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Dive into the research topics where Paulo A. Zaini is active.

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Featured researches published by Paulo A. Zaini.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2004

DNA Microarray-Based Genome Comparison of a Pathogenic and a Nonpathogenic Strain of Xylella fastidiosa Delineates Genes Important for Bacterial Virulence

Tie Koide; Paulo A. Zaini; Leandro Marcio Moreira; Ricardo Z. N. Vêncio; Adriana Y. Matsukuma; Alan Mitchell Durham; Diva C. Teixeira; Patrícia B. Monteiro; Ana C. R. da Silva; Sergio Verjovski-Almeida; Aline M. da Silva; Suely L. Gomes

Xylella fastidiosa is a phytopathogenic bacterium that causes serious diseases in a wide range of economically important crops. Despite extensive comparative analyses of genome sequences of Xylella pathogenic strains from different plant hosts, nonpathogenic strains have not been studied. In this report, we show that X. fastidiosa strain J1a12, associated with citrus variegated chlorosis (CVC), is nonpathogenic when injected into citrus and tobacco plants. Furthermore, a DNA microarray-based comparison of J1a12 with 9a5c, a CVC strain that is highly pathogenic and had its genome completely sequenced, revealed that 14 coding sequences of strain 9a5c are absent or highly divergent in strain J1a12. Among them, we found an arginase and a fimbrial adhesin precursor of type III pilus, which were confirmed to be absent in the nonpathogenic strain by PCR and DNA sequencing. The absence of arginase can be correlated to the inability of J1a12 to multiply in host plants. This enzyme has been recently shown to act as a bacterial survival mechanism by down-regulating host nitric oxide production. The lack of the adhesin precursor gene is in accordance with the less aggregated phenotype observed for J1a12 cells growing in vitro. Thus, the absence of both genes can be associated with the failure of the J1a12 strain to establish and spread in citrus and tobacco plants. These results provide the first detailed comparison between a nonpathogenic strain and a pathogenic strain of X. fastidiosa, constituting an important step towards understanding the molecular basis of the disease.


Current Biology | 2014

A rhodopsin-guanylyl cyclase gene fusion functions in visual perception in a fungus.

Gabriela Mol Avelar; Robert I. Schumacher; Paulo A. Zaini; Guy Leonard; Thomas A. Richards; Suely L. Gomes

Summary Sensing light is the fundamental property of visual systems, with vision in animals being based almost exclusively on opsin photopigments [1]. Rhodopsin also acts as a photoreceptor linked to phototaxis in green algae [2, 3] and has been implicated by chemical means as a light sensor in the flagellated swimming zoospores of the fungus Allomyces reticulatus [4]; however, the signaling mechanism in these fungi remains unknown. Here we use a combination of genome sequencing and molecular inhibition experiments with light-sensing phenotype studies to examine the signaling pathway involved in visual perception in the closely related fungus Blastocladiella emersonii. Our data show that in these fungi, light perception is accomplished by the function of a novel gene fusion (BeGC1) of a type I (microbial) rhodopsin domain and guanylyl cyclase catalytic domain. Photobleaching of rhodopsin function prevents accumulation of cGMP levels and phototaxis of fungal zoospores exposed to green light, whereas inhibition of guanylyl cyclase activity negatively affects fungal phototaxis. Immunofluorescence microscopy localizes the BeGC1 protein to the external surface of the zoospore eyespot positioned close to the base of the swimming flagellum [4, 5], demonstrating this is a photoreceptive organelle composed of lipid droplets. Taken together, these data indicate that Blastocladiomycota fungi have a cGMP signaling pathway involved in phototaxis similar to the vertebrate vision-signaling cascade but composed of protein domain components arranged as a novel gene fusion architecture and of distant evolutionary ancestry to type II rhodopsins of animals.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Xylella fastidiosa outer membrane vesicles modulate plant colonization by blocking attachment to surfaces.

Michael Ionescu; Paulo A. Zaini; Clelia Baccari; Sophia Tran; Aline M. da Silva; Steven E. Lindow

Significance Release of outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) is a general feature of Gram-negative bacteria. Most studies have addressed the mechanisms of their formation or the cargo they can carry, but other roles remain to be explored further. Here we provide evidence for a novel role for OMVs in Xylella fastidiosa, a bacterial pathogen that colonizes the xylem of important crop plants. OMVs, whose production is suppressed by a quorum-sensing system, serve as an autoinhibitor of cell adhesion to surfaces, thereby blocking attachment-driven biofilm formation that would restrict movement within the xylem and thus colonization of plants. The ubiquity of OMV formation in the bacterial world suggests that these extracellular products may have alternative roles that might modulate movement and biofilm formation. Outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) of Gram-negative bacteria have been studied intensively in recent years, primarily in their role in delivering virulence factors and antigens during pathogenesis. However, the near ubiquity of their production suggests that they may play other roles, such as responding to envelope stress or trafficking various cargoes to prevent dilution or degradation by other bacterial species. Here we show that OMVs produced by Xylella fastidiosa, a xylem-colonizing plant pathogenic bacterium, block its interaction with various surfaces such as the walls of xylem vessels in host plants. The release of OMVs was suppressed by the diffusible signal factor-dependent quorum-sensing system, and a X. fastidiosa ΔrpfF mutant in which quorum signaling was disrupted was both much more virulent to plants and less adhesive to glass and plant surfaces than the WT strain. The higher virulence of the ΔrpfF mutant was associated with fivefold higher numbers of OMVs recovered from xylem sap of infected plants. The frequency of attachment of X. fastidiosa to xylem vessels was 20-fold lower in the presence of OMVs than in their absence. OMV production thus is a strategy used by X. fastidiosa cells to adjust attachment to surfaces in its transition from adhesive cells capable of insect transmission to an “exploratory” lifestyle for systemic spread within the plant host which would be hindered by attachment. OMV production may contribute to the movement of other bacteria in porous environments by similarly reducing their contact with environmental constituents.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2010

Effects of the antimicrobial peptide gomesin on the global gene expression profile, virulence and biofilm formation of Xylella fastidiosa

Andréa C. Fogaça; Paulo A. Zaini; Nelson A. Wulff; Patrícia I.P. Da Silva; Marcos A. Fázio; Antonio Miranda; Sirlei Daffre; Aline M. da Silva

In the xylem vessels of susceptible hosts, such as citrus trees, Xylella fastidiosa forms biofilm-like colonies that can block water transport, which appears to correlate to disease symptoms. Besides aiding host colonization, bacterial biofilms play an important role in resistance against antimicrobial agents, for instance antimicrobial peptides (AMPs). Here, we show that gomesin, a potent AMP from a tarantula spider, modulates X. fastidiosa gene expression profile upon 60 min of treatment with a sublethal concentration. DNA microarray hybridizations revealed that among the upregulated coding sequences, some are related to biofilm production. In addition, we show that the biofilm formed by gomesin-treated bacteria is thicker than that formed by nontreated cells or cells exposed to streptomycin. We have also observed that the treatment of X. fastidiosa with a sublethal concentration of gomesin before inoculation in tobacco plants correlates with a reduction in foliar symptoms, an effect possibly due to the trapping of bacterial cells to fewer xylem vessels, given the enhancement in biofilm production. These results warrant further investigation of how X. fastidiosa would respond to the AMPs produced by citrus endophytes and by the insect vector, leading to a better understanding of the mechanism of action of these molecules on bacterial virulence.


Biochemical Journal | 2003

Dictyostelium discoideum protein phosphatase-1 catalytic subunit exhibits distinct biochemical properties

Luiz Paulo Andrioli; Paulo A. Zaini; Wladia Viviani; Aline M. da Silva

Protein phosphatase-1 (PP1) is expressed ubiquitously and is involved in many eukaryotic cellular functions, although PP1 enzyme activity could not be detected in the social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum cell extracts. In the present paper, we show that D. discoideum has a single copy gene that codes for the catalytic subunit of PP1 (DdPP1c). DdPP1c is expressed throughout the D. discoideum life cycle with constant levels of mRNA, and its protein and amino acid sequence show a mean identity of 80% with other PP1c enzymes. However, it has a distinctive difference: the substitution of a phenylalanine residue (Phe(269) in the DdPP1c) for a highly conserved cysteine residue (Cys(273) in rabbit PP1c) in a region that was shown to have a critical role in the interaction of rabbit PP1c with toxin inhibitors. Wild-type DdPP1c and an engineered mutant form in which Phe(269) was replaced by a cysteine residue were expressed in Escherichia coli. Both recombinant activities were similarly inhibited by okadaic acid, tautomycin and microcystin. However, the Phe(269)-->Cys mutation resulted in a large increase in enzyme activity towards phosphorylase a and a higher sensitivity to calyculin A. These results, together with the molecular modelling of DdPP1c structure, indicate that the Phe(269) residue, which occurs naturally in D. discoideum, confers distinct biochemical properties on this enzyme.


Scientific Reports | 2016

The Secreted Protease PrtA Controls Cell Growth, Biofilm Formation and Pathogenicity in Xylella fastidiosa

Hossein Gouran; Hyrum W. Gillespie; Rafael Nascimento; Sandeep Chakraborty; Paulo A. Zaini; Aaron Jacobson; Brett S. Phinney; David Dolan; Blythe Durbin-Johnson; Elena S. Antonova; Steven E. Lindow; Matthew S. Mellema; Luiz Ricardo Goulart; Abhaya M. Dandekar

Pierce’s disease (PD) is a deadly disease of grapevines caused by the Gram-negative bacterium Xylella fastidiosa. Though disease symptoms were formerly attributed to bacteria blocking the plant xylem, this hypothesis is at best overly simplistic. Recently, we used a proteomic approach to characterize the secretome of X. fastidiosa, both in vitro and in planta, and identified LesA as one of the pathogenicity factors of X. fastidiosa in grapevines that leads to leaf scorching and chlorosis. Herein, we characterize another such factor encoded by PD0956, designated as an antivirulence secreted protease “PrtA” that displays a central role in controlling in vitro cell proliferation, length, motility, biofilm formation, and in planta virulence. The mutant in X. fastidiosa exhibited reduced cell length, hypermotility (and subsequent lack of biofilm formation) and hypervirulence in grapevines. These findings are supported by transcriptomic and proteomic analyses with corresponding plant infection data. Of particular interest, is the hypervirulent response in grapevines observed when X. fastidiosa is disrupted for production of PrtA, and that PD-model tobacco plants transformed to express PrtA exhibited decreased symptoms after infection by X. fastidiosa.


BMC Research Notes | 2010

Development and validation of a Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri DNA microarray platform (XACarray) generated from the shotgun libraries previously used in the sequencing of this bacterial genome

Leandro Marcio Moreira; Marcelo Luiz de Laia; Robson F. de Souza; Paulo A. Zaini; Ana C. R. da Silva; Aline M. da Silva; Jesus Aparecido Ferro

BackgroundFrom shotgun libraries used for the genomic sequencing of the phytopathogenic bacterium Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. citri (XAC), clones that were representative of the largest possible number of coding sequences (CDSs) were selected to create a DNA microarray platform on glass slides (XACarray). The creation of the XACarray allowed for the establishment of a tool that is capable of providing data for the analysis of global genome expression in this organism.FindingsThe inserts from the selected clones were amplified by PCR with the universal oligonucleotide primers M13R and M13F. The obtained products were purified and fixed in duplicate on glass slides specific for use in DNA microarrays. The number of spots on the microarray totaled 6,144 and included 768 positive controls and 624 negative controls per slide. Validation of the platform was performed through hybridization of total DNA probes from XAC labeled with different fluorophores, Cy3 and Cy5. In this validation assay, 86% of all PCR products fixed on the glass slides were confirmed to present a hybridization signal greater than twice the standard deviation of the deviation of the global median signal-to-noise ration.ConclusionsOur validation of the XACArray platform using DNA-DNA hybridization revealed that it can be used to evaluate the expression of 2,365 individual CDSs from all major functional categories, which corresponds to 52.7% of the annotated CDSs of the XAC genome. As a proof of concept, we used this platform in a previously work to verify the absence of genomic regions that could not be detected by sequencing in related strains of Xanthomonas.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2008

The Iron Stimulon of Xylella fastidiosa Includes Genes for Type IV Pilus and Colicin V-Like Bacteriocins

Paulo A. Zaini; Andréa C. Fogaça; Fernanda G. N. Lupo; Helder I. Nakaya; Ricardo Z. N. Vêncio; Aline M. da Silva


Omics A Journal of Integrative Biology | 2005

Whole-genome expression profiling of Xylella fastidiosa in response to growth on glucose.

Stefano Pashalidis; Leandro Marcio Moreira; Paulo A. Zaini; João Carlos Campanharo; Lucia Maria Carareto Alves; Luciane P. Ciapina; Ricardo Z. N. Vêncio; Eliana Gertrudes de Macedo Lemos; Aline M. da Silva; Ana C. R. da Silva


Journal of Applied Phycology | 2018

Gracilaria tenuistipitata (Rhodophyta) tolerance to cadmium and copper exposure observed through gene expression and photosynthesis analyses

Angela P. Tonon; Paulo A. Zaini; Vanessa dos Reis Falcão; Mariana C. Oliveira; Jonas Collén; Catherine Boyen; Pio Colepicolo

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Leandro Marcio Moreira

Universidade Federal de Ouro Preto

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Rafael Nascimento

Federal University of Uberlandia

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Suely L. Gomes

University of São Paulo

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