21 research outputs found

    Intron-mediated enhancement: A tool for heterologous gene expression in plants?

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    Many plant promoters were characterized and used for transgene expression in plants. Even though these promoters drive high levels of transgene expression in plants, the expression patterns are rarely constitutive but restricted to some tissues and developmental stages. In terms of crop improvement not only the enhancement of expression per se but, in particular, tissue-specific and spatial expression of genes plays an important role. Introns were used to boost expression in transgenic plants in the field of crop improvement for a long time. However, the mechanism behind this so called intron-mediated enhancement (IME) is still largely unknown. This review highlights the complexity of IME on the levels of its regulation and modes of action and gives an overview on IME methodology, examples in fundamental research and models of proposed mechanisms. In addition, the application of IME in heterologous gene expression is discussed

    The role of the plant antioxidant system in drought tolerance

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    Laxa M, Liebthal M, Telman W, Chibani K, Dietz K-J. The role of the plant antioxidant system in drought tolerance. Antioxidants. 2019;8(4): 94.Water deficiency compromises plant performance and yield in many habitats and in agriculture. In addition to survival of the acute drought stress period which depends on plant-genotype-specific characteristics, stress intensity and duration, also the speed and efficiency of recovery determine plant performance. Drought-induced deregulation of metabolism enhances generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen species (RNS) which in turn affect the redox regulatory state of the cell. Strong correlative and analytical evidence assigns a major role in drought tolerance to the redox regulatory and antioxidant system. This review compiles current knowledge on the response and function of superoxide, hydrogen peroxide and nitric oxide under drought stress in various species and drought stress regimes. The meta-analysis of reported changes in transcript and protein amounts, and activities of components of the antioxidant and redox network support the tentative conclusion that drought tolerance is more tightly linked to up-regulated ascorbate-dependent antioxidant activity than to the response of the thiol-redox regulatory network. The significance of the antioxidant system in surviving severe phases of dehydration is further supported by the strong antioxidant system usually encountered in resurrection plants

    The Arabidopsis class II sirtuin is a lysine deacetylase and interacts with mitochondrial energy metabolism

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    The posttranslational regulation of proteins by lysine (Lys) acetylation has recently emerged to occur not only on histones, but also on organellar proteins in plants and animals. In particular, the catalytic activities of metabolic enzymes have been shown to be regulated by Lys acetylation. The Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) genome encodes two predicted sirtuin-type Lys deacetylases, of which only Silent Information Regulator2 homolog (SRT2) contains a predicted presequence for mitochondrial targeting. Here, we have investigated the function of SRT2 in Arabidopsis. We demonstrate that SRT2 functions as a Lys deacetylase in vitro and in vivo. We show that SRT2 resides predominantly at the inner mitochondrial membrane and interacts with a small number of protein complexes mainly involved in energy metabolism and metabolite transport. Several of these protein complexes, such as the ATP synthase and the ATP/ADP carriers, show an increase in Lys acetylation in srt2 loss-of-function mutants. The srt2 plants display no growth phenotype but rather a metabolic phenotype with altered levels in sugars, amino acids, and ADP contents. Furthermore, coupling of respiration to ATP synthesis is decreased in these lines, while the ADP uptake into mitochondria is significantly increased. Our results indicate that SRT2 is important in fine-tuning mitochondrial energy metabolism

    Metabolic recovery of Arabidopsis thaliana roots following cessation of oxidative stress

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    To cope with the various environmental stresses resulting in reactive oxygen species (ROS) production plant metabolism is known to be altered specifically under different stresses. After overcoming the stress the metabolism should be reconfigured to recover basal operation however knowledge concerning how this is achieved is cursory. To investigate the metabolic recovery of roots following oxidative stress, changes in metabolite abundance and carbon flow were analysed. Arabidopsis roots were treated by menadione to elicit oxidative stress. Roots were fed with 13C labelled glucose and the redistribution of isotope was determined in order to study carbon flow. The label redistribution through many pathways such as glycolysis, the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle and amino acid metabolism were reduced under oxidative stress. After menadione removal many of the stress-related changes reverted back to basal levels. Decreases in amounts of hexose phosphates, malate, 2-oxoglutarate, glutamate and aspartate were fully recovered or even increased to above the control level. However, some metabolites such as pentose phosphates and citrate did not recover but maintained their levels or even increased further. The alteration in label redistribution largely correlated with that in metabolite abundance. Glycolytic carbon flow reverted to the control level only 18 h after menadione removal although the TCA cycle and some amino acids such as aspartate and glutamate took longer to recover. Taken together, plant root metabolism was demonstrated to be able to overcome menadione-induced oxidative stress with the differential time period required by independent pathways suggestive of the involvement of pathway specific regulatory processes

    Co-expression and regulation of photorespiratory genes in Arabidopsis thaliana: A bioinformatic approach

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    Laxa M, Fromm S. Co-expression and regulation of photorespiratory genes in Arabidopsis thaliana: A bioinformatic approach. CURRENT PLANT BIOLOGY. 2018;14:2-18.Being a pathway tightly linked to photosynthesis, photorespiration is regulated by light, but also by both nutrients and metabolites on transcriptional level. However, only little is known about the signals and how they are integrated on promoter level to coordinate the whole pathway. Using a bioinformatic approach we analyzed the co-expression patterns of photorespiratory genes, the predicted cis-regulatory elements in their 5' upstream regions and the existence of introns in their 5'UTRs. We found that there are groups of photorespiratory genes that are strongly co-expressed among each other. The analysis showed a high co-expression between photorespiration and ammonia re-fixation. However, a strong co-regulation between two genes, like GDCH1 and GDCH2, did not necessarily mean that these genes share common cis-element in their 5' upstream regions. TATA-box, MYB1AT, and MYB4 binding site motifs occurred in 16 out of 20 genes. Furthermore, photorespiratory genes are subjected to alternative splicing. We discuss the presence of cis-elements in the context of both stress responses and development. A genome wide analysis of Arabidopsis 5'UTRs revealed that 5'UTRs introns are overrepresented in photorespiratory genes. Promoter:gusA studies indicated that photorespiratory gene expression is also regulated by intron-mediated enhancement (IME). As already shown for glutamate: glyoxylate aminotransferase, transcript abundance of serine: glyoxylate aminotransferase was affected by IME on mRNA level. IME of gene expression of glycolate oxidase was shown to act on translational level

    Low CO2 induces urea cycle intermediate accumulation in Arabidopsis thaliana

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    Blume C, Ost J, Muehlenbruch M, Peterhaensel C, Laxa M. Low CO2 induces urea cycle intermediate accumulation in Arabidopsis thaliana. PLOS ONE. 2019;14(1): e0210342.The non-proteinogenic amino acid ornithine links several stress response pathways. From a previous study we know that ornithine accumulates in response to low CO2. To investigate ornithine accumulation in plants, we shifted plants to either low CO2 or low light. Both conditions increased carbon limitation, but only low CO2 also increased the rate of photorespiration. Changes in metabolite profiles of light- and CO2-limited plants were quite similar. Several amino acids that are known markers of senescence accumulated strongly under both conditions. However, urea cycle intermediates respond differently between the two treatments. While the levels of both ornithine and citrulline were much higher in plants shifted to 100 ppm CO2 compared to those kept in 400 ppm CO2, their metabolite abundance did not significantly change in response to a light limitation. Furthermore, both ornithine and citrulline accumulation is independent from sugar starvation. Exogenous supplied sugar did not significantly change the accumulation of the two metabolites in low CO2-stressed plants, while the accumulation of other amino acids was reduced by about 50%. Gene expression measurements showed a reduction of the entire arginine biosynthetic pathway in response to low CO2. Genes in both proline biosynthesis and degradation were induced. Hence, proline did not accumulate in response to low CO2 like observed for many other stresses. We propose that excess of nitrogen re-fixed during photorespiration can be alternatively stored in ornithine and citrulline under low CO2 conditions. Furthermore, ornithine is converted to pyrroline-5-carboxylate by the action of delta OAT

    Low CO2 induces urea cycle intermediate accumulation in Arabidopsis thaliana

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    The non-proteinogenic amino acid ornithine links several stress response pathways. From a previous study we know that ornithine accumulates in response to low CO2. To investigate ornithine accumulation in plants, we shifted plants to either low CO2 or low light. Both conditions increased carbon limitation, but only low CO2 also increased the rate of photorespiration. Changes in metabolite profiles of light- and CO2-limited plants were quite similar. Several amino acids that are known markers of senescence accumulated strongly under both conditions. However, urea cycle intermediates respond differently between the two treatments. While the levels of both ornithine and citrulline were much higher in plants shifted to 100 ppm CO2 compared to those kept in 400 ppm CO2, their metabolite abundance did not significantly change in response to a light limitation. Furthermore, both ornithine and citrulline accumulation is independent from sugar starvation. Exogenous supplied sugar did not significantly change the accumulation of the two metabolites in low CO2-stressed plants, while the accumulation of other amino acids was reduced by about 50%. Gene expression measurements showed a reduction of the entire arginine biosynthetic pathway in response to low CO2. Genes in both proline biosynthesis and degradation were induced. Hence, proline did not accumulate in response to low CO2 like observed for many other stresses. We propose that excess of nitrogen re-fixed during photorespiration can be alternatively stored in ornithine and citrulline under low CO2 conditions. Furthermore, ornithine is converted to pyrroline-5-carboxylate by the action of δOAT

    Proteins of diverse function and subcellular location are lysine acetylated in Arabidopsis

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    Acetylation of the ε-amino group of lysine (Lys) is a reversible posttranslational modification recently discovered to be widespread, occurring on proteins outside the nucleus, in most subcellular locations in mammalian cells. Almost nothing is known about this modification in plants beyond the well-studied acetylation of histone proteins in the nucleus. Here, we report that Lys acetylation in plants also occurs on organellar and cytosolic proteins. We identified 91 Lys-acetylated sites on 74 proteins of diverse functional classes. Furthermore, our study suggests that Lys acetylation may be an important posttransitional modification in the chloroplast, since four Calvin cycle enzymes were acetylated. The plastid-encoded large subunit of Rubisco stands out because of the large number of acetylated sites occurring at important Lys residues that are involved in Rubisco tertiary structure formation and catalytic function. Using the human recombinant deacetylase sirtuin 3, it was demonstrated that Lys deacetylation significantly affects Rubisco activity as well as the activities of other central metabolic enzymes, such as the Calvin cycle enzyme phosphoglycerate kinase, the glycolytic enzyme glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, and the tricarboxylic acid cycle enzyme malate dehydrogenase. Our results demonstrate that Lys acetlyation also occurs on proteins outside the nucleus in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and that Lys acetylation could be important in the regulation of key metabolic enzymes
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