30 research outputs found

    Analysis of high-molecular-weight fructan polymers in crude plant extracts by high-resolution LC-MS

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    The main water-soluble carbohydrates in temperate forage grasses are polymeric fructans. Fructans consist of fructose chains of various chain lengths attached to sucrose as a core molecule. In grasses, fructans are a complex mixture of a large number of isomeric oligomers with a degree of polymerisation ranging from 3 to >100. Accurate monitoring and unambiguous peak identification requires chromatographic separation coupled to mass spectrometry. The mass range of ion trap mass spectrometers is limited, and we show here how monitoring selected multiply charged ions can be used for the detection and quantification of individual isomers and oligomers of high mass, particularly those of high degree of polymerization (DP > 20) in complex plant extracts. Previously reported methods using linear ion traps with low mass resolution have been shown to be useful for the detection of fructans with a DP up to 49. Here, we report a method using high-resolution mass spectrometry (MS) using an Exactive Orbitrap MS which greatly improves the signal-to-noise ratio and allows the detection of fructans up to DP = 100. High-sugar (HS) Lolium perenne cultivars with high concentrations of these fructans have been shown to be of benefit to the pastoral agricultural industry because they improve rumen nitrogen use efficiency and reduce nitrous oxide emissions from pastures. We demonstrate with our method that these HS grasses not only contain increased amounts of fructans in leaf blades but also accumulate fructans with much higher DP compared to cultivars with normal sugar levels

    Gating of aquaporins by heavy metals in Allium cepa L. epidermal cells

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    Changes in the water permeability, aquaporin (AQP) activity, of leaf cells were investigated in response to different heavy metals (Zn2+, Pb2+, Cd2+, Hg2+). The cell pressure probe experiments were performed on onion epidermal cells as a model system. Heavy metal solutions at different concentrations (0.05 μM–2 mM) were used in our experiments. We showed that the investigated metal ions can be arranged in order of decreasing toxicity (expressed as a decrease in water permeability) as follows: Hg>Cd>Pb>Zn. Our results showed that β-mercaptoethanol treatment (10 mM solution) partially reverses the effect of AQP gating. The magnitude of this reverse differed depending on the metal and its concentration. The time course studies of the process showed that the gating of AQPs occurred within the first 10 min after the application of a metal. We also showed that after 20–40 min from the onset of metal treatment, the water flow through AQPs stabilized and remained constant. We observed that irrespective of the metal applied, the effect of AQP gating can be recorded within the first 10 min after the administration of metal ions. More generally, our results indicate that the toxic effects of investigated metal ions on the cellular level may involve AQP gating

    Distribution of actin gene isoforms in the Arabidopsis leaf measured in microsamples from intact individual cells

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    The contents of single plant cells can be sampled using glass microcapillaries. By combining such single-cell sampling with reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), transcripts of individual genes can be identified and, in principle, quantified. This provides a valuable technique for the analysis and quantification of the intercellular distribution of gene expression in complex tissues. In a proof-of-principle study, the cellular locations of the transcripts of the eight isoforms of actin (ACT) expressed in Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. were analyzed. Cell sap was extracted from epidermal and mesophyll cells of leaves of 3- to 4-week-old plants. Single-cell (SC)-RT-PCR was used to amplify the actin transcripts using specific primer pairs for ACT1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 11 and 12. Only ACT2 and ACT8 were found in epidermal and in mesophyll cells. In individual trichomes, in addition to ACT2 and ACT8, ACT7 and ACT11 transcripts were detectable. By employing the already well-characterized actin system we demonstrate the practicality and power of SC-RT-PCR as a technique for analyzing gene expression at the ultimate level of resolution, the single cell
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