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Dive into the research topics where Nicolás Toro is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicolás Toro.


Molecular Microbiology | 2007

Identification of differentially expressed small non-coding RNAs in the legume endosymbiont Sinorhizobium meliloti by comparative genomics

Coral del Val; Elena Rivas; Omar Torres-Quesada; Nicolás Toro; José I. Jiménez-Zurdo

Bacterial small non‐coding RNAs (sRNAs) are being recognized as novel widespread regulators of gene expression in response to environmental signals. Here, we present the first search for sRNA‐encoding genes in the nitrogen‐fixing endosymbiont Sinorhizobium meliloti, performed by a genome‐wide computational analysis of its intergenic regions. Comparative sequence data from eight related α‐proteobacteria were obtained, and the interspecies pairwise alignments were scored with the programs eQRNA and RNAz as complementary predictive tools to identify conserved and stable secondary structures corresponding to putative non‐coding RNAs. Northern experiments confirmed that eight of the predicted loci, selected among the original 32 candidates as most probable sRNA genes, expressed small transcripts. This result supports the combined use of eQRNA and RNAz as a robust strategy to identify novel sRNAs in bacteria. Furthermore, seven of the transcripts accumulated differentially in free‐living and symbiotic conditions. Experimental mapping of the 5′‐ends of the detected transcripts revealed that their encoding genes are organized in autonomous transcription units with recognizable promoter and, in most cases, termination signatures. These findings suggest novel regulatory functions for sRNAs related to the interactions of α‐proteobacteria with their eukaryotic hosts.


International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2001

Mesorhizobium chacoense sp. nov., a novel species that nodulates Prosopis alba in the Chaco Arido region (Argentina)

Encarna Velázquez; José M. Igual; Anne Willems; Maria P. Fernandez; Estefanía Muñoz; Pedro F. Mateos; Adriana Abril; Nicolás Toro; Phillippe Normand; Emilio Cervantes; Monique Gillis; Eustoquio Martínez-Molina

Low-molecular-weight RNA analysis was performed for the identification and classification of 20 Argentinian strains isolated from the root nodules of Prosopis alba. SDS-PAGE of total cellular proteins, determination of the DNA base composition, DNA-DNA reassociation experiments and physiological and biochemical tests were also carried out for these strains and the whole 16S rRNA gene was sequenced from one of the strains, strain LMG 19008T. Results of the genotypic and phenotypic characterization showed that the strains isolated in this study belong to a group that clustered in the genus Mesorhizobium. The results of DNA-DNA hybridizations showed that this group is a novel species of this genus. The name Mesorhizobium chacoense sp. nov. is proposed for this species. The type strain is LMG 19008T (= CECT 5336T).


Environmental Microbiology | 2011

Characterization of novel antibiotic resistance genes identified by functional metagenomics on soil samples.

Gloria Torres-Cortés; Vicenta Millán; Hugo Ramírez-Saad; Rafael Nisa-Martínez; Nicolás Toro; Francisco Martínez-Abarca

The soil microbial community is highly complex and contains a high density of antibiotic-producing bacteria, making it a likely source of diverse antibiotic resistance determinants. We used functional metagenomics to search for antibiotic resistance genes in libraries generated from three different soil samples, containing 3.6 Gb of DNA in total. We identified 11 new antibiotic resistance genes: 3 conferring resistance to ampicillin, 2 to gentamicin, 2 to chloramphenicol and 4 to trimethoprim. One of the clones identified was a new trimethoprim resistance gene encoding a 26.8 kDa protein closely resembling unassigned reductases of the dihydrofolate reductase group. This protein, Tm8-3, conferred trimethoprim resistance in Escherichia coli and Sinorhizobium meliloti (γ- and α-proteobacteria respectively). We demonstrated that this gene encoded an enzyme with dihydrofolate reductase activity, with kinetic constants similar to other type I and II dihydrofolate reductases (K(m) of 8.9 µM for NADPH and 3.7 µM for dihydrofolate and IC(50) of 20 µM for trimethoprim). This is the first description of a new type of reductase conferring resistance to trimethoprim. Our results indicate that soil bacteria display a high level of genetic diversity and are a reservoir of antibiotic resistance genes, supporting the use of this approach for the discovery of novel enzymes with unexpected activities unpredictable from their amino acid sequences.


Molecular Microbiology | 1997

The Rhizobium meliloti putA gene: its role in the establishment of the symbiotic interaction with alfalfa.

José I. Jiménez-Zurdo; Fernando M. García-Rodríguez; Nicolás Toro

Little is known about the energy sources used by rhizobia during colonization, invasion and root nodule formation on leguminous plants. We have recently reported that an impaired proline metabolism in Rhizobium meliloti leads to a reduced nodulation efficiency and competitiveness on alfalfa roots. In the present study we have characterized the R. meliloti proline dehydrogenase gene (putA) and addressed the question of its role in symbiosis. This rhizobial gene encodes a 1224‐amino‐acid‐long polypeptide which is homologous to enteric bacteria, Rhodobacter capsulatus and Bradyrhizobium japonicum PutA proteins.Like the situation in these bacteria, sequence analysis identified the proline dehydrogenase (PDH) and pyrroline‐5‐carboxylate dehydrogenase (P5CDH) domains in the R. meliloti putA‐encoded protein. Beta‐galactosidase assays performed with free‐living cells carrying a putA–lacZ transcriptional fusion revealed that R. meliloti putA gene expression is induced by proline, autoregulated by its encoded product, and independent of the general nitrogen regulatory system (Ntr). In addition, analysis of putA expression during the different steps of the symbiotic interaction with alfalfa showed that expression of this gene is turned on by the root exudates (RE), during root invasion and nodule formation, but not in differentiated nitrogen‐fixing bacteroids. Furthermore, we show that the PutA− phenotype leads to a significant reduction of alfalfa root colonization by R. meliloti.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2005

The Coexistence of Symbiosis and Pathogenicity-Determining Genes in Rhizobium rhizogenes Strains Enables Them to Induce Nodules and Tumors or Hairy Roots in Plants

Encarna Velázquez; Alvaro Peix; José Luis Zurdo-Piñeiro; José Luis Palomo; Pedro F. Mateos; Raúl Rivas; Estefanía Muñoz-Adelantado; Nicolás Toro; Pablo García-Benavides; Eustoquio Martínez-Molina

Bacteria belonging to the family Rhizobiaceae may establish beneficial or harmful relationships with plants. The legume endosymbionts contain nod and nif genes responsible for nodule formation and nitrogen fixation, respectively, whereas the pathogenic strains carry vir genes responsible for the formation of tumors or hairy roots. The symbiotic and pathogenic strains currently belong to different species of the genus Rhizobium and, until now, no strains able to establish symbiosis with legumes and also to induce tumors or hairy roots in plants have been reported. Here, we report for the first time the occurrence of two rhizobial strains (163C and ATCC11325T) belonging to Rhizobium rhizogenes able to induce hairy roots or tumors in plants and also to nodulate Phaseolus vulgaris under natural environmental conditions. Symbiotic plasmids (pSym) containing nod and nif genes and pTi- or pRi-type plasmids containing vir genes were found in these strains. The nodD and nifH genes of the strains from this study are phylogenetically related to those of Sinorhizobium strains nodulating P. vulgaris. The virA and virB4 genes from strain 163C are phylogenetically related to those of R. tumefaciens C58, whereas the same genes from strain ATCC 11325T are related to those of hairy root-inducing strains. These findings may be of high relevance for the better understanding of plant-microbe interactions and knowledge of rhizobial phylogenetic history.


Molecular Microbiology | 1998

Characterization and splicing in vivo of a Sinorhizobium meliloti group II intron associated with particular insertion sequences of the IS630‐Tc1/IS3 retroposon superfamily

Francisco Martínez-Abarca; Sanae Zekri; Nicolás Toro

By sequence analysis of Sinorhizobium meliloti strain GR4 plasmid pRmeGR4b, we have identified a group II intron named RmInt1 inserted within the insertion sequence ISRm2011‐2 of the IS630‐Tc1/IS3 retroposon superfamily. Like some other group II introns, RmInt1 possesses, in addition to the structurally conserved ribozyme core, an open reading frame (ORF) with homology to reverse transcriptases. Using a T7 expression system in Escherichia coli, we show that the intron is active in splicing in vivo and that splicing efficiency requires the intron‐encoded ORF, which suggests that the putative intron encoded protein has a maturase function. DNA hybridization studies indicate that intron RmInt1 is widespread within S. meliloti native populations and appears to be mostly located within this IS element. Nevertheless, some S. meliloti strains harbour one copy of RmInt1 at a different location. DNA sequence analysis of the 5′ exon of one of these heterologous intron insertion sites revealed the presence of a putative IS element closely related to insertion sequence ISRm2011‐2. The intron‐binding sites (IBS1 and IBS2 motifs) are conserved, although a transition of a G→A in the IBS1 has occurred. Our results demonstrate an association of intron RmInt1 with particular insertion sequences of the IS630‐Tc1/IS3 retroposon superfamily that may have ensured the spread and maintenance of this group II intron in S. meliloti.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1986

Characterization of a large plasmid of Rhizobium meliloti involved in enhancing nodulation

Nicolás Toro; J. Olivares

SummaryThe plasmid pattern of Rhizobium meliloti strain GR4 was studied and a gene bank of one of the large plasmids (pRmeGR4) of 140 Mdal, was constructed using the broad host range vector pRK290. A restriction map was established with EcoRI. Two regions of this plasmid involved in the infectivity of GR4 on Medicago sativa were identified. An EcoRI fragment hybridizing with the PstI-nif fragment of pID1 was also identified. However, no homology to the cloned Klebsiella pneumoniae nitrogenase genes (pSA30) was detected.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2001

Construction and Environmental Release of a Sinorhizobium meliloti Strain Genetically Modified To Be More Competitive for Alfalfa Nodulation

Pieter van Dillewijn; María José Soto; Pablo J. Villadas; Nicolás Toro

ABSTRACT Highly efficient nitrogen-fixing strains selected in the laboratory often fail to increase legume production in agricultural soils containing indigenous rhizobial populations because they cannot compete against these populations for nodule formation. We have previously demonstrated, with a Sinorhizobium melilotiPutA− mutant strain, that proline dehydrogenase activity is required for colonization and therefore for the nodulation efficiency and competitiveness of S. meliloti on alfalfa roots (J. I. Jiménez-Zurdo, P. van Dillewijn, M. J. Soto, M. R. de Felipe, J. Olivares, and N. Toro, Mol. Plant-Microbe Interact. 8:492–498, 1995). In this work, we investigated whether the putA gene could be used as a means of increasing the competitiveness of S. melilotistrains. We produced a construct in which a constitutive promoter was placed 190 nucleotides upstream from the start codon of theputA gene. This resulted in an increase in the basal expression of this gene, with this increase being even greater in the presence of the substrate proline. We found that the presence of multicopy plasmids containing this putA gene construct increased the competitiveness of S. meliloti in microcosm experiments in nonsterile soil planted with alfalfa plants subjected to drought stress only during the first month. We investigated whether this construct also increased the competitiveness of S. meliloti strains under agricultural conditions by using it as the inoculum in a contained field experiment at León, Spain. We found that the frequency of nodule occupancy was higher with inoculum containing the modified putA gene for samples that were analyzed after 34 days but not for samples that were analyzed later.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 1995

Characterization of a Rhizobium meliloti proline dehydrogenase mutant altered in nodulation efficiency and competitiveness on alfalfa roots

José I. Jiménez-Zurdo; van Dillewijn P; María José Soto; de Felipe Mr; Olivares J; Nicolás Toro

Rhizobium meliloti strain GRM8 is able to transform ornithine into proline by means of an ornithine cyclodeaminase and, therefore, has the ability to use either of these amino acids as its sole carbon and nitrogen source. By Tn5 insertion mutagenesis we obtained a GRM8 mutant derivative strain (LM1) unable to catabolize either ornithine or proline. DNA hybridization studies showed that the LM1 mutant carries a single Tn5 insertion within a chromosomally located gene that, as deduced from a partial nucleotide sequence, encodes a proline dehydrogenase (ProDH). Enzymatic assays confirmed the lack of ProDH activity in cell extracts of strain LM1 and revealed that production of this enzyme is inducible in the parental strain by proline and ornithine. Ultrastructural nodule microscopy analysis, acetylene reduction assays, and dry-weight determinations of nodulated alfalfa plants showed no obvious defect in the nitrogen fixation process of the ProDH- mutant LM1. However, nodulation tests and competition assays demonstrated that in R. meliloti ProDH is required for nodulation efficiency and competitiveness on alfalfa roots.


BMC Microbiology | 2010

The Sinorhizobium meliloti RNA chaperone Hfq influences central carbon metabolism and the symbiotic interaction with alfalfa

Omar Torres-Quesada; Roke I. Oruezabal; Alexandra Peregrina; Edgardo Jofré; Javier Lloret; Rafael Rivilla; Nicolás Toro; José I. Jiménez-Zurdo

BackgroundThe bacterial Hfq protein is able to interact with diverse RNA molecules, including regulatory small non-coding RNAs (sRNAs), and thus it is recognized as a global post-transcriptional regulator of gene expression. Loss of Hfq has an extensive impact in bacterial physiology which in several animal pathogens influences virulence. Sinorhizobium meliloti is a model soil bacterium known for its ability to establish a beneficial nitrogen-fixing intracellular symbiosis with alfalfa. Despite the predicted general involvement of Hfq in the establishment of successful bacteria-eukaryote interactions, its function in S. meliloti has remained unexplored.ResultsTwo independent S. meliloti mutants, 2011-3.4 and 1021Δhfq, were obtained by disruption and deletion of the hfq gene in the wild-type strains 2011 and 1021, respectively, both exhibiting similar growth defects as free-living bacteria. Transcriptomic profiling of 1021Δhfq revealed a general down-regulation of genes of sugar transporters and some enzymes of the central carbon metabolism, whereas transcripts specifying the uptake and metabolism of nitrogen sources (mainly amino acids) were more abundant than in the wild-type strain. Proteomic analysis of the 2011-3.4 mutant independently confirmed these observations. Symbiotic tests showed that lack of Hfq led to a delayed nodulation, severely compromised bacterial competitiveness on alfalfa roots and impaired normal plant growth. Furthermore, a large proportion of nodules (55%-64%) elicited by the 1021Δhfq mutant were non-fixing, with scarce content in bacteroids and signs of premature senescence of endosymbiotic bacteria. RT-PCR experiments on RNA from bacteria grown under aerobic and microoxic conditions revealed that Hfq contributes to regulation of nifA and fixK1/K2, the genes controlling nitrogen fixation, although the Hfq-mediated regulation of fixK is only aerobiosis dependent. Finally, we found that some of the recently identified S. meliloti sRNAs co-inmunoprecipitate with a FLAG-epitope tagged Hfq protein.ConclusionsOur results support that the S. meliloti RNA chaperone Hfq contributes to the control of central metabolic pathways in free-living bacteria and influences rhizospheric competence, survival of the microsymbiont within the nodule cells and nitrogen fixation during the symbiotic interaction with its legume host alfalfa. The identified S. meliloti Hfq-binding sRNAs are predicted to participate in the Hfq regulatory network.

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Francisco Martínez-Abarca

Spanish National Research Council

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Manuel Fernández-López

Spanish National Research Council

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José I. Jiménez-Zurdo

Spanish National Research Council

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Pablo J. Villadas

Spanish National Research Council

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María José Soto

Spanish National Research Council

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J. Olivares

Spanish National Research Council

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Rafael Nisa-Martínez

Spanish National Research Council

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