29 research outputs found
Molecular Characterization of a Strawberry FaASR Gene in Relation to Fruit Ripening
BACKGROUND: ABA-, stress- and ripening-induced (ASR) proteins have been reported to act as a downstream component involved in ABA signal transduction. Although much attention has been paid to the roles of ASR in plant development and stress responses, the mechanisms by which ABA regulate fruit ripening at the molecular level are not fully understood. In the present work, a strawberry ASR gene was isolated and characterized (FaASR), and a polyclonal antibody against FaASR protein was prepared. Furthermore, the effects of ABA, applied to two different developmental stages of strawberry, on fruit ripening and the expression of FaASR at transcriptional and translational levels were investigated. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: FaASR, localized in the cytoplasm and nucleus, contained 193 amino acids and shared common features with other plant ASRs. It also functioned as a transcriptional activator in yeast with trans-activation activity in the N-terminus. During strawberry fruit development, endogenous ABA content, levels of FaASR mRNA and protein increased significantly at the initiation of ripening at a white (W) fruit developmental stage. More importantly, application of exogenous ABA to large green (LG) fruit and W fruit markedly increased endogenous ABA content, accelerated fruit ripening, and greatly enhanced the expression of FaASR transcripts and the accumulation of FaASR protein simultaneously. CONCLUSIONS: These results indicate that FaASR may be involved in strawberry fruit ripening. The observed increase in endogenous ABA content, and enhanced FaASR expression at transcriptional and translational levels in response to ABA treatment might partially contribute to the acceleration of strawberry fruit ripening
Review of laser speckle contrast techniques for visualizing tissue perfusion
When a diffuse object is illuminated with coherent laser light, the backscattered light will form an interference pattern on the detector. This pattern of bright and dark areas is called a speckle pattern. When there is movement in the object, the speckle pattern will change over time. Laser speckle contrast techniques use this change in speckle pattern to visualize tissue perfusion. We present and review the contribution of laser speckle contrast techniques to the field of perfusion visualization and discuss the development of the techniques
What Is Direct Allorecognition?
Direct allorecognition is the process by which
donor-derived major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-peptide
complexes, typically presented by donor-derived ‘passenger’
dendritic cells, are recognised directly by recipient T cells.
In this review, we discuss the two principle theories which
have been proposed to explain why individuals possess a
high-precursor frequency of T cells with direct allospecificity
and how self-restricted T cells recognise allogeneic MHCpeptide
complexes. These theories, both of which are supported
by functional and structural data, suggest that T cells
recognising allogeneic MHC-peptide complexes focus either
on the allopeptides bound to the allo-MHC molecules or the
allo-MHC molecules themselves. We discuss how direct
alloimmune responses may be sustained long term, the consequences
of this for graft outcome and highlight novel strategies
which are currently being investigated as a potential
means of reducing rejection mediated through this pathway