28 research outputs found
Steady-state free Ca(2+) in the yeast endoplasmic reticulum reaches only 10 microM and is mainly controlled by the secretory pathway pump pmr1.
Over recent decades, diverse intracellular organelles have been recognized as key determinants of Ca(2+) signaling in eukaryotes. In yeast however, information on intra-organellar Ca(2+) concentrations is scarce, despite the demonstrated importance of Ca(2+) signals for this microorganism. Here, we directly monitored free Ca(2+) in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of yeast cells, using a specifically targeted version of the Ca(2+)-sensitive photoprotein aequorin. Ca(2+) uptake into the yeast ER displayed characteristics distinctly different from the mammalian ER. At steady-state, the free Ca(2+) concentration in the ER lumen was limited to approximately 10 microM, and ER Ca(2+) sequestration was insensitive to thapsigargin, an inhibitor specific for mammalian ER Ca(2+) pumps. In pmr1 null mutants, free Ca(2+) in the ER was reduced by 50%. Our findings identify the secretory pathway pump Pmr1, predominantly localized in the Golgi, as a major component of ER Ca(2+) uptake activity in yeast
Detection of acute thalamo-mesencephalic infarction: diffusion abnormality precedes T2 hyperintensity.
OBJECTIVE: To examine the time course of signal changes in diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DW-MRI) and T2-weighted MRI in a case of cerebral infarction in the posterior circulation territory. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Diffusion- and T2-weighted MRI and comparison of signal changes in these sequences at 4 h, 1 day and 4 days after the onset of clinical symptoms caused by acute thalamo-mesencephalic infarction. RESULTS: Four hours after the onset of symptoms, signal changes in DW-MRI revealed an infarction in the territory of the posterior perforating thalamic artery, whereas no signal changes were detected in T2-weighted MRI. In follow-up MRI 1 and 4 days after infarction, however, a marked hyperintensity matching the location of the diffusion deficit could be identified in T2 images. CONCLUSION: Signal changes in DW-MRI precede T2 hyperintensity after infarction in the posterior circulation territory after hemispheric infarction
A secretory pathway-localized cation diffusion facilitator confers plant manganese tolerance
Manganese toxicity is a major problem for plant growth in acidic soils, but cellular mechanisms that facilitate growth in such conditions have not been clearly delineated. Established mechanisms that counter metal toxicity in plants involve chelation and cytoplasmic export of the metal across the plasma or vacuolar membranes out of the cell or sequestered into a large organelle, respectively. We report here that expression of the Arabidopsis and poplar MTP11 cation diffusion facilitators in a manganese-hypersensitive yeast mutant restores manganese tolerance to wild-type levels. Microsomes from yeast expressing AtMTP11 exhibit enhanced manganese uptake. In accord with a presumed function of MTP11 in manganese tolerance, Arabidopsis mtp11 mutants are hypersensitive to elevated levels of manganese, whereas plants overexpressing MTP11 are hypertolerant. In contrast, sensitivity to manganese deficiency is slightly decreased in mutants and increased in overexpressing lines. Promoter-GUS studies showed that AtMTP11 is most highly expressed in root tips, shoot margins, and hydathodes, but not in epidermal cells and trichomes, which are generally associated with manganese accumulation. Surprisingly, imaging of MTP11–EYFP fusions demonstrated that MTP11 localizes neither to the plasma membrane nor to the vacuole, but to a punctate endomembrane compartment that largely coincides with the distribution of the trans-Golgi marker sialyl transferase. Golgi-based manganese accumulation might therefore result in manganese tolerance through vesicular trafficking and exocytosis. In accord with this proposal, Arabidopsis mtp11 mutants exhibit enhanced manganese concentrations in shoots and roots. We propose that Golgi-mediated exocytosis comprises a conserved mechanism for heavy metal tolerance in plants
Hydrogeologische Karte von Baden-Wuerttemberg, Oberschwaben Erolzheimer Feld/Illertal. 11 Karten/Erlaeuterungen
With 11 mapsSIGLETIB: AC 9694 / FIZ - Fachinformationszzentrum Karlsruhe / TIB - Technische InformationsbibliothekDEGerman