María Eugenia Segretin
National Scientific and Technical Research Council
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by María Eugenia Segretin.
Annual Review of Phytopathology | 2011
Vivianne G. A. A. Vleeshouwers; Sylvain Raffaele; Jack H. Vossen; Nicolas Champouret; Ricardo Oliva; María Eugenia Segretin; Hendrik Rietman; Liliana M. Cano; A.A. Lokossou; G.J.T. Kessel; Mathieu A. Pel; Sophien Kamoun
Potato (Solanum tuberosum) is the worlds third-largest food crop. It severely suffers from late blight, a devastating disease caused by Phytophthora infestans. This oomycete pathogen secretes host-translocated RXLR effectors that include avirulence (AVR) proteins, which are targeted by resistance (R) proteins from wild Solanum species. Most Solanum R genes appear to have coevolved with P. infestans at its center of origin in central Mexico. Various R and Avr genes were recently cloned, and here we catalog characterized R-AVR pairs. We describe the mechanisms that P. infestans employs for evading R protein recognition and discuss partial resistance and partial virulence phenotypes in the context of our knowledge of effector diversity and activity. Genome-wide catalogs of P. infestans effectors are available, enabling effectoromics approaches that accelerate R gene cloning and specificity profiling. Engineering R genes with expanded pathogen recognition has also become possible. Importantly, monitoring effector allelic diversity in pathogen populations can assist in R gene deployment in agriculture.
Molecular Plant Pathology | 2009
Sebastian Schornack; Edgar Huitema; Liliana M. Cano; Tolga O. Bozkurt; Ricardo Oliva; Mireille van Damme; Simon Schwizer; Sylvain Raffaele; Angela Chaparro-Garcia; Rhys A. Farrer; María Eugenia Segretin; Jorunn I. B. Bos; Brian J. Haas; Michael C. Zody; Chad Nusbaum; Joe Win; Marco Thines; Sophien Kamoun
Long considered intractable organisms by fungal genetic research standards, the oomycetes have recently moved to the centre stage of research on plant-microbe interactions. Recent work on oomycete effector evolution, trafficking and function has led to major conceptual advances in the science of plant pathology. In this review, we provide a historical perspective on oomycete genetic research and summarize the state of the art in effector biology of plant pathogenic oomycetes by describing what we consider to be the 10 most important concepts about oomycete effectors.
Cellular Microbiology | 2010
Ricardo Oliva; Joe Win; Sylvain Raffaele; Laurence S. Boutemy; Tolga O. Bozkurt; Angela Chaparro-Garcia; María Eugenia Segretin; Remco Stam; Sebastian Schornack; Liliana M. Cano; Mireille van Damme; Edgar Huitema; Marco Thines; Mark J. Banfield; Sophien Kamoun
Ricardo Oliva,1 Joe Win,1 Sylvain Raffaele,1 Laurence Boutemy,2 Tolga O. Bozkurt,1 Angela Chaparro-Garcia,1 Maria Eugenia Segretin,1 Remco Stam,1 Sebastian Schornack,1 Liliana M. Cano,1 Mireille van Damme,1 Edgar Huitema,3 Marco Thines,1,4 Mark J. Banfield2 and Sophien Kamoun1* The Sainsbury Laboratory, Norwich NR4 7UH, UK. Department of Biological Chemistry, John Innes Centre, Norwich NR4 7UH, UK. Division of Plant Sciences, College of Life Sciences, University of Dundee at Scottish Crop Research Institute, Invergowrie, Dundee DD2 5DA, UK. University of Hohenheim, Institute of Botany 210, 70593 Stuttgart, Germany.
Cellular Microbiology | 2010
Ricardo Oliva; Joe Win; Sylvain Raffaele; Laurence S. Boutemy; Tolga O. Bozkurt; Angela Chaparro-Garcia; María Eugenia Segretin; Remco Stam; Sebastian Schornack; Liliana M. Cano; Mireille van Damme; Edgar Huitema; Marco Thines; Mark J. Banfield; Sophien Kamoun
Filamentous pathogens, such as plant pathogenic fungi and oomycetes, secrete an arsenal of effector molecules that modulate host innate immunity and enable parasitic infection. It is now well accepted that these effectors are key pathogenicity determinants that enable parasitic infection. In this review, we report on the most interesting features of a representative set of filamentous pathogen effectors and highlight recent findings. We also list and describe all the linear motifs reported to date in filamentous pathogen effector proteins. Some of these motifs appear to define domains that mediate translocation inside host cells.
Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2014
María Eugenia Segretin; Marina Pais; Marina Franceschetti; Angela Chaparro-Garcia; Jorunn I. B. Bos; Mark J. Banfield; Sophien Kamoun
Both plants and animals rely on nucleotide-binding domain and leucine-rich repeat-containing (NB-LRR or NLR) proteins to respond to invading pathogens and activate immune responses. How plant NB-LRR proteins respond to pathogens is poorly understood. We undertook a gain-of-function random mutagenesis screen of the potato NB-LRR immune receptor R3a to study how this protein responds to the effector protein AVR3a from the oomycete pathogen Phytophthora infestans. R3a response can be extended to the stealthy AVR3aEM isoform of the effector while retaining recognition of AVR3aKI. Each one of eight single amino acid mutations is sufficient to expand the R3a response to AVR3aEM and other AVR3a variants. These mutations occur across the R3a protein, from the N terminus to different regions of the LRR domain. Further characterization of these R3a mutants revealed that at least one of them was sensitized, exhibiting a stronger response than the wild-type R3a protein to AVR3aKI. Remarkably, the N336Y mutation, near the R3a nucleotide-binding pocket, conferred response to the effector protein PcAVR3a4 from the vegetable pathogen P. capsici. This work contributes to understanding how NB-LRR receptor specificity can be modulated. Together with knowledge of pathogen effector diversity, this strategy can be exploited to develop synthetic immune receptors.
Planta | 2010
Ezequiel Lentz; María Eugenia Segretin; Mauro Morgenfeld; Sonia Wirth; María José Dus Santos; M. Mozgovoj; Andrés Wigdorovitz; Fernando Bravo-Almonacid
Chloroplast transformation has an extraordinary potential for antigen production in plants because of the capacity to accumulate high levels of recombinant proteins and increased biosafety due to maternal plastid inheritance in most crops. In this article, we evaluate tobacco chloroplasts transformation for the production of a highly immunogenic epitope containing amino acid residues 135–160 of the structural protein VP1 of the foot and mouth disease virus (FMDV). To increase the accumulation levels, the peptide was expressed as a fusion protein with the β-glucuronidase reporter gene (uidA). The recombinant protein represented the 51% of the total soluble proteins in mature leaves, a level higher than those of the Rubisco large subunit, the most abundant protein in the leaf of a wild-type plant. Despite this high accumulation of heterologous protein, the transplastomic plants and wild-type tobacco were phenotypically indistinguishable. The FMDV epitope expressed in transplastomic plants was immunogenic in mice. These results show that transplastomic tobacco express efficiently the recombinant protein, and we conclude that this technology allows the production of large quantities of immunogenic proteins.
Molecular Biotechnology | 2009
Mauro Morgenfeld; María Eugenia Segretin; Sonia Wirth; Ezequiel Lentz; Alicia Zelada; Alejandro Mentaberry; Lutz Gissmann; Fernando Bravo-Almonacid
Cervical cancer linked to infection with human papillomavirus (HPV) is the third cause of cancer-related death in women. As the virus cannot be propagated in culture, vaccines have been based on recombinant antigens with inherited high-cost production. In a search of alternative cheap production system, E7 HPV type 16 protein, an attractive candidate for anticancer vaccine development, was engineered to be expressed in tobacco chloroplast. In addition, E7 coding sequence was fused to potato virus X coat protein (CP) to compare expression level. Results show that E7CP transcript accumulation reached lower levels than non-fused E7. However, antigen expression levels were higher for fusion protein indicating that CP stabilizes E7 peptide in the chloroplast stroma. These results support viability of transplastomic plants for antigen production and the relevance of improving recombinant peptide stability for certain transgenes to enhance protein accumulation in this organelle.
Plant Journal | 2011
Nicolás E. Blanco; Romina D. Ceccoli; María Eugenia Segretin; Hugo O. Poli; Ingo Voss; Michael Melzer; Fernando Bravo-Almonacid; Renate Scheibe; Mohammad-Reza Hajirezaei; Néstor Carrillo
Ferredoxins are the main electron shuttles in chloroplasts, accepting electrons from photosystem I and delivering them to essential oxido-reductive pathways in the stroma. Ferredoxin levels decrease under adverse environmental conditions in both plants and photosynthetic micro-organisms. In cyanobacteria and some algae, this decrease is compensated for by induction of flavodoxin, an isofunctional flavoprotein that can replace ferredoxin in many reactions. Flavodoxin is not present in plants, but tobacco lines expressing a plastid-targeted cyanobacterial flavodoxin developed increased tolerance to environmental stress. Chloroplast-located flavodoxin interacts productively with endogenous ferredoxin-dependent pathways, suggesting that its protective role results from replacement of stress-labile ferredoxin. We tested this hypothesis by using RNA antisense and interference techniques to decrease ferredoxin levels in transgenic tobacco. Ferredoxin-deficient lines showed growth arrest, leaf chlorosis and decreased CO(2) assimilation. Chlorophyll fluorescence measurements indicated impaired photochemistry, over-reduction of the photosynthetic electron transport chain and enhanced non-photochemical quenching. Expression of flavodoxin from the nuclear or plastid genome restored growth, pigment contents and photosynthetic capacity, and relieved the electron pressure on the electron transport chain. Tolerance to oxidative stress also recovered. In the absence of flavodoxin, ferredoxin could not be decreased below 45% of physiological content without fatally compromising plant survival, but in its presence, lines with only 12% remaining ferredoxin could grow autotrophically, with almost wild-type phenotypes. The results indicate that the stress tolerance conferred by flavodoxin expression in plants stems largely from functional complementation of endogenous ferredoxin by the cyanobacterial flavoprotein.
Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2015
Artemis Giannakopoulou; John F. C. Steele; María Eugenia Segretin; Tolga O. Bozkurt; Ji Zhou; Silke Robatzek; Mark J. Banfield; Marina Pais; Sophien Kamoun
Plants and animals rely on immune receptors, known as nucleotide-binding domain and leucine-rich repeat (NLR)-containing proteins, to defend against invading pathogens and activate immune responses. How NLR receptors respond to pathogens is inadequately understood. We previously reported single-residue mutations that expand the response of the potato immune receptor R3a to AVR3a(EM), a stealthy effector from the late blight oomycete pathogen Phytophthora infestans. I2, another NLR that mediates resistance to the will-causing fungus Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici, is the tomato ortholog of R3a. We transferred previously identified R3a mutations to I2 to assess the degree to which the resulting I2 mutants have an altered response. We discovered that wild-type I2 protein responds weakly to AVR3a. One mutant in the N-terminal coiled-coil domain, I2(I141N), appeared sensitized and displayed markedly increased response to AVR3a. Remarkably, I2(I141N) conferred partial resistance to P. infestans. Further, I2(I141N) has an expanded response spectrum to F. oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici effectors compared with the wild-type I2 protein. Our results suggest that synthetic immune receptors can be engineered to confer resistance to phylogenetically divergent pathogens and indicate that knowledge gathered for one NLR could be exploited to improve NLR from other plant species.
Plant Physiology | 2013
Nicolás E. Blanco; Romina D. Ceccoli; María V. Dalla Vía; Ingo Voss; María Eugenia Segretin; Fernando Bravo-Almonacid; Michael Melzer; Mohammad-Reza Hajirezaei; Renate Scheibe; Guy Hanke
Summary: Characterization of ferredoxin overexpressor transplastomic tobacco plants provides new evidence about the different roles of this protein and the effect of this feature on the regulation of the photosynthetic electron flow to produce alternative electron partitioning between linear and cyclic flow. Ferredoxins (Fds) are ferrosulfoproteins that function as low-potential electron carriers in plants. The Fd family is composed of several isoforms that share high sequence homology but differ in functional characteristics. In leaves, at least two isoforms conduct linear and cyclic photosynthetic electron transport around photosystem I, and mounting evidence suggests the existence of at least partial division of duties between these isoforms. To evaluate the contribution of different kinds of Fds to the control of electron fluxes along the photosynthetic electron transport chain, we overexpressed a minor pea (Pisum sativum) Fd isoform (PsFd1) in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) plants. The transplastomic OeFd1 plants exhibited variegated leaves and retarded growth and developmental rates. Photosynthetic studies of these plants indicated a reduction in carbon dioxide assimilation rates, photosystem II photochemistry, and linear electron flow. However, the plants showed an increase in nonphotochemical quenching, better control of excitation pressure at photosystem II, and no evidence of photoinhibition, implying a better dynamic regulation to remove excess energy from the photosynthetic electron transport chain. Finally, analysis of P700 redox status during illumination confirmed that the minor pea Fd isoform promotes enhanced cyclic flow around photosystem I. The two novel features of this work are: (1) that Fd levels achieved in transplastomic plants promote an alternative electron partitioning even under greenhouse light growth conditions, a situation that is exacerbated at higher light intensity measurements; and (2) that an alternative, minor Fd isoform has been overexpressed in plants, giving new evidence of labor division among Fd isoforms.