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Dive into the research topics where Virginia Ruiz-Ferrer is active.

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Featured researches published by Virginia Ruiz-Ferrer.


Annual Review of Plant Biology | 2009

Roles of Plant Small RNAs in Biotic Stress Responses

Virginia Ruiz-Ferrer; Olivier Voinnet

A multitude of small RNAs (sRNAs, 18-25 nt in length) accumulate in plant tissues. Although heterogeneous in size, sequence, genomic distribution, biogenesis, and action, most of these molecules mediate repressive gene regulation through RNA silencing. Besides their roles in developmental patterning and maintenance of genome integrity, sRNAs are also integral components of plant responses to adverse environmental conditions, including biotic stress. Until recently, antiviral RNA silencing was considered a paradigm of the interactions linking RNA silencing to pathogens: Virus-derived sRNAs silence viral gene expression and, accordingly, viruses produce suppressor proteins that target the silencing mechanism. However, increasing evidence shows that endogenous, rather than pathogen-derived, sRNAs also have broad functions in regulating plant responses to various microbes. In turn, microbes have evolved ways to inhibit, avoid, or usurp cellular silencing pathways, thereby prompting the deployment of counter-defensive measures by plants, a compelling illustration of the never-ending molecular arms race between hosts and parasites.


Nature Genetics | 2007

Intra- and intercellular RNA interference in Arabidopsis thaliana requires components of the microRNA and heterochromatic silencing pathways

Patrice Dunoyer; Christophe Himber; Virginia Ruiz-Ferrer; Abdelmalek Alioua; Olivier Voinnet

In RNA interference (RNAi), double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) is processed into short interfering RNA (siRNA) to mediate sequence-specific gene knockdown. The genetics of plant RNAi is not understood, nor are the bases for its spreading between cells. Here, we unravel the requirements for biogenesis and action of siRNAs directing RNAi in Arabidopsis thaliana and show how alternative routes redundantly mediate this process under extreme dsRNA dosages. We found that SMD1 and SMD2, required for intercellular but not intracellular RNAi, are allelic to RDR2 and NRPD1a, respectively, previously implicated in siRNA-directed heterochromatin formation through the action of DCL3 and AGO4. However, neither DCL3 nor AGO4 is required for non–cell autonomous RNAi, uncovering a new pathway for RNAi spreading or detection in recipient cells. Finally, we show that the genetics of RNAi is distinct from that of antiviral silencing and propose that this experimental silencing pathway has a direct endogenous plant counterpart.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Endogenous TasiRNAs mediate non-cell autonomous effects on gene regulation in Arabidopsis thaliana.

Rebecca Schwab; Alexis Maizel; Virginia Ruiz-Ferrer; Damien Garcia; Martin Bayer; Martin Crespi; Olivier Voinnet; Robert A. Martienssen

Background Different classes of small RNAs (sRNAs) refine the expression of numerous genes in higher eukaryotes by directing protein partners to complementary nucleic acids, where they mediate gene silencing. Plants encode a unique class of sRNAs, called trans-acting small interfering RNAs (tasiRNAs), which post-transcriptionally regulate protein-coding transcripts, as do microRNAs (miRNAs), and both sRNA classes control development through their targets. TasiRNA biogenesis requires multiple components of the siRNA pathway and also miRNAs. But while 21mer siRNAs originating from transgenes can mediate silencing across several cell layers, miRNA action seems spatially restricted to the producing or closely surrounding cells. Principal Findings We have previously described the isolation of a genetrap reporter line for TAS3a, the major locus producing AUXIN RESPONS FACTOR (ARF)-regulating tasiRNAs in the Arabidopsis shoot. Its activity is limited to the adaxial (upper) side of leaf primordia, thus spatially isolated from ARF-activities, which are located in the abaxial (lower) side. We show here by in situ hybridization and reporter fusions that the silencing activities of ARF-regulating tasiRNAs are indeed manifested non-cell autonomously to spatially control ARF activities. Conclusions/Significance Endogenous tasiRNAs are thus mediators of a mobile developmental signal and might provide effective gene silencing at a distance beyond the reach of most miRNAs.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Structural Analysis of Tobacco Etch Potyvirus HC-Pro Oligomers Involved in Aphid Transmission

Virginia Ruiz-Ferrer; Jasminka Boskovic; Carlos Alfonso; Germán Rivas; Oscar Llorca; Dionisio López-Abella; Juan José López-Moya

ABSTRACT Oligomeric forms of the HC-Pro protein of the tobacco etch potyvirus (TEV) have been analyzed by analytical ultracentrifugation and single-particle electron microscopy combined with three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction. Highly purified HC-Pro protein was obtained from plants infected with TEV by using a modified version of the virus that incorporates a histidine tag at the HC-Pro N terminus (hisHC-Pro). The purified protein retained a high biological activity in solution when tested for aphid transmission. Sedimentation equilibrium showed that the hisHC-Pro preparations were heterogenous in size. Sedimentation velocity confirmed the previous observation and revealed that the active protein solution contained several sedimenting species compatible with dimers, tetramers, hexamers, and octamers of the protein. Electron microscopy fields of purified protein showed particles of different sizes and shapes. The reconstructed 3D structures suggested that the observed particles could correspond to dimeric, tetrameric, and hexameric forms of the protein. A model of the interactions required for oligomerization of the HC-Pro of potyviruses is proposed.


New Phytologist | 2016

Differentially expressed small RNAs in Arabidopsis galls formed by Meloidogyne javanica: a functional role for miR390 and its TAS3-derived tasiRNAs.

Javier Cabrera; Marta Barcala; Alejandra García; Ana Rio-Machín; Clémence Medina; Stéphanie Jaubert-Possamai; Bruno Favery; Alexis Maizel; Virginia Ruiz-Ferrer; Carmen Fenoll; Carolina Escobar

Root-knot nematodes (RKNs) induce inside the vascular cylinder the giant cells (GCs) embedded in the galls. The distinctive gene repression in early-developing GCs could be facilitated by small RNAs (sRNA) such as miRNAs, and/or epigenetic mechanisms mediated by 24nt-sRNAs, rasiRNAs and 21-22nt-sRNAs. Therefore, the sRNA-population together with the role of the miR390/TAS3/ARFs module were studied during early gall/GC formation. Three sRNA libraries from 3-d-post-inoculation (dpi) galls induced by Meloidogyne javanica in Arabidopsis and three from uninfected root segments were sequenced following Illumina-Solexa technology. pMIR390a::GUS and pTAS3::GUS lines were assayed for nematode-dependent promoter activation. A sensor line indicative of TAS3-derived tasiRNAs binding to the ARF3 sequence (pARF3:ARF3-GUS) together with a tasiRNA-resistant ARF3 line (pARF3:ARF3m-GUS) were used for functional analysis. The sRNA population showed significant differences between galls and controls, with high validation rate and correspondence with their target expression: 21-nt sRNAs corresponding mainly to miRNAs were downregulated, whilst 24-nt-sRNAs from the rasiRNA family were mostly upregulated in galls. The promoters of MIR390a and TAS3, active in galls, and the pARF3:ARF3-GUS line, indicated a role of TAS3-derived-tasiRNAs in galls. The regulatory module miR390/TAS3 is necessary for proper gall formation possibly through auxin-responsive factors, and the abundance of 24-nt sRNAs (mostly rasiRNAs) constitutes a gall hallmark.


Molecular Plant Pathology | 2016

Activation of senescence-associated Dark-inducible (DIN) genes during infection contributes to enhanced susceptibility to plant viruses

Lourdes Fernández-Calvino; Irene Guzmán-Benito; Francisco J. del Toro; Livia Donaire; Ana B. Castro-Sanz; Virginia Ruiz-Ferrer; César Llave

Virus infections in plants cause changes in host gene expression that are common to other environmental stresses. In this work, we found extensive overlap in the transcriptional responses between Arabidopsis thaliana plants infected with Tobacco rattle virus (TRV) and plants undergoing senescence. This is exemplified by the up-regulation during infection of several senescence-associated Dark-inducible (DIN) genes, including AtDIN1 (Senescence 1, SEN1), AtDIN6 (Asparagine synthetase 1, AtASN1) and AtDIN11. DIN1, DIN6 and DIN11 homologues were also activated in Nicotiana benthamiana in response to TRV and Potato virus X (PVX) infection. Reduced TRV levels in RNA interference (RNAi) lines targeting AtDIN11 indicate that DIN11 is an important modulator of susceptibility to TRV in Arabidopsis. Furthermore, low accumulation of TRV in Arabidopsis protoplasts from RNAi lines suggests that AtDIN11 supports virus multiplication in this species. The effect of DIN6 on virus accumulation was negligible in Arabidopsis, perhaps as a result of gene or functional redundancy. However, TRV-induced silencing of NbASN, the DIN6 homologue in N. benthamiana, compromises TRV and PVX accumulation in systemically infected leaves. Interestingly, NbASN inactivation correlates with the appearance of morphological defects in infected leaves. We found that DIN6 and DIN11 regulate virus multiplication in a step prior to the activation of plant defence responses. We hypothesize on the possible roles of DIN6 and DIN11 during virus infection.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2018

A Phenotyping Method of Giant Cells from Root-Knot Nematode Feeding Sites by Confocal Microscopy Highlights a Role for CHITINASE-LIKE 1 in Arabidopsis

Javier Cabrera; Rocío Olmo; Virginia Ruiz-Ferrer; Isidro Abreu; Christian Hermans; Isabel Martinez-Argudo; Carmen Fenoll; Carolina Escobar

Most effective nematicides for the control of root-knot nematodes are banned, which demands a better understanding of the plant-nematode interaction. Understanding how gene expression in the nematode-feeding sites relates to morphological features may assist a better characterization of the interaction. However, nematode-induced galls resulting from cell-proliferation and hypertrophy hinders such observation, which would require tissue sectioning or clearing. We demonstrate that a method based on the green auto-fluorescence produced by glutaraldehyde and the tissue-clearing properties of benzyl-alcohol/benzyl-benzoate preserves the structure of the nematode-feeding sites and the plant-nematode interface with unprecedented resolution quality. This allowed us to obtain detailed measurements of the giant cells’ area in an Arabidopsis line overexpressing CHITINASE-LIKE-1 (CTL1) from optical sections by confocal microscopy, assigning a role for CTL1 and adding essential data to the scarce information of the role of gene repression in giant cells. Furthermore, subcellular structures and features of the nematodes body and tissues from thick organs formed after different biotic interactions, i.e., galls, syncytia, and nodules, were clearly distinguished without embedding or sectioning in different plant species (Arabidopsis, cucumber or Medicago). The combination of this method with molecular studies will be valuable for a better understanding of the plant-biotic interactions.


Molecular Plant Pathology | 2018

Silenced retrotransposons are major rasiRNAs targets in Arabidopsis galls induced by Meloidogyne javanica: rasiRNAs target retrotransposons in galls

Virginia Ruiz-Ferrer; Javier Cabrera; Isabel Martinez-Argudo; Haydeé Artaza; Carmen Fenoll; Carolina Escobar

Root-knot nematodes (RKNs, Meloidogyne spp.) are sedentary biotrophic pathogens that establish within the vascular cylinder of plant roots, forming a gall and inducing several feeding cells, giant cells (GCs), essential for completion of their life cycle. GCs suffer gene expression changes, repeated mitosis and endoreduplication events. Transcriptomics has revealed that an extensive down-regulation of transcripts, a molecular signature of early-developing galls and GCs that is conserved in tomato and Arabidopsis, may be achieved through small RNA (sRNA) gene silencing pathways. The role of some microRNAs (miRNAs) in plant-RKN interactions has recently been addressed, but little is known about the regulatory roles of other sRNA types. Here, we perform a differential accumulation analysis to show which repeat-associated small interfering RNAs (rasiRNAs) are distinctive or enriched in early Arabidopsis galls vs. uninfected roots. Those distinctive from galls are preferentially located in pericentromeric regions with predominant sizes of 24 and 22 nucleotides. Gall-distinctive rasiRNAs target primarily GYPSY and COPIA retrotransposons, which show a marked repression in galls vs. uninfected roots. Infection tests and phenotypic studies of galls from Meloidogyne javanica in Arabidopsis mutants impaired in post-transcriptional gene silencing and/or canonical RNA-directed DNA methylation (RdDM) pathways, as well as quantitative polymerase chain reaction analysis, suggest the implication of canonical and non-canonical RdDM pathways during gall formation, possibly through the regulation of retrotransposons. This process may be crucial for the maintenance of genome integrity during the reprogramming process of galls/GCs from their vascular precursor cells, and/or to ensure a faithful DNA replication during the repeated mitosis/endoreduplication that concurs with feeding site formation.


European Journal of Plant Pathology | 2018

sRNAs involved in the regulation of plant developmental processes are altered during the root-knot nematode interaction for feeding site formation

Javier Cabrera; Virginia Ruiz-Ferrer; Carmen Fenoll; Carolina Escobar

Plant parasitic root- knot nematodes (RKNs; Meloidogyne spp.) are a significant threat for the agriculture as they infect multiple crops, causing severe economic losses worldwide. Most of the effective chemical nematicides have been or are in the process of being banned on the basis of their harmful effect to the environment and human health. These nematodes penetrate the root, migrate intercellularly and establish in the vascular cylinder. Then, nematode effectors delivered into the plant cells alter the plant development to induce their feeding cells, called giant cells (GCs) that serve to nourish them till life cycle completion. The GCs are embedded into a swelling in the root, called gall, formed by the proliferation and/or hypertrophy of the surrounding tissues. Further studies on the development of the nematode-feeding sites, i.e. to deepen into the molecular bases of the plant-nematode interaction, are required to identify alternative approaches for nematode control. Here, we summarize recent advances specifically in the role of the small RNAs during the compatible interactions between RKNs and Arabidopsis and tomato hosts. Most of the studies describe the deregulation in the galls and/or GCs of gene regulatory modules composed by miRNAs and transcription factors which have already an assigned function during development and/or organogenesis processes in the plant. This may point to a role for these miRNAs as molecular hubs of pathways triggered either by developmental plant cues or by a biotic stress as the nematode infection.


BioEssays | 2007

Viral suppression of RNA silencing: 2b wins the Golden Fleece by defeating Argonaute

Virginia Ruiz-Ferrer; Olivier Voinnet

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Dionisio López-Abella

Spanish National Research Council

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Juan José López-Moya

Spanish National Research Council

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Ana B. Castro-Sanz

Technical University of Madrid

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Belén Martínez-García

Spanish National Research Council

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Carlos Alfonso

Spanish National Research Council

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César Llave

Spanish National Research Council

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Elisa Goytia

Spanish National Research Council

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Francisco J. del Toro

Spanish National Research Council

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