149 research outputs found

    Hormonal changes, growth and yield of tomato plants in response to chemical and bio-fertilization application in sandy soils

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    The response of tomato plants to chemical and bio-fertilization under sandy soil conditions was investigated. The experiments were conducted in Nubaria region, Egypt. Tomato plants were treated with Microbein or a mixture of Phosphorine and Biogein as bio-fertilizers under different rates of the recommended nitrogen and phosphorus fertilization (100% of N and P, 75% of N and P and 50% of N and P). In addition, plants of three treatments received only the rates of chemical fertilizers and were not treated with the bio-fertilizers. Vegetative growth measurements, yield, hormonal changes in leaves, and N, P and K contents of leaves were recorded to study the effects of these treatments. The results showed that bio-fertilization significantly increased the vegetative growth of tomato plants (including plant height, number of branches, number of leaves and the fresh weight of plants) and yield compared to non-treated plants. Growth and yield of tomato plants was negatively affected by the low chemical fertilization treatments especially at 50% of N and P while biofertilization enhanced growth and productivity under such conditions. Tomato plants which were treated with a mixture of Phosphorine and Biogein had higher growth and yield than plants treated with Microbein. Bio-fertilization resulted in higher N, P and K contents of leaves and higher indole acetic acid (IAA), Gibberellins (GA3) and Cytokinins. The possible effects of the treatments are discussed

    Drought tolerance and water status of bean plants (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) as affected by citric acid application

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       Enhancement of drought tolerance of plants is a crucial concern in arid and semi-arid regions. Using safe and environmentally-friendly tools and treatments for this purpose is needed to overcome the problems of water shortage with particular emphasis on sustainable resource management and environmental protection. This study investigated the water status and drought tolerance of beans. Bean plants (Phaseoulus vulgaris L.) were treated with citric acid (0.5, 1, 1.5 and 2 g/L) as a foliar application prior the exposition to drought stress conditions. Physiological changes, such as leaf temperature, relative water content (RWC) and chlorophyll content of leaves, were recorded in response to citric acid application. The results revealed that the water status of bean plants under drought stress conditions was improved by citric acid application, indicated by higher RWC of leaves compared to control plants. The most effective level in this respect was 1.5 g/L. A similar trend was observed with total chlorophyll content of leaves. In addition, plant growth, productivity and quality parameters were significantly improved by application of citric acid compared to control plants. The possible roles of citric acid on water status and drought tolerance of bean plants are discussed

    Tomato yield, physiological response, water and nitrogen use efficiency under deficit and partial root zone drying irrigation in an arid region

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    Water scarcity in arid regions is a serious problem, which calls for innovative irrigation water management. Partial root zone drying (PRD) technique can considerably reduce irrigation amount for crops. To investigate this further, tomato plants were imposed to either surface drip (SUR) with full irrigation (FI) at 100% of evaporative demands and regulate deficit irrigation (RDI) at 50% water of FI or subsurface drip irrigation (SDI) with fixed PRD at 75 (PRD75) and 50% (PRD50) of the FI. Surface evaporation under SUR with FI constitutes a large fraction of water losses from cropped fields while SDI with PRD75 preserved more water for plant uptake. Plants grown under water saving treatments showed lower stomatal conductance and transpiration rates compared to FI plants. Tomato yield under SDI with PRD75 was comparable to yield under SUR with FI for both tested seasons along with 25% water saving and 30% increase in water use efficiency (WUE). Otherwise, PRD50 reduced yield by 18-20%, but a substantial amount of irrigation water was saved along a 60 and 65% higher WUE compared to FI treatment. Fruit dry weight and harvest index (HI) were significantly higher with PRD75 compared to the other treatments. Seasonal N uptake and in turn N recovery was higher in PRD75 than any other treatment associated with improving N use efficiency

    Rhesus macaque MHC class I molecules show differential subcellular localizations

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    The MHC class I gene family of rhesus macaques is characterised by considerable gene duplications. While a HLA-C-orthologous gene is absent, the Mamu-A and in particular the Mamu-B genes have expanded, giving rise to plastic haplotypes with differential gene content. Although some of the rhesus macaque MHC class I genes are known to be associated with susceptibility/resistance to infectious diseases, the functional significance of duplicated Mamu-A and Mamu-B genes and the expression pattern of their encoded proteins are largely unknown. Here, we present data of the subcellular localization of AcGFP-tagged Mamu-A and Mamu-B molecules. We found strong cell surface and low intracellular expression for Mamu-A1, Mamu-A2 and Mamu-A3-encoded molecules as well as for Mamu-B*01704, Mamu-B*02101, Mamu-B*04801, Mamu-B*06002 and Mamu-B*13401. In contrast, weak cell surface and strong intracellular expression was seen for Mamu-A4*1403, Mamu-B*01202, Mamu-B*02804, Mamu-B*03002, Mamu-B*05704, Mamu-I*010201 and Mamu-I*0121. The different expression patterns were assigned to the antigen-binding α1 and α2 domains, suggesting failure of peptide binding is responsible for retaining ‘intracellular’ Mamu class I molecules in the endoplasmic reticulum. These findings indicate a diverse functional role of the duplicated rhesus macaque MHC class I genes

    Human NK Cells Differ More in Their KIR2DL1-Dependent Thresholds for HLA-Cw6-Mediated Inhibition than in Their Maximal Killing Capacity

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    In this study we have addressed the question of how activation and inhibition of human NK cells is regulated by the expression level of MHC class I protein on target cells. Using target cell transfectants sorted to stably express different levels of the MHC class I protein HLA-Cw6, we show that induction of degranulation and that of IFN-γ secretion are not correlated. In contrast, the inhibition of these two processes by MHC class-I occurs at the same level of class I MHC protein. Primary human NK cell clones were found to differ in the amount of target MHC class I protein required for their inhibition, rather than in their maximum killing capacity. Importantly, we show that KIR2DL1 expression determines the thresholds (in terms of MHC I protein levels) required for NK cell inhibition, while the expression of other receptors such as LIR1 is less important. Furthermore, using mathematical models to explore the dynamics of target cell killing, we found that the observed delay in target cell killing is exhibited by a model in which NK cells require some activation or priming, such that each cell can lyse a target cell only after being activated by a first encounter with the same or a different target cell, but not by models which lack this feature

    Expression and prognostic relevance of activated extracellular-regulated kinases (ERK1/2) in breast cancer

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    Extracellular-regulated kinases (ERK1, ERK2) play important roles in the malignant behaviour of breast cancer cells in vitro. In our present study, 148 clinical breast cancer samples (120 cases with follow-up data) were studied for the expression of ERK1, ERK2 and their phosphorylated forms p-ERK1 and p-ERK2 by immunoblotting, and p-ERK1/2 expression in corresponding paraffin sections was analysed by immunohistochemistry. The results were correlated with established clinical and histological prognostic parameters, follow-up data and expression of seven cell-cycle regulatory proteins as well as MMP1, MMP9, PAI-1 and AP-1 transcription factors, which had been analysed before. High p-ERK1 expression as determined by immunoblots correlated significantly with a low frequency of recurrences and infrequent fatal outcome (P=0.007 and 0.008) and was an independent indicator of long relapse-free and overall survival in multivariate analysis. By immunohistochemistry, strong p-ERK staining in tumour cells was associated with early stages (P=0.020), negative nodal status (P=0.003) and long recurrence-free survival (P=0.017). In contrast, expression of the unphosphorylated kinases ERK1 and ERK2 was not associated with clinical and histological prognostic parameters, except a positive correlation with oestrogen receptor status. Comparison with the expression of formerly analysed cell-cycle- and invasion-associated proteins corroborates our conclusion that activation of ERK1 and ERK2 is not associated with enhanced proliferation and invasion of mammary carcinomas

    Proteomic Analysis of S-Acylated Proteins in Human B Cells Reveals Palmitoylation of the Immune Regulators CD20 and CD23

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    S-palmitoylation is a reversible post-translational modification important for controlling the membrane targeting and function of numerous membrane proteins with diverse roles in signalling, scaffolding, and trafficking. We sought to identify novel palmitoylated proteins in B lymphocytes using acyl-biotin exchange chemistry, coupled with differential analysis by liquid-chromatography tandem mass spectrometry. In total, we identified 57 novel palmitoylated protein candidates from human EBV-transformed lymphoid cells. Two of them, namely CD20 and CD23 (low affinity immunoglobulin epsilon Fc receptor), are immune regulators that are effective/potential therapeutic targets for haematological malignancies, autoimmune diseases and allergic disorders. Palmitoylation of CD20 and CD23 was confirmed by heterologous expression of alanine mutants coupled with bioorthogonal metabolic labeling. This study demonstrates a new subset of palmitoylated proteins in B cells, illustrating the ubiquitous role of protein palmitoylation in immune regulation
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