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Dive into the research topics where Néstor Cortez is active.

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Featured researches published by Néstor Cortez.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2011

Genome Sequence of Sphingomonas sp. S17, Isolated from an Alkaline, Hyperarsenic, and Hypersaline Volcano-Associated Lake at High Altitude in the Argentinean Puna

Maria Eugenia Farias; Santiago Revale; Estefania Mancini; Omar Federico Ordoñez; Adrián G. Turjanski; Néstor Cortez; Martin P. Vazquez

The high-altitude Andean lakes (HAAL) in the Argentinean Puna-high Andes region represent an almost unexplored ecosystem exposed to extreme conditions (high UV irradiation, hypersalinity, drastic temperature changes, desiccation, and high pH). Here we present the first genome sequence, a Sphingomonas sp., isolated from this extreme environment.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2003

The single superoxide dismutase of Rhodobacter capsulatus is a cambialistic, manganese-containing enzyme.

Leandro C. Tabares; Cristian Bittel; Néstor Carrillo; Ana Bortolotti; Néstor Cortez

The phototrophic bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus contains a single, oxygen-responsive superoxide dismutase (SOD(Rc)) homologous to iron-containing superoxide dismutase enzymes. Recombinant SOD(Rc), however, displayed higher activity after refolding with Mn(2+), especially when the pH of the assay mixture was raised. SOD(Rc) isolated from Rhodobacter cells also preferentially contains manganese, but metal discrimination depends on the culture conditions, with iron fractions increasing from 7% in aerobic cultures up to 40% in photosynthetic cultures. Therefore, SOD(Rc) behaves as a Mn-containing dismutase with cambialistic properties.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2011

UV-resistant Acinetobacter sp. isolates from Andean wetlands display high catalase activity

Cecilia Beatriz Di Capua; Ana Bortolotti; Maria Eugenia Farias; Néstor Cortez

Andean wetlands are characterized by their extreme environmental conditions such as high UV radiation, elevated heavy metal content and salinity. We present here the first study on UV tolerance and antioxidant defense of four Acinetobacter strains: Ver3, Ver5 and Ver7, isolated from Lake Verde, and N40 from Lake Negra, both lakes located 4400 m above sea level. All four isolates displayed higher UV resistance compared with collection strains, with Ver3 and Ver7 being the most tolerant strains not only to UV radiation but also to hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) and methyl viologen (MV) challenges. A single superoxide dismutase band with similar activity was detected in all studied strains, whereas different electrophoretic pattern and activity levels were observed for catalase. Ver3 and Ver7 displayed 5-15 times higher catalase activity levels than the control strains. Analysis of the response of antioxidant enzymes to UV and oxidative challenges revealed a significant increase in Ver7 catalase activity after H(2)O(2) and MV exposure. Incubation of Ver7 cultures with a catalase inhibitor resulted in a significant decrease of tolerance against UV radiation. We conclude that the high catalase activity displayed by Ver7 isolate could play an important role in UV tolerance.


Genome Announcements | 2013

Draft Genome Sequence of the Polyextremophilic Exiguobacterium sp. Strain S17, Isolated from Hyperarsenic Lakes in the Argentinian Puna

Omar Federico Ordoñez; Esteban Lanzarotti; Daniel Kurth; Marta Fabiana Gorriti; Santiago Revale; Néstor Cortez; Martín P. Vázquez; Maria Eugenia Farias; Adrián G. Turjanski

ABSTRACT Exiguobacterium sp. strain S17 is a moderately halotolerant, arsenic-resistant bacterium that was isolated from Laguna Socompa stromatolites in the Argentinian Puna. The draft genome sequence suggests potent enzyme candidates that are essential for survival under multiple environmental extreme conditions, such as high levels of UV radiation, elevated salinity, and the presence of critical arsenic concentrations.


FEBS Letters | 2003

The oxidant-responsive diaphorase of Rhodobacter capsulatus is a ferredoxin (flavodoxin)-NADP(H) reductase

Cristian Bittel; Leandro C. Tabares; Martín Armesto; Néstor Carrillo; Néstor Cortez

Challenge of Rhodobacter capsulatus cells with the superoxide propagator methyl viologen resulted in the induction of a diaphorase activity identified as a member of the ferredoxin (flavodoxin)‐(reduced) nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP(H)) reductase (FPR) family by N‐terminal sequencing. The gene coding for Rhodobacter FPR was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. Both native and recombinant forms of the enzyme were purified to homogeneity rendering monomeric products of ∼30 kDa with essentially the same spectroscopic and kinetic properties. They were able to bind and reduce Rhodobacter flavodoxin (NifF) and to mediate typical FPR activities such as the NADPH‐driven diaphorase and cytochrome c reductase.


FEBS Letters | 1991

Possible role of the highly conserved amino acids Trp-8 and Pro-13 in the N-terminal segment of the pigment-binding poly eptide LHI α of Rhodobacter capsulatus

Petra Richter; Néstor Cortez; Gerhart Drews

Trp‐8 and Pro‐13 of the Rhodobacter capsulatus light‐harvesting (LH) I α polypeptide are highly conserved among LHI and LHII α proteins of several species of the Rhodospirillaceae. Exchange of Trp‐8 and Pro‐13 to other amino acyl residues similar in structure and/or hydrophobicity indicates that Trp‐8 is involved in the insertion of the LHI α polypeptide into the intracytoplasmic membrane (ICM). Pro‐13, however, seems not to participate in the integration process of the LHI α protein but seems to be important for stable insertion of the LHI β partner protein in the ICM.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2010

Mechanistic Insights into Ferredoxin-NADP(H) Reductase Catalysis Involving the Conserved Glutamate in the Active Site

Verónica I. Dumit; Timm Essigke; Néstor Cortez; G. Matthias Ullmann

Plant-type ferredoxin-NADP(H) reductases (FNRs) are flavoenzymes harboring one molecule of noncovalently bound flavin adenine dinucleotide that catalyze reversible reactions between obligatory one-electron carriers and obligatory two-electron carriers. A glutamate next to the C-terminus is strictly conserved in FNR and has been proposed to function as proton donor/acceptor during catalysis. However, experimental studies of this proposed function led to contradicting conclusions about the role of this glutamate in the catalytic mechanism. In the present work, we study the titration behavior of the glutamate in the active site of FNR using theoretical methods. Protonation probabilities for maize FNR were computed for the reaction intermediates of the catalytic cycle by Poisson-Boltzmann electrostatic calculations and Metropolis Monte Carlo titration. The titration behavior of the highly conserved glutamate was found to vary depending on the bound substrates NADP(H) and ferredoxin and also on the redox states of these substrates and the flavin adenine dinucleotide. Our results support the involvement of the glutamate in the FNR catalytic mechanism not only as a proton donor but also as a key residue for stabilizing and destabilizing reaction intermediates. On the basis of our findings, we propose a model rationalizing the function of the glutamate in the reaction cycle, which allows reinterpretation of previous experimental results.


Extremophiles | 2014

Triacylglycerol accumulation and oxidative stress in Rhodococcus species: differential effects of pro-oxidants on lipid metabolism

Susana de los Ángeles Bequer Urbano; Cecilia Beatriz Di Capua; Néstor Cortez; Maria Eugenia Farias; Héctor M. Alvarez

In general, members of Rhodococcus genus are highly resistant to desiccation. Desiccation is a complex process which includes the formation of reactive oxygen species that results in significant damage to cells. In this study, we demonstrate that extremophile actinobacterial strains isolated from diverse environments, mainly belonging to Rhodococcus genus, exhibited high tolerance to the pro-oxidants hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and methyl viologen (MV). In addition, we investigated the possible interconnections between the responses of the oleaginous Rhodococcus opacus PD630 to oxidative stress and lipid metabolism, since both processes demand a metabolic reorganization of cells. Experiments with metabolic inhibitors showed differential effects of both pro-oxidants on lipid metabolism in PD630 cells. The inhibition of carotenoid biosynthesis by the addition of diphenylamine to the media negatively affected the tolerance of cells to H2O2, but not to MV. The inhibition of triacylglycerol (TAG) biosynthesis and accumulation in PD630 did not affect the tolerance of cells to H2O2 and MV; whereas, the blockage of lipolysis decreased the tolerance of cells to H2O2 (but not MV) under carbon-starvation conditions. Interestingly, the addition of MV to the media (but not H2O2) induced a reduction of TAG accumulation by cells. Resuming, results of this study revealed metabolic connections between lipid metabolism and oxidative stress responses in R. opacus PD630, and probably in other extremophile TAG-accumulating rhodococci.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2015

Genomic and proteomic evidences unravel the UV-resistome of the poly-extremophile Acinetobacter sp. Ver3

Daniel Kurth; Carolina Belfiore; Marta Fabiana Gorriti; Néstor Cortez; Maria Eugenia Farias; Virginia Helena Albarracín

Ultraviolet radiation can damage biomolecules, with detrimental or even lethal effects for life. Even though lower wavelengths are filtered by the ozone layer, a significant amount of harmful UV-B and UV-A radiation reach Earth’s surface, particularly in high altitude environments. high-altitude Andean lakes (HAALs) are a group of disperse shallow lakes and salterns, located at the Dry Central Andes region in South America at altitudes above 3,000 m. As it is considered one of the highest UV-exposed environments, HAAL microbes constitute model systems to study UV-resistance mechanisms in environmental bacteria at various complexity levels. Herein, we present the genome sequence of Acinetobacter sp. Ver3, a gammaproteobacterium isolated from Lake Verde (4,400 m), together with further experimental evidence supporting the phenomenological observations regarding this bacterium ability to cope with increased UV-induced DNA damage. Comparison with the genomes of other Acinetobacter strains highlighted a number of unique genes, such as a novel cryptochrome. Proteomic profiling of UV-exposed cells identified up-regulated proteins such as a specific cytoplasmic catalase, a putative regulator, and proteins associated to amino acid and protein synthesis. Down-regulated proteins were related to several energy-generating pathways such as glycolysis, beta-oxidation of fatty acids, and electronic respiratory chain. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report on a genome from a polyextremophilic Acinetobacter strain. From the genomic and proteomic data, an “UV-resistome” was defined, encompassing the genes that would support the outstanding UV-resistance of this strain.


Frontiers in Environmental Science | 2015

Genome comparison of two Exiguobacterium strains from high altitude andean lakes with different arsenic resistance: identification and 3D modeling of the Acr3 efflux pump

Omar Federico Ordoñez; Esteban Lanzarotti; Daniel Kurth; Néstor Cortez; Maria Eugenia Farias; Adrián G. Turjanski

Arsenic exists in natural systems in a variety of chemical forms, including inorganic arsenite (As [III]) and arsenate (As [V]). The majority of living organisms have evolved various mechanisms to avoid occurrence of arsenic inside the cell due to its toxicity. Common core genes include a transcriptional repressor ArsR, an arsenate reductase ArsC, and arsenite efflux pumps ArsB and Acr3. To understand arsenic resistance we have performed arsenic tolerance studies, genomic and bioinformatic analysis of two Exiguobacterium strains, S17 and N139, from the high-altitude Andean Lakes. In these environments high concentrations of arsenic were described in the water due to a natural geochemical phenomenon, therefore, these strains represent an attractive model system for the study of environmental stress and can be readily cultivated. Our experiments show that S17 has a greater tolerance to arsenite (10nM) than N139, but similar growth in arsenate (150nM). We sequenced the genome of the two Exiguobacterium and identified an acr3 gene in S17 as the only difference between both species regarding known arsenic resistance genes. To further understand the Acr3 we modeled the 3D structure and identified the location of relevant residues of this protein. Our model is in agreement with previous experiments and allowed us to identify a region where a relevant cysteine lies. This Acr3 membrane efflux pump, present only in S17, may explain its increased tolerance to As(III) and is the first Acr3-family protein described in Exiguobacterium genus.

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Ana Bortolotti

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Maria Eugenia Farias

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Juan A. Hermoso

Spanish National Research Council

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Néstor Carrillo

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Sun Un

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Adrián G. Turjanski

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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Cristian Bittel

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Omar Federico Ordoñez

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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