Marianna Faraco
VU University Amsterdam
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Publication
Featured researches published by Marianna Faraco.
Plant Physiology | 2011
Marianna Faraco; Gian Pietro Di Sansebastiano; Kees Spelt; Ronald Koes; Francesca Quattrocchio
Protoplasts are widely used to study a variety of cellular processes because they are easy to transform, manipulate and image at high resolution. Protoplasts are thought to loose their original cell identity and therefore their origin is of minor unimportance. Hence, leaf mesophyll protoplasts are generally used to study processes active in other cell-types. However, there is no consensus whether data from protoplasts hold true for cells in intact tissues. We developed a procedure to isolate protoplasts from petals and compared their features with those of leaf protoplasts and intact tissues. Petal protoplasts derived from epidermis or mesophyll can be easily distinguished by their color and accurately reproduce the cell-specific differences in gene regulation and protein sorting observed in the intact tissue. We show that protoplasts maintain the features of the original cells in the intact tissue and, depending on their origin may produce completely different results in gene expression or protein localization assays. Consequently, analyses in leaf mesophyll protoplasts of genes or proteins that are expressed in other cell-types should be interpreted with caution. We conclude that with a few simple adjustments, to distinguish different cell-types, protoplasts can provide an excellent tool to reliably analyze highly cell-specific processes.
Plant and Cell Physiology | 2008
Reiaz Ul Rehman; Egidio Stigliano; Grantley W. Lycett; Liliane Sticher; Francesca Sbano; Marianna Faraco; Giuseppe Dalessandro; Gian Pietro Di Sansebastiano
The regulatory functions of Rab proteins in membrane trafficking lie in their ability to perform as molecular switches that oscillate between a GTP- and a GDP-bound conformation. The role of tomato LeRab11a in secretion was analyzed in tobacco protoplasts. Green fluorescent protein (GFP)/red fluorescent protein (RFP)-tagged LeRab11a was localized at the trans-Golgi network (TGN) in vivo. Two serines in the GTP-binding site of the protein were mutagenized, giving rise to the three mutants Rab11S22N, Rab11S27N and Rab11S22/27N. The double mutation reduced secretion of a marker protein, secRGUS (secreted rat beta-glucuronidase), by half, whereas each of the single mutations alone had a much smaller effect, showing that both serines have to be mutated to obtain a dominant negative effect on LeRab11a function. The dominant negative mutant was used to determine whether Rab11 is involved in the pathway(s) regulated by the plasma membrane syntaxins SYP121 and SYP122. Co-expression of either of these GFP-tagged syntaxins with the dominant negative Rab11S22/27N mutant led to the appearance of endosomes, but co-expression of GFP-tagged SYP122 also labeled the endoplasmic reticulum and dotted structures. However, co-expression of Rab11S22/27N with SYP121 dominant negative mutants decreased secretion of secRGUS further compared with the expression of Rab11S22/27N alone, whereas co-expression of Rab11S22/27N with SYP122 had no synergistic effect. With the same essay, the difference between SYP121- and SYP122-dependent secretion was then evidenced. The results suggest that Rab11 regulates anterograde transport from the TGN to the plasma membrane and strongly implicate SYP122, rather than SYP121. The differential effect of LeRab11a supports the possibility that SYP121 and SYP122 drive independent secretory events.
Molecular Plant | 2013
Maria De Benedictis; Gianluca Bleve; Marianna Faraco; Egidio Stigliano; Francesco Grieco; Gabriella Piro; Giuseppe Dalessandro; Gian Pietro Di Sansebastiano
Plant sensitive factor attachment protein receptors (SNAREs) encoded by genes of the same sub-family are generally considered as redundant in promoting vesicle-associated membrane fusion events. Nonetheless, the application of innovative experimental approaches highlighted that members of the same gene sub-family often have different functional specificities. In this work, two closely related Qc-SNAREs--the AtSYP51 and the AtSYP52--are compared in their ability to influence different secretory pathways. Their role in the vesicle sorting to the central vacuole has been revised and they were found to have a novel inhibitory function. When transiently overexpressed, the SYP51 and the SYP52 distributed between the TGN and the tonoplast. Our data demonstrate that these SYPs (syntaxin of plants) act as t-SNARE when present on the membrane of TGN/PVC, whereas they behave as inhibitory or interfering SNAREs (i-SNAREs) when they accumulate on the tonoplast. Moreover, the performed functional analysis indicated that the AtSYP51 and the AtSYP52 roles differ in the traffic to the vacuole. The findings are a novel contribution to the functional characterization of plant SNAREs that reveals additional non-fusogenic roles.
Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 2013
Egidio Stigliano; Marianna Faraco; Jean-Marc Neuhaus; Anna Montefusco; Giuseppe Dalessandro; Gabriella Piro; Gian Pietro Di Sansebastiano
Vacuolar Sorting Determinants (VSDs) have been extensively studied in plants but the mechanisms for the accumulation of storage proteins in somatic tissues are not yet fully understood. In this work we used two mutated versions of well-documented vacuolar fluorescent reporters, a GFP fusion in frame with the C-terminal VSD of tobacco chitinase (GFPChi) and an N-terminal fusion in frame with the sequence-specific VSD of the barley cysteine protease aleurain (AleuGFP). The GFP sequence was mutated to present an N-glycosylation site at the amino-acid position 133. The reporters were transiently expressed in Nicotiana tabacum protoplasts and agroinfiltrated in Nicotiana benthamiana leaves and their distribution was identical to that of the non-glycosylated versions. With the glycosylated GFPs we could highlight a differential ENDO-H sensitivity and therefore differential glycan modifications. This finding suggests two different and independent routes to the vacuole for the two reporters. BFA also had a differential effect on the two markers and further, inhibition of COPII trafficking by a specific dominant-negative mutant (NtSar1h74l) confirmed that GFPChi transport from the ER to the vacuole is not fully dependent on the Golgi apparatus.
The Plant Cell | 2016
Walter Verweij; Cornelis Spelt; Mattijs Bliek; Michel de Vries; Niek Wit; Marianna Faraco; Ronald Koes; Francesca Quattrocchio
PH3 of petunia is a WRKY protein that is homologous to TRANSPARENT TESTA GLABRA2 from Arabidopsis. The WD40 proteins ANTHOCYANIN11 (AN11) from petunia (Petunia hybrida) and TRANSPARENT TESTA GLABRA1 (TTG1) from Arabidopsis thaliana and associated basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) and MYB transcription factors activate a variety of differentiation processes. In petunia petals, AN11 and the bHLH protein AN1 activate, together with the MYB protein AN2, anthocyanin biosynthesis and, together with the MYB protein PH4, distinct genes, such as PH1 and PH5, that acidify the vacuole. To understand how AN1 and AN11 activate anthocyanin biosynthetic and PH genes independently, we isolated PH3. We found that PH3 is a target gene of the AN11-AN1-PH4 complex and encodes a WRKY protein that can bind to AN11 and is required, in a feed-forward loop, together with AN11-AN1-PH4 for transcription of PH5. PH3 is highly similar to TTG2, which regulates hair development, tannin accumulation, and mucilage production in Arabidopsis. Like PH3, TTG2 can bind to petunia AN11 and the Arabidopsis homolog TTG1, complement ph3 in petunia, and reactivate the PH3 target gene PH5. Our findings show that the specificity of WD40-bHLH-MYB complexes is in part determined by interacting proteins, such as PH3 and TTG2, and reveal an unanticipated similarity in the regulatory circuitry that controls petunia vacuolar acidification and Arabidopsis hair development.
Plant Cell Reports | 2010
Nadine Paris; Bruno Saint-Jean; Marianna Faraco; Weronika Krzeszowiec; Giuseppe Dalessandro; Jean-Marc Neuhaus; Gian Pietro Di Sansebastiano
The complex-type N-linked glycans of plants differ markedly in structure from those of animals. Like those of insects and mollusks they lack terminal sialic acid(s) and may contain an α-(1,3)-fucose (Fuc) linked to the proximal GlcNAc residue and/or a β-(1,2)-xylose (Xyl) residue attached to the proximal mannose (Man) of the glycan core. N-glycosylated GFPs were used in previous studies showing their effective use to report on membrane traffic between the ER and the Golgi apparatus in plant cells. In all these cases glycosylated tags were added at the GFP termini. Because of the position of the tag and depending on the sorting and accumulation site of these modified GFP, there is always a risk of processing and degradation, and this protein design cannot be considered ideal. Here, we describe the development of three different GFPs in which the glycosylation site is internally localized at positions 80, 133, or 172 in the internal sequence. The best glycosylation site was at position 133. This glycosylated GFPgl133 appears to be protected from undesired processing of the glycosylation site and represents a bivalent reporter for biochemical and microscopic studies. After experimental validation, we can conclude that amino acid 133 is an effective glycosylation site and that the GFPgl133 is a powerful tool for in vivo investigations in plant cell biology.
Plant Biosystems | 2009
G. P. Di Sansebastiano; Marianna Faraco; J. Zouhar; Giuseppe Dalessandro
Abstract SNARE (soluble N‐ethylmaleimide‐sensitive factor attachment protein receptor) proteins are the principal actors of the concluding step of membrane traffic, the fusion of a vesicle with its acceptor membrane. The specificity of their interactions has been studied mostly in vitro and is now waiting for innovative approaches to elucidate the highly complex in vivo situations with which the multicellular organisms have satisfied the need for polarized and regulated secretion or vacuolar/lysosomal/endosomal trafficking. Plants, because of their high number of SNARE genes, their complex vacuolar system and peculiarity of established models for studying polarized and regulated exocytosis (pollen tube, root hair), represent a particularly challenging system for understanding the fine details of SNARE functions. The specificity of SNARE interactions resides in their structure but is certainly modulated by the cellular environment and a number of accessory factors; consequently, only in vivo experiments will reveal the full complexity of SNARE‐regulated processes. This review will highlight the major areas of interest and the approaches to study plant SNAREs specificity in vivo.
Journal of Biotechnology | 2015
Gian Pietro Di Sansebastiano; Francesca Rizzello; Miriana Durante; Sofia Caretto; Rossella Nisi; Angelo De Paolis; Marianna Faraco; Anna Montefusco; Gabriella Piro; Giovanni Mita
Plants are ideal bioreactors for the production of macromolecules but transport mechanisms are not fully understood and cannot be easily manipulated. Several attempts to overproduce recombinant proteins or secondary metabolites failed. Because of an independent regulation of the storage compartment, the product may be rapidly degraded or cause self-intoxication. The case of the anti-malarial compound artemisinin produced by Artemisia annua plants is emblematic. The accumulation of artemisinin naturally occurs in the apoplast of glandular trichomes probably involving autophagy and unconventional secretion thus its production by undifferentiated tissues such as cell suspension cultures can be challenging. Here we characterize the subcellular compartmentalization of several known fluorescent markers in protoplasts derived from Artemisia suspension cultures and explore the possibility to modify compartmentalization using a modified SNARE protein as molecular tool to be used in future biotechnological applications. We focused on the observation of the vacuolar organization in vivo and the truncated form of AtSYP51, 51H3, was used to induce a compartment generated by the contribution of membrane from endocytosis and from endoplasmic reticulum to vacuole trafficking. The artificial compartment crossing exocytosis and endocytosis may trap artemisinin stabilizing it until extraction; indeed, it is able to increase total enzymatic activity of a vacuolar marker (RGUSChi), probably increasing its stability. Exploring the 51H3-induced compartment we gained new insights on the function of the SNARE SYP51, recently shown to be an interfering-SNARE, and new hints to engineer eukaryote endomembranes for future biotechnological applications.
Cell Reports | 2014
Marianna Faraco; Cornelis Spelt; Mattijs Bliek; Walter Verweij; Atsushi Hoshino; Luca Espen; Bhakti Prinsi; Rinse Jaarsma; Eray Tarhan; Albertus H. de Boer; Gian Pietro Di Sansebastiano; Ronald Koes; Francesca Quattrocchio
Cell Reports | 2017
Marianna Faraco; Yanbang Li; Shuangjiang Li; Cornelis Spelt; Gian Pietro Di Sansebastiano; Lara Reale; Francesco Ferranti; Walter Verweij; Ronald Koes; Francesca Quattrocchio