5,505 research outputs found
Accumulation of 5-hydroxynorvaline in maize (Zea mays) leaves is induced by insect feeding and abiotic stress.
Plants produce a wide variety of defensive metabolites to protect themselves against herbivores and pathogens. Non-protein amino acids, which are present in many plant species, can have a defensive function through their mis-incorporation during protein synthesis and/or inhibition of biosynthetic pathways in primary metabolism. 5-Hydroxynorvaline was identified in a targeted search for previously unknown non-protein amino acids in the leaves of maize (Zea mays) inbred line B73. Accumulation of this compound increases during herbivory by aphids (Rhopalosiphum maidis, corn leaf aphid) and caterpillars (Spodoptera exigua, beet armyworm), as well as in response to treatment with the plant signalling molecules methyl jasmonate, salicylic acid and abscisic acid. In contrast, ethylene signalling reduced 5-hydroxynorvaline abundance. Drought stress induced 5-hydroxynorvaline accumulation to a higher level than insect feeding or treatment with defence signalling molecules. In field-grown plants, the 5-hydroxynorvaline concentration was highest in above-ground vegetative tissue, but it was also detectable in roots and dry seeds. When 5-hydroxynorvaline was added to aphid artificial diet at concentrations similar to those found in maize leaves and stems, R. maidis reproduction was reduced, indicating that this maize metabolite may have a defensive function. Among 27 tested maize inbred lines there was a greater than 10-fold range in the accumulation of foliar 5-hydroxynorvaline. Genetic mapping populations derived from a subset of these inbred lines were used to map quantitative trait loci for 5-hydroxynorvaline accumulation to maize chromosomes 5 and 7
Determination of Strange Sea Quark Distributions from Fixed-target and Collider Data
We present an improved determination of the strange sea distribution in the
nucleon with constraints coming from the recent charm production data in
neutrino-nucleon deep-inelastic scattering by the NOMAD and CHORUS experiments
and from charged current inclusive deep-inelastic scattering at HERA. We
demonstrate that the results are consistent with the data from the ATLAS and
the CMS experiments on the associated production of -bosons with
-quarks. We also discuss issues related to the recent strange sea
determination by the ATLAS experiment using LHC collider data.Comment: 23 pages, 14 figure
Determination of the top quark mass from the t¯t cross section measured by CMS at √s = 7TeV
Higher-order QCD predictions are used to extract the top quark mass, both in the pole and in the MS scheme, from the top quark pair production cross section measured in the dilepton final state. The analyzed dataset corresponds to an integrated luminosity of 1.14 fb−1 collected by the CMS experiment in 2011 in pp collisions at √s = 7TeV
Prompt neutrino fluxes in the atmosphere with PROSA parton distribution functions
Effects on atmospheric prompt neutrino fluxes of present uncertainties
affecting the nucleon composition are studied by using the PROSA fit to parton
distribution functions (PDFs). The PROSA fit extends the precision of the PDFs
to low x, which is the kinematic region of relevance for high-energy neutrino
production, by taking into account LHCb data on charm and bottom
hadroproduction. In the range of neutrino energies explored by present Very
Large Volume Neutrino Telescopes, it is found that PDF uncertainties are far
smaller with respect to those due to renormalization and factorization scale
variation and to assumptions on the cosmic ray composition, which at present
dominate and limit our knowledge of prompt neutrino fluxes. A discussion is
presented on how these uncertainties affect the expected number of atmospheric
prompt neutrino events in the analysis of high-energy events characterized by
interaction vertices fully contained within the instrumented volume of the
detector, performed by the IceCube collaboration.Comment: 36 pages, 17 figures, 1 tabl
A Critical Appraisal and Evaluation of Modern PDFs
We review the present status of the determination of parton distribution
functions (PDFs) in the light of the precision requirements for the LHC in Run
2 and other future hadron colliders. We provide brief reviews of all currently
available PDF sets and use them to compute cross sections for a number of
benchmark processes, including Higgs boson production in gluon-gluon fusion at
the LHC. We show that the differences in the predictions obtained with the
various PDFs are due to particular theory assumptions made in the fits of those
PDFs. We discuss PDF uncertainties in the kinematic region covered by the LHC
and on averaging procedures for PDFs, such as advocated by the PDF4LHC15 sets,
and provide recommendations for the usage of PDF sets for theory predictions at
the LHC.Comment: 70 pages pdflatex, 19 figures, 17 tables; final versio
Reading sentences with a late closure ambiguity: does semantic information help?
Stowe (1989) reported that semantic information eliminates garden paths in sentences with the direct-object vs. subject ambiguity, such as Even before the police stopped the driver was very frightened. Three experiments are presented which addressed some methodological problems in Stowe's study. Experiment 1, using a word-by-word, self-paced reading task with grammaticality judgements, manipulated animacy of the first subject noun while controlling for the plausibility of the transitive action. The results suggest that initial sentence analysis is not guided by animacy. Experiment 2 and 3, using the self-paced task with grammaticality judgements and eye-tracking, varied the plausibility of the direct-object nouns to test revision effects. Plausibility was found to facilitate revision without fully eliminating garden paths, in line with various revision models. The findings support the view of a sentence processing system relying heavily on syntactic information, with semantic information playing a weaker role both in initial analysis and during revision, thus supporting serial, syntax-first models and ranked-parallel models relying on structural criteria
Moonlighting function of Phytochelatin synthase1 in extracellular defense against fungal pathogens
Phytochelatin synthase (PCS) is a key component of heavy metal detoxification in plants. PCS catalyzes both the synthesis of the peptide phytochelatin from glutathione and the degradation of glutathione conjugates via peptidase activity. Here, we describe a role for PCS in disease resistance against plant pathogenic fungi. The pen4 mutant, which is allelic to cadmium insensitive1 (cad1/pcs1) mutants, was recovered from a screen for Arabidopsis mutants with reduced resistance to the nonadapted barley fungal pathogen Blumeria graminis f. sp. hordei. PCS1, which is found in the cytoplasm of cells of healthy plants, translocates upon pathogen attack and colocalizes with the PEN2 myrosinase on the surface of immobilized mitochondria. pcs1 and pen2 mutant plants exhibit similar metabolic defects in the accumulation of pathogen-inducible indole glucosinolate-derived compounds, suggesting that PEN2 and PCS1 act in the same metabolic pathway. The function of PCS1 in this pathway is independent of phytochelatin synthesis and deglycination of glutathione conjugates, as catalytic-site mutants of PCS1 are still functional in indole glucosinolate metabolism. In uncovering a peptidase-independent function for PCS1, we reveal this enzyme to be a moonlighting protein important for plant responses to both biotic and abiotic stresses
A foundation for provitamin A biofortification of maize: genome-wide association and genomic prediction models of carotenoid levels.
Efforts are underway for development of crops with improved levels of provitamin A carotenoids to help combat dietary vitamin A deficiency. As a global staple crop with considerable variation in kernel carotenoid composition, maize (Zea mays L.) could have a widespread impact. We performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of quantified seed carotenoids across a panel of maize inbreds ranging from light yellow to dark orange in grain color to identify some of the key genes controlling maize grain carotenoid composition. Significant associations at the genome-wide level were detected within the coding regions of zep1 and lut1, carotenoid biosynthetic genes not previously shown to impact grain carotenoid composition in association studies, as well as within previously associated lcyE and crtRB1 genes. We leveraged existing biochemical and genomic information to identify 58 a priori candidate genes relevant to the biosynthesis and retention of carotenoids in maize to test in a pathway-level analysis. This revealed dxs2 and lut5, genes not previously associated with kernel carotenoids. In genomic prediction models, use of markers that targeted a small set of quantitative trait loci associated with carotenoid levels in prior linkage studies were as effective as genome-wide markers for predicting carotenoid traits. Based on GWAS, pathway-level analysis, and genomic prediction studies, we outline a flexible strategy involving use of a small number of genes that can be selected for rapid conversion of elite white grain germplasm, with minimal amounts of carotenoids, to orange grain versions containing high levels of provitamin A
Recommended from our members
The impact of pop-up warning messages of losses on expenditure in a simulated game of online roulette: a pilot study
Background: ‘Pop-up’ warning messages have potential as a Responsible Gambling tool, but many warning messages in the literature are generic. The present study simulated digital roulette to compare the effectiveness of expenditure-specific, generic and control messages, during online roulette.
Methods: Forty-five casual gamblers participated in a laboratory setting. Gambles were ‘rigged’ such that participants suffered a net loss. Total ‘play money’ wagers from individual bets after the presentation of the messages were measured.
Results: Expenditure-specific warning messages demonstrated significant reductions in wager amounts compared with other message types - Generic (p = .035) and Control messages (p  .05). Thus expenditure-specific warning messages about current losses were more effective than generic messages for reducing expenditure.
Conclusions: Expenditure-specific warning messages exhibit potential for ameliorating potentially harmful gambling behaviour. Expenditure-specific messages should be tested in a broader range of gambling contexts to examine their generalizability and potential for implementation in the gambling industry
- …