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Dive into the research topics where Maura Cardarelli is active.

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Featured researches published by Maura Cardarelli.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1987

Agrobacterium rhizogenes T-DNA genes capable of inducing hairy root phenotype.

Maura Cardarelli; Domenico Mariotti; M. Pomponi; Laura Spanò; I. Capone; Paolo Costantino

SummarySegments of the TL-DNA of the agropine type Ri plasmid pRi 1855 encompassing single and groups of open-reading frames were cloned in the Ti plasmid-derived binary vector system Bin 19. Leaf disc infections on Nicotiana tabacum led to transformed plants, some of which showed typical hairy root phenotypes, such as the wrinkled leaf morphology, excessive and partially non geotropic root systems and the ability of leaf explants to differentiate roots in a hormone-free culture medium. Particularly interestingly, most of these traits were shown by plants transformed with a TL-DNA segment encompassing the single ORF 11, corresponding to the rolB locus. Hairy root can be induced by this latter T-DNA segment on wounded stems of tobacco plants; hairy root induction on carrot discs requires, on the contrary, a more complex complement of TL-DNA genes.


The Plant Cell | 2008

Auxin Regulates Arabidopsis Anther Dehiscence, Pollen Maturation, and Filament Elongation

Valentina Cecchetti; Maria Maddalena Altamura; Giuseppina Falasca; Paolo Costantino; Maura Cardarelli

We provide evidence on the localization, synthesis, transport, and effects of auxin on the processes occurring late in Arabidopsis thaliana stamen development: anther dehiscence, pollen maturation, and preanthesis filament elongation. Expression of auxin-sensitive reporter constructs suggests that auxin effects begin in anthers between the end of meiosis and the bilocular stage in the somatic tissues involved in the first step of dehiscence as well as in the microspores and in the junction region between anther and filament. In situ hybridizations of the auxin biosynthetic genes YUC2 and YUC6 suggest that auxin is synthesized in anthers. In agreement with the timing of auxin effects, the TIR1, AFB1, AFB2, and AFB3 auxin receptor-encoding genes are transcribed in anthers only during late stages of development starting at the end of meiosis. We found that in tir1 afb triple and quadruple mutants, anther dehiscence and pollen maturation occur earlier than in the wild type, causing the release of mature pollen grains before the completion of filament elongation. We also assessed the contribution of auxin transport to late stamen developmental processes. Our results suggest that auxin synthesized in anthers plays a major role in coordinating anther dehiscence and pollen maturation, while auxin transport contributes to the independent regulation of preanthesis filament elongation.


Planta | 2006

Overexpression of Arabidopsis phytochelatin synthase in tobacco plants enhances Cd2+ tolerance and accumulation but not translocation to the shoot

Mirella Pomponi; Vincenzo Censi; Valentina Di Girolamo; Angelo De Paolis; Luigi Sanità di Toppi; Rita Aromolo; Paolo Costantino; Maura Cardarelli

Phytochelatins (PCs) are metal binding peptides involved in heavy metal detoxification. To assess whether enhanced phytochelatin synthesis would increase heavy metal tolerance and accumulation in plants, we overexpressed the Arabidopsis phytochelatin synthase gene (AtPCS1) in the non-accumulator plant Nicotiana tabacum. Wild-type plants and plants harbouring the Agrobacterium rhizogenes rolB oncogene were transformed with a 35SAtPCS1 construct. Root cultures from rolB plants could be easily established and we demonstrated here that they represent a reliable system to study heavy metal tolerance. Cd2+ tolerance in cultured rolB roots was increased as a result of overexpression of AtPCS1, and further enhanced when reduced glutathione (GSH, the substrate of PCS1) was added to the culture medium. Accordingly, HPLC analysis showed that total PC production in PCS1-overexpressing rolB roots was higher than in rolB roots in the presence of GSH. Overexpression of AtPCS1 in whole seedlings led to a twofold increase in Cd2+ accumulation in the roots and shoots of both rolB and wild-type seedlings. Similarly, a significant increase in Cd2+ accumulation linked to a higher production of PCs in both roots and shoots was observed in adult plants. However, the percentage of Cd2+ translocated to the shoots of seedlings and adult overexpressing plants was unaffected. We conclude that the increase in Cd2+ tolerance and accumulation of PCS1 overexpressing plants is directly related to the availability of GSH, while overexpression of phytochelatin synthase does not enhance long distance root-to-shoot Cd2+ transport.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1989

Induction and growth properties of carrot roots with different complements of Agrobacterium rhizogenes T-DNA

I. Capone; Laura Spanò; Maura Cardarelli; Daniela Bellincampi; A. Petit; Paolo Costantino

Single and multiple infections of carrot discs were carried out with Agrobacterium strains harbouring different segments of pRi1855 TL-DNA cloned in the binary vector Bin 19 and with a strain carrying the TR-DNA from the same Ri plasmid. Roots induced by the various co-inoculations were cultured and their growth patterns were followed. Abundant roots could be induced by TL-DNA rol genes A, B and C as a single insert (rolA+B+C) and by rolB alone provided an extended segment beyond its 5′ noncoding region was included in the construction. A depression of rooting capability was caused by the inclusion of rolC together with rolB (rolB+C). In all cases co-inoculation with the Agrobacterium carrying TR-DNA-borne auxin genes was necessary for root induction since none of the rol constructions was in itself capable of eliciting any response; an exceeding majority of these roots were however shown to contain rol genes but no TR-DNA. Rooting was also elicited if rol constructions were co-inoculated with a strain carrying TL-DNA genes 13 and 14 (ORF13+14) instead of the TR-DNA strain. These roots were shown to contain both rol genes and ORF13+14. Striking differences in growth properties were shown by roots containing different complements of TL-DNA genes. Typical hairy root traits, high growth rate, branching and, most noticeably, absence of geotropism, were shown by roots containing rolB alone, while roots with rolA+B+C were geotropic as normal carrot roots. Hairy root traits were conferred to rolA+B+C roots by the concomitant presence of ORF13+14 and by the addition of auxin to the culture medium. A model is presented which attempts to rationalize the growth patterns by assigning interplaying roles to the various TL-DNA genes involved.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1987

The role of auxin in hairy root induction

Maura Cardarelli; Laura Spanò; Domenico Mariotti; Maria Luisa Mauro; Marie-Anne Van Sluys; Paolo Costantino

SummaryWe have investigated the relative role of auxin and of Agrobacterium rhizogenes T-DNA in the induction of hairy roots. By infecting carrot discs with suitably constructed bacterial strains containing different T-DNA complements, we have shown that both auxin and the presence of T-DNA in the carrot cells are required for root growth on the discs. Auxin added alone or in combination with cytokinin is not sufficient to induce rooting on uninfected discs. Also cells transformed by T-DNA containing only auxin synthetic genes very rarely differentiate into roots. On the other hand auxin is necessary for hairy root induction since A. rhizogenes devoid of T-DNA-borne auxin genes is not capable of eliciting symptoms in the absence of hormone. Auxin is not required for either T-DNA transfer or T-DNA expression in the transformed host. Cells infected in the absence of auxin, which do not respond by rooting, do contain T-DNA whose expression is shown by the synthesis of hairy root opines; subsequent addition of auxin to these quiescent transformed cells results in root development. A model for hairy root induction where the action of T-DNA is envisaged as conferring auxin responsiveness to the transformed cells is discussed.


Plasmid | 1985

Localization of agropine-synthesizing functions in the TR region of the root-inducing plasmid of Agrobacterium rhizogenes 1855.

A. De Paolis; Maria Luisa Mauro; M. Pompom; Maura Cardarelli; L. Spanò; Paolo Costantino

The region of the Ri plasmid pRi 1855 that encodes agropine synthesis has been identified through its sequence homology with the equivalent genes of the octopine Ti plasmid pTi ACH5. Interestingly the agropine genes lie outside the so-far identified T-DNA of pRi 1855, and are separated from this latter by a long sequence of non integrated plasmid DNA. The presence of this additional T-DNA (TRight DNA) in hairy roots was demonstrated by Southern blot analysis and by the presence of specific transcripts. The genes for agropine synthesis are arranged in the Ri plasmid in a reversed order as compared to their orientation in the Ti plasmid pTi ACH5.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1985

Identification of the genetic locus responsible for non-polar root induction by Agrobacterium rhizogenes 1855.

Maura Cardarelli; L. Spanò; A. De Paolis; Maria Luisa Mauro; G. Vitali; Paolo Costantino

SummaryRoot proliferation can be induced by Agrobacterium rhizogenes on carrot discs both on the apical and basal surface (facing the root apex and base, respectively) or on the apical surface only, depending on the bacterial strain. This differential response on the two surfaces is denominated polarity. We correlate the polarity of some strains with the absence of an Ri plasmid genetic locus, present in non polar strains such as A. rhizogenes 1855, which bears sequence homology with the auxin genes of Ti plasmid T-DNA. We demonstrate that this locus is responsible for root induction on the basal surface since insertion of a transposon in this region of pRi1855 induces polarity in this strain.


The Plant Cell | 1996

Oligogalacturonides Prevent Rhizogenesis in rolB-Transformed Tobacco Explants by Inhibiting Auxin-Induced Expression of the rolB Gene.

Daniela Bellincampi; Maura Cardarelli; Daniela Zaghi; Giovanna Serino; G. Salvi; Christiane Gatz; Felice Cervone; Maria Maddalena Altamura; Paolo Costantino; Giulia De Lorenzo

Oligogalacturonides elicit several defense responses and regulate different aspects of growth and development in plants. Many of the development-related effects of oligogalacturonides appear to be amenable to an auxin antagonist activity of these oligosaccharins. To clarify the role of oligogalacturonides in antagonizing auxin, we analyzed their effect on root formation in leaf explants of tobacco harboring the plant oncogene rolB. We show here that oligogalacturonides are capable of inhibiting root morphogenesis driven by rolB in transgenic leaf explants when this process requires exogenous auxin. Because rolB expression is induced by auxin and dramatically alters the response to this hormone in transformed plant cells, the inhibiting effect of oligogalacturonides could be exerted on the induction of rolB and/or at some other auxin-requiring step(s) in rhizogenesis. We show that oligogalacturonides antagonize auxin primarily because they strongly inhibit auxin-regulated transcriptional activation of a rolB-[beta]-glucuronidase gene fusion in both leaf explants and cultured leaf protoplasts. In contrast, oligogalacturonides do not inhibit rhizogenesis when rolB transcriptional activation is made independent of auxin, as shown by the lack of inhibition of root formation in leaf explants containing rolB driven by a tetracycline-inducible promoter.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2011

Cadmium tolerance and phytochelatin content of Arabidopsis seedlings over-expressing the phytochelatin synthase gene AtPCS1

Patrizia Brunetti; Letizia Zanella; Alessandra Proia; Angelo De Paolis; Giuseppina Falasca; Maria Maddalena Altamura; Luigi Sanità di Toppi; Paolo Costantino; Maura Cardarelli

Previous studies demonstrated that expression of the Arabidopsis phytochelatin (PC) biosynthetic gene AtPCS1 in Nicotiana tabacum plants increases the Cd tolerance in the presence of exogenous glutathione (GSH). In this paper, the Cd tolerance of Arabidopsis plants over-expressing AtPCS1 (AtPCSox lines) has been analysed and the differences between Arabidopsis and tobacco are shown. Based on the analysis of seedling fresh weight, primary root length, and alterations in root anatomy, evidence is provided that, at relatively low Cd concentrations, the Cd tolerance of AtPCSox lines is lower than the wild type, while AtPCS1 over-expressing tobacco is more tolerant to Cd than the wild type. At higher Cd concentrations, Arabidopsis AtPCSox seedlings are more tolerant to Cd than the wild type, while tobacco AtPCS1 seedlings are as sensitive as the wild type. Exogenous GSH, in contrast to what was observed in tobacco, did not increase the Cd tolerance of AtPCSox lines. The PC content in wild-type Arabidopsis at low Cd concentrations is more than three times higher than in tobacco and substantial differences were also found in the PC chain lengths. These data indicate that the differences in Cd tolerance and in its dependence on exogenous GSH between Arabidopsis and tobacco are due to species-specific differences in the endogenous content of PCs and GSH and may be in the relative abundance of PCs of different length.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2015

Cadmium-inducible expression of the ABC-type transporter AtABCC3 increases phytochelatin-mediated cadmium tolerance in Arabidopsis

Patrizia Brunetti; Letizia Zanella; Angelo De Paolis; Davide Di Litta; Valentina Cecchetti; Giuseppina Falasca; Maurizio Barbieri; Maria Maddalena Altamura; Paolo Costantino; Maura Cardarelli

Highlight AtABCC3 detoxifies cadmium by transporting phytochelatin–cadmium complexes into the vacuoles, and it can functionally complement abcc1 abcc2 mutants.

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Paolo Costantino

Sapienza University of Rome

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Giuseppina Falasca

Sapienza University of Rome

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Patrizia Brunetti

Sapienza University of Rome

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Mirella Pomponi

Sapienza University of Rome

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I. Capone

Sapienza University of Rome

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Letizia Zanella

Sapienza University of Rome

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Laura Spanò

Sapienza University of Rome

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Maria Luisa Mauro

Sapienza University of Rome

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