12 research outputs found

    Exogenous Glutathione Enhances Mercury Tolerance by Inhibiting Mercury Entry into Plant Cells

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    Despite the increasing understanding of the crucial roles of glutathione (GSH) in cellular defense against heavy metal stress as well as oxidative stress, little is known about the functional role of exogenous GSH in mercury (Hg) tolerance in plants. Here, we provide compelling evidence that GSH contributes to Hg tolerance in diverse plants. Exogenous GSH did not mitigate the toxicity of cadmium (Cd), copper (Cu), or zinc (Zn), whereas application of exogenous GSH significantly promoted Hg tolerance during seed germination and seedling growth of Arabidopsis thaliana, tobacco, and pepper. By contrast, addition of buthionine sulfoximine, an inhibitor of GSH biosynthesis, severely retarded seed germination and seedling growth of the plants in the presence of Hg. The effect of exogenous GSH on Hg specific tolerance was also evident in the presence of other heavy metals, such as Cd, Cu, and Zn, together with Hg. GSH treatment significantly decreased H2O2 and O2- levels and lipid peroxidation, but increased chlorophyll content in the presence of Hg. Importantly, GSH treatment resulted in significantly less accumulation of Hg in Arabidopsis plants, and thin layer chromatography and nuclear magnetic resonance analysis revealed that GSH had much stronger binding affinity to Hg than to Cd, Cu, or Zn, suggesting that tight binding of GSH to Hg impedes Hg uptake, leading to low Hg accumulation in plant cells. Collectively, the present findings reveal that GSH is a potent molecule capable of conferring Hg tolerance by inhibiting Hg accumulation in plants

    Improved recombinant cellulase expression in chloroplast of tobacco through promoter engineering and 5ā€² amplification promoting sequence

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    Economical production of bioethanol from lignocellulosic biomass still faces many technical limitations. Cost-effective production of fermentable sugars is still not practical for large-scale production of bioethanol due to high costs of lignocellulolytic enzymes. Therefore, plant molecular farming, where plants are used as bioreactors, was developed for the mass production of cell wall degrading enzymes that will help reduce costs. Subcellular targeting is also potentially more suitable for the accumulation of recombinant cellulases. Herein, we generated transgenic tobacco plants (Nicotiana tabacum cv. SR1) that accumulated Thermotoga maritima BglB cellulase, which was driven by the alfalfa RbcsK-1A promoter and contained a small subunit of the rubisco complex transit peptide. The generated transformants possessed high specific BglB activity and did not show any abnormal phenotypes. Furthermore, we genetically engineered the RbcsK-1A promoter (MRbcsK-1A) and fused the amplification promoting sequence (aps) to MRbcsK-1A promoter to obtain high expression of BglB in transgenic plants. AMRsB plant lines with aps-MRbcsK-1A promoter showed the highest specific activity of BglB, and the accumulated BglB protein represented up to 9.3 % of total soluble protein. When BglB was expressed in Arabidopsis and tobacco plants, the maximal production capacity of recombinant BglB was 0.59 and 1.42 mg/g wet weight, respectively. These results suggests that suitable recombinant expression of cellulases in subcellular compartments such as chloroplasts will contribute to the cost-effective production of enzymes, and will serve as the solid foundation for the future commercialization of bioethanol production via plant molecular farming. Ā© 2013 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht

    The transgenic poplar as an efficient bioreactor system for the production of xylanase

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    Plants are attractive expression systems for largescale, low-cost production of high-value proteins. The xylanase 2 gene (Xyn2), encoding an endo-Ī²-1,4-xylanase from Trichoderma reesei, was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli and the poplar (Populus spp.). The optimal temperature and pH of the recombinant xylanase were 50 Ā°C and 5.0 respectively when expressed in E. coli. The purpose of this study was to produce recombinant xylanase in poplar. The Xyn2 gene was transferred into poplars by Agrobacterium-mediated transformation. The transgenic status and transgene expression of the transformed poplar were confirmed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) genotyping and reverse transcription (RT)-PCR analysis. The poplar-expressed xylanase was biologically active, with an expression level of up to 14.4% of total leaf soluble protein. In the leaves, the average xylanase content was 1.016mg per g of leaf fresh weight in the transgenic poplar. We found that the poplar might make possible the large-scale production of commercially important recombinant proteins

    Hostā€“Guest Chemistry of 1D Suprachannels and Dihalomethane Molecules: Metallacyclodimeric Ensembles Consisting of Zinc(II)-2,7-bis(nicotinoyloxy)naphthalene Complexes

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    Self-assembly of ZnX<sub>2</sub> (X = Cl, Br, and I) with 2,7-bisĀ­(nicotinoylĀ­oxy)Ā­naphthalene (L) as a hemicircular bidentate ligand containing a chromophore moiety yields a systematic metallacyclodimeric unit, [ZnX<sub>2</sub>(L)]<sub>2</sub>. These basic skeletons constitute, via interdigitated Ļ€Ā·Ā·Ā·Ļ€ interactions, a unique columnar ensemble forming a suprachannel. This can then be employed as an unusual ā€œdiiodomethane within the suprachannelā€ hostā€“guest system, CH<sub>2</sub>I<sub>2</sub>@ā€‹[ZnX<sub>2</sub>(L)]<sub>2</sub>. Specifically, the suprachannel significantly stabilizes the CH<sub>2</sub>I<sub>2</sub> molecules in the order [ZnI<sub>2</sub>(L)]<sub>2</sub> > [ZnBr<sub>2</sub>(L)]<sub>2</sub> > [ZnCl<sub>2</sub>(L)]<sub>2</sub>. This suprachannel has significant halogen effects on the photoluminescence (PL), thermal properties, and hostā€“guest inclusion

    ISG15 modification of filamin B negatively regulates the type I interferon-induced JNK signalling pathway

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    Interferon (IFN)-induced signalling pathways have essential functions in innate immune responses. In response to type I IFNs, filamin B tethers RAC1 and a Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK)-specific mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) moduleā€”MEKK1, MKK4 and JNKā€”and thereby promotes the activation of JNK and JNK-mediated apoptosis. Here, we show that type I IFNs induce the conjugation of filamin B by interferon-stimulated gene 15 (ISG15). ISGylation of filamin B led to the release of RAC1, MEKK1 and MKK4 from the scaffold protein and thus to the prevention of sequential activation of the JNK cascade. By contrast, blockade of filamin B ISGylation by substitution of Lys 2467 with arginine or by knockdown of ubiquitin-activating enzyme E1-like (UBEL1) prevented the release of the signalling molecules from filamin B, resulting in persistent promotion of JNK activation and JNK-mediated apoptosis. These results indicate that filamin B ISGylation acts as a negative feedback regulatory gate for the desensitization of type I IFN-induced JNK signalling
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