21 research outputs found
Chlorophyll-deficient mutants of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii that accumulate magnesium protoporphyrin IX
Two Chlamydomonas reinhardtii mutants defective in CHLM encoding Mg-protoporphyrin IX methyltransferase (MgPMT) were identified. The mutants, one with a missense mutation (chlM-1) and a second mutant with a splicing defect (chlM-2), do not accumulate chlorophyll, are yellow in the dark and dim light, and their growth is inhibited at higher light intensities. They accumulate Mg-protoporphyrin IX (MgProto), the substrate of MgPMT and this may be the cause for their light sensitivity. In the dark, both mutants showed a drastic reduction in the amounts of core proteins of photosystems I and II and light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding proteins. However, LHC mRNAs accumulated above wild-type levels. The accumulation of the transcripts of the LHC and other genes that were expressed at higher levels in the mutants during dark incubation was attenuated in the initial phase of light exposure. No regulatory effects of the constitutively 7- to 18-fold increased MgProto levels on gene expression were detected, supporting previous results in which MgProto and heme in Chlamydomonas were assigned roles as second messengers only in the transient activation of genes by light
Desmophyllum dianthus (Esper, 1794) in the scleractinian phylogeny and its intraspecific diversity
© The Author(s), 2012. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in PLoS One 7 (2012): e50215, doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0050215.The cosmopolitan solitary deep-water scleractinian coral Desmophyllum dianthus (Esper, 1794) was selected as a representative model species of the polyphyletic Caryophylliidae family to (1) examine phylogenetic relationships with respect to the principal Scleractinia taxa, (2) check population structure, (3) test the widespread connectivity hypothesis and (4) assess the utility of different nuclear and mitochondrial markers currently in use. To carry out these goals, DNA sequence data from nuclear (ITS and 28S) and mitochondrial (16S and COI) markers were analyzed for several coral species and for Mediterranean populations of D. dianthus. Three phylogenetic methodologies (ML, MP and BI), based on data from the four molecular markers, all supported D. dianthus as clearly belonging to the “robust” clade, in which the species Lophelia pertusa and D. dianthus not only grouped together, but also shared haplotypes for some DNA markers. Molecular results also showed shared haplotypes among D. dianthus populations distributed in regions separated by several thousands of kilometers and by clear geographic barriers. These results could reflect limited molecular and morphological taxonomic resolution rather than real widespread connectivity. Additional studies are needed in order to find molecular markers and morphological features able to disentangle the complex phylogenetic relationship in the Order Scleractinia and to differentiate isolated populations, thus avoiding the homoplasy found in some morphological characters that are still considered in the literature.This study was funded by CTM2009-00496 and CGL2011-23306 projects of the “Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación” (Spain). Research at sea was partly supported by the European Commission F. P.VI Project HERMES Contract No. GOCE-CT-2005-511234-1) and the EU F.P. VII Project HERMIONE(contract number no. 226354)
Brucella pinnipedialis in hooded seal (Cystophora cristata) primary epithelial cells
Background: Marine Brucella spp. have been isolated from numerous pinniped and cetacean species, but pathological
findings in association with infection with Brucella pinnipedialis in pinnipeds have been sparse. The capacity
of brucellae to survive and replicate within host macrophages underlies their important ability to produce chronic
infections, but previous work has shown that B. pinnipedialis spp. are rapidly eliminated from hooded seal (Cystophora
cristata) alveolar macrophages.
Results: To investigate if multiplication could take place in other hooded seal cell types, primary epithelial cells were
isolated, verified to express the epithelial marker cytokeratin and challenged with three different strains of B. pinnipedialis;
B. pinnipedialis sp. nov., B. pinnipedialis hooded seal strain B17, and B. pinnipedialis hooded seal strain 22F1. All
strains were steadily eliminated and the amounts of intracellular bacteria were reduced to less than one-third by 48 h
post infection. Intracellular presence was verified using immunocytochemistry.
Conclusions: So far, intracellular multiplication in seal cells has not been documented for B. pinnipedialis. The lack
of intracellular survival in macrophages, as well as in epithelial cells, together with the fact that pathological changes
due to B. pinnipedialis infection is not yet identified in seals, suggests that the bacteria may only cause a mild, acute
and transient infection. These findings also contribute to substantiate the hypothesis that seals may not be the primary
host of B. pinnipedialis and that the transmission to seals are caused by other species in the marine environment
Protein-tyrosine Phosphatase α Acts as an Upstream Regulator of Fyn Signaling to Promote Oligodendrocyte Differentiation and Myelination*
The tyrosine kinase Fyn plays a key role in oligodendrocyte differentiation and myelination in the central nervous system, but the molecules responsible for regulating Fyn activation in these processes remain poorly defined. Here we show that receptor-like protein-tyrosine phosphatase α (PTPα) is an important positive regulator of Fyn activation and signaling that is required for the differentiation of oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs). PTPα is expressed in OPCs and is up-regulated during differentiation. We used two model systems to investigate the role of PTPα in OPC differentiation: the rat CG4 cell line where PTPα expression was silenced by small interfering RNA, and oligosphere-derived primary OPCs isolated from wild-type and PTPα-null mouse embryos. In both cell systems, the ablation of PTPα inhibited differentiation and morphological changes that accompany this process. Although Fyn was activated upon induction of differentiation, the level of activation was severely reduced in cells lacking PTPα, as was the activation of Fyn effector molecules focal adhesion kinase, Rac1, and Cdc42, and inactivation of Rho. Interestingly, another downstream effector of Fyn, p190RhoGAP, which is responsible for Rho inactivation during differentiation, was not affected by PTPα ablation. In vivo studies revealed defective myelination in the PTPα−/− mouse brain. Together, our findings demonstrate that PTPα is a critical regulator of Fyn activation and of specific Fyn signaling events during differentiation, and is essential for promoting OPC differentiation and central nervous system myelination