Publications by authors named "J Campos-Garcia"

The target of rapamycin (TOR) signaling pathway is critical for plant growth and stress adaptation through maintaining the proper balance between cell proliferation and differentiation. Here, by using BX517, an inhibitor of the mammalian phosphoinositide-dependent protein kinase 1 (PDK1), we tested the hypothesis that a plant ortholog of PDK1 could influence the TOR complex activity and its target, the S6 ribosomal protein kinase (S6K) in Arabidopsis seedlings. Through locally applying sucrose to leaves, which promotes root growth and plant biomass production via TOR signaling, we could demonstrate the opposite trend upon BX517 treatment, which antagonized sucrose-induced plant growth and overly decreased root development through inhibiting the expression of mitotic cyclins CYCB1 and CYCA3 in root meristems.

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Hydrogen peroxide (HO) is naturally produced by plant cells during normal development and serves as a messenger that regulates cell metabolism. Despite its importance, the relationship between hydrogen peroxide and the target of rapamycin (TOR) pathway, as well as its impact on cell division, has been poorly analyzed. In this study, we explore the interaction of HO with TOR, a serine/threonine protein kinase that plays a central role in controlling cell growth, size, and metabolism in Arabidopsis thaliana.

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Management of the plant microbiome may help support food needs for the human population. Bacteria influence plants through enhancing nutrient uptake, metabolism, photosynthesis, biomass production and/or reinforcing immunity. However, information into how these microbes behave under different growth conditions is missing.

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Background: Human cervix adenocarcinoma (CC) caused by papillomavirus is the third most common cancer among female malignant tumors. Bioactive compounds such as cyclodipeptides (CDPs) possess cytotoxic effects in human cervical cancer HeLa cells mainly by blocking the PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway and subsequently inducing gene expression by countless transcription regulators. However, the upstream elements of signaling pathways have not been well studied.

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This study analyzed the role of blood serum in enhancing the mitochondrial metabolism and virulence of Mucorales through rhizoferrin secretion. We observed that the spores of clinically relevant Mucorales produced in the presence of serum exhibited higher virulence in a heterologous infection model of . Cell-free supernatants of the culture broth obtained from spores produced in serum showed increased toxicity against , which was linked with the enhanced secretion of rhizoferrin.

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