamine Synthetase Mutants for New Insights in Proline Metabolism 5. Modulation of Proline - Implications in Plant Stress Tolerance and Development 6. Target Osmoprotectants for Abiotic Stress Tolerance in Crop Plants - Glycine Betaine and Proline SECTION III C AMINES AND BRASSINOSTEROIDS, AND PLANT STRESS ADAPTATION 7. Polyamines as Indicators and as Modulators in the Abiotic Stress in Plants 8. Polyamines in Stress Protection: Applications in Agriculture 9. Functional Role of Polyamines and Polyamine-Metabolizing Enzymes during Salinity, Drought and Cold stresses 10. Regulatory Role of Polyamines in Growth, Development and Abiotic Stress Tolerance in Plants 11. Polyamines - Involvement in Plant Stress Tolerance and Adaptation 12. Role of Polyamines in Plant-Pathogen Interactions 13. Role of Polyamines in Stress Management 14. Polyamines in Plant In Vitro Culture 15. Betaines and Related Osmoprotectants - Significance in Metabolic Engineering of Plant Stress Resistance 16. Brassinosteroids Role for Amino Acids, Peptides and Amines Modulation in Stressed Plants C A Review SECTION IV C APPRAISAL AND PERSPECTIVES 17. Plant Adaptation to Environmental Change and Significance of Amino Acids and Their Derivatives C Appraisal and Perspectives

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