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Ruben Rellan-Alvarez


rrellan@eead.csic.es

Journal articles

2010
R Rellan-Alvarez, J Giner-Martinez-Sierra, J Orduna, I Orera, J A Rodriguez-Castrillon, J I Garcia-Alonso, J Abadia, A Alvarez-Fernandez (2010)  Identification of a Tri-Iron(III), Tri-Citrate Complex in the Xylem Sap of Iron-Deficient Tomato Resupplied with Iron : New Insights into Plant Iron Long-Distance Transport   PLANT AND CELL PHYSIOLOGY 51: 1. 91-102 JAN  
Abstract: The identification of Fe transport forms in plant xylem sap is crucial to the understanding of long-distance Fe transport processes in plants. Previous studies have proposed that Fe may be transported as an Fecitrate complex in plant xylem sap, but such a complex has never been detected. In this study we report the first direct and unequivocal identification of a natural Fe complex in plant xylem sap. A tri-Fe(III), tri-citrate complex (Fe(3)Cit(3)) was found in the xylem sap of Fe-deficient tomato (Solanum lycopersicum Mill. cv. Tres Cantos) resupplied with Fe, by using an integrated mass spectrometry approach based on exact molecular mass, isotopic signature and Fe determination and retention time. This complex has been modeled as having an oxo-bridged tri-Fe core. A second complex, a di-Fe(III), di-citrate complex was also detected in Fecitrate standards along with Fe(3)Cit(3), with the allocation of Fe between the two complexes depending on the Fe to citrate ratio. These results provide evidence for Fecitrate complex xylem transport in plants. The consequences for the role of Fe to citrate ratio in long-distance transport of Fe in xylem are also discussed.
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I Pascual, I Azcona, J Aguirreolea, F Morales, F J Corpas, J M Palma, R Rellan-Alvarez, M Sanchez-Diaz (2010)  Growth, Yield, and Fruit Quality of Pepper Plants Amended with Two Sanitized Sewage Sludges   JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY 58: 11. 6951-6959 JUN 9  
Abstract: Organic wastes such as sewage sludge have been successfully used to increase crop productivity of horticultural soils. Nevertheless, considerations of the impact of sludges on vegetable and fruit quality have received little attention. Therefore, the objective of the present work was to investigate the impact of two sanitized sewage sludges, autothermal thermophilic aerobic digestion (ATAD) and compost sludge, on the growth, yield, and fruit quality of pepper plants (Capsicum annuum L. cv. Piquillo) grown in the greenhouse. Two doses of ATAD (15 and 30% v/v) and three of composted sludge (15, 30, and 45%) were applied to a peat-based potting mix. Unamended substrate was included as control. ATAD and composted sludge increased leaf, shoot, and root dry matter, as well as fruit yield, mainly due to a higher number of fruits per plant. There was no effect of sludge on fruit size (dry matter per fruit and diameter). The concentrations of Zn and Cu in fruit increased with the addition of sewage sludges. Nevertheless, the levels of these elements remained below toxic thresholds. Pepper fruits from sludge-amended plants maintained low concentrations of capsaicin and dihydrocapsaicin, thus indicating low pungency level, in accordance with the regulations prescribed by the Control Board of "Lodosa Piquillo peppers" Origin Denomination. The application of sludges did not modify the concentration of vitamin C (ASC) in fruit, whereas the highest doses of composted sludge tended to increase the content of reduced (GSH) and oxidized (GSSG) glutathione, without change in the GSH/GSSG ratio. There were no effects of sludge on the transcript levels of enzymes involved in the synthesis of vitamin C, L-galactono-1,4-lactone dehydrogenase (GLDH) or in the ascorbate-glutathione cycle, ascorbate peroxidase (APX), monodehydroascorbate reductase (MDAR), and glutathione reductase (GA). Results suggest that the synthesis and degradation of ASC and GSH were compensated for in most of the treatments assayed. The application of sanitized sludges to pepper plants can improve pepper yield without loss of food nutritional quality, in terms of fruit size and vitamin C, glutathione, and capsaicinoid contents.
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R Rellan-Alvarez, S Andaluz, J Rodriguez-Celma, G Wohlgemuth, G Zocchi, A Alvarez-Fernandez, O Fiehn, A F Lopez-Millan, J Abadia (2010)  Changes in the proteomic and metabolic profiles of Beta vulgaris root tips in response to iron deficiency and resupply   BMC PLANT BIOLOGY 10: JUN 21  
Abstract: Background: Plants grown under iron deficiency show different morphological, biochemical and physiological changes. These changes include, among others, the elicitation of different strategies to improve the acquisition of Fe from the rhizosphere, the adjustment of Fe homeostasis processes and a reorganization of carbohydrate metabolism. The application of modern techniques that allow the simultaneous and untargeted analysis of multiple proteins and metabolites can provide insight into multiple processes taking place in plants under Fe deficiency. The objective of this study was to characterize the changes induced in the root tip proteome and metabolome of sugar beet plants in response to Fe deficiency and resupply. Results: Root tip extract proteome maps were obtained by 2-D isoelectric focusing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and approximately 140 spots were detected. Iron deficiency resulted in changes in the relative amounts of 61 polypeptides, and 22 of them were identified by mass spectrometry (MS). Metabolites in root tip extracts were analyzed by gas chromatography-MS, and more than 300 metabolites were resolved. Out of 77 identified metabolites, 26 changed significantly with Fe deficiency. Iron deficiency induced increases in the relative amounts of proteins and metabolites associated to glycolysis, tri-carboxylic acid cycle and anaerobic respiration, confirming previous studies. Furthermore, a protein not present in Fe-sufficient roots, dimethyl-8-ribityllumazine (DMRL) synthase, was present in high amounts in root tips from Fe-deficient sugar beet plants and gene transcript levels were higher in Fe-deficient root tips. Also, a marked increase in the relative amounts of the raffinose family of oligosaccharides (RFOs) was observed in Fe-deficient plants, and a further increase in these compounds occurred upon short term Fe resupply. Conclusions: The increases in DMRL synthase and in RFO sugars were the major changes induced by Fe deficiency and resupply in root tips of sugar beet plants. Flavin synthesis could be involved in Fe uptake, whereas RFO sugars could be involved in the alleviation of oxidative stress, C trafficking or cell signalling. Our data also confirm the increase in proteins and metabolites related to carbohydrate metabolism and TCA cycle pathways.
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J Rodriguez-Celma, R Rellan-Alvarez, A Abadia, J Abadia, A F Lopez-Millan (2010)  Changes induced by two levels of cadmium toxicity in the 2-DE protein profile of tomato roots   JOURNAL OF PROTEOMICS 73: 9. 1694-1706 AUG 5  
Abstract: Tomato is an important crop from nutritional and economical points of view, and it is grown in greenhouses, where special substrates and the use of recycled water imply an increased risk of Cd accumulation. We investigated tomato root responses to low (10 mu M) and high (100 mu M) Cd concentrations at the root proteome level. Root extract proteome maps were obtained by 2-DE, and an average of 121, 145 and 93 spots were detected in the 0, 10 and 100 mu Cd treatments, respectively. The low Cd treatment (10 mu M) resulted in significant and higher than 2-fold changes in the relative amounts of 36 polypeptides, with 27 of them identified by mass spectrometry, whereas the 100 mu M Cd treatment resulted in changes in the relative amounts of 41 polypeptides, with 33 of them being identified. The 2-DE based proteomic approach allowed assessing the main metabolic pathways affected by Cd toxicity. Our results suggests that the 10 mu M Cd treatment elicits proteomic responses similar to those observed in Fe deficiency, including activation of the glycolytic pathway, TCA cycle and respiration, whereas the 100 mu M Cd treatment responses are more likely due to true Cd toxicity, with a general shutdown of carbon metabolism and increases in stress related and detoxification proteins. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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2009
M C Marti, D Camejo, N Fernandez-Garcia, R Rellan-Alvarez, S Marques, F Sevilla, A Jimenez (2009)  Effect of oil refinery sludges on the growth and antioxidant system of alfalfa plants   JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS 171: 1-3. 879-885 NOV 15  
Abstract: The refining process in the petrochemical industry generates oil refinery sludges, a potentially contaminating waste product, with a high content of hydrocarbons and heavy metals. Faster degradation of hydrocarbons has been reported in vegetated soils than in non-vegetated soils, but the impact of these contaminants on the plants physiology and on their antioxidant system is not well known. In this study, the effect of the addition of petroleum sludge to soil on the physiological parameters, nutrient contents, and oxidative and antioxidant status in alfalfa was investigated. An inhibition of alfalfa growth and an induction of oxidative stress, as indicated by an increase in protein oxidation, were found. Also, the superoxide dismutase isoenzymes, peroxidase, and those enzymes involved in the ascorbate-glutathione cycle showed significant activity increases, parallel to an enhancement of total homoglutathione, allowing plants being tolerant to this situation. This information is necessary to establish successful and sustainable plant-based remediation strategies. (c) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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2008
R Rellan-Alvarez, J Abadia, A Alvarez-Fernandez (2008)  Formation of metal-nicotianamine complexes as affected by pH, ligand exchange with citrate and metal exchange. A study by electrospray ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry   RAPID COMMUNICATIONS IN MASS SPECTROMETRY 22: 10. 1553-1562 MAY  
Abstract: Nicotianamine (NA) is considered as a key element in plant metal homeostasis. This non-proteinogenic amino acid has an optimal structure for chelation of metal ions, with six functional groups that allow octahedral coordination. The ability to chelate metals by NA is largely dependent on the pK of the resulting complex and the pH of the solution, with most metals being chelated at neutral or basic pH values. In silico calculations using pKa and pK values have predicted the occurrence of metal-NA complexes in plant fluids, but the use of soft ionization techniques (e.g. electrospray), together with high-resolution mass spectrometers (e.g. time-of-flight mass detector), can offer direct and metal-specific information on the speciation of NA in solution. We have used direct infusion electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (time-of-flight) ESI-MS(TOF) to study the complexation of Mn, Fe(II), Fe(III), Ni, Cu by NA. The pH dependence of the metal-NA complexes in ESI-MS was compared to that predicted in silico. Possible exchange reactions that may occur between Fe-NA and other metal micronutrients as Zn and Cu, as well as between Fe-NA and citrate, another possible Fe ligand candidate in plants, were studied at pH 5.5 and 7.5, values typical of the plant xylem and phloem saps. Metal-NA complexes were generally observed in the ESI-MS experiments at a pH value approximately 1-2 units lower than that predicted in silico, and this difference could be only partially explained by the estimated error, approximately 0.3 pH units, associated with measuring pH in organic solvent-containing solutions. Iron-NA complexes are less likely to participate in ligand- and metal-exchange reactions at pH 7.5 than at pH 5.5. Results support that NA may be the ligand chelating Fe at pH values usually found in phloem sap, whereas in the xylem sap NA is not likely to be involved in Fe transport, conversely to what occurs with other metals such as Cu and Ni. Some considerations that need to be addressed when studying metal complexes in plant compartments by ESI-MS are also discussed. Copyright (C) 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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2007
C Ortega-Villasante, L E Hernandez, R Rellan-Alvarez, F F Del Campo, R O Carpena-Ruiz (2007)  Rapid alteration of cellular redox homeostasis upon exposure to cadmium and mercury in alfalfa seedlings   NEW PHYTOLOGIST 176: 1. 96-107  
Abstract: Here, the kinetics of oxidative stress responses of alfalfa (Medicago sativa) seedlings to cadmium (Cd) and mercury (Hg) (0, 3, 10 and 30 mu m) exposure, expanding from a few minutes to 24 h, were studied. Intracellular oxidative stress was analysed using 2',7'-dichlorofluorescin diacetate and extracellular hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) production was studied with Amplex Red. Growth inhibition, concentrations of ascorbate, glutathione (GSH), homoglutathione (hGSH), Cd and Hg, ascorbate peroxidase (APX) activity, and expression of genes related to GSH metabolism were also determined. Both Cd and Hg increased cellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) production and extracellular H2O2 formation, but in different ways. The increase was mild and slow with Cd, but more rapid and transient with Hg. Hg treatments also caused a higher cell death rate, significant oxidation of hGSH, as well as increased APX activity and transient overexpression of glutathione reductase 2, glutamylcysteinyl synthetase, and homoglutathione synthetase genes. However, Cd caused minor alterations. Hg accumulation was one order of magnitude higher than Cd accumulation. The different kinetics of early physiological responses in vivo to Cd and Hg might be relevant to the characterization of their mechanisms of toxicity. Thus, high accumulation of Hg might explain the metabolism poisoning observed in Hg-treated seedlings.
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2006
R Rellan-Alvarez, C Ortega-Villasante, A Alvarez-Fernandez, F F del Campo, L E Hernandez (2006)  Stress responses of Zea mays to cadmium and mercury   PLANT AND SOIL 279: 1-2. 41-50 FEB  
Abstract: A hydroponic experiment was carried out to characterize the oxidative stress responses of maize seedlings (Zea mays L. cv. Dekalb DK604) to cadmium (Cd) and mercury (Hg). Plants were grown hydroponically for 7 days in a nutrient solution supplemented with several concentrations of Cd and Hg: 0.0 (control), 6 or 30 mu M. Growth was inhibited by both metals. The effect was more severe in plants exposed to Hg. Oxidative stress was caused by the exposure to the metals, as quantified by malondialdehyde and carbonyl accumulation, by-products of lipid peroxidation and protein oxidation, respectively. The activity of ascorbate peroxidase (APX) and superoxide dismutase (SOD), enzymes involved in the scavenging of reactive oxygen species, were measured upon metal treatment. We found an activation of a cytosolic APX isoform, as identified by using a specific polyclonal antiserum. However, there were negligible changes in SOD activity. Analysis of thiol-peptides revealed that at 6 mu M Cd a remarkable increase in root reduced glutathione (GSH) content occurred, and little effect on the relative content of oxidised glutathione (GSSG) was observed. However, at 30 mu M Cd and in plants exposed to 6 and 30 mu M of Hg, GSH root content either remained stable or decreased significantly, while the proportion of GSSG increased. Moreover, only Cd was able to induce accumulation of phytochelatins at both assayed concentrations. Apparently, Hg was more toxic than Cd, as inferred from the magnitude of the changes found in the physiological parameters tested.
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R Rellan-Alvarez, L E Hernandez, J Abadia, A Alvarez-Fernandez (2006)  Direct and simultaneous determination of reduced and oxidized glutathione and homoglutathione by liquid chromatographyelectrospray/mass spectrometry in plant tissue extracts   ANALYTICAL BIOCHEMISTRY 356: 2. 254-264 SEP 15  
Abstract: A simple, highly selective, sensitive, and reproducible liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization/mass spectrometry (time of flight) method has been developed for the direct and simultaneous determination of glutathione and related compounds such as homoglutathione in different plant tissues. These compounds are low-molecular mass antioxidants involved in cellular redox homeostasis in plants, and efforts are being made to develop methods to determine the concentrations of oxidized and reduced forms of these compounds and their ratio. Many of the methodologies developed so far, however, are time-consuming and complex; therefore, analytes can decompose and their redox status can change during the analysis process. The method we have developed allows the simultaneous determination of reduced forms (glutathione [GSH] and homoglutathione [hGSH]) and oxidized forms (glutathione disulfide [GSSG]) of these compounds and is also suitable for the determination of ascorbic acid (ASA) and S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO). Quantification was done using isotopically labeled GSH and ASA as internal standards. All compounds were base peak resolved in less than 6 min, and limits of detection were 60 pmol for GSH, 30 pmol for hGSH, 20 pmol for GSSG, 100 pmol for ASA, and 30 pmol for GSNO. The intraday repeatability values were approximately 0.4 and 7% for retention time and peak area, respectively, whereas the interday repeatability values were approximately 0.6 and 9% for retention time and peak area, respectively. Analyte recoveries found were between 92 and 105%. The method was used to determine the concentrations of GSH, GSSG, hGSH, and ASA in extracts from several plant tissues. (c) 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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2005
C Ortega-Villasante, R Rellan-Alvarez, F F Del Campo, R O Carpena-Ruiz, L E Hernandez (2005)  Cellular damage induced by cadmium and mercury in Medicago sativa   JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY 56: 418. 2239-2251 AUG  
Abstract: Alfalfa (Medicago sativa) plantlets were exposed to Cd or Hg to study the kinetics of diverse stress indexes. In the so-called beaker-size hydroponic system, plantlets were grown in 30 mu M of Cd or Hg for 7 d. Oxidative stress took place and increased over time, a linear response being observed with Cd but not with Hg. To improve the sensitivity of the stress assays used, a micro-assay system, in which seedlings were exposed for 24 h, was developed. Phytotoxicity of metals, quantified as growth inhibition, was observed well before there was any change in the non-protein thiol tissue concentration. When measured with conventional techniques, oxidative stress indexes did not show significant variation. To trace early and small plant responses to Cd and Hg, a microscopic analysis with novel fluorescent dyes, which had not yet been exploited to any significant extent for use in plants, was conducted. These fluorescent probes, which allowed minute cellular responses to 0, 3, 10, and 30 mu M of both metals to be visualized in the roots of the alfalfa seedlings, were: (i) 2',7'-dichlorofluorescin diacetate that labels peroxides; (ii) monochlorobimane that stains reduced glutathione/homoglutathione (GSH/hGSH); and (iii) propidium iodide that marks nuclei of dead cells. Oxidative stress and cell death increased after exposure for 6-24 h to Cd and Hg, but labelling of GSH/hGSH decreased acutely. This diminution might be the result of direct interaction of GSH/hGSH with both Cd and Hg, as inferred from an in vitro conjugation assay. Therefore, both Cd and Hg not only compromised severely the cellular redox homeostasis, but also caused cell necrosis. In plants treated with 1 mM L-buthionine sulphoximine, a potent inhibitor of GSH/hGSH synthesis, only the oxidative stress symptoms appeared, indicating that the depletion of the GSH/hGSH pool was not sufficient to promote cell death, and that other phytotoxic mechanisms might be involved.
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