Zulema Udaondo
Spanish National Research Council
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Featured researches published by Zulema Udaondo.
Fems Microbiology Reviews | 2015
Juan-Luis Ramos; María del Sol Cuenca; Carlos Molina-Santiago; Ana Segura; Estrella Duque; María R. Gómez-García; Zulema Udaondo; Amalia Roca
A number of microorganisms have the ability to thrive in the presence of a range of toxic solvents. Tolerance to these chemicals is a multifactorial process, meaning that bacterial cells use a set of physiological and gene expression changes to overcome the damage imparted by these chemicals. This review focuses mainly on issues related to tolerance to aromatic hydrocarbons and butanol in Pseudomonas, although other microorganisms are also discussed. Pseudomonas putida strains contain a circular chromosome of approximately 6 Mbp which encodes about 5300 genes. A combination of physiological and biochemical assays, a genome-wide collection of mutants and several omics approaches have provided useful information to help identify functions involved in solvent tolerance in P. putida. The solvent response involves fine-tuning of lipid fluidity to adjust membrane functions including impermeabilization, activation of a general stress-response system, increased energy generation and induction of specific efflux pumps that extrude solvents to the medium. These responses are modulated at the transcriptional level by local and global regulators as well as by a number of sRNAs whose levels fluctuate with the presence of solvents in the environment. Taken as a whole these regulatory inputs orchestrate the complex network of metabolic responses observed after solvent addition.
Environmental Microbiology | 2013
Amalia Roca; Paloma Pizarro-Tobías; Zulema Udaondo; Matilde Fernández; Miguel A. Matilla; M. Antonia Molina-Henares; Lázaro Molina; Ana Segura; Estrella Duque; Juan-Luis Ramos
Pseudomonas putida BIRD-1 is a plant growth-promoting rhizobacterium whose genome size is 5.7 Mbp. It adheres to plant roots and colonizes the rhizosphere to high cell densities even in soils with low moisture. This property is linked to its ability to synthesize trehalose, since a mutant deficient in the synthesis of trehalose exhibited less tolerance to desiccation than the parental strain. The genome of BIRD-1 encodes a wide range of proteins that help it to deal with reactive oxygen stress generated in the plant rhizosphere. BIRD-1 plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria properties derive from its ability to enhance phosphorous and iron solubilization and to produce phytohormones. BIRD-1 is capable of solubilizing insoluble inorganic phosphate forms through acid production. The genome of BIRD-1 encodes at least five phosphatases related to phosphorous solubilization, one of them being a phytase that facilitates the utilization of phytic acid, the main storage form of phosphorous in plants. Pyoverdine is the siderophore produced by this strain, a mutant that in the FvpD siderophore synthase failed to grow on medium without supplementary iron, but the mutant was as competitive as the parental strain in soils because it captures the siderophores produced by other microbes. BIRD-1 overproduces indole-3-acetic acid through convergent pathways.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Lázaro Molina; Zulema Udaondo; Estrella Duque; Matilde Fernández; Carlos Molina-Santiago; Amalia Roca; Mario Porcel; Jesús de la Torre; Ana Segura; Patrick Plésiat; Katy Jeannot; Juan L. Ramos
Environmental microbes harbor an enormous pool of antibiotic and biocide resistance genes that can impact the resistance profiles of animal and human pathogens via horizontal gene transfer. Pseudomonas putida strains are ubiquitous in soil and water but have been seldom isolated from humans. We have established a collection of P. putida strains isolated from in-patients in different hospitals in France. One of the isolated strains (HB3267) kills insects and is resistant to the majority of the antibiotics used in laboratories and hospitals, including aminoglycosides, ß-lactams, cationic peptides, chromoprotein enediyne antibiotics, dihydrofolate reductase inhibitors, fluoroquinolones and quinolones, glycopeptide antibiotics, macrolides, polyketides and sulfonamides. Similar to other P. putida clinical isolates the strain was sensitive to amikacin. To shed light on the broad pattern of antibiotic resistance, which is rarely found in clinical isolates of this species, the genome of this strain was sequenced and analysed. The study revealed that the determinants of multiple resistance are both chromosomally-borne as well as located on the pPC9 plasmid. Further analysis indicated that pPC9 has recruited antibiotic and biocide resistance genes from environmental microorganisms as well as from opportunistic and true human pathogens. The pPC9 plasmid is not self-transmissible, but can be mobilized by other bacterial plasmids making it capable of spreading antibiotic resistant determinants to new hosts.
Environmental Microbiology | 2016
Zulema Udaondo; Lázaro Molina; Ana Segura; Estrella Duque; Juan L. Ramos
Pseudomonas putida are strict aerobes that proliferate in a range of temperate niches and are of interest for environmental applications due to their capacity to degrade pollutants and ability to promote plant growth. Furthermore solvent-tolerant strains are useful for biosynthesis of added-value chemicals. We present a comprehensive comparative analysis of nine strains and the first characterization of the Pseudomonas putida pangenome. The core genome of P. putida comprises approximately 3386 genes. The most abundant genes within the core genome are those that encode nutrient transporters. Other conserved genes include those for central carbon metabolism through the Entner-Doudoroff pathway, the pentose phosphate cycle, arginine and proline metabolism, and pathways for degradation of aromatic chemicals. Genes that encode transporters, enzymes and regulators for amino acid metabolism (synthesis and degradation) are all part of the core genome, as well as various electron transporters, which enable aerobic metabolism under different oxygen regimes. Within the core genome are 30 genes for flagella biosynthesis and 12 key genes for biofilm formation. Pseudomonas putida strains share 85% of the coding regions with Pseudomonas aeruginosa; however, in P. putida, virulence factors such as exotoxins and type III secretion systems are absent.
FEBS Letters | 2012
Zulema Udaondo; Estrella Duque; Matilde Fernández; Lázaro Molina; Jesús de la Torre; Patricia Bernal; José-Luis Niqui; Cecilia Pini; Amalia Roca; Miguel A. Matilla; M. Antonia Molina-Henares; Hortencia Silva-Jiménez; Gloria Navarro-Avilés; Andreas E. Busch; Jesús Lacal; Tino Krell; Ana Segura; Juan-Luis Ramos
Pseudomonas putida strains are prevalent in a variety of pristine and polluted environments. The genome of the solvent‐tolerant P. putida strain DOT‐T1E which thrives in the presence of high concentrations of monoaromatic hydrocarbons, contains a circular 6.3 Mbp chromosome and a 133 kbp plasmid. Omics information has been used to identify the genes and proteins involved in solvent tolerance in this bacterium. This strain uses a multifactorial response that involves fine‐tuning of lipid fluidity, activation of a general stress‐response system, enhanced energy generation, and induction of specific efflux pumps that extrude solvents to the medium. Local and global transcriptional regulators participate in a complex network of metabolic functions, acting as the decision makers in the response to solvents.
Microbial Biotechnology | 2013
Zulema Udaondo; Lázaro Molina; Craig Daniels; Manuel J. Gómez; María Antonia Molina-Henares; Miguel A. Matilla; Amalia Roca; Matilde Fernández; Estrella Duque; Ana Segura; Juan L. Ramos
Pseudomonas putida DOT‐T1E is an organic solvent tolerant strain capable of degrading aromatic hydrocarbons. Here we report the DOT‐T1E genomic sequence (6 394 153 bp) and its metabolic atlas based on the classification of enzyme activities. The genome encodes for at least 1751 enzymatic reactions that account for the known pattern of C, N, P and S utilization by this strain. Based on the potential of this strain to thrive in the presence of organic solvents and the subclasses of enzymes encoded in the genome, its metabolic map can be drawn and a number of potential biotransformation reactions can be deduced. This information may prove useful for adapting desired reactions to create value‐added products. This bioengineering potential may be realized via direct transformation of substrates, or may require genetic engineering to block an existing pathway, or to re‐organize operons and genes, as well as possibly requiring the recruitment of enzymes from other sources to achieve the desired transformation.
Systematic and Applied Microbiology | 2015
Zaira Martín-Moldes; María Teresa Zamarro; Carlos del Cerro; Ana Valencia; Manuel J. Gómez; Aida Arcas; Zulema Udaondo; José Luis García; Juan Nogales; Manuel Carmona; Eduardo Díaz
The genomic features of Azoarcus sp. CIB reflect its most distinguishing phenotypes as a diazotroph, facultative anaerobe, capable of degrading either aerobically and/or anaerobically a wide range of aromatic compounds, including some toxic hydrocarbons such as toluene and m-xylene, as well as its endophytic lifestyle. The analyses of its genome have expanded the catabolic potential of strain CIB toward common natural compounds, such as certain diterpenes, that were not anticipated as carbon sources. The high number of predicted solvent efflux pumps and heavy metal resistance gene clusters has provided the first evidence for two environmentally relevant features of this bacterium that remained unknown. Genome mining has revealed several gene clusters likely involved in the endophytic lifestyle of strain CIB, opening the door to the molecular characterization of some plant growth promoting traits. Horizontal gene transfer and mobile genetic elements appear to have played a major role as a mechanism of adaptation of this bacterium to different lifestyles. This work paves the way for a systems biology-based understanding of the abilities of Azoarcus sp. CIB to integrate aerobic and anaerobic metabolism of aromatic compounds, tolerate stress conditions, and interact with plants as an endophyte of great potential for phytostimulation and phytoremediation strategies. Comparative genomics provides an Azoarcus pan genome that confirms the global metabolic flexibility of this genus, and suggests that its phylogeny should be revisited.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Abdelali Daddaoua; Sandy Fillet; Matilde Fernández; Zulema Udaondo; Tino Krell; Juan L. Ramos
Homologs of the transcriptional regulator PtxS are omnipresent in Pseudomonas, whereas PtxR homologues are exclusively found in human pathogenic Pseudomonas species. In all Pseudomonas sp., PtxS with 2-ketogluconate is the regulator of the gluconate degradation pathway and controls expression from its own promoter and also from the Pgad and Pkgu for the catabolic operons. There is evidence that PtxS and PtxR play a central role in the regulation of exotoxin A expression, a relevant primary virulence factor of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. We show using DNaseI-footprint analysis that in P. aeruginosa PtxR binds to the -35 region of the PtoxA promoter in front of the exotoxin A gene, whereas PtxS does not bind to this promoter. Bioinformatic and DNaseI-footprint analysis identified a PtxR binding site in the Pkgu and Pgad promoters that overlaps the -35 region, while the PtxS operator site is located 50 bp downstream from the PtxR site. In vitro, PtxS recognises PtxR with nanomolar affinity, but this interaction does not occur in the presence of 2-ketogluconate, the specific effector of PtxS. DNAaseI footprint assays of Pkgu and Pgad promoters with PtxS and PtxR showed a strong region of hyper-reactivity between both regulator binding sites, indicative of DNA distortion when both proteins are bound; however in the presence of 2-ketogluconate no protection was observed. We conclude that PtxS modulates PtxR activity in response to 2-ketogluconate by complex formation in solution in the case of the PtoxA promoter, or via the formation of a DNA loop as in the regulation of gluconate catabolic genes. Data suggest two different mechanisms of control exerted by the same regulator.
Environmental Microbiology | 2015
Carlos Molina-Santiago; Abdelali Daddaoua; María Gómez-Lozano; Zulema Udaondo; Søren Molin; Juan-Luis Ramos
Multi-drug resistant bacteria are a major threat to humanity, especially because the current battery of known antibiotics is not sufficient to combat infections produced by these microbes. Therefore, the study of how current antibiotics act and how bacteria defend themselves against antibiotics is of critical importance. Pseudomonas putida DOT-T1E exhibits an impressive array of RND efflux pumps, which confer this microorganism high resistance to organic solvents and antibiotics that would kill most other microorganisms. We have chosen DOT-T1E as a model microbe to study the microbial responses to a wide battery of antibiotics (chloramphenicol, rifampicin, tetracycline, ciprofloxacin, ampicillin, kanamycin, spectinomycin and gentamicin). Ribonucleic acid sequencing (RNA)-seq analyses revealed that each antibiotic provokes a unique transcriptional response profile in DOT-T1E. While many of the genes identified were related to known antibiotic targets, others were unrelated or encoded hypothetical proteins. These results indicate that our knowledge of antibiotic resistance mechanisms is still partial. We also identified 138 new small RNAs (sRNAs) in DOT-T1E, dramatically adding to the 16 that have been previously described. Importantly, our results reveal that a correlation exists between the expression of messenger RNA and sRNA, indicating that some of these sRNAs are likely involved in fine tuning the expression of antibiotic resistance genes. Taken together, these findings open new frontiers in the fight against multi-drug resistant bacteria and point to the potential use of sRNAs as novel antimicrobial targets.
Genome Announcements | 2013
Lázaro Molina; Patricia Bernal; Zulema Udaondo; Ana Segura; Juan L. Ramos
ABSTRACT We report the complete genome sequence of Pseudomonas putida strain H8234, which was isolated from a hospital patient presenting with bacteremia. This strain has a single chromosome (6,870,827 bp) that contains 6,305 open reading frames. The strain is not a pathogen but exhibits multidrug resistance associated with 40 genomic islands.