816 research outputs found
Cellular reorganization in auxin-dependent pattern formation during early embryogenesis in Arabidopsis thaliana
A fundamental question in developmental biology is how the complex cellular pattern in multicellular organisms arises from a single cell. In land plants, the biosynthesis, transport, and signaling of phytohormone auxin is essential for pattern formation in embryogenesis. In Chapter 1, a brief introduction on plant embryogenesis, the roles of auxin signaling in pattern formation in early embryo, cellular basis on oriented cell division, and auxin-regulated oriented cell division during early embryogenesis are described as the foundation of this thesis aimed to answer the domain and cellular structures regulated by auxin that lead precise pattern formation during early embryo development of Arabidopsis thaliana. In Chapter 2, two novel fluorescent protein-based reporters for auxin perception and response, respectively, were developed to overcome technical bottlenecks for dissecting auxin signaling in embryos. The novel reporters offer higher sensitivity and responsiveness compared to existing tools. Our reporters revealed the gradients and maxima of auxin perception and response that had been hypothesized, but not yet detected. In addition, these new tools now offer a wider scope of application beyond the embryo and are generic tools for the auxin biology research community. In Chapter 3, the auxin reporters described in the previous chapter were improved to overcome their limitations, and the first comprehensive auxin reporter that was able to simultaneously visualize both auxin perception and response was characterized. With this new auxin reporter, the differential auxin signaling capacity between different cell types and differentiation states was demonstrated. In addition, the reporter for auxin response described in the previous chapter was applied in mutant embryos with a local auxin response defect, revealing its broad impact on auxin output. In Chapter 4, a toolkit of fluorescent protein-based markers labeling specific cellular structures was established. The structures included the plasma membrane, cytoskeletons, organelles, and the nucleus, structures excepted to participate in the oriented cell divisions that shape the early embryo. Expression of the protein markers was optimized for early Arabidopsis embryos, and topologies of subcellular structures were mapped during cellular reorganization in early embryogenesis. In addition, a specialized imaging technique was developed to allow high-resolution 3-dimensional imaging within the special embryo geometry. Combining the embryo-specific cellular structure marker set and the optimized imaging approach, 3-dimentional imaging of cellular structures in early embryos was achieved, and the dynamic organizations of organelles and cytoskeletons along with the unexpected discovery of early establishment of central/peripheral polarity in early embryos are described in this chapter. In Chapter 5, part of the toolkit established in the previous chapter was applied to embryos with inducible suppression on auxin response. Previously, it was shown that suppression of auxin response leads to divisions that follow only the cellular geometry, while auxin response allows cells to divide asymmetrically by deviating from this mode. It was unclear if and how the cytoskeleton mediates this auxin output, which was tested by visualizing the effect of auxin response on cytoskeleton organization. Distinct effects on both actin and microtubule properties were identified, and this provides an indication for further investigation into the biochemical and biomechanical mechanisms of pattern formation. In Chapter 6, the discoveries described in this thesis are placed in a broader context and discussed along with the latest technological and scientific advances related to the topic to offer future perspective in understanding the mechanisms underlying pattern formation.</p
Ample Pairs
We show that the ample degree of a stable theory with trivial forking is
preserved when we consider the corresponding theory of belles paires, if it
exists. This result also applies to the theory of -structures of a trivial
theory of rank .Comment: Research partially supported by the program MTM2014-59178-P. The
second author conducted research with support of the programme
ANR-13-BS01-0006 Valcomo. The third author would like to thank the European
Research Council grant 33882
DIX Domain Polymerization Drives Assembly of Plant Cell Polarity Complexes
The identities of cell polarity determinants are not conserved between animals and plants; however, characterization of a DIX-domain containing protein in land plants reveals that the physical principles of polar complex assembly are preserved across eukaryotes.</p
A plausible microtubule-based mechanism for cell division orientation in plant embryogenesis
Oriented cell divisions are significant in plant morphogenesis because plant cells are embedded in cell walls and cannot relocate. Cell divisions follow various regular orientations, but the underlying mechanisms have not been clarified. We propose that cell-shape-dependent self-organization of cortical microtubule arrays is able to provide a mechanism for determining planes of early tissue-generating divisions and may form the basis for robust control of cell division orientation in the embryo. To show this, we simulate microtubules on actual cell surface shapes, from which we derive a minimal set of three rules for proper array orientation. The first rule captures the effects of cell shape alone on microtubule organization, the second rule describes the regulation of microtubule stability at cell edges, and the third rule includes the differential effect of auxin on local microtubule stability. These rules generate early embryonic division plane orientations and potentially offer a framework for understanding patterned cell divisions in plant morphogenesis. Chakrabortty et al. show that a computational model for dynamic self-organization of cortical microtubules on experimentally extracted cell shapes provides a plausible molecular mechanism for division plane orientation in the first four divisions of early stage A. thaliana embryos, in WT as well as two developmental mutants bodenlos and clasp
Ethylene-mediated phosphorylation of ORESARA1 induces sequential leaf death during flooding in Arabidopsis
The volatile phytohormone ethylene is a major regulator of plant adaptive responses to flooding. In flooded plant tissues, it quickly increases to high concentrations due to its low solubility and diffusion rates in water. The passive, quick and consistent accumulation of ethylene in submerged plant tissues makes it a reliable cue for plants to trigger flood-acclimative responses. However, persistent ethylene accumulation can also have negative effects, notably accelerated leaf senescence. Ethylene is a well-established positive regulator of senescence which is a natural element of plant ageing. However stress-induced senescence hampers the photosynthetic capacity and stress recovery of plants. In submerged Arabidopsis shoots, senescence follows a strict age-dependent pattern starting with the older leaves. Although mechanisms underlying ethylene-mediated senescence have been uncovered, it is unclear how submerged plants avoid an indiscriminate breakdown of leaves despite high systemic accumulation of ethylene. Here we demonstrate in Arabidopsis plants that even though submergence triggers a leaf-age independent activation of ethylene signaling via EIN3, senescence was initiated only in the old leaves. This EIN3 stabilization also led to the overall transcript and protein accumulation of the senescence-promoting transcription factor ORESARA1 (ORE1). ORE1 protein accumulated in both old and young leaves during submergence. However, leaf age-dependent senescence could be explained by ORE1 activation via phosphorylation only in old leaves. Our results unravel a mechanism by which plants regulate the speed and pattern of senescence during environmental stresses like flooding. Such an age-dependent phosphorylation of ORE1 ensures that older expendable leaves are dismantled first, thus prolonging the life of younger leaves and meristematic tissues vital to whole plant survival
Inflammatory Marker but Not Adipokine Predicts Mortality among Long-Term Hemodialysis Patients
Aims: chronic inflammation contributes significantly to the morbidity and mortality of chronic hemodialysis patients. A recent research has shown that adipokines were associated with inflammation in these patients. We aim to investigate whether biomarkers of inflammation, adipokines, and clinical features can predict the outcome of hemodialysis patients. Materials and methods: we enrolled 181 hemodialysis patients (men: 97, mean age: 56.3±13.6) and analyzed predictors of long-term outcomes. Results: during the 3-year followup period, 41 patients died; the main causes of death were infection and cardiovascular disease. Elevated serum levels of hsCRP and albumin and advanced age were highly associated with death
(all P<.001). Leptin and adiponectin levels were not significantly different between deceased patients and survivors. Cox-regression analysis indicated that age, diabetes, albumin level, and hsCRP were independent factors predicting mortality. Conclusion: the presence of underlying disease, advanced age, and markers of chronic inflammation is strongly related to survival rate in long-term hemodialysis patients
Increasing Incidence of Nontuberculous Mycobacteria, Taiwan, 2000–2008
To assess the species distribution and epidemiologic trends of nontuberculous mycobacteria, we examined isolates from patients in Taiwan. During 2000–2008, the proportion increased significantly from 32.3% to 49.8%. Associated disease incidence increased from 2.7 to 10.2 cases per 100,000 patients. Mycobacterium avium complex and M. abscessus were most frequently isolated
VoiceBank-2023: A Multi-Speaker Mandarin Speech Corpus for Constructing Personalized TTS Systems for the Speech Impaired
Services of personalized TTS systems for the Mandarin-speaking speech
impaired are rarely mentioned. Taiwan started the VoiceBanking project in 2020,
aiming to build a complete set of services to deliver personalized Mandarin TTS
systems to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis patients. This paper reports the
corpus design, corpus recording, data purging and correction for the corpus,
and evaluations of the developed personalized TTS systems, for the VoiceBanking
project. The developed corpus is named after the VoiceBank-2023 speech corpus
because of its release year. The corpus contains 29.78 hours of utterances with
prompts of short paragraphs and common phrases spoken by 111 native Mandarin
speakers. The corpus is labeled with information about gender, degree of speech
impairment, types of users, transcription, SNRs, and speaking rates. The
VoiceBank-2023 is available by request for non-commercial use and welcomes all
parties to join the VoiceBanking project to improve the services for the speech
impaired.Comment: submitted to 26th International Conference of the ORIENTAL-COCOSD
Void Structures in Regularly Patterned ZnO Nanorods Grown with the Hydrothermal Method
The void structures and related optical properties after thermal annealing with ambient oxygen in regularly patterned ZnO nanrorod (NR) arrays grown with the hydrothermal method are studied. In increasing the thermal annealing temperature, void distribution starts from the bottom and extends to the top of an NR in the vertical (c-axis) growth region. When the annealing temperature is higher than 400°C, void distribution spreads into the lateral (m-axis) growth region. Photoluminescence measurement shows that the ZnO band-edge emission, in contrast to defect emission in the yellow-red range, is the strongest under the n-ZnO NR process conditions of 0.003 M in Ga-doping concentration and 300°C in thermal annealing temperature with ambient oxygen. Energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy data indicate that the concentration of hydroxyl groups in the vertical growth region is significantly higher than that in the lateral growth region. During thermal annealing, hydroxyl groups are desorbed from the NR leaving anion vacancies for reacting with cation vacancies to form voids
Interplay between moment-dependent and field-driven unidirectional magnetoresistance in CoFeB/InSb/CdTe heterostructures
Magnetoresistance effects are crucial for understanding the charge/spin
transport as well as propelling the advancement of spintronic applications.
Here we report the coexistence of magnetic moment-dependent (MD) and magnetic
field-driven (FD) unidirectional magnetoresistance (UMR) effects in
CoFeB/InSb/CdTe heterostructures. The strong spin-orbital coupling of InSb and
the matched impedance at the CoFeB/InSb interface warrant a distinct MD-UMR
effect at room temperature, while the interaction between the in-plane magnetic
field and the Rashba effect at the InSb/CdTe interface induces the marked
FD-UMR signal that dominates the high-field region. Moreover, owning to the
different spin transport mechanisms, these two types of nonreciprocal charge
transport show opposite polarities with respect to the magnetic field
direction, which further enable an effective phase modulation of the
angular-dependent magnetoresistance. Besides, the demonstrations of both the
tunable UMR response and two-terminal spin-orbit torque-driven magnetization
switching validate our CoFeB/InSb/CdTe system as a suitable integrated building
block for multifunctional spintronic device design
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