82 research outputs found

    La conservazione preventiva del patrimonio librario come possibile alternativa al restauro tradizionale

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    The present paper focuses on the close relation between library collections and their preservation environment, aiming, in particular, at highlighting the importance of promoting and sustaining the monitoring. The paper proposes some simple and ready-to-use technologies – smart monitoring – to prevent future damages

    Agricultural uses of plant biostimulants

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    Recherche des voies de régulation impliquées dans les réponses cellulaires et moléculaires d'Arabidopsis thaliana à une rhizobactérie bénéfique (Phyllobacterium brassicacearum)

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    MONTPELLIER-BU Sciences (341722106) / SudocSudocFranceF

    PGPR-Arabidopsis interactions is a useful system to study signaling pathways involved in plant developmental control

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    Using their 1-amino cyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) deaminase activity, many rhizobacteria can divert ACC from the ethylene biosynthesis pathway in plant roots. To investigate the role of this microbial activity in plant responses to plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR), we analyzed the effects of acdS knock-out and wild-type PGPR strains on two phenotypic responses to inoculation—root hair elongation and root system architecture—in Arabidopsis thaliana. Our work shows that rhizobacterial AcdS activity has a negative effect on root hair elongation, as expected from the reduction of ethylene production rate in root cells, while it has no impact on root system architecture. This suggests that PGPR triggered root hair elongation is independent of ethylene biosynthesis or signaling pathway. In addition, it does indicate that AcdS activity alters local regulatory processes, but not systemic regulations such as those that control root architecture. Our work also indicates that root hair elongation induced by PGPR inoculation is probably an auxin-independent mechanism. These findings were unexpected since genetic screens for abnormal root hair development mutants led to the isolation of ethylene and auxin mutants. Our work hence shows that studying the interaction between a PGPR and the model plant Arabidopsis is a useful system to uncover new pathways involved in plant plasticity

    The synthesis of pABA: Coupling between the glutamine amidotransferase and aminodeoxychorismate synthase domains of the bifunctional aminodeoxychorismate synthase from Arabidopsis thaliana.

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    International audienceAminodeoxychorismate (ADC) synthase in plants is a bifunctional enzyme containing glutamine amidotransferase (GAT) and ADC synthase (ADCS) domains. The GAT domain releases NH(3) from glutamine and the ADCS domain uses NH(3) to aminate chorismate. This enzyme is involved in folate (vitamin B9) biosynthesis. We produced a stable recombinant GAT-ADCS from Arabidopsis. Its kinetic properties were characterized, and activities and coupling of the two domains assessed. Both domains could operate independently, but not at their optimal capacities. When coupled, the activity of one domain modified the catalytic properties of the other. The GAT activity increased in the presence of chorismate, an activation process that probably involved conformational changes. The ADCS catalytic efficiency was 10(4) fold higher with glutamine than with NH(4)Cl, indicating that NH(3) released from glutamine and used for ADC synthesis did not equilibrate with the external medium. We observed that the GAT activity was always higher than that of ADCS, the excess of NH(3) being released in the external medium. In addition, we observed that ADC accumulation retro-inhibited ADCS activity. Altogether, these results indicate that channeling of NH(3) between the two domains and/or amination of chorismate are the limiting step of the whole process, and that ADC cannot accumulate

    Structural analysis of point mutations at the Vaccinia virus A20/D4 interface

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    International audienceThe Vaccinia virus polymerase holoenzyme is composed of three subunits: E9, the catalytic DNA polymerase subunit; D4, a uracil-DNA glycosylase; and A20, a protein with no known enzymatic activity. The D4/A20 heterodimer is the DNA polymerase cofactor, the function of which is essential for processive DNA synthesis. The recent crystal structure of D4 bound to the first 50 amino acids of A20 (D4/A201-50) revealed the importance of three residues, forming a cation-π interaction at the dimerization interface, for complex formation. These are Arg167 and Pro173 of D4 and Trp43 of A20. Here, the crystal structures of the three mutants D4-R167A/A201-50, D4-P173G/A201-50 and D4/A201-50-W43A are presented. The D4/A20 interface of the three structures has been analysed for atomic solvation parameters and cation-π interactions. This study confirms previous biochemical data and also points out the importance for stability of the restrained conformational space of Pro173. Moreover, these new structures will be useful for the design and rational improvement of known molecules targeting the D4/A20 interface

    Crystal Structure of the Vaccinia Virus Uracil-DNA Glycosylase in Complex with DNA.

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    International audienceVaccinia virus polymerase holoenzyme is composed of the DNA polymerase catalytic subunit E9 associated with its heterodimeric co-factor A20·D4 required for processive genome synthesis. Although A20 has no known enzymatic activity, D4 is an active uracil-DNA glycosylase (UNG). The presence of a repair enzyme as a component of the viral replication machinery suggests that, for poxviruses, DNA synthesis and base excision repair is coupled. We present the 2.7 Å crystal structure of the complex formed by D4 and the first 50 amino acids of A20 (D4·A201-50) bound to a 10-mer DNA duplex containing an abasic site resulting from the cleavage of a uracil base. Comparison of the viral complex with its human counterpart revealed major divergences in the contacts between protein and DNA and in the enzyme orientation on the DNA. However, the conformation of the dsDNA within both structures is very similar, suggesting a dominant role of the DNA conformation for UNG function. In contrast to human UNG, D4 appears rigid, and we do not observe a conformational change upon DNA binding. We also studied the interaction of D4·A201-50 with different DNA oligomers by surface plasmon resonance. D4 binds weakly to nonspecific DNA and to uracil-containing substrates but binds abasic sites with a Kd of <1.4 μm. This second DNA complex structure of a family I UNG gives new insight into the role of D4 as a co-factor of vaccinia virus DNA polymerase and allows a better understanding of the structural determinants required for UNG action
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