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Dive into the research topics where Santiago Torres-Martínez is active.

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Featured researches published by Santiago Torres-Martínez.


Current Biology | 2008

Microsporidia Evolved from Ancestral Sexual Fungi

Soo Chan Lee; Nicolas Corradi; Edmond J. Byrnes; Santiago Torres-Martínez; Fred S. Dietrich; Patrick J. Keeling; Joseph Heitman

Microsporidia are obligate, intracellular eukaryotic pathogens that infect animal cells, including humans [1]. Previous studies suggested microsporidia share a common ancestor with fungi [2-7]. However, the exact nature of this phylogenetic relationship is unclear because of unusual features of microsporidial genomes, which are compact with fewer and highly divergent genes [8]. As a consequence, it is unclear whether microsporidia evolved from a specific fungal lineage, or whether microsporidia are a sister group to all fungi. Here, we present evidence addressing this controversial question that is independent of sequence-based phylogenetic reconstruction, but rather based on genome structure. In the zygomycete basal fungal lineage, the sex locus is a syntenic gene cluster governing sexual reproduction in which a high mobility group (HMG) transcription-factor gene is flanked by triose-phosphate transporter (TPT) and RNA helicase genes [9]. Strikingly, microsporidian genomes harbor a sex-related locus with the same genes in the same order. Genome-wide synteny analysis reveals multiple other loci conserved between microsporidia and zygomycetes to the exclusion of all other fungal lineages with sequenced genomes. These findings support the hypothesis that microsporidia are true fungi that descended from a zygomycete ancestor and suggest microsporidia may have an extant sexual cycle.


The EMBO Journal | 2003

Two classes of small antisense RNAs in fungal RNA silencing triggered by non‐integrative transgenes

Francisco E. Nicolás; Santiago Torres-Martínez; Rosa M. Ruiz-Vázquez

Transformation of Mucor circinelloides with self‐replicative plasmids containing a wild‐type copy of the carotenogenic gene carB causes silencing of the carB function in 3% of transformants. Genomic analyses revealed a relationship between silenced phenotype and number of copies of plasmids. This phenotype results from a reduction of the steady‐state levels of carB mRNA, a reduction that is not due to differences in the level of transcription, indicating that silencing is post‐transcriptional. Small sense and antisense RNAs have been found to be associated with gene silencing in M.circinelloides. Two size classes of small antisense RNAs, differentially accumulated during the vegetative growth of silenced transformants, have been detected: a long 25‐nucleotide RNA and a short 21‐nucleotide RNA. Secondary sense and antisense RNAs corresponding to sequences of the endogenous gene downstream of the initial triggering molecule have also been detected, revealing the existence of spreading of RNA targeting in fungi. These findings, together with the self‐replicative nature of the triggering molecules, make M.circinelloides a suitable organism for investigating some unresolved questions in RNA silencing.


PLOS Pathogens | 2011

Sporangiospore Size Dimorphism Is Linked to Virulence of Mucor circinelloides

Charles H. Li; María Cervantes; Deborah J. Springer; Teun Boekhout; Rosa M. Ruiz-Vázquez; Santiago Torres-Martínez; Joseph Heitman; Soo Chan Lee

Mucor circinelloides is a zygomycete fungus and an emerging opportunistic pathogen in immunocompromised patients, especially transplant recipients and in some cases otherwise healthy individuals. We have discovered a novel example of size dimorphism linked to virulence. M. circinelloides is a heterothallic fungus: (+) sex allele encodes SexP and (−) sex allele SexM, both of which are HMG domain protein sex determinants. M. circinelloides f. lusitanicus (Mcl) (−) mating type isolates produce larger asexual sporangiospores that are more virulent in the wax moth host compared to (+) isolates that produce smaller less virulent sporangiospores. The larger sporangiospores germinate inside and lyse macrophages, whereas the smaller sporangiospores do not. sexMΔ mutants are sterile and still produce larger virulent sporangiospores, suggesting that either the sex locus is not involved in virulence/spore size or the sexP allele plays an inhibitory role. Phylogenetic analysis supports that at least three extant subspecies populate the M. circinelloides complex in nature: Mcl, M. circinelloides f. griseocyanus, and M. circinelloides f. circinelloides (Mcc). Mcc was found to be more prevalent among clinical Mucor isolates, and more virulent than Mcl in a diabetic murine model in contrast to the wax moth host. The M. circinelloides sex locus encodes an HMG domain protein (SexP for plus and SexM for minus mating types) flanked by genes encoding triose phosphate transporter (TPT) and RNA helicase homologs. The borders of the sex locus between the three subspecies differ: the Mcg sex locus includes the promoters of both the TPT and the RNA helicase genes, whereas the Mcl and Mcc sex locus includes only the TPT gene promoter. Mating between subspecies was restricted compared to mating within subspecies. These findings demonstrate that spore size dimorphism is linked to virulence of M. circinelloides species and that plasticity of the sex locus and adaptations in pathogenicity have occurred during speciation of the M. circinelloides complex.


Molecular Microbiology | 2006

Distinct white collar‐1 genes control specific light responses in Mucor circinelloides

Fátima Silva; Santiago Torres-Martínez; Victoriano Garre

Light regulates many developmental and physiological processes in a large number of organisms. The best‐known light response in the fungus Mucor circinelloides is the biosynthesis of β‐carotene. Here, we show that M. circinelloides sporangiophores also respond to light, exhibiting a positive phototropism. Analysis of both responses to different light wavelengths within the visible spectrum demonstrated that phototropism is induced by green and blue light, whereas carotenogenesis is only induced by blue light. The blue regulation of both responses suggests the existence of blue‐light photoreceptors in M. circinelloides. Three white collar‐1 genes (mcwc‐1a, mcwc‐1b and mcwc‐1c) coding for proteins showing similarity with the WC‐1 photoreceptor of Neurospora crassa have been identified. All three contain a LOV (light, oxygen or voltage) domain, similar to that present in fungal and plant blue‐light receptors. When knockout mutants for each mcwc‐1 gene were generated to characterize gene functions, only mcwc‐1c mutants were defective in light induction of carotene biosynthesis, indicating that mcwc‐1c is involved in the light transduction pathway that control carotenogenesis. We have also shown that positive phototropism is controlled by the mcwc‐1a gene. It seems therefore that mcwc‐1a and mcwc‐1c genes control different light transduction pathways, although cross‐talk between both pathways probably exists because mcwc‐1a is involved in the light regulation of mcwc‐1c expression.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 2001

A negative regulator of light-inducible carotenogenesis in Mucor circinelloides

Eusebio Navarro; Juan M. Lorca-Pascual; Marı́a Dolores Quiles‐Rosillo; Francisco E. Nicolás; Victoriano Garre; Santiago Torres-Martínez; Rosa M. Ruiz-Vázquez

Abstract. Mucor circinelloides responds to blue light by activating carotene biosynthesis. Wild-type strains grown in darkness contain minimal amounts of β-carotene because of the low levels of transcription of the structural genes for carotenogenesis. When exposed to a light pulse, the level of transcription of these genes increases strongly, leading to the formation of high concentrations of β-carotene. The crgA gene is involved in the regulation of light-induced carotenoid biosynthesis. This gene, originally identified as a 3′-truncated ORF which causes carotene over-accumulation in the dark, encodes a protein with a cysteine-rich, zinc-binding, RING-finger motif, as found in diverse groups of regulatory proteins. The expression of the crgA gene is activated by a light pulse, with a time course similar to that of the structural genes for carotenogenesis. To understand the regulatory role of the crgA gene in carotenogenesis, we have used a genetic approach based on the construction of crgA null mutants by gene replacement. Lack of the crgA function provokes the over-accumulation of carotenoids both in the dark and the light. Introduction of the wild-type crgA allele into these mutants restores the wild-type phenotype for carotenogenesis. The high levels of carotenoid accumulation shown by the null crgA mutants are correlated with an increase in the expression of carotenogenic structural genes. These results strongly indicate that crgA acts as a negative regulator of light-inducible carotenogenesis in M. circinelloides.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

Endogenous short RNAs generated by Dicer 2 and RNA-dependent RNA polymerase 1 regulate mRNAs in the basal fungus Mucor circinelloides

Francisco E. Nicolás; Simon Moxon; Juan P. de Haro; Silvia Calo; Igor V. Grigoriev; Santiago Torres-Martínez; Vincent Moulton; Rosa M. Ruiz-Vázquez; Tamas Dalmay

Endogenous short RNAs (esRNAs) play diverse roles in eukaryotes and usually are produced from double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) by Dicer. esRNAs are grouped into different classes based on biogenesis and function but not all classes are present in all three eukaryotic kingdoms. The esRNA register of fungi is poorly described compared to other eukaryotes and it is not clear what esRNA classes are present in this kingdom and whether they regulate the expression of protein coding genes. However, evidence that some dicer mutant fungi display altered phenotypes suggests that esRNAs play an important role in fungi. Here, we show that the basal fungus Mucor circinelloides produces new classes of esRNAs that map to exons and regulate the expression of many protein coding genes. The largest class of these exonic-siRNAs (ex-siRNAs) are generated by RNA-dependent RNA Polymerase 1 (RdRP1) and dicer-like 2 (DCL2) and target the mRNAs of protein coding genes from which they were produced. Our results expand the range of esRNAs in eukaryotes and reveal a new role for esRNAs in fungi.


Eukaryotic Cell | 2009

A single dicer gene is required for efficient gene silencing associated with two classes of small antisense RNAs in Mucor circinelloides.

Juan P. de Haro; Silvia Calo; María Cervantes; Francisco E. Nicolás; Santiago Torres-Martínez; Rosa M. Ruiz-Vázquez

ABSTRACT RNA silencing in the zygomycete Mucor circinelloides exhibits uncommon features, such as induction by self-replicative sense transgenes and the accumulation of two size classes of antisense small interfering RNAs (siRNAs). To investigate whether this silencing phenomenon follows the rules of a canonical RNA-silencing mechanism, we used hairpin RNA (hpRNA)-producing constructs as silencing triggers and analyzed the efficiency and stability of silencing in different genetic backgrounds. We show here that the dsRNA-induced silencing mechanism is also associated with the accumulation of two sizes of antisense siRNAs and that this mechanism is not mediated by the previously known dcl-1 (dicer-like) gene, which implies the existence of an additional dicer gene. An M. circinelloides dcl-2 gene was cloned and characterized, and the corresponding null mutant was generated by gene replacement. This mutant is severely impaired in the silencing mechanism induced by self-replicative sense or inverted-repeat transgenes, providing the first genetic evidence of a canonical silencing mechanism in this class of fungus and pointing to a role for dcl-2 in the mechanism. Moreover, a functional dcl-2 gene is required for the normal accumulation of the two sizes of antisense RNAs, as deduced from the analysis of dcl-2− transformants containing hpRNA-expressing plasmids. In addition to its critical role in transgene-induced silencing, the dcl-2 gene seems to play a role in the control of vegetative development, since the dcl-2 null mutants showed a significant decrease in their production of asexual spores.


Nature | 2014

Antifungal drug resistance evoked via RNAi-dependent epimutations

Silvia Calo; Cecelia Shertz-Wall; Soo Chan Lee; Robert J. Bastidas; Francisco E. Nicolás; Joshua A. Granek; Piotr A. Mieczkowski; Santiago Torres-Martínez; Rosa M. Ruiz-Vázquez; Maria E. Cardenas; Joseph Heitman

Microorganisms evolve via a range of mechanisms that may include or involve sexual/parasexual reproduction, mutators, aneuploidy, Hsp90 and even prions. Mechanisms that may seem detrimental can be repurposed to generate diversity. Here we show that the human fungal pathogen Mucor circinelloides develops spontaneous resistance to the antifungal drug FK506 (tacrolimus) via two distinct mechanisms. One involves Mendelian mutations that confer stable drug resistance; the other occurs via an epigenetic RNA interference (RNAi)-mediated pathway resulting in unstable drug resistance. The peptidylprolyl isomerase FKBP12 interacts with FK506 forming a complex that inhibits the protein phosphatase calcineurin. Calcineurin inhibition by FK506 blocks M. circinelloides transition to hyphae and enforces yeast growth. Mutations in the fkbA gene encoding FKBP12 or the calcineurin cnbR or cnaA genes confer FK506 resistance and restore hyphal growth. In parallel, RNAi is spontaneously triggered to silence the fkbA gene, giving rise to drug-resistant epimutants. FK506-resistant epimutants readily reverted to the drug-sensitive wild-type phenotype when grown without exposure to the drug. The establishment of these epimutants is accompanied by generation of abundant fkbA small RNAs and requires the RNAi pathway as well as other factors that constrain or reverse the epimutant state. Silencing involves the generation of a double-stranded RNA trigger intermediate using the fkbA mature mRNA as a template to produce antisense fkbA RNA. This study uncovers a novel epigenetic RNAi-based epimutation mechanism controlling phenotypic plasticity, with possible implications for antimicrobial drug resistance and RNAi-regulatory mechanisms in fungi and other eukaryotes.


PLOS Pathogens | 2013

Loss and Retention of RNA Interference in Fungi and Parasites

Francisco E. Nicolás; Santiago Torres-Martínez; Rosa M. Ruiz-Vázquez

RNA interference (RNAi) or RNA silencing is a gene regulatory system, widely conserved in eukaryotes, that represses gene expression through a homology-dependent mechanism. This repressive effect is mediated by small non-coding RNAs (sRNAs) of about 20–30 nucleotides, derived from double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) precursors that are recognized and processed by the RNaseIII Dicer. These sRNAs are loaded into an RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC), where the Argonaute protein plays a main role. Upon loading, the sRNAs selectively guide RISC to the target RNAs, causing their degradation or preventing their translation. In certain organisms, including fungi and parasitic protozoa, the silencing mechanism requires RNA-dependent RNA polymerases (RdRPs) to generate dsRNA from single-stranded RNA (ssRNA) or to amplify sRNA signals [1,2]. Originally described as a defense mechanism against invasive nucleic acids and viruses, RNAi and related pathways play many fundamental roles in metazoans, including regulation of mRNA accumulation and translation, chromatin silencing, programmed DNA rearrangements, and genome surveillance.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2013

Malic enzyme activity is not the only bottleneck for lipid accumulation in the oleaginous fungus Mucor circinelloides

Rosa A. Rodríguez-Frómeta; Adrián Gutiérrez; Santiago Torres-Martínez; Victoriano Garre

Commercial interest in microbial lipids is increasing due to their potential use as feedstock for biodiesel production. The supply of NADPH generated by malic enzyme (ME; NADP+-dependent; EC 1.1.1.40) has been postulated as being the rate-limiting step for fatty acid biosynthesis in oleaginous fungi, based mainly on data from the zygomycete Mucor circinelloides studies. This fungus contains five genes that code for six different ME isoforms. One of these genes, malA, codes for the isoforms III and IV, which have previously been associated with lipid accumulation. Following a strategy of targeted integration of an engineered malA gene, a stable strain overexpressing malA and showing high ME activity has been obtained, demonstrating the feasibility of this strategy to overexpress genes of biotechnological interest in M. circinelloides. This is the first report showing the integration and overexpression of a gene in Zygomycetes. Unexpectedly, the genetically modified strain showed a lipid content similar to that of a prototrophic non-overexpressing control strain, suggesting that another limiting step in the fatty acid synthesis pathway may have been revealed as a consequence of the elimination of malic enzyme-based bottleneck. Otherwise, the fact that prototrophic strains showed at least a 2.5-fold increase in lipid accumulation in comparison with leucine auxotrophic strains suggests that a wild-type leucine biosynthetic pathway is required for lipid accumulation. Moreover, increasing concentrations of leucine in culture medium increased growth of auxotrophs but failed to increase lipid content, suggesting that the leucine synthesized by the fungus is the only leucine available for lipid biosynthesis. These results support previous data postulating leucine metabolism as one of the pathways involved in the generation of the acetyl-CoA required for fatty acid biosynthesis.

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Ana Vila

University of Murcia

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Soo Chan Lee

University of Texas at San Antonio

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