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  4. 2001
Showing papers in "Plant Physiology in 2001"
Journal Article•10.1104/PP.126.2.485•
Flavonoid Biosynthesis. A Colorful Model for Genetics, Biochemistry, Cell Biology, and Biotechnology

[...]

Brenda Winkel-Shirley1•
Virginia Tech1
01 Jun 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: The role of flavonoids as the major red, blue, and purple pigments in plants has gained these secondary products a great deal of attention over the years.
Abstract: The role of flavonoids as the major red, blue, and purple pigments in plants has gained these secondary products a great deal of attention over the years. From the first description of acid and base effects on plant pigments by Robert Boyle in 1664 to the characterization of structural and

3,496 citations

Journal Article•10.1104/PP.125.4.1558•
Non-Photochemical Quenching. A Response to Excess Light Energy

[...]

Patricia Müller1, Xiao-Ping Li1, Krishna K. Niyogi1•
University of California, Berkeley1
01 Apr 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: Plants and algae have a love/hate relationship with light; however, too much light can lead to increased production of damaging reactive oxygen species as byproducts of photosynthesis.
Abstract: Plants and algae have a love/hate relationship with light. As oxygenic photoautotrophic organisms, they require light for life; however, too much light can lead to increased production of damaging reactive oxygen species as byproducts of photosynthesis. In extreme cases, photooxidative damage can

2,848 citations

Journal Article•10.1104/PP.126.4.1646•
Phylogenetic Relationships within Cation Transporter Families of Arabidopsis

[...]

Pascal Mäser1, Sébastien Thomine2, Julian I. Schroeder, John M. Ward3, Kendal D. Hirschi4, Heven Sze5, Ina N. Talke6, Anna Amtmann6, Frans J. M. Maathuis6, Dale Sanders6, Jeffrey F. Harper7, Jason Tchieu1, Michael Gribskov1, Michael W. Persans8, David E. Salt8, Sun A. Kim9, Mary Lou Guerinot9 •
University of California, San Diego1, Centre national de la recherche scientifique2, University of Minnesota3, Baylor College of Medicine4, University of Maryland, College Park5, University of York6, Scripps Research Institute7, Northern Arizona University8, Dartmouth College9
01 Aug 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: This analysis has focused on cation transporter gene families for which initial characterizations have been achieved for individual members, including potassium transporters and channels, sodium transporter, calcium antiporters, cyclic nucleotide-gated channels, cation diffusion facilitator proteins, natural resistance-associated macrophage proteins, and Zn-regulated transporter Fe-regulatedporter-like proteins.
Abstract: Uptake and translocation of cationic nutrients play essential roles in physiological processes including plant growth, nutrition, signal transduction, and development. Approximately 5% of the Arabidopsis genome appears to encode membrane transport proteins. These proteins are classified in 46 unique families containing approximately 880 members. In addition, several hundred putative transporters have not yet been assigned to families. In this paper, we have analyzed the phylogenetic relationships of over 150 cation transport proteins. This analysis has focused on cation transporter gene families for which initial characterizations have been achieved for individual members, including potassium transporters and channels, sodium transporters, calcium antiporters, cyclic nucleotide-gated channels, cation diffusion facilitator proteins, natural resistance-associated macrophage proteins (NRAMP), and Zn-regulated transporter Fe-regulated transporter-like proteins. Phylogenetic trees of each family define the evolutionary relationships of the members to each other. These families contain numerous members, indicating diverse functions in vivo. Closely related isoforms and separate subfamilies exist within many of these gene families, indicating possible redundancies and specialized functions. To facilitate their further study, the PlantsT database (http://plantst.sdsc.edu) has been created that includes alignments of the analyzed cation transporters and their chromosomal locations.

1,289 citations

Journal Article•10.1104/PP.010497•
Isoprene Produced by Leaves Protects the Photosynthetic Apparatus against Ozone Damage, Quenches Ozone Products, and Reduces Lipid Peroxidation of Cellular Membranes

[...]

Francesco Loreto, Violeta Velikova1•
Bulgarian Academy of Sciences1
01 Dec 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: The results indicate that isoprene may exert its protective action at the membrane level, although a similar effect could be obtained if isopane reacted with ozone before forming active oxygen species, and suggest that endogenous isopene has an important antioxidant role in plants.
Abstract: Many plants invest carbon to form isoprene. The role of isoprene in plants is unclear, but many experiments showed that isoprene may have a role in protecting plants from thermal damage. A more general antioxidant action has been recently hypothesized on the basis of the protection offered by exogenous isoprene in nonemitting plants exposed to acute ozone doses. We inhibited the synthesis of endogenous isoprene by feeding fosmidomycin and observed that Phragmites australis leaves became more sensitive to ozone than those leaves forming isoprene. Photosynthesis, stomatal conductance, and fluorescence parameters were significantly affected by ozone only in leaves on which isoprene was not formed. The protective effect of isoprene was more evident when the leaves were exposed for a long time (8 h) to relatively low (100 nL L−1) ozone levels than when the exposure was short and acute (3 h at 300 nL L−1). Isoprene quenched the amount of H2O2 formed in leaves and reduced lipid peroxidation of cellular membranes caused by ozone. These results indicate that isoprene may exert its protective action at the membrane level, although a similar effect could be obtained if isoprene reacted with ozone before forming active oxygen species. Irrespective of the mechanism, our results suggest that endogenous isoprene has an important antioxidant role in plants.

1,243 citations

Journal Article•10.1104/PP.010331•
Symbiotic Nitrogen Fixation and Phosphorus Acquisition. Plant Nutrition in a World of Declining Renewable Resources

[...]

Carroll P. Vance1•
United States Department of Agriculture1
01 Oct 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: The world's population is projected to increase and stabilize at 8 to 9 billion people during the next 40 years, and agricultural specialists predicted that food production would not keep pace with the burgeoning population.
Abstract: Since 1960, the world's population has doubled to 6 billion people. During the next 40 years, the population is projected to increase and stabilize at 8 to 9 billion people (Table [I][1]). In the 1960s, agricultural specialists predicted that food production would not keep pace with the burgeoning

955 citations

Journal Article•10.1104/PP.126.3.1024•
Evidence for a Role of Salicylic Acid in the Oxidative Damage Generated by NaCl and Osmotic Stress in Arabidopsis Seedlings

[...]

Omar Borsani1, Victoriano Valpuesta1, Miguel A. Botella1•
University of Málaga1
01 Jul 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: The data support a model for SA potentiating the stress response of the germinating Arabidopsis seedling as measured by lipid peroxidation.
Abstract: Previous studies have shown that salicylic acid (SA) is an essential component of the plant resistance to pathogens. We now show that SA plays a role in the plant response to adverse environmental conditions, such as salt and osmotic stresses. We have studied the responses of wild-type Arabidopsis and an SA-deficient transgenic line expressing a salicylate hydroxylase (NahG) gene to different abiotic stress conditions. Wild-type plants germinated under moderate light conditions in media supplemented with 100 mm NaCl or 270 mm mannitol showed extensive necrosis in the shoot. In contrast, NahG plants germinated under the same conditions remained green and developed true leaves. The lack of necrosis observed in NahG seedlings under the same conditions suggests that SA potentiates the generation of reactive oxygen species in photosynthetic tissues during salt and osmotic stresses. This hypothesis is supported by the following observations. First, the herbicide methyl viologen, a generator of superoxide radical during photosynthesis, produced a necrotic phenotype only in wild-type plants. Second, the presence of reactive oxygen-scavenging compounds in the germination media reversed the wild-type necrotic phenotype seen under salt and osmotic stress. Third, a greater increase in the oxidized state of the glutathione pool under NaCl stress was observed in wild-type seedlings compared with NahG seedlings. Fourth, greater oxidative damage occurred in wild-type seedlings compared with NahG seedlings under NaCl stress as measured by lipid peroxidation. Our data support a model for SA potentiating the stress response of the germinating Arabidopsis seedling.

943 citations

Journal Article•10.1104/PP.125.3.1198•
Evolutionary History of the Grasses

[...]

Elizabeth A. Kellogg1•
University of Missouri–St. Louis1
01 Mar 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: While some scientists have been working to sequence and describe the human genome, with increasingly dramatic results, another set of scientists has been quietly providing a map of evolutionary history, a time line that shows how life has evolved.
Abstract: While some scientists have been working to sequence and describe the human genome, with increasingly dramatic results, another set of scientists has been quietly providing a map of evolutionary history, a time line that shows how life has evolved. Unlike the genome projects, which accumulate

830 citations

Journal Article•10.1104/PP.126.2.524•
Flavonoids Act as Negative Regulators of Auxin Transport in Vivo in Arabidopsis

[...]

Dana E. Brown1, Aaron M. Rashotte1, Angus S. Murphy2, Jennifer Normanly3, Brian W. Tague1, Wendy Ann Peer2, Lincoln Taiz2, Gloria K. Muday1 •
Wake Forest University1, University of California, Santa Cruz2, University of Massachusetts Amherst3
01 Jun 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: Analyses of auxin transport in the inflorescence and hypocotyl of independent tt4 alleles indicate that auxIn transport is elevated in plants with a tt 4 mutation, which is consistent with a role for flavonoids as endogenous regulators of Auxin transport.
Abstract: Polar transport of the plant hormone auxin controls many aspects of plant growth and development. A number of synthetic compounds have been shown to block the process of auxin transport by inhibition of the auxin efflux carrier complex. These synthetic auxin transport inhibitors may act by mimicking endogenous molecules. Flavonoids, a class of secondary plant metabolic compounds, have been suggested to be auxin transport inhibitors based on their in vitro activity. The hypothesis that flavonoids regulate auxin transport in vivo was tested in Arabidopsis by comparing wild-type (WT) and transparent testa (tt4) plants with a mutation in the gene encoding the first enzyme in flavonoid biosynthesis, chalcone synthase. In a comparison between tt4 and WT plants, phenotypic differences were observed, including three times as many secondary inflorescence stems, reduced plant height, decreased stem diameter, and increased secondary root development. Growth of WT Arabidopsis plants on naringenin, a biosynthetic precursor to those flavonoids with auxin transport inhibitor activity in vitro, leads to a reduction in root growth and gravitropism, similar to the effects of synthetic auxin transport inhibitors. Analyses of auxin transport in the inflorescence and hypocotyl of independent tt4 alleles indicate that auxin transport is elevated in plants with a tt4 mutation. In hypocotyls of tt4, this elevated transport is reversed when flavonoids are synthesized by growth of plants on the flavonoid precursor, naringenin. These results are consistent with a role for flavonoids as endogenous regulators of auxin transport.

822 citations

Journal Article•10.1104/PP.126.3.1196•
Nitric Oxide Induces Stomatal Closure and Enhances the Adaptive Plant Responses against Drought Stress

[...]

Carlos García-Mata1, Lorenzo Lamattina1•
Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales1
01 Jul 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: Results suggest that the exogenous application of NO donors might confer an increased tolerance to severe drought stress conditions in plants.
Abstract: Nitric oxide (NO) is a very active molecule involved in many and diverse biological pathways where it has proved to be protective against damages provoked by oxidative stress conditions. In this work, we studied the effect of two NO donors, sodium nitroprusside (SNP) and S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine SNP-treated on the response of wheat (Triticum aestivum) to water stress conditions. After 2 and 3 h of drought, detached wheat leaves pretreated with 150 microM SNP retained up to 15% more water than those pretreated with water or NO(2)(-)/NO(3)(-). The effect of SNP treatment on water retention was also found in wheat seedlings after 7 d of drought. These results were consistent with a 20% decrease in the transpiration rate of SNP-treated detached wheat leaves for the same analyzed time. In parallel experiments, NO was also able to induce a 35%, 30%, and 65% of stomatal closure in three different species, Tradescantia sp. (monocotyledonous) and two dicotyledonous, Salpichroa organifolia and fava bean (Vicia faba), respectively. In SNP-treated leaves of Tradescantia sp., the stomatal closure was correlated with a 10% increase on RWC. Ion leakage, a cell injury index, was 25% lower in SNP-treated wheat leaves compared with control ones after the recovery period. Carboxy-PTIO (2-(4-carboxyphenyl)-4,4,5,5-tetramethylimidazoline-1-oxyl-3-oxide), a specific NO scavenger, reverted SNP action by restoring the transpiration rate, stomatal aperture, and the ion leakage to the level found in untreated leaves. Northern-blot analysis showed that SNP-treated wheat leaves display a 2-fold accumulation of a group three late embryogenesis abundant transcript with respect to control leaves both after 2 and 4 h of drought periods. All together, these results suggest that the exogenous application of NO donors might confer an increased tolerance to severe drought stress conditions in plants.

803 citations

Journal Article•10.1104/PP.127.1.315•
Hormonal Changes in the Grains of Rice Subjected to Water Stress during Grain Filling

[...]

Jianchang Yang1, Jianhua Zhang2, Zhiqing Wang1, Qingsen Zhu1, Wei Wang1 •
Yangzhou University1, Hong Kong Baptist University2
01 Sep 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: Results suggest that an altered hormonal balance in rice grains by water stress during grain filling, especially a decrease in GAs and an increase in ABA, enhances the remobilization of prestored carbon to the grains and accelerates the grain filling rate.
Abstract: Lodging-resistant rice (Oryza sativa) cultivars usually show slow grain filling when nitrogen is applied in large amounts. This study investigated the possibility that a hormonal change may mediate the effect of water deficit that enhances whole plant senescence and speeds up grain filling. Two rice cultivars showing high lodging resistance and slow grain filling were field grown and applied with either normal or high amount nitrogen (HN) at heading. Well-watered and water-stressed (WS) treatments were imposed 9 days post anthesis to maturity. Results showed that WS increased partitioning of fixed (14)CO(2) into grains, accelerated the grain filling rate but shortened the grain filling period, whereas the HN did the opposite way. Cytokinin (zeatin + zeatin riboside) and indole-3-acetic acid contents in the grains transiently increased at early filling stage and WS treatments hastened their declines at the late grain filling stage. Gibberellins (GAs; GA(1) + GA(4)) in the grains were also high at early grain filling but HN enhanced, whereas WS substantially reduced, its accumulation. Opposite to GAs, abscisic acid (ABA) in the grains was low at early grain filling but WS remarkably enhanced its accumulation. The peak values of ABA were significantly correlated with the maximum grain filling rates (r = 0.92**, P < 0.01) and the partitioning of fixed (14)C into grains (r = 0.95**, P < 0.01). Exogenously applied ABA on pot-grown HN rice showed similar results as those by WS. Results suggest that an altered hormonal balance in rice grains by water stress during grain filling, especially a decrease in GAs and an increase in ABA, enhances the remobilization of prestored carbon to the grains and accelerates the grain filling rate.

790 citations

Journal Article•10.1104/PP.126.2.875•
Phosphate availability regulates root system architecture in Arabidopsis.

[...]

Lisa Williamson1, Sebastien P.C.P. Ribrioux1, Alastair Fitter1, H. M. Ottoline Leyser1•
University of York1
01 Jun 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: The ability of the root system to respond to phosphate availability was found to be independent of sucrose supply and auxin signaling, and shoot phosphate status was finding to influence theRoot system architecture response to phosphateavailability.
Abstract: Plant root systems are highly plastic in their development and can adapt their architecture in response to the prevailing environmental conditions. One important parameter is the availability of phosphate, which is highly immobile in soil such that the arrangement of roots within the soil will profoundly affect the ability of the plant to acquire this essential nutrient. Consistent with this, the availability of phosphate was found to have a marked effect on the root system architecture of Arabidopsis. Low phosphate availability favored lateral root growth over primary root growth, through increased lateral root density and length, and reduced primary root growth mediated by reduced cell elongation. The ability of the root system to respond to phosphate availability was found to be independent of sucrose supply and auxin signaling. In contrast, shoot phosphate status was found to influence the root system architecture response to phosphate availability.
Journal Article•10.1104/PP.010188•
Antioxidant systems and o2.?/h2o2 production in the apoplast of pea leaves. its relation with salt-induced necrotic lesions in minor veins

[...]

José Antonio Hernández1, María A. Ferrer2, Ana Jiménez1, Alfonso Ros Barceló2, Francisca Sevilla1 •
Spanish National Research Council1, University of Murcia2
01 Nov 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: The results suggest a strong interaction between both cell compartments in the control of the apoplastic ASC content in pea leaves, but this anti-oxidative response does not seem to be sufficient to remove the harmful effects of high salinity.
Abstract: The present work describes, for the first time, the changes that take place in the leaf apoplastic antioxidant defenses in response to NaCl stress in two pea (Pisum sativum) cultivars (cv Lincoln and cv Puget) showing different degrees of sensitivity to high NaCl concentrations. The results showed that only superoxide dismutase, and probably dehydroascorbate reductase (DHAR), were present in the leaf apoplastic space, whereas ascorbate (ASC) peroxidase, monodehydroascorbate reductase (MDHAR), and glutathione (GSH) reductase (GR) seemed to be absent. Both ASC and GSH were detected in the leaf apoplastic space and although their absolute levels did not change in response to salt stress, the ASC/dehydroascorbate and GSH to GSH oxidized form ratios decreased progressively with the severity of the stress. Apoplastic superoxide dismutase activity was induced in NaCl-treated pea cv Puget but decreased in NaCl-treated pea cv Lincoln. An increase in DHAR and GR and a decrease in ASC peroxidase, MDHAR, ASC, and GSH levels was observed in the symplast from NaCl-treated pea cv Lincoln, whereas in pea cv Puget an increase in DHAR, GR, and MDHAR occurred. The results suggest a strong interaction between both cell compartments in the control of the apoplastic ASC content in pea leaves. However, this anti-oxidative response does not seem to be sufficient to remove the harmful effects of high salinity. This finding is more evident in pea cv Lincoln, which is characterized by a greater inhibition of the growth response and by a higher rise in the apoplastic hydrogen peroxide content, O(2)(.-) production and thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances, and CO protein levels. This NaCl-induced oxidative stress in the apoplasts might be related to the appearance of highly localized O(2)(.-)/H(2)O(2)-induced necrotic lesions in the minor veins in NaCl-treated pea plants. It is possible that both the different anti-oxidative capacity and the NaCl-induced response in the apoplast and in the symplast from pea cv Puget in comparison with pea cv Lincoln contributes to a better protection of pea cv Puget against salt stress.
Journal Article•10.1104/PP.010318•
Cadmium-induced changes in antioxidative systems, hydrogen peroxide content, and differentiation in Scots pine roots.

[...]

Andres Schützendübel1, Peter Schwanz1, Thomas Teichmann1, Kristina Gross1, Rosemarie Langenfeld-Heyser1, Douglas L. Godbold2, Andrea Polle1 •
University of Göttingen1, Bangor University2
01 Nov 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: In conclusion, Cd did not cause necrotic injury in root tips but appeared to expedite differentiation, thus leading to accelerated aging and may have triggered the developmental program leading to xylogenesis.
Abstract: To investigate whether Cd induces common plant defense pathways or unspecific necrosis, the temporal sequence of physiological reactions, including hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) production, changes in ascorbate-glutathione-related antioxidant systems, secondary metabolism (peroxidases, phenolics, and lignification), and developmental changes, was characterized in roots of hydroponically grown Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) seedlings. Cd (50 microM, 6 h) initially increased superoxide dismutase, inhibited the systems involved in H(2)O(2) removal (glutathione/glutathione reductase, catalase [CAT], and ascorbate peroxidase [APX]), and caused H(2)O(2) accumulation. Elongation of the roots was completely inhibited within 12 h. After 24 h, glutathione reductase activities recovered to control levels; APX and CAT were stimulated by factors of 5.5 and 1.5. Cell death was increased. After 48 h, nonspecific peroxidases and lignification were increased, and APX and CAT activities were decreased. Histochemical analysis showed that soluble phenolics accumulated in the cytosol of Cd-treated roots but lignification was confined to newly formed protoxylem elements, which were found in the region of the root tip that normally constitutes the elongation zone. Roots exposed to 5 microM Cd showed less pronounced responses and only a small decrease in the elongation rate. These results suggest that in cells challenged by Cd at concentrations exceeding the detoxification capacity, H(2)O(2) accumulated because of an imbalance of redox systems. This, in turn, may have triggered the developmental program leading to xylogenesis. In conclusion, Cd did not cause necrotic injury in root tips but appeared to expedite differentiation, thus leading to accelerated aging.
Journal Article•10.1104/PP.126.4.1438•
Hydrogen Peroxide Is Involved in Abscisic Acid-Induced Stomatal Closure in Vicia faba

[...]

Xiao Zhang1, Lin Zhang1, Facai Dong1, Junfeng Gao, David W. Galbraith2, Chun-Peng Song1 •
Henan University1, University of Arizona2
01 Aug 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: It is suggested that guard cells treated with ABA may close the stomata via a pathway with H(2)O(2), which may be an intermediate in ABA signaling, and H( 2)O
Abstract: One of the most important functions of the plant hormone abscisic acid (ABA) is to induce stomatal closure by reducing the turgor of guard cells under water deficit. Under environmental stresses, hydrogen peroxide (H 2 O 2 ), an active oxygen species, is widely generated in many biological systems. Here, using an epidermal strip bioassay and laser-scanning confocal microscopy, we provide evidence that H 2 O 2 may function as an intermediate in ABA signaling in Vicia faba guard cells. H 2 O 2 inhibited induced closure of stomata, and this effect was reversed by ascorbic acid at concentrations lower than 10 −5 m. Further, ABA-induced stomatal closure also was abolished partly by addition of exogenous catalase (CAT) and diphenylene iodonium (DPI), which are an H 2 O 2 scavenger and an NADPH oxidase inhibitor, respectively. Time course experiments of single-cell assays based on the fluorescent probe dichlorofluorescein showed that the generation of H 2 O 2 was dependent on ABA concentration and an increase in the fluorescence intensity of the chloroplast occurred significantly earlier than within the other regions of guard cells. The ABA-induced change in fluorescence intensity in guard cells was abolished by the application of CAT and DPI. In addition, ABA microinjected into guard cells markedly induced H 2 O 2 production, which preceded stomatal closure. These effects were abolished by CAT or DPI micro-injection. Our results suggest that guard cells treated with ABA may close the stomata via a pathway with H 2 O 2 production involved, and H 2 O 2 may be an intermediate in ABA signaling.
Journal Article•10.1104/PP.126.2.811•
Genetic control of natural variation in Arabidopsis glucosinolate accumulation.

[...]

Daniel J. Kliebenstein1, Juergen Kroymann1, Paul D Brown1, Antje Figuth1, Deana Pedersen1, Jonathan Gershenzon1, Thomas Mitchell-Olds1 •
Max Planck Society1
01 Jun 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: There appears to be a modular genetic system regulating glucos inolate profiles in Arabidopsis that allows the rapid generation of new glucosinolate combinations in response to changing herbivory or other selective pressures.
Abstract: Glucosinolates are biologically active secondary metabolites of the Brassicaceae and related plant families that influence plant/insect interactions. Specific glucosinolates can act as feeding deterrents or stimulants, depending upon the insect species. Hence, natural selection might favor the presence of diverse glucosinolate profiles within a given species. We determined quantitative and qualitative variation in glucosinolates in the leaves and seeds of 39 Arabidopsis ecotypes. We identified 34 different glucosinolates, of which the majority are chain-elongated compounds derived from methionine. Polymorphism at only five loci was sufficient to generate 14 qualitatitvely different leaf glucosinolate profiles. Thus, there appears to be a modular genetic system regulating glucosinolate profiles in Arabidopsis. This system allows the rapid generation of new glucosinolate combinations in response to changing herbivory or other selective pressures. In addition to the qualitative variation in glucosinolate profiles, we found a nearly 20-fold difference in the quantity of total aliphatic glucosinolates and were able to identify a single locus that controls nearly three-quarters of this variation.
Journal Article•10.1104/PP.010548•
Components of the Arabidopsis C-repeat/dehydration-responsive element binding factor cold-response pathway are conserved in Brassica napus and other plant species.

[...]

Kirsten Jaglo1, Susanne Kleff, Keenan Amundsen1, Xin Zhang1, Volker Haake2, James Zhang2, Thomas Deits, Michael F. Thomashow1 •
Michigan State University1, Mendel Biotechnology, Inc.2
01 Nov 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: It is concluded that components of the CBF cold-response pathway are highly conserved in flowering plants and not limited to those that cold acclimate.
Abstract: Many plants increase in freezing tolerance in response to low, nonfreezing temperatures, a phenomenon known as cold acclimation. Cold acclimation in Arabidopsis involves rapid cold-induced expression of the C-repeat/dehydration-responsive element binding factor (CBF) transcriptional activators followed by expression of CBF-targeted genes that increase freezing tolerance. Here, we present evidence for a CBF cold-response pathway in Brassica napus. We show that B. napus encodes CBF-like genes and that transcripts for these genes accumulate rapidly in response to low temperature followed closely by expression of the cold-regulated Bn115 gene, an ortholog of the Arabidopsis CBF-targeted COR15a gene. Moreover, we show that constitutive overexpression of the Arabidopsis CBF genes in transgenic B. napus plants induces expression of orthologs of Arabidopsis CBF-targeted genes and increases the freezing tolerance of both nonacclimated and cold-acclimated plants. Transcripts encoding CBF-like proteins were also found to accumulate rapidly in response to low temperature in wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv Norstar) and rye (Secale cereale L. cv Puma), which cold acclimate, as well as in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum var. Bonny Best, Castle Mart, Micro-Tom, and D Huang), a freezing-sensitive plant that does not cold acclimate. An alignment of the CBF proteins from Arabidopsis, B. napus, wheat, rye, and tomato revealed the presence of conserved amino acid sequences, PKK/RPAGRxKFxETRHP and DSAWR, that bracket the AP2/EREBP DNA binding domains of the proteins and distinguish them from other members of the AP2/EREBP protein family. We conclude that components of the CBF cold-response pathway are highly conserved in flowering plants and not limited to those that cold acclimate.
Journal Article•10.1104/PP.010820•
Signal Transduction in Maize and Arabidopsis Mesophyll Protoplasts

[...]

Jen Sheen1•
Harvard University1
01 Dec 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: The development of defined protoplast transient expression systems for high-throughput screening and systematic characterization of gene functions has greatly contributed to elucidating plant signal transduction pathways, in combination with genetic, genomic, and transgenic approaches.
Abstract: Plant protoplasts show physiological perceptions and responses to hormones, metabolites, environmental cues, and pathogen-derived elicitors, similar to cell-autonomous responses in intact tissues and plants. The development of defined protoplast transient expression systems for high-throughput screening and systematic characterization of gene functions has greatly contributed to elucidating plant signal transduction pathways, in combination with genetic, genomic, and transgenic approaches.
Journal Article•10.1104/PP.125.3.1206•
Aquaporins Constitute a Large and Highly Divergent Protein Family in Maize

[...]

François Chaumont1, François Barrieu2, Eva Wojcik3, Maarten J. Chrispeels2, Rudolf Jung3 •
Université catholique de Louvain1, University of California, San Diego2, DuPont Pioneer3
01 Mar 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: This study opens the way to analyze the function of the proteins in Xenopus laevis oocytes, determine the tissue specific expression of the genes, recover insertion mutants, and determine the in planta function.
Abstract: Aquaporins (AQPs) are an ancient family of channel proteins that transport water and neutral solutes through a pore and are found in all eukaryotes and most prokaryotes. A comparison of the amino acid sequences and phylogenetic analysis of 31 full-length cDNAs of maize (Zea mays) AQPs shows that they comprise four different groups of highly divergent proteins. We have classified them as plasma membrane intinsic proteins (PIPs), tonoplast intrinsic proteins, Nod26-like intrinsic proteins, and small and basic intrinsic proteins. Amino acid sequence identities vary from 16% to 100%, but all sequences share structural motifs and conserved amino acids necessary to stabilize the two loops that form the aqueous pore. Most divergent are the small and basic integral proteins in which the first of the two highly conserved Asn-Pro-Ala motifs of the pore is not conserved, but is represented by alanine-proline-threonine or alanine-proline-serine. We present a model of ZmPIP1-2 based on the three-dimensional structure of mammalian AQP1. Tabulation of the number of times that the AQP sequences are found in a collection of databases that comprises about 470,000 maize cDNAs indicates that a few of the maize AQPs are very highly expressed and many are not abundantly expressed. The phylogenetic analysis supports the interpretation that the divergence of PIPs through gene duplication occurred more recently than the divergence of the members of the other three subfamilies. This study opens the way to analyze the function of the proteins in Xenopus laevis oocytes, determine the tissue specific expression of the genes, recover insertion mutants, and determine the in planta function.
Journal Article•10.1104/PP.125.1.199•
Lipid peroxidation is an early symptom triggered by aluminum, but not the primary cause of elongation inhibition in pea roots

[...]

Yoko Yamamoto1, Yukiko Kobayashi1, Hideaki Matsumoto1•
Okayama University1
01 Jan 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: Pea (Pisum sativum) roots were treated with aluminum in a calcium solution, and lipid peroxidation was investigated histochemically and biochemically, as well as other events caused by aluminum exposure, finding it to be a relatively early symptom induced by the accumulation of aluminum.
Abstract: Pea (Pisum sativum) roots were treated with aluminum in a calcium solution, and lipid peroxidation was investigated histochemically and biochemically, as well as other events caused by aluminum exposure. Histochemical stainings were observed to distribute similarly on the entire surface of the root apex for three events (aluminum accumulation, lipid peroxidation, and callose production), but the loss of plasma membrane integrity (detected by Evans blue uptake) was localized exclusively at the periphery of the cracks on the surface of root apex. The enhancement of four events (aluminum accumulation, lipid peroxidation, callose production, and root elongation inhibition) displayed similar aluminum dose dependencies and occurred by 4 h. The loss of membrane integrity, however, was enhanced at lower aluminum concentrations and after longer aluminum exposure (8 h). The addition of butylated hydroxyanisole (a lipophilic antioxidant) during aluminum treatment completely prevented lipid peroxidation and callose production by 40%, but did not prevent or slow the other events. Thus lipid peroxidation is a relatively early symptom induced by the accumulation of aluminum and appears to cause, in part, callose production, but not the root elongation inhibition; by comparison, the loss of plasma membrane integrity is a relatively late symptom caused by cracks in the root due to the inhibition of root elongation.
Journal Article•10.1104/PP.010816•
Wood Formation in Trees

[...]

Christophe Plomion1, Grégoire Le-Provost1, Alexia Stokes1•
Institut national de la recherche agronomique1
01 Dec 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: Wood is the most important natural and endlessly renewable source of energy and therefore has a major future role as an environmentally cost-effective alternative to burning fossils fuels.
Abstract: Among the ecosystem services provided by forests, wood provisioning takes a central position. Wood and derived products have played a critical role in the evolution of human kind and demand for raw material is increasing in a foreseeable future. Wood is used for energy production, construction and a wide variety of products for which different properties are required. Anatomical, chemical and physical properties of wood are determined through a complex process called xylogenesis controlled by internal and external signals and occurring during the life of the tree. In this chapter we describe i/how wood is formed and ii/the different factors controlling this developmental process with emphasis on the molecular machinery involved, iii/the functions of wood and iv/the biotechnology approaches developed to improve wood biomass production and properties genetically.
Journal Article•10.1104/PP.010324•
The Arabidopsis Somatic Embryogenesis Receptor Kinase 1 Gene Is Expressed in Developing Ovules and Embryos and Enhances Embryogenic Competence in Culture

[...]

Valérie Hecht1, Jean-Philippe Vielle-Calzada2, Marijke Hartog1, Eduard Daniel Leendert Schmidt1, K. Boutilier1, Ueli Grossniklaus2, Ueli Grossniklaus3, S. de Vries1 •
Laboratory of Molecular Biology1, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory2, University of Zurich3
01 Nov 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: An increased AtSERK1 level is sufficient to confer embryogenic competence in culture and demonstrate its role during establishment of somatic embryogenesis in culture.
Abstract: We report here the isolation of the Arabidopsis SOMATIC EMBRYOGENESIS RECEPTOR-LIKE KINASE 1 (AtSERK1) gene and we demonstrate its role during establishment of somatic embryogenesis in culture. The AtSERK1 gene is highly expressed during embryogenic cell formation in culture and during early embryogenesis. The AtSERK1 gene is first expressed in planta during megasporogenesis in the nucleus of developing ovules, in the functional megaspore, and in all cells of the embryo sac up to fertilization. After fertilization, AtSERK1 expression is seen in all cells of the developing embryo until the heart stage. After this stage, AtSERK1 expression is no longer detectable in the embryo or in any part of the developing seed. Low expression is detected in adult vascular tissue. Ectopic expression of the full-length AtSERK1 cDNA under the control of the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter did not result in any altered plant phenotype. However, seedlings that overexpressed the AtSERK1 mRNA exhibited a 3- to 4-fold increase in efficiency for initiation of somatic embryogenesis. Thus, an increased AtSERK1 level is sufficient to confer embryogenic competence in culture.
Journal Article•10.1104/PP.010724•
Cotton Fiber Growth in Planta and in Vitro. Models for Plant Cell Elongation and Cell Wall Biogenesis

[...]

Hee Jin Kim1, Barbara A. Triplett1•
United States Department of Agriculture1
01 Dec 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: There are only a few cells in the plant kingdom that are as exaggerated in their size or composition as cotton fibers, and their highly elongated structure and exceptional chemical make-up establishes cotton fiber as an ideal model for studies of plant cell elongation and cell wall.
Abstract: There are only a few cells in the plant kingdom that are as exaggerated in their size or composition as cotton fibers. It is precisely their highly elongated structure and exceptional chemical make-up that establishes cotton fiber as an ideal model for studies of plant cell elongation and cell wall
Journal Article•10.1104/PP.126.2.835•
Proteomic Analysis of Arabidopsis Seed Germination and Priming

[...]

Karine Gallardo1, Claudette Job1, Steven P.C. Groot, Magda Puype2, Hans Demol2, Joël Vandekerckhove2, Dominique Job1 •
Institut national de la recherche agronomique1, Ghent University2
01 Jun 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: A proteome analysis of the model plant Arabidopsis revealed new proteins associated with the different phases of seed germination and priming and highlighted the power of proteomics to unravel specific features of complex developmental processes such as germination.
Abstract: To better understand seed germination, a complex developmental process, we developed a proteome analysis of the model plant Arabidopsis for which complete genome sequence is now available. Among about 1,300 total seed proteins resolved in two-dimensional gels, changes in the abundance (up- and down-regulation) of 74 proteins were observed during germination sensu stricto (i.e. prior to radicle emergence) and the radicle protrusion step. This approach was also used to analyze protein changes occurring during industrial seed pretreatments such as priming that accelerate seed germination and improve seedling uniformity. Several proteins were identified by matrix-assisted laser-desorption ionization time of flight mass spectrometry. Some of them had previously been shown to play a role during germination and/or priming in several plant species, a finding that underlines the usefulness of using Arabidopsis as a model system for molecular analysis of seed quality. Furthermore, the present study, carried out at the protein level, validates previous results obtained at the level of gene expression (e.g. from quantitation of differentially expressed mRNAs or analyses of promoter/reporter constructs). Finally, this approach revealed new proteins associated with the different phases of seed germination and priming. Some of them are involved either in the imbibition process of the seeds (such as an actin isoform or a WD-40 repeat protein) or in the seed dehydration process (e.g. cytosolic glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase). These facts highlight the power of proteomics to unravel specific features of complex developmental processes such as germination and to detect protein markers that can be used to characterize seed vigor of commercial seed lots and to develop and monitor priming treatments.
Journal Article•10.1104/PP.126.2.861•
Seed-Specific Over-Expression of an Arabidopsis cDNA Encoding a Diacylglycerol Acyltransferase Enhances Seed Oil Content and Seed Weight

[...]

Colette Jako1, Arvind Kumar1, Yangdou Wei1, Jitao Zou1, Dennis L. Barton1, E. Michael Giblin1, Patrick S. Covello1, David C. Taylor1 •
National Research Council1
01 Jun 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: The current study confirms the important role of DGAT in regulating the quantity of seed triacylglycerols and the sink size in developing seeds and shows for the first time that seed-specific over-expression of the DGAT cDNA in wild-type Arabidopsis enhances oil deposition and average seed weight, which are correlated with DGAT transcript levels.
Abstract: We recently reported the cloning and characterization of an Arabidopsis (ecotype Columbia) diacylglycerol acyltransferase cDNA (Zou et al., 1999) and found that in Arabidopsis mutant line AS11, an ethyl methanesulfonate-induced mutation at a locus on chromosome II designated as Tag1 consists of a 147-bp insertion in the DNA, which results in a repeat of the 81-bp exon 2 in the Tag1 cDNA. This insertion mutation is correlated with an altered seed fatty acid composition, reduced diacylglycerol acyltransferase (DGAT; EC 2.3.1.20) activity, reduced seed triacylglycerol content, and delayed seed development in the AS11 mutant. The effect of the insertion mutation on microsomal acyl-coenzyme A-dependent DGAT is examined with respect to DGAT activity and its substrate specificity in the AS11 mutant relative to wild type. We demonstrate that transformation of mutant AS11 with a single copy of the wild-type Tag1 DGAT cDNA can complement the fatty acid and reduced oil phenotype of mutant AS11. More importantly, we show for the first time that seed-specific over-expression of the DGAT cDNA in wild-type Arabidopsis enhances oil deposition and average seed weight, which are correlated with DGAT transcript levels. The DGAT activity in developing seed of transgenic lines was enhanced by 10% to 70%. Thus, the current study confirms the important role of DGAT in regulating the quantity of seed triacylglycerols and the sink size in developing seeds.
Journal Article•10.1104/PP.010498•
Hydrogen Production. Green Algae as a Source of Energy

[...]

Anastasios Melis1, Thomas Happe2•
University of California, Berkeley1, University of Bonn2
01 Nov 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: Interconversion between these two forms of energy suggests on-site utilization of hydrogen to generate electricity, with the electrical power grid serving in energy transportation, distribution utilization, and hydrogen regeneration as needed.
Abstract: Hydrogen gas is thought to be the ideal fuel for a world in which air pollution has been alleviated, global warming has been arrested, and the environment has been protected in an economically sustainable manner. Hydrogen and electricity could team to provide attractive options in transportation and power generation. Interconversion between these two forms of energy suggests on-site utilization of hydrogen to generate electricity, with the electrical power grid serving in energy transportation, distribution utilization, and hydrogen regeneration as needed. A challenging problem in establishing H2 as a source of energy for the future is the renewable and environmentally friendly generation of large quantities of H2 gas. Thus, processes that are presently conceptual in nature, or at a developmental stage in the laboratory, need to be encouraged,
Journal Article•10.1104/PP.126.3.1281•
Superoxide Production by Plant Homologues of the gp91phox NADPH Oxidase. Modulation of Activity by Calcium and by Tobacco Mosaic Virus Infection

[...]

Moshe Sagi1, Robert Fluhr1•
Weizmann Institute of Science1
01 Jul 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: In contrast to the mammalian gp91(phox), the plant homolog can produce O(2)(-) in the absence of additional cytosolic components and is stimulated directly by Ca(2+), indicating that the formazan precipitates were due to reduction by O( 2)(-) radicals catalyzed by an NADPH-dependent flavin containing enzyme.
Abstract: Genes encoding homologs of the gp91(phox) subunit of the plasma membrane NADPH oxidase complex have been identified in plants and are hypothesized to be a source of reactive oxygen species during defense responses. However, the direct involvement of the gene products in superoxide (O(2)(-)) production has yet to be shown. A novel activity gel assay based on protein fractionation in native or sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-denaturing polyacrylamide gels was developed. In native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, one or two major O(2)(-)-producing formazan bands were detected in tomato (Lycopersicum esculentum Mill. cv Moneymaker) and tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum var. Samsun, NN) plasma membranes, respectively. Denaturing fractionation of tomato and tobacco plasma membrane in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, followed by regeneration of the in-gel activity, revealed NADPH-dependent O(2)(-)-producing formazan bands of 106-, 103-, and 80- to 75-kD molecular masses. The SDS and native activity bands were dependent on NADPH and completely inhibited by diphenylene iodonium or CuZn- O(2)(-) dismutase, indicating that the formazan precipitates were due to reduction by O(2)(-) radicals catalyzed by an NADPH-dependent flavin containing enzyme. The source of the plasma membrane activity bands was confirmed by their cross-reaction with antibody prepared from the C terminus of the tomato gp91(phox) homolog. Membrane extracts as well as the in-gel NADPH oxidase activities were stimulated in the presence of Ca(2+). In addition, the relative activity of the gp91(phox) homolog was enhanced in the plasma membrane of tobacco mosaic virus-infected leaves. Thus, in contrast to the mammalian gp91(phox), the plant homolog can produce O(2)(-) in the absence of additional cytosolic components and is stimulated directly by Ca(2+).
Journal Article•10.1104/PP.125.2.1074•
Molecular Responses to Aphid Feeding in Arabidopsis in Relation to Plant Defense Pathways

[...]

Patrick J. Moran1, Gary A. Thompson•
University of Arizona1
01 Feb 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: Phloem feeding on Arabidopsis leads to stimulation of response pathways associated with both pathogen infection and wounding, and application of the SA analog benzothiadiazole led to decreases in aphid reproduction on leaves of both wild-type plants and mutant plants deficient in responsiveness to SA.
Abstract: Little is known about molecular responses in plants to phloem feeding by insects. The induction of genes associated with wound and pathogen response pathways was investigated following green peach aphid (Myzus persicae) feeding on Arabidopsis. Aphid feeding on rosette leaves induced transcription of two genes associated with salicylic acid (SA)-dependent responses to pathogens (PR-1 and BGL2) 10- and 23-fold, respectively. Induction of PR-1 and BGL2 mRNA was reduced in npr1 mutant plants, which are deficient in SA signaling. Application of the SA analog benzothiadiazole led to decreases in aphid reproduction on leaves of both wild-type plants and mutant plants deficient in responsiveness to SA, suggesting that wild-type SA-dependent responses do not influence resistance to aphids. Two-fold increases occurred in mRNA levels of PDF1.2, which encodes defensin, a peptide involved in the jasmonate (JA)-/ethylene-dependent response pathway. Transcripts encoding JA-inducible lipoxygenase (LOX2) and SA/JA-inducible Phe-ammonia lyase increased 1.5- to 2-fold. PDF1.2 and LOX2 induction by aphids did not occur in infested leaves of the JA-resistant coi1-1 mutant. Aphid feeding induced 10-fold increases in mRNA levels of a stress-related monosaccharide symporter gene, STP4. Phloem feeding on Arabidopsis leads to stimulation of response pathways associated with both pathogen infection and wounding.
Journal Article•10.1104/PP.126.3.1055•
Role of Auxin-Induced Reactive Oxygen Species in Root Gravitropism

[...]

Jung Hee Joo1, Yun Soo Bae1, June Seung Lee1•
Ewha Womans University1
01 Jul 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: The results indicate that the generation of ROS plays a role in root gravitropism, and the scavenging of ROS by antioxidants (N-acetylcysteine, ascorbic acid, and Trolox) inhibited root gravItropism.
Abstract: We report our studies on root gravitropism indicating that reactive oxygen species (ROS) may function as a downstream component in auxin-mediated signal transduction. A transient increase in the intracellular concentration of ROS in the convex endodermis resulted from either gravistimulation or unilateral application of auxin to vertical roots. Root bending was also brought about by unilateral application of ROS to vertical roots pretreated with the auxin transport inhibitor N-1-naphthylphthalamic acid. Furthermore, the scavenging of ROS by antioxidants (N-acetylcysteine, ascorbic acid, and Trolox) inhibited root gravitropism. These results indicate that the generation of ROS plays a role in root gravitropism.
Journal Article•10.1104/PP.125.4.1591•
Release of Reactive Oxygen Intermediates (Superoxide Radicals, Hydrogen Peroxide, and Hydroxyl Radicals) and Peroxidase in Germinating Radish Seeds Controlled by Light, Gibberellin, and Abscisic Acid

[...]

Peter Schopfer1, Claudia Plachy1, Gitta Frahry1•
University of Freiburg1
01 Apr 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: The participation of superoxide radicals, hydrogen peroxide, and hydroxyl radicals in ROI metabolism was demonstrated with specific in vivo assays, suggesting ROI production by germinating seeds represents an active, developmentally controlled physiological function, presumably for protecting the emerging seedling against attack by pathogens.
Abstract: Germination of radish (Raphanus sativus cv Eterna) seeds can be inhibited by far-red light (high-irradiance reaction of phytochrome) or abscisic acid (ABA). Gibberellic acid (GA3) restores full germination under far-red light. This experimental system was used to investigate the release of reactive oxygen intermediates (ROI) by seed coats and embryos during germination, utilizing the apoplastic oxidation of 2′,7′-dichlorofluorescin to fluorescent 2′,7′-dichlorofluorescein as an in vivo assay. Germination in darkness is accompanied by a steep rise in ROI release originating from the seed coat (living aleurone layer) as well as the embryo. At the same time as the inhibition of germination, far-red light and ABA inhibit ROI release in both seed parts and GA3 reverses this inhibition when initiating germination under far-red light. During the later stage of germination the seed coat also releases peroxidase with a time course affected by far-red light, ABA, and GA3. The participation of superoxide radicals, hydrogen peroxide, and hydroxyl radicals in ROI metabolism was demonstrated with specific in vivo assays. ROI production by germinating seeds represents an active, developmentally controlled physiological function, presumably for protecting the emerging seedling against attack by pathogens.
Journal Article•10.1104/PP.126.3.930•
Silencing on the Spot. Induction and Suppression of RNA Silencing in the Agrobacterium-Mediated Transient Expression System

[...]

Lisa K. Johansen1, James C. Carrington1•
Washington State University1
01 Jul 2001-Plant Physiology
TL;DR: Results indicate RNA silencing can be triggered by a variety of inducers and analyzed entirely using transient gene delivery systems, and indicate thatRNA silencing may be a significant limitation to expression of genes in the Agrobacterium-mediated transient assay but that this limitation can be overcome by using RNAsilencing suppressors.
Abstract: The Agrobacterium-mediated transient expression assay in intact tissues has emerged as a rapid and useful method to analyze genes and gene products in plants. In many cases, high levels of active protein can be produced without the need to produce transgenic plants. In this study, a series of tools were developed to enable strong or weak induction of RNA silencing and to suppress RNA silencing in the absence of stable transgenes. Transient delivery of a gene directing production of a double-stranded green fluorescent protein (GFP) transcript rapidly induced RNA silencing of a codelivered GFP reporter gene, effectively preventing accumulation of GFP protein and mRNA. RNA silencing triggered by the strong dsGFP inducer was partially inhibited by the tobacco etch virus silencing suppressor, P1/HC-Pro. In the absence of the strong double-stranded GFP inducer, the functional GFP gene served as a weak RNA silencing inducer in the transient assay, severely limiting accumulation of the GFP mRNA over time. The weak silencing induced by the GFP gene was suppressed by P1/HC-Pro. These results indicate RNA silencing can be triggered by a variety of inducers and analyzed entirely using transient gene delivery systems. They also indicate that RNA silencing may be a significant limitation to expression of genes in the Agrobacterium-mediated transient assay but that this limitation can be overcome by using RNA silencing suppressors.
...

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