115 research outputs found

    Genetic, molecular and cellular approaches to the analysis of maize embryo development

    Get PDF
    The development of embryo structures in plants is essential for the formation of the adult plant organs. In cereals, this process has distinct features which have attracted attention from different points of view. Differential gene expression analyses have been used in order to identify genes useful as molecular markers of certain physiological, molecular or developmental processes. Several maize mutants affected in embryo development have been isolated, but only a fraction of them have been characterized at the molecular level. Molecular markers can be useful in the characterization of embryo defective mutants. Here, we describe the different techniques used in the identification of molecular marker genes for embryo development. We describe in more detail some groups of genes coding for cell wall proteins. We also describe the application of these molecular markers in the characterization of some embryo mutants

    Transcriptional activity of transposable elements in maize

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Mobile genetic elements represent a high proportion of the Eukaryote genomes. In maize, 85% of genome is composed by transposable elements of several families. First step in transposable element life cycle is the synthesis of an RNA, but few is known about the regulation of transcription for most of the maize transposable element families. Maize is the plant from which more ESTs have been sequenced (more than two million) and the third species in total only after human and mice. This allowed us to analyze the transcriptional activity of the maize transposable elements based on EST databases.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We have investigated the transcriptional activity of 56 families of transposable elements in different maize organs based on the systematic search of more than two million expressed sequence tags. At least 1.5% maize ESTs show sequence similarity with transposable elements. According to these data, the patterns of expression of each transposable element family is variable, even within the same class of elements. In general, transcriptional activity of the <it>gypsy</it>-like retrotransposons is higher compared to other classes. Transcriptional activity of several transposable elements is specially high in shoot apical meristem and sperm cells. Sequence comparisons between genomic and transcribed sequences suggest that only a few copies are transcriptionally active.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The use of powerful high-throughput sequencing methodologies allowed us to elucidate the extent and character of repetitive element transcription in maize cells. The finding that some families of transposable elements have a considerable transcriptional activity in some tissues suggests that, either transposition is more frequent than previously expected, or cells can control transposition at a post-transcriptional level.</p

    Experimental evidence for splicing of intron-containing transcripts of plant LTR retrotransposon Ogre

    Get PDF
    Ogre elements are a distinct group of plant Ty3/gypsy-like retrotransposons characterized by several specific features, one of which is a separation of the gag-pol region into two non-overlapping open reading frames: ORF2 coding for Gag-Pro, and ORF3 coding for RT/RH-INT proteins. Previous characterization of Ogre elements from several plant species revealed that part of their transcripts lacks the region between ORF2 and ORF3, carrying one uninterrupted ORF instead. In this work, we investigated a hypothesis that this region represents an intron that is spliced out from part of the Ogre transcripts as a means for preferential production of ORF2-encoded proteins over those encoded by the complete ORF2–ORF3 region. The experiments involved analysis of transcription patterns of well-defined Ogre populations in a model plant Medicago truncatula and examination of transcripts carrying dissected pea Ogre intron expressed within a coding sequence of chimeric reporter gene. Both experimental approaches proved that the region between ORF2 and ORF3 is spliced from Ogre transcripts and showed that this process is only partial, probably due to weak splice signals. This is one of very few known cases of spliced LTR retrotransposons and the only one where splicing does not involve parts of the element’s coding sequences, thus resembling intron splicing found in most cellular genes

    FIDEL—a retrovirus-like retrotransposon and its distinct evolutionary histories in the A- and B-genome components of cultivated peanut

    Get PDF
    In this paper, we describe a Ty3-gypsy retrotransposon from allotetraploid peanut (Arachis hypogaea) and its putative diploid ancestors Arachis duranensis (A-genome) and Arachis ipaënsis (B-genome). The consensus sequence is 11,223 bp. The element, named FIDEL (Fairly long Inter-Dispersed Euchromatic LTR retrotransposon), is more frequent in the A- than in the B-genome, with copy numbers of about 3,000 (±950, A. duranensis), 820 (±480, A. ipaënsis), and 3,900 (±1,500, A. hypogaea) per haploid genome. Phylogenetic analysis of reverse transcriptase sequences showed distinct evolution of FIDEL in the ancestor species. Fluorescent in situ hybridization revealed disperse distribution in euchromatin and absence from centromeres, telomeric regions, and the nucleolar organizer region. Using paired sequences from bacterial artificial chromosomes, we showed that elements appear less likely to insert near conserved ancestral genes than near the fast evolving disease resistance gene homologs. Within the Ty3-gypsy elements, FIDEL is most closely related with the Athila/Calypso group of retrovirus-like retrotransposons. Putative transmembrane domains were identified, supporting the presence of a vestigial envelope gene. The results emphasize the importance of FIDEL in the evolution and divergence of different Arachis genomes and also may serve as an example of the role of retrotransposons in the evolution of legume genomes in general

    HAD hydrolase function unveiled by substrate screening: enzymatic characterization of Arabidopsis thaliana subclass I phosphosugar phosphatise AtSgpp

    Get PDF
    [EN] This work presents the isolation and the biochemical characterization of the Arabidopsis thaliana gene AtSgpp. This gene shows homology with the Arabidopsis low molecular weight phosphatases AtGpp1 and AtGpp2 and the yeast counterpart GPP1 and GPP2, which have a high specificity for dl-glycerol-3-phosphate. In addition, it exhibits homology with DOG1 and DOG2 that dephosphorylate 2-deoxy-d-glucose-6-phosphate. Using a comparative genomic approach, we identified the AtSgpp gene as a conceptual translated haloacid dehalogenase-like hydrolase HAD protein. AtSgpp (locus tag At2g38740), encodes a protein with a predicted Mw of 26.7 kDa and a pI of 4.6. Its sequence motifs and expected structure revealed that AtSgpp belongs to the HAD hydrolases subfamily I, with the C1-type cap domain. In the presence of Mg2+ ions, the enzyme has a phosphatase activity over a wide range of phosphosugars substrates (pH optima at 7.0 and K (m) in the range of 3.6-7.7 mM). AtSgpp promiscuity is preferentially detectable on d-ribose-5-phosphate, 2-deoxy-d-ribose-5-phosphate, 2-deoxy-d-glucose-6-phosphate, d-mannose-6-phosphate, d-fructose-1-phosphate, d-glucose-6-phosphate, dl-glycerol-3-phosphate, and d-fructose-6-phosphate, as substrates. AtSgpp is ubiquitously expressed throughout development in most plant organs, mainly in sepal and guard cell. Interestingly, expression is affected by abiotic and biotic stresses, being the greatest under Pi starvation and cyclopentenone oxylipins induction. Based on both, substrate lax specificity and gene expression, the physiological function of AtSgpp in housekeeping detoxification, modulation of sugar-phosphate balance and Pi homeostasis, is provisionally assigned.We acknowledge Professors Montserrat Pages (CSIC Barcelona, Spain), Thomas Kupke (University of Heidelberg, Germany) and Manuel Hernandez (University Polytechnic of Valencia, Spain) for their warm support. We also thank the advice and provision of plasmid pSBETa by Dr. Florence Vignols and Yves Meyer (University of Perpignan, France); the computer software helps by Ramon Nogales-Rangel and Alexis Gonzalez-Policarpo; Eugenio Grau-Ferrando for kind advice and help for sequencing. This work was funded by the 10 month research contract MEC-FEDER to J.A.C.-M., 10 month research contract JAE-DOC to I.M.-S. and by the research project BIO2006-10138 from the MEC-FEDER of Spain to F.A.C.-M. In memoriam of Dr. Mari Cruz Cutanda-Perez.Caparrós Martín, JA.; Mccarthy Suarez, I.; Culiañez Macia, FA. (2013). HAD hydrolase function unveiled by substrate screening: enzymatic characterization of Arabidopsis thaliana subclass I phosphosugar phosphatise AtSgpp. Planta. 237(4):943-954. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00425-012-1809-5S9439542374Allen KN, Dunaway-Mariano D (2004) Phosphoryl group transfer: evolution of a catalytic scaffold. Trends Biochem Sci 29:495–503Altschul SF, Gish W, Miller W, Myers EW, Lipman DJ (1990) Basic local alignment search tool. J Mol Biol 215:403–410Ames BN (1966) Assay of inorganic phosphate, total phosphate, and phosphatases. Methods Enzymol 8:115–118Böhmer M, Schroeder JI (2011) Quantitative transcriptomic analysis of abscisic acid-induced and reactive oxygen species-dependent expression changes and proteomic profiling in Arabidopsis suspension cells. Plant J 67:105–118Bradford MM (1976) A rapid and sensitive method for the quantization of microgram quantities of protein utilizing the principle of protein-dye binding. Anal Biochem 72:248–254Burroughs AM, Allen KN, Dunaway-Mariano D, Aravind L (2006) Evolutionary genomics of the HAD superfamily: understanding the structural adaptations and catalytic diversity in a superfamily of phosphoesterases and allied enzymes. J Mol Biol 361:1003–1034Caparrós-Martín JA, Reiland S, Köchert K, Cutanda MC, Culiáñez-Macia FA (2007) Arabidopsis thaliana AtGpp 1 and AtGpp2: two novel low molecular weight phosphatases involved in plant glycerol metabolism. Plant Mol Biol 63:505–517Collet JF, Stroobant V, Pirard M, Delpierre G, Van Schaftingen E (1998) A new class of phosphotransferases phosphorylated on an aspartate residue in an amino-terminal DXDX(T/V) motif. J Biol Chem 273:14107–14112Corpet F, Servantm F, Gouzy J, Kahn D (2000) ProDom and ProDom-CG: tools for protein domain analysis and whole genome comparisons. Nucleic Acids Res 28:267–269Cutanda MC (2003) Effect of altering levels of hexoses phosphate in carbohydrate metabolism and glucose signalling in yeast and plants. PhD thesis, Polytechnic University of Valencia, Valencia, SpainHiggins D, Thompson J, Gibson T, Thompson JD, Higgins DG, Gibson TJ (1994) CLUSTAL W: improving the sensitivity of progressive multiple sequence alignment through sequence weighting, position-specific gap penalties and weight matrix choice. Nucleic Acids Res 22:4673–4680Koonin EV, Tatusov RL (1994) Computer analysis of bacterial haloacid dehalogenases defines a large superfamily of hydrolases with diverse specificity. Application of an iterative approach to database search. J Mol Biol 244:125–132Kupke T, Caparrós-Martín JA, Malquichagua Salazar KJ, Culiàñez-Macià FA (2009) Biochemical and physiological characterization of Arabidopsis thaliana AtCoAse: a Nudix CoA hydrolyzing protein that improves plant development. Physiol Plant 135:365–378Kuznetsova E, Proudfoot M, Sanders SA, Reinking J, Savchenko A, Arrowsmith CH, Edwards AM, Yakunin AF (2005) Enzyme genomics: application of general enzymatic screens to discover new enzymes. FEMS Microbiol Rev 29:263–279Kuznetsova E, Proudfoo M, Gonzalez CF, Brown G, Omelchenko MV, Borozan I, Carmel L, Wolf YI, Mori H, Savchenko AV, Arrowsmith CH, Koonin EV, Edwards AM, Yakunin AF (2006) Genome-wide analysis of substrate specificities of the Escherichia coli haloacid dehalogenase-like phosphatase family. J Biol Chem 281:36149–36161Lahiri SD, Zhang G, Dai J, Dunaway-Mariano D, Allen KN (2004) Analysis of the substrate specificity loop of the HAD superfamily cap domain. Biochemistry 43:2812–2820Lahiri SD, Zhang G, Dunaway-Mariano D, Allen KN (2006) Diversification of function in the haloacid dehalogenase enzyme superfamily: the role of the cap domain in hydrolytic phosphorus—carbon bond cleavage. Bioorganic Chem 34:394–409Lambert C, Leonard N, De Bolle X, Depiereux E (2002) ESyPred3D: prediction of proteins 3D structures. Bioinformatics 18:1250–1256Lu Z, Dunaway-Mariano D, Allen KN (2005) HAD superfamily phosphotransferase substrate diversification: structure and function analysis of HAD subclass IIB sugar phosphatase BT4131. Biochemistry 44:8684–8696Lu Z, Dunaway-Mariano D, Allen KN (2008) The catalytic scaffold of the haloalkanoic acid dehalogenase enzyme superfamily acts as a mold for the trigonal bipyramidal transition state. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 105:5687–5692Maniatis T, Fritsch EF, Sambrook J (1982) Molecular cloning: a laboratory manual. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring HarborMorais MC, Zhang W, Baker AS, Zhang G, Dunaway-Mariano D, Allen KN (2000) The crystal structure of Bacillus cereus phosphonoacetaldehyde hydrolase: insight into catalysis of phosphorus bond cleavage and catalytic diversification within the HAD enzyme superfamily. Biochemistry 39:10385–10396Morais MC, Zhang G, Zhang W, Olsen DB, Dunaway-Mariano D, Allen KN (2004) X-ray crystallographic and site-directed mutagenesis analysis of the mechanism of Schiff-base formation in phosphonoacetaldehyde hydrolase catalysis. J Biol Chem 279:9353–9361Mueller WS, Hilbert B, Dueckershoff K, Roitsch T, Krischke M, Mueller MJ, Berger S (2008) General detoxification and stress responses are mediated by oxidized lipids through TGA transcription factors in Arabidopsis. Plant Cell 20:768–785Murashige T, Skoog F (1962) A revised medium for rapid growth and bioassays with tobacco cultures. Physiol Plant 15:473–497Norbeck J, Pahlman AK, Akhtar N, Blomberg A, Adler L (1996) Purification and characterization of two isoenzymes of dl-glycerol-3-phosphatase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Identification of the corresponding GPP1 and GPP2 genes and evidence for osmotic regulation of Gpp 2p expression by the osmosensing mitogen-activated protein kinase signal transduction pathway. J Biol Chem 271:13875–13881Rández-Gil F, Blasco A, Prieto JA, Sanz P (1995) DOGR1 and DOGR2: two genes from Saccharomyces cerevisiae that confer 2-deoxyglucose resistance when overexpressed. Yeast 11:1233–1240Rao KN, Kumaran D, Seetharaman J, Bonanno JB, Burley SK, Swaminathan S (2006) Crystal structure of trehalose-6-phosphate phosphatase-related protein: biochemical and biological implications. Protein Sci 15:1735–1744Schagger H, von Jagow G (1987) Tricine-sodium dodecyl sulfatepolyacrylamide gel electrophoresis for the separation of proteins in the range from 1 to 100 kDa. Anal Biochem 166:368–379Schenk PM, Baumann S, Mattes R, Steinbiss HH (1995) Improved high-level expression system for eukaryotic genes in Escherichia coli using T7 RNA polymerase and rare ArgtRNAs. Biotechniques 19:196–200Selengut JD (2001) MDP-1 is a new and distinct member of the haloacid dehalogenase family of aspartate-dependent phosphohydrolases. Biochemistry 40:12704–12711Selengut JD, Levine RL (2000) MDP-1: a novel eukaryotic magnesium-dependent phosphatase. Biochemistry 39:8315–8324Shin DH, Roberts A, Jancarik J, Yocota H, Kim R, Wemmer DE, Kim S-H (2003) Crystal structure of a phosphatase with a unique substrate binding domain from Thermotoga maritime. Protein Sci 12:1464–1472Sussman I, Avron M (1981) Characterization and partial puri-fication of dl-glycerol-1-phosphatase from Dunaliella salina. Biochim Biophys Acta 661:199–204The Arabidopsis Genome Initiative (2000) Analysis of the genome sequence of the flowering plant Arabidopsis thaliana. Nature 408:796–815Tremblay LW, Dunaway-Mariano D, Allen KN (2006) Structure and activity analyses of Escherichia coli K-12 NagD provide insight into the evolution of biochemical function in the haloalkanoic acid dehalogenase superfamily. Biochemistry 45:1183–1193Vicient CM, Delseny M (1999) Isolation of total RNA from Arabidopsis thaliana seeds. Anal Biochem 268:412–413Wang W, Cho HS, Kim R, Jancarik J, Yokota H, Nguyen HH, Grigoriev IV, Wemmer DE, Kim S-H (2002) Structural characterization of the reaction pathway in phosphoserine phosphatase: crystallographic “snapshots” of intermediate states. J Mol Biol 319:421–431Zhang G, Mazurkie AS, Dunaway-Mariano D, Allen KN (2002) Kinetic evidence for a substrate-induced fit in phosphonoacetaldehyde hydrolase catalysis. Biochemistry 41:13370–13377Zhang G, Morais MC, Dai J, Zhang W, Dunaway-Mariano D, Allen KN (2004) Investigation of metal Ion binding in phosphonoacetaldehyde hydrolase identifies sequence markers for metal-activated enzymes of the HAD enzyme superfamily. Biochemistry 43:4990–4997Zimmermann P, Hirsch-Hoffmann M, Hennig L, Gruissem W (2004) GENEVESTIGATOR: Arabidopsis microarray database and analysis toolbox. Plant Physiol 136:2621–263
    corecore