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Dive into the research topics where Maurizio Trovato is active.

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Featured researches published by Maurizio Trovato.


Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2009

Proline accumulation in plants: not only stress.

Roberto Mattioli; Paolo Costantino; Maurizio Trovato

In addition to its role in protein synthesis, and in the response of plant cell to a number of environmental stresses, circumstantial evidence suggest that proline may also play a role in flowering and development both as a metabolite and as a signal molecule. Although there is a growing consensus that proline is of special importance throughout the reproductive phase, from flower transition to seed development, a general agreement on the molecular and genetic mechanisms proline is involved in, is yet to be established. In this paper we shall review and critically discuss most of the evidence supporting a role for proline in plant development, paying special attention to the recently reported role of proline in flower transition.


Plant Molecular Biology | 2008

Modulation of intracellular proline levels affects flowering time and inflorescence architecture in Arabidopsis.

Roberto Mattioli; Daniele Marchese; Simone D’Angeli; Maria Maddalena Altamura; Paolo Costantino; Maurizio Trovato

We reported previously that the plant oncogene rolD anticipates and stimulates flowering in Nicotiana tabacum, and encodes ornithine cyclodeaminase, an enzyme catalysing the conversion of ornithine to proline. To investigate on the possible role of proline in flowering, we altered the expression of AtP5CS1, encoding the rate-limiting enzyme of proline biosynthesis in plants. Accordingly we characterized a mutant line containing a T-DNA insertion into AtP5CS1 and introduced in Arabidopsis thalianaAtP5CS1 under the control of the CaMV35S promoter. As expected homozygous p5cs1 mutants behaved as late flowering. In addition p5cs1 mutants exhibited a shorter size and contained lower levels of proline, compared to wild type. 35S-P5CS1 plants, manifested, early in development, overexpression of P5CS1 and accumulation of proline, leading to early flowering, both under long- and short-day conditions. Later in development, down-regulation of P5CS1 occurred in 35S-P5CS1 leaves, leading to proline reduction, and, in turn, impaired bolting and stunted growth. Salt-stress restored expression of P5CS1 and proline accumulation in P5CS1-transformed plants, as well as rescuing growth. Our data suggest that proline plays a key role in flower transition, bolting and coflorescence formation.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2015

Physiological implications of arginine metabolism in plants

Gudrun Winter; Christopher D. Todd; Maurizio Trovato; Giuseppe Forlani; Dietmar Funck

Nitrogen is a limiting resource for plant growth in most terrestrial habitats since large amounts of nitrogen are needed to synthesize nucleic acids and proteins. Among the 21 proteinogenic amino acids, arginine has the highest nitrogen to carbon ratio, which makes it especially suitable as a storage form of organic nitrogen. Synthesis in chloroplasts via ornithine is apparently the only operational pathway to provide arginine in plants, and the rate of arginine synthesis is tightly regulated by various feedback mechanisms in accordance with the overall nutritional status. While several steps of arginine biosynthesis still remain poorly characterized in plants, much wider attention has been paid to inter- and intracellular arginine transport as well as arginine-derived metabolites. A role of arginine as alternative source besides glutamate for proline biosynthesis is still discussed controversially and may be prevented by differential subcellular localization of enzymes. Apparently, arginine is a precursor for nitric oxide (NO), although the molecular mechanism of NO production from arginine remains unclear in higher plants. In contrast, conversion of arginine to polyamines is well documented, and in several plant species also ornithine can serve as a precursor for polyamines. Both NO and polyamines play crucial roles in regulating developmental processes as well as responses to biotic and abiotic stress. It is thus conceivable that arginine catabolism serves on the one hand to mobilize nitrogen storages, while on the other hand it may be used to fine-tune development and defense mechanisms against stress. This review summarizes the recent advances in our knowledge about arginine metabolism, with a special focus on the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana, and pinpoints still unresolved critical questions.


Physiologia Plantarum | 2009

The proline biosynthetic genes P5CS1 and P5CS2 play overlapping roles in Arabidopsis flower transition but not in embryo development

Roberto Mattioli; Giuseppina Falasca; Sabrina Sabatini; Maria Maddalena Altamura; Paolo Costantino; Maurizio Trovato

Overexpression of the proline biosynthetic gene P5CS1 results in early flowering in Arabidopsis. However, the p5cs1 loss-of-function mutant exhibits a modest delay in flowering, suggesting that P5CS2, a duplicated P5CS1 gene present in the Arabidopsis, may also play a role in flower transition. In situ mRNA hybridizations and quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) revealed that P5CS1 and P5CS2 are expressed at similar levels and with the same pattern of expression in vegetative and floral shoot apical meristems as well as in axillary meristems. Arabidopsis lines homozygous for the p5cs1 mutant and simultaneously heterozygous for the p5cs2 mutation showed a stronger late-flowering phenotype than p5cs1 single mutants, confirming that also P5CS2 plays a role in flower transition and supporting the notion of overlapping functions of the two P5CS genes in this developmental process. P5CS1 and P5CS2 have identical messenger RNA (mRNA) distributions also in embryos, but only p5cs2 mutant embryos exhibit alterations of the cellular division planes and consequently stop developing. This suggests a specific role of P5CS2 in embryogenesis and an involvement of proline in cell division. Accordingly, exogenous proline accelerated organ growth and meristem formation, and stimulated expression of the cell cycle-related protein CYCB1;1.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

The plant oncogene rolD encodes a functional ornithine cyclodeaminase

Maurizio Trovato; Bruno Maras; Francisco Scaglia Linhares; Paolo Costantino

The plant oncogene rolD stimulates the reproductive phase transition in plants. We define here the function of its gene product. We show that the RolD protein bears sequence homology with ornithine cyclodeaminase, an uncommon enzyme of specialized-niche eubacteria and archaea that catalyzes the unusual NAD+-dependent conversion of ornithine to proline. To confirm the prediction of the bioinformatic analysis, the RolD protein was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified. An ornithine-dependent NAD+ reduction that can be ascribed only to ornithine cyclodeaminase (OCD) activity was detected both in bacterial extracts containing RolD and in assays on the purified RolD protein. Furthermore, OCD activity was observed in soluble extracts from plants overexpressing rolD. The role of rolD in plant pathogenesis and its effect on plant reproductive development are discussed in light of the newly demonstrated enzymatic activity of its gene product.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1989

Upstream non-coding region which confers polar expression to Ri plasmid root inducing gene rolB

I. Capone; Maura Cardarelli; Maurizio Trovato; Paolo Costantino

SummaryRoot differentiation could be elicited on carrot discs by transformation with the agropine Ri plasmid rolB gene cloned in the binary vector Bin19, provided two conditions were met. Firstly, an adequate auxin supply had to be provided. This was achieved by co-inoculation with a strain carrying only the auxin synthetic genes of the TR-DNA. Most of the resulting roots were then shown to harbour only rolB and no aux genes. Secondly, an extended non-coding region (∼1200 bp) at the 5′ end of rolB had to be included in the construction. A shorter (∼300 bp) 5′ region, including TATA and CCAAT boxes, was not sufficient to trigger root differentiation. Both the extended (B1185) and reduced (B310) 5′ regions of rolB were then cloned upstream of the β-glucuronidase (GUS) reporter gene and infections carried out both on the apical and on the basal side of carrot discs. Strong expression of GUS, visualized histochemically as an intense blue colouring of transformed cells was observed with B1185-GUS constructions on the apical side of the discs. Only occasionally could coloured cells be observed on the basal side of the discs with B1185-GUS and on both apical and basal sides with B310-GUS constructions. Strong GUS expression was, on the contrary, achieved on cells of both auxin-rich (apical) and auxin-depleted (basal) sides of the discs with the strong constitutive viral promoter, CaMV35S. These results indicate the presence of an upstream regulatory region which confers polar expression to the rolB gene and suggest a role for auxin in its activation.


Genetica | 1994

Bacterial plant oncogenes: the rol genes' saga.

Paolo Costantino; I. Capone; Maura Cardarelli; A. De Paolis; Maria Luisa Mauro; Maurizio Trovato

Therol genes are part of the T-DNA which is transferred byAgrobacterium rhizogenes in plant cells, causing neoplastic growth and differentiation. Each of these bacterial oncogenes deeply influences plant development and is finely regulated once transferred into the plant host. Both from the study of the effects and biochemical function of therol genes and from the analysis of their regulation, important insight in plant development can be derived. Some of the most intriguing aspects of past, current and future research on this gene system are highlighted and discussed.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2012

Two SERK genes are markers of pluripotency in Cyclamen persicum Mill

M. Savona; Roberto Mattioli; S. Nigro; Giuseppina Falasca; F. Della Rovere; Paolo Costantino; S. de Vries; B. Ruffoni; Maurizio Trovato; M. M. Altamura

The genetic basis of stem cell specification in somatic embryogenesis and organogenesis is still obscure. SOMATIC EMBRYOGENESIS RECEPTOR-LIKE KINASE (SERK) genes are involved in embryogenesis and organogenesis in numerous species. In vitro culture of Cyclamen persicum immature ovules provides a system for investigating stem cell formation and maintenance, because lines forming either organs or embryos or callus without organs/embryos are available for the same cultivar and plant growth regulator conditions. The present aim was to exploit this property of cyclamen cultures to understand the role of SERK(s) in stem cell formation and maintenance in somatic embryogenesis and organogenesis in vitro, in comparison with expression in planta. CpSERK1 and CpSERK2 were isolated from embryogenic callus. CpSERK1 and CpSERK2 levels by RT-PCR showed that expression is high in embryogenic, moderate in organogenic, and null in recalcitrant calli. in situ hybridizations showed that the expression of both genes started in clumps of pluripotent stem cells, from which both pre-embryogenic aggregates and organ meristemoids derived, and continued in their trans-amplifying, meristem-like, derivatives. Expression declined in organ meristemoids, in parallel with a partial loss of meristematization. In mature somatic embryos, and in shoot and root primordia, CpSERK1 and CpSERK2 were expressed in meristems, and similar patterns occurred in zygotic embryo and primary meristems in planta. The results point to SERK1 and SERK2 as markers of pluripotency in cyclamen. It is proposed that the high expression of these genes in the trans-amplifying derivatives of the stem cells maintains a pluripotent condition leading to totipotency and, consequently, somatic embryogenesis.


BMC Plant Biology | 2012

Proline is required for male gametophyte development in Arabidopsis

Roberto Mattioli; Marco Biancucci; Chiara Lonoce; Paolo Costantino; Maurizio Trovato

BackgroundIn crosses between the proline-deficient mutant homozygous for p5cs1 and heterozygous for p5cs2 (p5cs1 p5cs2/P5CS2), used as male, and different Arabidopsis mutants, used as females, the p5cs2 mutant allele was rarely transmitted to the outcrossed progeny, suggesting that the fertility of the male gametophyte carrying mutations in both P5CS1 and P5CS2 is severely compromised.ResultsTo confirm the fertility defects of pollen from p5cs1 p5cs2/P5CS2 mutants, transmission of mutant alleles through pollen was tested in two ways. First, the number of progeny inheriting a dominant sulfadiazine resistance marker linked to p5cs2 was determined. Second, the number of p5cs2/p5cs2 embryos was determined. A ratio of resistant to susceptible plantlets close to 50%, and the absence of aborted embryos were consistent with the hypothesis that the male gametophyte carrying both p5cs1 and p5cs2 alleles is rarely transmitted to the offspring. In addition, in reciprocal crosses with wild type, about 50% of the p5cs2 mutant alleles were transmitted to the sporophytic generation when p5cs1 p5cs2/P5CS2 was used as a female, while less than 1% of the p5cs2 alleles could be transmitted to the outcrossed progeny when p5cs1 p5cs2/P5CS2 was used as a male. Morphological and functional analysis of mutant pollen revealed a population of small, degenerated, and unviable pollen grains, indicating that the mutant homozygous for p5cs1 and heterozygous for p5cs2 is impaired in pollen development, and suggesting a role for proline in male gametophyte development. Consistent with these findings, we found that pollen from p5cs1 homozygous mutants, display defects similar to, but less pronounced than pollen from p5cs1 p5cs2/P5CS2 mutants. Finally, we show that pollen from p5cs1 p5cs2/P5CS2 plants contains less proline than wild type and that exogenous proline supplied from the beginning of another development can partially complement both morphological and functional pollen defects.ConclusionsOur data show that the development of the male gametophyte carrying mutations in both P5CS1 and P5CS2 is severely compromised, and indicate that proline is required for pollen development and transmission.


Protoplasma | 1997

THE ROLD GENE FROM AGROBACTERIUM RHIZOGENES IS DEVELOPMENTALLY REGULATED IN TRANSGENIC TOBACCO

Maurizio Trovato; Maria Luisa Mauro; Paolo Costantino; M. M. Altamura

SummaryTherolD gene fromAgrobacterium rhizogenes has recently been shown to induce striking precocity of flowering in transgenic tobacco. A transcriptional fusion between 578 bp of therolD upstream regulating sequence and the GUS reporter gene has been transferred to tobacco plants and its expression analysed throughout the whole life cycle of the plant. A detailed histological analysis revealed thatrolD is strongly expressed in elongating and differentiating tissues of each organ, from the mature embryo to the adult plant. In organs with determinate growth, such as cotyledons, leaves and floral parts,rolD expression follows the age gradient of the tissues. In mature tissues,rolD expression is high, begins to decrease with ageing and is switched off when senescence occurs.RolD is also active in the vascular system, in the procambium, pith- and receptacular-meristems. Our data show that expression ofrolD is under developmental control as it correlates with, and may represent a molecular marker for, the elongation/expansion and maturation phases of the plant tissues.

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Paolo Costantino

Sapienza University of Rome

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Roberto Mattioli

Sapienza University of Rome

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Maria Luisa Mauro

Sapienza University of Rome

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Giuseppina Falasca

Sapienza University of Rome

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