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Dive into the research topics where Tania Islas-Flores is active.

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Featured researches published by Tania Islas-Flores.


Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2012

Changes in RACK1 expression induce defects in nodulation and development in Phaseolus vulgaris

Tania Islas-Flores; Gabriel Guillén; Federico Sánchez; Marco A. Villanueva

RACK1 is a scaffold protein with the ability to interact in a regulated manner with a diverse number of ligands from distinct signal-transduction pathways. This assessment allowed us to infer that it may be involved in different processes such as nodulation. In a recent study we showed by silencing, that PvRACK1 has a pivotal role in cell expansion and in symbiosome and bacteroid integrity during nodule development in Phaseolus vulgaris. On the other hand, we have also observed that its overexpression provokes a dramatic phenotype in: (a) seedlings that have been exposed to heat, in which systemic necrosis is induced; and (b) in Agrobacterium rhizogenes-transformed roots, where nodulation is strongly inhibited and nodules show early senescent symptoms. These findings indicate that PvRACK1 may be an integrator of diverse signal-transduction pathways in processes as varied as nodulation, cell expansion, heat stress responses, and systemic activation of necrosis.


Physiologia Plantarum | 2009

Germination behavior, biochemical features and sequence analysis of the RACK1/arcA homolog from Phaseolus vulgaris.

Tania Islas-Flores; Gabriel Guillén; Ignacio Islas-Flores; Carolina San Román-Roque; Federico Sánchez; Herminia Loza-Tavera; Elaine L. Bearer; Marco A. Villanueva

Partial peptide sequence of a 36 kDa protein from common bean embryo axes showed 100% identity with a reported beta-subunit of a heterotrimeric G protein from soybean. Analysis of the full sequence showed 96.6% identity with the reported soybean G(beta)-subunit, 86% with RACK1B and C from Arabidopsis and 66% with human and mouse RACK1, at the amino acid level. In addition, it showed 85.5, 85 and 83% identities with arcA from Solanum lycopersicum, Arabidopsis (RACK1A) and Nicotiana tabacum, respectively. The amino acid sequence displayed seven WD40 domains and two sites for activated protein kinase C binding. The protein showed a constant expression level but the mRNA had a maximum at 32 h post-imbibition. Western immunoblotting showed the protein in vegetative plant tissues, and in both microsomal and soluble fractions from embryo axes. Synthetic auxin treatment during germination delayed the peak of RACK1 mRNA expression to 48 h but did not affect the protein expression level while the polar auxin transport inhibitor, naphtylphtalamic acid had no effect on either mRNA or protein expression levels. Southern blot and genomic DNA amplification revealed a small gene family with at least one member without introns in the genome. Thus, the RACK1/arcA homolog from common bean has the following features: (1) it is highly conserved; (2) it is both soluble and insoluble within the embryo axis; (3) it is encoded by a small gene family; (4) its mRNA has a peak of expression at the time point of germination stop and (5) its expression is only slightly affected by auxin but unaffected by an auxin transport blocker.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Heterologous DNA Uptake in Cultured Symbiodinium spp. Aided by Agrobacterium tumefaciens

Mario Fernando Ortiz-Matamoros; Tania Islas-Flores; Boris Voigt; Diedrik Menzel; František Baluška; Marco A. Villanueva

Plant-targeted pCB302 plasmids containing sequences encoding gfp fusions with a microtubule-binding domain; gfp with the fimbrin actin-binding domain 2; and gfp with AtRACK1C from Arabidopsis thaliana, all harbored in Agrobacterium tumefaciens, were used to assay heterologous expression on three different clades of the photosynthetic dinoflagellate, Symbiodinium. Accessibility to the resistant cell wall and through the plasma membrane of these dinoflagellates was gained after brief but vigorous shaking in the presence of glass beads and polyethylene glycol. A resistance gene to the herbicide Basta allowed appropriate selection of the cells expressing the hybrid proteins, which showed a characteristic green fluorescence, although they appeared to lose their photosynthetic pigments and did not further divide. Cell GFP expression frequency measured as green fluorescence emission yielded 839 per every 106 cells for Symbiodinium kawagutii, followed by 640 and 460 per every 106 cells for Symbiodinium microadriaticum and Symbiodinium sp. Mf11, respectively. Genomic PCR with specific primers amplified the AtRACK1C and gfp sequences after selection in all clades, thus revealing their presence in the cells. RT-PCR from RNA of S. kawagutii co-incubated with A. tumefaciens harboring each of the three vectors with their respective constructs, amplified products corresponding to the heterologous gfp sequence while no products were obtained from three distinct negative controls. The reported procedure shows that mild abrasion followed by co-incubation with A. tumefaciens harboring heterologous plasmids with CaMV35S and nos promoters can lead to expression of the encoded proteins into the Symbiodinium cells in culture. Despite the obvious drawbacks of the procedure, this is an important first step towards a stable transformation of Symbiodinium.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2015

The Receptor for Activated C Kinase in Plant Signaling: Tale of a Promiscuous Little Molecule

Tania Islas-Flores; Ahasanur Rahman; Hemayet Ullah; Marco A. Villanueva

Two decades after the first report of the plant homolog of the Receptor for Activated C Kinase 1 (RACK1) in cultured tobacco BY2 cells, a significant advancement has been made in the elucidation of its cellular and molecular role. The protein is now implicated in many biological functions including protein translation, multiple hormonal responses, developmental processes, pathogen infection resistance, environmental stress responses, and miRNA production. Such multiple functional roles are consistent with the scaffolding nature of the plant RACK1 protein. A significant advance was achieved when the β-propeller structure of the Arabidopsis RACK1A isoform was elucidated, thus revealing that its conserved seven WD repeats also assembled into this typical topology. From its crystal structure, it became apparent that it shares the structural platform for the interaction with ligands identified in other systems such as mammals. Although RACK1 proteins maintain conserved Protein Kinase C binding sites, the lack of a bona fide PKC adds complexity and enigma to the nature of the ligand partners with which RACK1 interacts in plants. Nevertheless, ligands recently identified using the split-ubiquitin based and conventional yeast two-hybrid assays, have revealed that plant RACK1 is involved in several processes that include defense response, drought and salt stress, ribosomal function, cell wall biogenesis, and photosynthesis. The information acquired indicates that, in spite of the high degree of conservation of its structure, the functions of the plant RACK1 homolog appear to be distinct and diverse from those in yeast, mammals, insects, etc. In this review, we take a critical look at the novel information regarding the many functions in which plant RACK1 has been reported to participate, with a special emphasis on the information on its currently identified and missing ligand partners.


Photosynthesis Research | 2013

The PsbO homolog from Symbiodinium kawagutii (Dinophyceae) characterized using biochemical and molecular methods

Raúl Eduardo Castillo-Medina; Tania Islas-Flores; Patricia E. Thomé; Roberto Iglesias-Prieto; Senjie Lin; Huan Zhang; Marco A. Villanueva

A photosystem II component, the PsbO protein is essential for maximum rates of oxygen production during photosynthesis, and has been extensively characterized in plants and cyanobacteria but not in symbiotic dinoflagellates. Its close interaction with D1 protein has important environmental implications since D1 has been identified as the primary site of damage in endosymbiotic dinoflagellates after thermal stress. We identified and biochemically characterized the PsbO homolog from Symbiodiniumkawagutii as a 28-kDa protein, and immunolocalized it to chloroplast membranes. Chloroplast association was further confirmed by western blot on photosynthetic membrane preparations. TX-114 phase partitioning, chromatography, and SDS-PAGE for single band separation and partial peptide sequencing yielded peptides identical or with high identity to PsbO from dinoflagellates. Analysis of a cDNA library revealed three genes differing by only one aminoacid residue in the in silico-translated ORFs despite greater differences at nucleotide level in the untranslated, putative regulatory sequences. The consensus full amino acid sequence displayed all the characteristic domains and features of PsbO from other sources, but changes in functionally critical, highly conserved motifs were detected. Our biochemical, molecular, and immunolocalization data led to the conclusion that the 28-kDa protein from S. kawagutii is the PsbO homolog, thereby named SkPsbO. We discuss the implications of critical amino acid substitutions for a putative regulatory role of this protein.


PeerJ | 2017

Indomethacin reproducibly induces metamorphosis in Cassiopea xamachana scyphistomae

Patricia Cabrales-Arellano; Tania Islas-Flores; Patricia E. Thomé; Marco A. Villanueva

Cassiopea xamachana jellyfish are an attractive model system to study metamorphosis and/or cnidarian–dinoflagellate symbiosis due to the ease of cultivation of their planula larvae and scyphistomae through their asexual cycle, in which the latter can bud new larvae and continue the cycle without differentiation into ephyrae. Then, a subsequent induction of metamorphosis and full differentiation into ephyrae is believed to occur when the symbionts are acquired by the scyphistomae. Although strobilation induction and differentiation into ephyrae can be accomplished in various ways, a controlled, reproducible metamorphosis induction has not been reported. Such controlled metamorphosis induction is necessary for an ensured synchronicity and reproducibility of biological, biochemical, and molecular analyses. For this purpose, we tested if differentiation could be pharmacologically stimulated as in Aurelia aurita, by the metamorphic inducers thyroxine, KI, NaI, Lugol’s iodine, H2O2, indomethacin, or retinol. We found reproducibly induced strobilation by 50 μM indomethacin after six days of exposure, and 10–25 μM after 7 days. Strobilation under optimal conditions reached 80–100% with subsequent ephyrae release after exposure. Thyroxine yielded inconsistent results as it caused strobilation occasionally, while all other chemicals had no effect. Thus, indomethacin can be used as a convenient tool for assessment of biological phenomena through a controlled metamorphic process in C. xamachana scyphistomae.


Briefings in Functional Genomics | 2018

Genetic transformation of cell-walled plant and algae cells: delivering DNA through the cell wall

Mario Fernando Ortiz-Matamoros; Marco A. Villanueva; Tania Islas-Flores

Transformation techniques are a fundamental tool for functional genomics studies. These techniques are routinely used in many prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms, but in eukaryotes that are surrounded by a cell wall, these protocols have proven difficult to successfully deliver heterologous or homologous DNA within their cytoplasm and nucleus. Such cell-walled organisms represent a challenge that requires the development of genetic transformation techniques that are able to overcome their natural barrier, to achieve targeted gene expression. Here, we review the techniques that have been proven successful and applied to these cell-walled eukaryotic organisms. We focus, especially, on plant cells, microalgae, and the latest approaches to mediate DNA uptake by the photosynthetic dinoflagellate Symbiodinium.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2016

Editorial: Signaling through WD-Repeat Proteins in Plants.

Marco A. Villanueva; Tania Islas-Flores; Hemayet Ullah

Plants are sessile organisms that rely on appropriate signal-transduction responses in order to cope with the challenges imposed by their environment, and must be able to recognize potential damage or benefit to respond accordingly. These response mechanisms are mediated by specific sets of signal receptors, effector proteins interacting through scaffolding assemblies, second messengers, and transcription factors, among other components. The specific responses occur through protein–protein interactions conveyed by particular sequence modules such as the WD-repeat (WDR), which has been evolutionarily conserved in many proteins participating in signaling events. This module consists of a sequence that spans a number of conserved amino acids and ends with tryptophan and aspartate (WD) residues (Neer et al., 1994). The WDR proteins comprise a breathtakingly diverse superfamily of regulatory proteins, representing a breadth of biochemical mechanisms and cellular processes (van Nocker and Ludwig, 2003). One particular variant, the WD40 domain, starts with glycine and histidine followed by a 40 amino acid stretch that ends with WD. These domains usually assemble into β-stranded platforms that form a structure called the β-propeller (Wang et al., 2013). Through the interactions on various parts of the platform, signal-transduction molecules are brought in close proximity to relay conformational changes or enzyme-mediated modifications. The topic “Signaling through WD-repeat proteins in plants” consists of two comprehensive reviews, a perspective, and two articles of original research on the field that help understand how some of these WDR proteins from plants interact with other molecules in response to particular signals.


Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology | 2018

Molecular Features and mRNA Expression of the Receptor for Activated C Kinase 1 from Symbiodinium microadriaticum ssp. microadriaticum During Growth and the Light/Dark cycle

Tania Islas-Flores; Esmeralda Pérez-Cervantes; Jessica Nava-Galeana; Montserrat Loredo-Guillén; Gabriel Guillén; Marco A. Villanueva

Two genes of the RACK1 homolog from the photosynthetic dinoflagellate Symbiodinium microadriaticum ssp. microadriaticum (SmicRACK1), termed SmicRACK1A and SmicRACK1B, were found tandemly arrayed and displayed a single synonymous substitution (T/C) encoding threonine. They included two exons of 942 bp each, encoding 313 amino acids with seven WD‐40 repeats and two PKC‐binding motifs. The protein theoretical mass and pI were 34,200 Da and 5.9, respectively. SmicRACK1 showed maximum identities with RACK1 homologs at the amino acid and nucleotide level, respectively, of 92 and 84% with S. minutum, and phylogenetic analysis revealed clustered related RACK1 sequences from the marine dinoflagellates S. minutum, Heterocapsa triquetra, Karenia brevis, and Alexandrium tamarense. Interestingly, light‐dependent regulatory elements were found both within the 282 bp SmicRACK1A promotor sequence, and within an intergenic sequence of 359 nucleotides that separated both genes, which strongly suggest light‐related functions. This was further supported by mRNA accumulation analysis, which fluctuated along the light and dark phases of the growth cycle showing maximum specific peaks under either condition. Finally, qRT‐PCR analysis revealed differential SmicRACK1 mRNA accumulation with maxima at 6 and 20 d of culture. Our SmicRACK1 characterization suggests roles in active growth and proliferation, as well as light/dark cycle regulation in S. microadriaticum.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2011

PvRACK1 loss-of-function impairs cell expansion and morphogenesis in Phaseolus vulgaris L. root nodules.

Tania Islas-Flores; Gabriel Guillén; Xochitl Alvarado-Affantranger; Miguel Lara-Flores; Federico Sánchez; Marco A. Villanueva

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Marco A. Villanueva

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Gabriel Guillén

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Mario Fernando Ortiz-Matamoros

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Federico Sánchez

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Patricia E. Thomé

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Carolina San Román-Roque

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Esmeralda Pérez-Cervantes

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Herminia Loza-Tavera

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Ignacio Islas-Flores

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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