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Dive into the research topics where Pilar Tejero-Mateo is active.

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Featured researches published by Pilar Tejero-Mateo.


Carbohydrate Research | 1998

Structural analysis of the exopolysaccharides produced by Lactobacillus spp. G-77.

M.Teresa Dueñas-Chasco; Miguel A. Rodríguez-Carvajal; Pilar Tejero-Mateo; José L. Espartero; Ana Irastorza-Iribas; Antonio M. Gil-Serrano

The exopolysaccharide produced by a ropy strain of Lactobacillus spp. G-77 in a semi-defined medium, was found to be a mixture of two homopolymers composed of D-Glc. The two poly-saccharides were separated and, on the basis of monosaccharide and methylation analyses, 1H, 13C, 1D and 2D NMR experiments, one of the polysaccharides was shown to be a 2-substituted-(1-3)-beta-D-glucan, identical to that described for the EPS from Pediococcus damnosus 2.6 (M.T. Dueñas-Chasco, M.A. Rodríguez-Carvajal, P. Tejero-Mateo, G. Franco-Rodríguez, J. L. Espartero, A. Irastorza-Iribar, and A.M. Gil-Serrano, Carbohydr. Res., 303 (1997) 453-458), and the other polysaccharide was shown to consist of repeating units with the following structure [formula: see text]


Journal of Applied Microbiology | 2007

Growth and exopolysaccharide (EPS) production by Oenococcus oeni I4 and structural characterization of their EPSs

Idoia Ibarburu; María Eugenia Soria-Díaz; Miguel A. Rodríguez-Carvajal; S.E. Velasco; Pilar Tejero-Mateo; Antonio M. Gil-Serrano; A. Irastorza; Mª. Teresa Dueñas

Aims:  To study the influence of medium constituents on growth, and exopolysaccharide (EPS) production by a strain of Oenococcus oeni. The structure of one of the EPSs has also been characterized.


Carbohydrate Research | 1990

Structure of the extracellular polysaccharide secreted by Rhizobium leguminosarum var. phaseoli CIAT 899.

Antonio M. Gil-Serrano; Angel Sánchez del Junco; Pilar Tejero-Mateo; Manuel Megías; Miguel A. Caviedes

The structure of the extracellular polysaccharide secreted by Rhizobium leguminosarum var. phaseoli CIAT 899 has been studied by methylation analysis. 1H-n.m.r. spectroscopy, and partial acid hydrolysis. The repeating unit is an octasaccharide made up of D-glucose, D-galactose, pyruvic acid, and acetic acid in the molar ratios 6:2:1.5:1.5. Half of the terminal Gal groups are 4,6-substituted by pyruvic acid acetal groups and the other half by O-acetyl groups at position 3. Also, one of the 3-linked glucosyl residues carries a pyruvic acid 4,6-acetal group and one of the 4-linked glucosyl residues is acetylated at position 6.


Carbohydrate Research | 1997

Structural determination of the lipo-chitin oligosaccharide nodulation signals produced by Rhizobium fredii HH103

Antonio M. Gil-Serrano; Guillermo Franco-Rodríguez; Pilar Tejero-Mateo; Jane E. Thomas-Oates; Herman P. Spaink; JoséE. Ruiz-Sainz; Manuel Megías; Youssef Lamrabet

Rhizobium fredii HH103 produces extracellular signal molecules that are able to induce deformation of root hairs and nodule organogenesis of soybean. This strain produces a large variety of nodulation factors, consisting of a linear backbone of GlcNAc with different degrees of polymerization, bearing on the non-reducing residue various different N-acyl residues. The reducing terminal residue is 2-O-methylfucosylated at position 6. Several analogous molecules substituted with fucose were also detected.


Archives of Microbiology | 2008

Signal molecules in the peanut–bradyrhizobia interaction

Tania Taurian; Belén Morón; María Eugenia Soria-Díaz; Jorge Angelini; Pilar Tejero-Mateo; Antonio M. Gil-Serrano; Manuel Megías; Adriana Fabra

Main nodulation signal molecules in the peanut–bradyrhizobia interaction were examined. Flavonoids exuded by Arachis hypogaea L. cultivar Tegua were genistein, daidzein and chrysin, the latest being released in lower quantities. Thin layer chromatography analysis from genistein-induced bacterial cultures of three peanut bradyrhizobia resulted in an identical Nod factor pattern, suggesting low variability in genes involved in the synthesis of these molecules. Structural study of Nod factor by mass spectrometry and NMR analysis revealed that it shares a variety of substituents with the broad-host-range Rhizobium sp. NGR234 and Bradyrhizobium spp. Nodulation assays in legumes nodulated by these rhizobia demonstrated differences between them and the three peanut bradyrhizobia. The three isolates were classified as Bradyrhizobium sp. Their fixation gene nifD and the common nodulation genes nodD and nodA were also analyzed.


Carbohydrate Research | 1999

Solvent-dependent conformational behaviour of lipochitoligosaccharides related to Nod factors

Leandro González; Manuel Bernabé; Juan F. Espinosa; Pilar Tejero-Mateo; Antonio M. Gil-Serrano; Natacha Mantegazza; Anne Imberty; Hugues Driguez; Jesús Jiménez-Barbero

The solution conformation of two lipooligosaccharides related to Nod factors or lipochitoligosaccharides have been analysed by 1D and 2D 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopy, molecular mechanics and dynamics calculations. The obtained data indicate that the glycosidic torsion angles have restricted fluctuations, but may adopt a variety of shapes. Remarkably, the relative orientation of the fatty acid chain towards the oligosaccharide backbone is solvent dependent. In water solution, the acyl residue and the oligosaccharide adopt a quasi-parallel orientation for a significant amount of time.


Journal of Molecular Structure | 1993

The structure and molecular mechanics calculations of the cyclic (1 → 2)-β-d-glucan secreted by Rhizobium tropici CIAT 899

Antonio Miguel Gil Serrano; Guillermo Franco-Rodríguez; Isabel González-Jiménez; Pilar Tejero-Mateo; José Molina Molina; José A. Dobado; Manuel Megías; María Jesús Gómez de Tejada Romero

Abstract The structure of the extracellular cyclic (1 → 2)-β- d -glucan secreted by Rhizobium tropici CIAT 899 has been studied by methylation analysis, 1 D and 2 D NMR experiments, HPLC and FAB-MS. Molecular mechanics (MM2) and theoretical 3 J HH coupling constants calculations were performed.


Carbohydrate Research | 2003

Structural determination of the lipo-chitin oligosaccharide nodulation signals produced by Rhizobium giardinii bv. giardinii H152

M. Eugenia Soria-Díaz; Pilar Tejero-Mateo; José L. Espartero; Miguel A. Rodríguez-Carvajal; Belén Morón; Carolina Sousa; Manuel Megías; Noëlle Amarger; Jane E. Thomas-Oates; Antonio M. Gil-Serrano

Rhizobium giardinii bv. giardinii is a microsymbiont of plants of the genus Phaseolus and produces extracellular signal molecules that are able to induce deformation of root hairs and nodule organogenesis. We report here the structures of seven lipochitooligosaccharide (LCO) signal molecules secreted by R. giardinii bv. giardinii H152. Six of them are pentamers of GlcNAc carrying C 16:0, C 18:0, C 20:0 and C 18:1 fatty acyl chains on the non-reducing terminal residue. Four are sulfated at C-6 of the reducing terminal residue and one is acetylated in the same position. Six of them are N-methylated on the non-reducing GlcN residue and all the nodulation factors are carbamoylated on C-6 of the non-reducing terminal residue. The structures were determined using monosaccharide composition and methylation analyses, 1D- and 2D-NMR experiments and a range of mass spectrometric techniques. The position of the carbamoyl substituent on the non-reducing glucosamine residue was determined using a CID-MSMS experiment and an HMBC experiment.


Biomacromolecules | 2008

Structure of the O-antigen of the main lipopolysaccharide isolated from Sinorhizobium fredii SMH12.

Francisco J. Fernández de Córdoba; Miguel A. Rodríguez-Carvajal; Pilar Tejero-Mateo; Javier Corzo; Antonio M. Gil-Serrano

The lipopolysaccharide of Sinorhizobium fredii SMH12, a wide-range host bacterium isolated from nodulated soybean plants growing in Vietnam, has been studied. Isolation of lipopolysaccharide by the phenol-water method leads to a mixture of two polysaccharides; polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis indicates that both are possibly lipopolysaccharides. The structures of the O-antigen of the main lipopolysaccharide and its deacetylated form are determined by sugar and methylation analysis, partial hydrolysis, lithium degradation, ESI-MS/MS, and NMR studies. Here we show that the fast-growing S. fredii SMH12 produces a lipopolysaccharide whose O-antigen has a repeating unit consisting of the trisaccharide -->4)-alpha-D-Gal pA-(1-->3)-2-O-Ac-alpha-L-Rha p-(1-->3)-2-O-Ac-alpha-D-Man p-(1-->. The position O-6 of the mannose residue in the repeating unit is unsubstituted, acetylated, or methylated in an approximate ratio 1:1:2. The tandem mass spectrometry studies rule out both an alternating and a random distribution of methyl groups and suggest the existence of zones in the polysaccharide rich in methyl groups interspersed with zones without methyl groups.


Carbohydrate Research | 2013

Structure of the O-antigen of the lipopolysaccharide isolated from Pantoea ananatis AEP17, a rhizobacterium associated with rice

Rocío Contreras Sánchez-Matamoros; Antonio Miguel Gil Serrano; Pilar Tejero-Mateo; Javier Ollero; Esaú Megías Saavedra; Miguel A. Rodríguez-Carvajal

The lipopolysaccharide of a Gram-negative bacterium having a putative plant-growth promoting activity (Pantoea ananatis AEP17) has been isolated and subjected to partial hydrolysis. The O-antigen has been studied by mass spectrometry and NMR experiments. On the basis of these experiments it is concluded that the following repeating unit is present in the polysaccharide: →3)-β-d-GlcpNAc-(1→3)[α-d-GalpAN-(1→2)]-α-l-Rhap-(1→2)-α-l-Rhap-(1→3)-α-l-Rhap-(1→2)-α-l-Rhap-(1→ The occurrence of d-galacturonamide (GalAN) is unusual in bacterial O-polysaccharides. It has only been reported in Escherichia coli O65 [Perry, M. B.; MacLean, L. L. Carbohydr. Res.1999, 322, 57-66].

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Manuel Bernabé

Spanish National Research Council

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