12 research outputs found
How do nitrogen and phosphorus deficiencies affect strigolactone production and exudation?
Plants exude strigolactones (SLs) to attract symbiotic arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in the rhizosphere. Previous studies have demonstrated that phosphorus (P) deficiency, but not nitrogen (N) deficiency, significantly promotes SL exudation in red clover, while in sorghum not only P deficiency but also N deficiency enhances SL exudation. There are differences between plant species in SL exudation under P- and N-deficient conditions, which may possibly be related to differences between legumes and non-legumes. To investigate this possibility in detail, the effects of N and P deficiencies on SL exudation were examined in Fabaceae (alfalfa and Chinese milk vetch), Asteraceae (marigold and lettuce), Solanaceae (tomato), and Poaceae (wheat) plants. In alfalfa as expected, and unexpectedly in tomato, only P deficiency promoted SL exudation. In contrast, in Chinese milk vetch, a leguminous plant, and in the other non-leguminous plants examined, N deficiency as well as P deficiency enhanced SL exudation. Distinct reductions in shoot P levels were observed in plants grown under N deficiency, except for tomato, in which shoot P level was increased by N starvation, suggesting that the P status of the shoot regulates SL exudation. There seems to be a correlation between shoot P levels and SL exudation across the species/families investigated
Low strigolactone root exudation: A novel mechanism of broomrape (Orobanche and Phelipanche spp.) resistance available for faba bean breeding
Faba bean yield is severely constrained in the Mediterranean region and Middle East by the parasitic weeds Orobanche crenata, O. foetida, and Phelipanche aegyptiaca. Seed germination of these weeds is triggered upon recognition of host root exudates. Only recently faba bean accessions have been identified with resistance based in low induction of parasitic seed germination, but the underlying mechanism was not identified. Strigolactones are a group of terpenoid lactones involved in the host recognition by parasitic plants. Our LC-MS/MS analysis of root exudates of the susceptible accession Prothabon detected orobanchol, orobanchyl acetate, and a novel germination stimulant. A time course analysis indicated that their concentration increased with plant age. However, low or undetectable amounts of these germination stimulants were detected in root exudates of the resistant lines Quijote and Navio at all plant ages. A time course analysis of seed germination induced by root exudates of each faba bean accession indicated important differences in the ability to stimulate parasitic germination. Results presented here show that resistance to parasitic weeds based on low strigolactone exudation does exist within faba bean germplasm. Therefore, selection for this trait is feasible in a breeding program. The remarkable fact that low induction of germination is similarly operative against O. crenata, O. foetida, and P. aegyptiaca reinforces the value of this resistance. © 2014 American Chemical Society.This work was supported by the Program for Promotion of Basic
and Applied Researches for Innovation in Bio-oriented Industry
to K.Y., T.K., and X.X. and to projects FP7-LEGATO and
AGL2011-22524, cofinanced by FEDER funds to D.R. M.F.-A.
has received the support of the European Union, in the
framework of the International Outgoing European Marie
Curie Postdoctoral Fellowship Programme (PIOF-GA-2009-
252538), and from the Japan Society for the Promotion of
Science Postdoctoral Fellowship ID noP 13390.Peer Reviewe
Difference inStriga-susceptibility is reflected in strigolactone secretion profile, but not in compatibility and host preference in arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis in two maize cultivars
・Strigolactones released from plant roots trigger both seed germination of parasitic weeds such as Striga spp. and hyphal branching of the symbionts arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi. Generally, strigolactone composition in exudates is quantitatively and qualitatively different among plants, which may be involved in susceptibility and host specificity in the parasite-plant interactions. We hypothesized that difference in strigolactone composition would have a significant impact on compatibility and host specificity/preference in AM symbiosis. ・Strigolactones in root exudates of Striga-susceptible (Pioneer 3253) and -resistant (KST 94) maize (Zea mays) cultivars were characterized by LC–MS/MS combined with germination assay using Striga hermonthica seeds. Levels of colonization and community compositions of AM fungi in the two cultivars were investigated in field and glasshouse experiments. ・5-Deoxystrigol was exuded exclusively by the susceptible cultivar, while the resistant cultivar mainly exuded sorgomol. Despite the distinctive difference in strigolactone composition, the levels of AM colonization and the community compositions were not different between the cultivars. ・The present study demonstrated that the difference in strigolactone composition has no appreciable impact on AM symbiosis, at least in the two maize cultivars, and further suggests that the traits involved in Striga-resistance are not necessarily accompanied by reduction in compatibility to AM fungi
Thrombin Inhibitors from the Freshwater Cyanobacterium <i>Anabaena compacta</i>
Bioassay-guided investigation of the cyanobacterium <i>Anabaena
compacta</i> extracts afforded spumigin J (<b>1</b>) and
the known thrombin inhibitor spumigin A (<b>2</b>). The absolute
configuration of <b>1</b> was analyzed by advanced Marfey’s
methodology. Compounds <b>1</b> and <b>2</b> inhibited
thrombin with EC<sub>50</sub> values of 4.9 and 2.1 μM, and
0.7 and 0.2 μM in the cathepsin B inhibitory assay, respectively.
The MM-GBSA methodology predicted spumigin A with 2<i>S</i>-4-methylproline as the better thrombin inhibitor
A carlactonoic acid methyltransferase that contributes to the inhibition of shoot branching in Arabidopsis
植物の枝分かれ調節ホルモンの合成メカニズムを解明 --植物ホルモンを活性化する酵素タンパク質を発見--. 京都大学プレスリリース. 2022-03-30.Strigolactones (SLs) are plant hormones that regulate shoot branching and diverse developmental processes. They are biosynthesized from carotenoid molecules via a key biosynthetic precursor called carlactone (CL) and its carboxylated analog, carlactonoic acid (CLA). We have previously identified the methyl esterified derivative of CLA, methyl carlactonoate (MeCLA), as an endogenous SL-like molecule in Arabidopsis. Neither CL nor CLA could interact with the receptor protein, Arabidopsis DWARF14 (AtD14), in vitro, while MeCLA could, suggesting that the methylation step of CLA is critical to convert a biologically inactive precursor to a bioactive compound in the shoot branching inhibition pathway. Here, we show that a member of the SABATH protein family (At4g36470) efficiently catalyzes methyl esterification of CLA using S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM) as a methyl donor. We named this enzyme CLAMT for CLA methyltransferase. The Arabidopsis loss-of-function clamt mutant accumulated CLA and had substantially reduced MeCLA content compared with wild type (WT), showing that CLAMT is the main enzyme that catalyzes CLA methylation in Arabidopsis. The clamt mutant displayed an increased branching phenotype, yet the branch number was less than that of severe SL biosynthetic mutants. Exogenously applied MeCLA, but not CLA, restored the branching phenotype of the clamt mutant. In addition, grafting experiments using the clamt and other SL biosynthetic mutants suggest that CL and CLA are transmissible from root to shoot. Taken together, our results demonstrate a significant role of CLAMT in the shoot branching inhibition pathway in Arabidopsis
Strigolactone perception and deactivation by a hydrolase receptor DWARF14
植物の枝分かれ制御ホルモン「ストリゴラクトン」の受容メカニズムを解明 --受容体タンパクがストリゴラクトンの受容と不活性化を担うことを発見--. 京都大学プレスリリース. 2019-01-18.The perception mechanism for the strigolactone (SL) class of plant hormones has been a subject of debate because their receptor, DWARF14 (D14), is an α/β-hydrolase that can cleave SLs. Here we show via time-course analyses of SL binding and hydrolysis by Arabidopsis thaliana D14, that the level of uncleaved SL strongly correlates with the induction of the active signaling state. In addition, we show that an AtD14D218A catalytic mutant that lacks enzymatic activity is still able to complement the atd14 mutant phenotype in an SL-dependent manner. We conclude that the intact SL molecules trigger the D14 active signaling state, and we also describe that D14 deactivates bioactive SLs by the hydrolytic degradation after signal transmission. Together, these results reveal that D14 is a dual-functional receptor, responsible for both the perception and deactivation of bioactive SLs