32 research outputs found

    Spatial and temporal mapping of key lipid species in Brassica napus seeds

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    The regulation of lipid synthesis in oil seeds is still not fully understood. Oilseed rape is the third most productive vegetable oil crop on the global market. Therefore, increasing our understanding of lipid accumulation in oilseed rape seeds is of great economic, as well as intellectual, importance. Matrix-assisted laser/desorption ionisation - mass spectrometry imaging (MALDI-MSI) is a technique that allows the mapping of metabolites directly onto intact biological tissues, giving a spatial context to metabolism. We have used MADLI-MSI to study the spatial distribution of two major lipid species, triacylglycerols (TAGs) and phosphatidylcholines (PCs). A dramatic, heterogeneous landscape of molecular species was revealed, demonstrating significantly different lipid compositions between the various seed tissues. The embryonic axis was particularly enriched in lipid species containing palmitate, while the seed coat/aleurone layer accumulated vaccenic, linoleic and α-linoleic acids. Furthermore, the lipid composition of the inner and outer cotyledons differed to each other, a remarkable discovery given the supposed identical functionality of these two tissues. TAG and PC molecular species distribution was analysed through a developmental time series covering early seed lipid accumulation to the end of lipid accumulation. The spatial patterning of lipid molecular species did not vary much during seed development, although there were exceptions. Data gathered using MALDI-MSI was verified through gas chromatography analysis of dissected seeds. The distinct lipid distribution profiles observed implies differential regulation of lipid metabolism between the different seed tissues. Further understanding of this differential regulation will enhance efforts to improve oilseed rape productivity and quality

    The highly divergent Jekyll genes, required for sexual reproduction, are lineage specific for the related grass tribes Triticeae and Bromeae

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    Phylogenetically related groups of species contain lineage-specific genes that exhibit no sequence similarity to any genes outside the lineage. We describe here that the Jekyll gene, required for sexual reproduction, exists in two much diverged allelic variants, Jek1 and Jek3. Despite low similarity, the Jek1 and Jek3 proteins share identical signal peptides, conserved cysteine positions and direct repeats. The Jek1/Jek3 sequences are located at the same chromosomal locus and inherited in a monogenic Mendelian fashion. Jek3 has a similar expression as Jek1 and complements the Jek1 function in Jek1-deficient plants. Jek1 and Jek3 allelic variants were almost equally distributed in a collection of 485 wild and domesticated barley accessions. All domesticated barleys harboring the Jek1 allele belong to single haplotype J1-H1 indicating a genetic bottleneck during domestication. Domesticated barleys harboring the Jek3 allele consisted of three haplotypes. Jekyll-like sequences were found only in species of the closely related tribes Bromeae and Triticeae but not in other Poaceae. Non-invasive magnetic resonance imaging revealed intrinsic grain structure in Triticeae and Bromeae, associated with the Jekyll function. The emergence of Jekyll suggests its role in the separation of the Bromeae and Triticeae lineages within the Poaceae and identifies the Jekyll genes as lineage-specific

    Insect haptoelectrical stimulation of Venus flytrap triggers exocytosis in gland cells

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    The Venus flytrap Dionaea muscipula captures insects and consumes their flesh. Prey contacting touch-sensitive hairs trigger traveling electrical waves. These action potentials (APs) cause rapid closure of the trap and activate secretory functions of glands, which cover its inner surface. Such prey-induced haptoelectric stimulation activates the touch hormone jasmonate (JA) signaling pathway, which initiates secretion of an acidic hydrolase mixture to decompose the victim and acquire the animal nutrients. Although postulated since Darwin’s pioneering studies, these secretory events have not been recorded so far. Using advanced analytical and imaging techniques, such as vibrating ion-selective electrodes, carbon fiber amperometry, and magnetic resonance imaging, we monitored stimulus-coupled glandular secretion into the flytrap. Trigger-hair bending or direct application of JA caused a quantal release of oxidizable material from gland cells monitored as distinct amperometric spikes. Spikes reminiscent of exocytotic events in secretory animal cells progressively increased in frequency, reaching steady state 1 d after stimulation. Our data indicate that trigger-hair mechanical stimulation evokes APs. Gland cells translate APs into touch-inducible JA signaling that promotes the formation of secretory vesicles. Early vesicles loaded with H⁺ and Cl⁻ fuse with the plasma membrane, hyperacidifying the “green stomach”-like digestive organ, whereas subsequent ones carry hydrolases and nutrient transporters, together with a glutathione redox moiety, which is likely to act as the major detected compound in amperometry. Hence, when glands perceive the haptoelectrical stimulation, secretory vesicles are tailored to be released in a sequence that optimizes digestion of the captured animal

    Cellular plasticity in response to suppression of storage proteins in the Brassica napus embryo

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    The tradeoff between protein and oil storage in oilseed crops has been tested here in oilseed rape (Brassica napus) by analyzing the effect of suppressing key genes encoding protein storage products (napin and cruciferin). The phenotypic outcomes were assessed using NMR and mass spectrometry imaging, microscopy, transcriptomics, proteomics, metabolomics, lipidomics, immunological assays, and flux balance analysis. Surprisingly, the profile of storage products was only moderately changed in RNA interference transgenics. However, embryonic cells had undergone remarkable architectural rearrangements. The suppression of storage proteins led to the elaboration of membrane stacks enriched with oleosin (sixfold higher protein abundance) and novel endoplasmic reticulum morphology. Protein rebalancing and amino acid metabolism were focal points of the metabolic adjustments to maintain embryonic carbon/nitrogen homeostasis. Flux balance analysis indicated a rather minor additional demand for cofactors (ATP and NADPH). Thus, cellular plasticity in seeds protects against perturbations to its storage capabilities and, hence, contributes materially to homeostasis. This study provides mechanistic insights into the intriguing link between lipid and protein storage, which have implications for biotechnological strategies directed at improving oilseed crops

    Physiologische und metabolische hochaufgelöste Pflanzen-Magnetresonanzbildgebung

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    The noninvasive magnetic resonance imaging technique allows for the investigation of functional processes in the living plant. For this purpose during this work, different NMR imaging methods were further developed and applied. For the localisation of the intrusion of water into the germinating rape seed with the simultaneous depiction of the lipid-rich tissue via a 3D rendering, in Chap. 5 the technique of interleaved chemical selective acquisition of water and lipid was used in the germinating seed. The utilization of high-resolution MR images of germinated seeds enabled the localization of a predetermined water gap in the lipid-rich aleurone layer, which resides directly under the seed coat. The for a long time in biology prevalent discussion, whether such a gap exists or the seed soaks up the water from all sides, rather like a sponge, could hereby, at least for the rapeseed seed, be answered clearly. Furthermore, the segmentation and 3D visualization of the vascular tissue in the rapeseed seeds was enabled by the high-resolution datasets, a multiply branched structure preconstructed in the seed could be shown. The water is directed by the vascular tissue and thus awakens the seed gradually to life. This re-awakening could as well be tracked by means of invasive imaging via an oxygen sensor. In the re-awakened seeds, the lipid degradation starts, other than expected, not in the lipid-rich cotyledons but in the residual endosperm remaining from seed development and in the aleurone layer which previously protected the embryo. Within this layer, the degradation could be verified in the high-resolution MR datasets. The method presented in Chap. 6 provides a further characteristic trait for phenotyping of seeds and lipid containing plants in general. The visualization of the compounds of fatty acids in plant seeds and fruits could be achieved by the distinct utilization of chemical shift-selective imaging techniques. Via the application of a CSI sequence the fatty acid compounds in an olive were localized in a 2D slice. In conjunction with an individually adjusted CHESS presaturation module Haa85 the high-resolution 3D visualization of saturated and unsaturated fatty acid compounds in different seeds was achieved. The ratio maps calculated from these datasets allow to draw conclusions from the developmental stage or the type of seed. Furthermore, it could be shown that the storage condition of two soybean seeds with different storage time durations lead to no degradation of the fatty acid content. Additional structural information from inside of dry seeds are now accessible via MRI. In this work the imaging of cereal seeds could be significantly improved by the application of the UTE sequence. The hitherto existing depictions of the lipid distribution, acquired with the spin echo sequence, were always sufficient for examinations of the lipid content, yet defects in the starchy endosperm or differences in the starch concentration within the seed remained constantly unseen with this technique. In a direct comparison of the datasets acquired with the previous imaging technique (spin echo) and with UTE imaging, the advantage of data acquisition with UTE could be shown. By investigating the potential seed compounds (starch, proteins, sugar) in pure form, the constituent parts contributing to the signal could be identified as bound water (residual moisture) and starch. The application of a bi-exponential fit on the datasets of the barley seed enabled the separate mapping of magnetization and of relaxation time of two components contributing to the NMR signal. The direct comparison with histological stainings verified the previous results, thus this technique can be used for the selective imaging of starch in dry seeds. Conclusions on the translocation characteristics in plants can be drawn by the technique proposed in Chap. 8. The associated translocation velocities can now, even in the range of several um/h, be determined in the living plant. Based on calculated concentrations of an MR contrast agent, which was taken up by the plant, these translocation velocities were estimated both in longitudinal direction, thus along the vascular bundle, and in horizontal direction, thus out of the bundle. The latter velocity is located below the contrast agent's velocity value of free diffusion. By adjusting a dynamic contrast-enhancing imaging technique (DCE-Imaging, Tof91) the acquisition duration of a T1-map was significantly reduced. By means of these maps, local concentrations of the contrast agent in plant stems and the siliques of the rapeseed plant could be determined. Numerous questions in plant science can only be answered by non-invasive techniques such as MRI. For this reason, besides the experimental results achieved in this work, further NMR methods were tested and provided for the investigation of plants. As an example, the study on the imaging of magnetic exchange processes are mentioned, which provided the groundwork for a possible transfer of CEST experiments (Chemical Exchange Saturation Transfer) to the plant. The results are presented in the bachelor thesis of A. Jäger Jae17, which was performed under my supervision, they find great interest under biologists. The development of new technologies, which extend the possibilities for the investigation of living organisms, is of great importance. For this reason, I have contributed to the development of the currently unpublished method RACETE (Refocused Acquisition of Chemical Exchange Transferred Excitations [Jak17, Reu17, Gut18a]). By rephasing the transferred magnetization the utilization of properties which have not been available in chemical "`exchange"' experiments is enabled. With this method a positive contrast is generated, thus a reference experiment is not mandatory. Furthermore, the image phase, which in classical experiments contains no information about the exchanged protons, can be used for the distinct identification of multiple substances which have been excited simultaneously. This recently at the Department of Experimental Physics V developed method can be used in particular for the identification of lipids and for the localization of sugars and amino acids, thus it can serve the enhancement and improvement of non-invasive analytical methods.Die nicht-invasive Bildgebungstechnik der Magnetresonanz ermöglicht es, funktionelle Prozesse in Pflanzen am lebenden Objekt zu untersuchen. Hierfür wurden im Rahmen dieser Arbeit verschiedene NMR-Bildgebungsmethoden weiterentwickelt und angewendet. Da Pflanzen ein magnetisch sehr inhomogenes Gewebe besitzen, bedingt durch Lufteinschlüsse und das Vorhandensein verschiedenster gelöster Stoffe im Pflanzengewebe, wurden daher hauptsächlich Spin-Echo-Methoden für die Bildgebung verwendet. Um das erste Eindringen des Wassers in den keimenden Raps-Samen bei gleichzeitiger Darstellung des lipid-reichen Gewebes mittels einer 3D-Visualisierung zu lokalisieren, wurde in Kapitel 5 die Technik der verschachtelten, chemisch selektiven Aufnahme von Wasser und Lipid im keimenden Samen verwendet. Durch Verwendung von hochausgelösten MR-Aufnahmen an gekeimten Samen konnte weiterhin in der lipid-reichen Aleuron-Schicht, die sich direkt unter der Samenschale befindet, ein gezielt angelegter Einlass für das Wasser verortet werden. Die in der Biologie lange Zeit verbreitete Diskussion, ob es einen solchen Einlass gibt oder der keimende Samen das Wasser eher wie ein Schwamm von allen Seiten aufsaugt, konnte hierdurch, zumindest für den Raps-Samen, eindeutig beantwortet werden. Weiterhin konnte durch die hoch-aufgelösten Aufnahmen das vaskuläre Gewebe in den Raps-Samen segmentiert und in 3D veranschaulicht werden, es zeigte sich eine mehrfach verzweigte Struktur, die bereits im Samen angelegt ist. Das Wasser folgt hierbei dem vaskulären Gewebe und erweckt hierdurch den Samen schrittweise zum Leben. Dieses Wieder-Erwachen konnte ebenfalls durch die invasive Bildgebung mittels eines Sauerstoff-Sensors nachverfolgt werden. Im nun erwachten Samen selbst beginnt der Lipid-Abbau, anders als zunächst angenommen, nicht in den lipid-haltigen Kotyledonen sondern im von der Samen-Entwicklung verbliebenden Endosperm und in der den Keimling vormals schützenden Aleuron-Schicht. In dieser konnte der Abbau an gekeimten Samen durch hochaufgelöste MR-Aufnahmen nachgewiesen werden. Die in Kapitel 6 vorgeschlagene Methode liefert ein weiteres Merkmal zur Phenotypisiserung von Samen und lipidhaltigen Pflanzenbestandteilen im Allgemeinen. Die Darstellung der Bestandteile ungesättigter Fettsäuren in Pflanzensamen und -Früchten konnte durch gezielte Verwendung von chemisch selektiven Bildgebungstechniken erreicht werden. Durch die Anwendung einer CSI-Sequenz konnten die Fettsäurebestandteile in Oliven in einer 2D-Schicht lokalisiert werden. In Verbindung mit einem jeweils angepassten CHESS-Vorsättigungsmodul Haa85 wurde die hochaufgelöste 3D-Darstellung von gesättigten und ungesättigten Fettsäurebestandteilen in unterschiedlichen Samen erreicht. Rückschlüsse über das Entwicklungsstadium sowie die Sorte der verwendeten Samen können aus den Verhältnis-Karten, die aus den jeweiligen Datensätzen berechnet wurden, gezogen werden. Dass in diesem Fall die Aufbewahrungsmethode zu keiner Degradation der Fettsäurezusammensetzung geführt hat, konnte weiterhin am Beispiel von zwei Sojasamen mit unterschiedlicher Lagerdauer gezeigt werden. Zusätzliche strukturelle Informationen aus dem Inneren trockener Samen sind nun mittels MRT zugänglich. In dieser Arbeit konnte durch die UTE-Sequenz die Bildgebung von Getreidesamen deutlich vorangebracht werden. Die bisherigen Darstellungen der Lipid-Verteilung, aufgenommen mit einer Spin-Echo Sequenz, waren zwar für die Betrachtung des Lipid-Gehalts stets ausreichend, Defekte im stärkehaltigen Endosperm oder Unterschiede in der Stärke-Konzentration innerhalb des Samen blieben mit dieser Technik jedoch stets verborgen. Im direkten Vergleich der mit der bisherigen Technik (Spin-Echo) und der UTE-Bildgebung aufgenommenen Datensätze konnte der Vorteil der Datenaufnahme mit UTE gezeigt werden. Durch die Untersuchung der möglichen Samenbestandteile (Stärke, Proteine, Zucker) in Reinform konnten die zum Signal beitragen Bestandteile als gebundenes Wasser (Restfeuchte) und Stärke identifiziert werden. Die Verwendung bi-exponentiellen Fits and die Messdaten ermöglichte es im Gersten-Samen, zwei zum Signal beitragende Komponenten in getrennten Karten bezüglich ihrer Magnetisierung und Relaxationszeit zu trennen. Der Vergleich mit histologischen Färbungen bestätigte die bisherigen Ergebnisse, somit kann diese Technik zur selektiven Darstellung von Stärke in trockenen Samen verwendet werden. Rückschlüsse auf das Transportverhalten in Pflanzen können durch die in Kapitel 8 vorgestellte Technik gezogen werden. Die zugehörigen Transportgeschwindigkeiten im lebenden Pflanzenobjekt können nun, selbst im Bereich von wenigen μ\mum/h, bestimmt werden. Diese wurden anhand von berechneten Konzentrationen eines von der Pflanze aufgenommenen MR-Kontrastmittels sowohl in longitudinaler Richtung, also entlang des Leitgewebebündels, als auch in horizontaler Richtung, also aus dem Leitbündel heraus, abgeschätzt werden; Letztere Geschwindigkeit liegt deutlich unter dem Wert der freien Diffusionsgeschwindigkeit des Kontrastmittels. Hierfür wurden durch Anpassung einer dynamischen Kontrast-erhöhenden Bildgebungstechnik (DCE-Imaging, Tof91) die Aufnahmedauer einer für die weiteren Berechnungen benötigen T1-Karte deutlich reduziert. Mittels dieser Karten konnten die lokalen Konzentrationen des Kontrastmittels in Pflanzenstängeln und Schoten der Rapspflanze bestimmt werden. Zahlreiche Fragen in der Pflanzenforschung können nur durch nicht-invasive Techniken wie MRT beantwortet werden. Deswegen wurden, neben den experimentellen Ergebnissen, die mittels dieser Arbeit erreicht wurden, auch weitere NMR Methoden für die Untersuchung von Pflanzen getestet und zur Verfügung gestellt. Als Beispiel seien hier die Untersuchungen zur Bildgebung von magnetischen Austauschprozessen genannt, welche eine Vorarbeit zur möglichen Übertragung con CEST-Experimenten (Chemical Exchange Saturation Transfer) auf das Modell Pflanze liefern. Die Ergebnisse sind in der Bachelor-Arbeit von A. Jäger \cite{jaeger17}, an deren Durchführung ich als Betreuer maßgeblich beteiligt war, dargestellt und finden großes Interesse bei Biologen. Von besonderer Wichtigkeit sind auch die Entwicklungen neuer Technologien, die die Möglichkeiten zur Untersuchung von lebenden Organismen erweitern können. Deswegen habe ich zu der Entwicklung der bislang unveröffentlichten Methode RACETE (Refocused Acquisition of Chemical Exchange Transferred Excitations [Jak17, Reu17, Gut18a]) beigetragen. Durch das Rephasieren der transferierten Magnetisierung können Eigenschaften, die bislang in chemischen "`Austausch"'-Experimenten nicht zur Verfügung stehen, ausgenutzt werden. Mit dieser Methode wird ein positiver Kontrast erzeugt, sie ist deshalb nicht zwingend auf ein Referenz-Experiment angewiesen. Weiterhin kann die Bildphase, welche in klassichen CEST-Experimenten keine Information über die ausgetauschten Protonen enthält, zur eindeutigen Identifizierung mehrerer parallel angeregter Substanzen verwendet werden

    The potential of nuclear magnetic resonance to track lipids in planta

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    Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) provides a highly flexible platform for non invasive analysis and imaging biological samples, since the manipulation of nuclear spin allows the tailoring of experiments to maximize the informativeness of the data. MRI is capable of visualizing a holistic picture of the lipid storage in living plant/seed. This review has sought to explain how the technology can be used to acquire functional and physiological data from plant samples, and how to exploit it to characterize lipid deposition in vivo. At the same time, we have referred to the current limitations of NMR technology as applied to plants, and in particular of the difficulty of transferring methodologies optimized for animal/medical subjects to plant ones. A forward look into likely developments in the field is included, anticipating its key future role in the study of living plant

    The PreS2 activator MHBs(t) of hepatitis B virus activates c-raf-1/Erk2 signaling in transgenic mice

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    The large hepatitis B virus (HBV) surface protein (LHBs) and C-terminally truncated middle size surface proteins (MHBs(t)) form the family of the PreS2 activator proteins of HBV. Their transcriptional activator function is based on the cytoplasmic orientation of the PreS2 domain. MHBs(t) activators are paradigmatic for this class of activators. Here we report that MHBs(t) is protein kinase C (PKC)-dependently phosphorylated at Ser28. The integrity of the phosphorylation site is essential for the activator function. MHBs(t) triggers PKC-dependent activation of c-Raf-1/Erk2 signaling that is a prerequisite for MHBs(t)-dependent activation of AP-1 and NF-κB. To analyze the pathophysiological relevance of these data in vivo, transgenic mice were established that produce the PreS2 activator MHBs(t) specifically in the liver. In these mice, a permanent PreS2-dependent specific activation of c-Raf-1/Erk2 signaling was observed, resulting in an increased hepatocyte proliferation rate. In transgenics older than 15 months, an increased incidence of liver tumors occurs. These data suggest that PreS2 activators LHBs and MHBs(t) exert a tumor promoter-like function by activation of key enzymes of proliferation control

    Transcript abundance on its own cannot be used to infer fluxes in central metabolism

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    An attempt has been made to define the extent to which metabolic flux in central plant metabolism is reflected by changes in the transcriptome and metabolome, based on an analysis of in vitro cultured immature embryos of two oilseed rape (Brassica napus) accessions which contrast for seed lipid accumulation. Metabolic flux analysis (MFA) was used to constrain a flux balance metabolic model which included 671 biochemical and transport reactions within the central metabolism. This highly confident flux information was eventually used for comparative analysis of flux vs. transcript (metabolite). Metabolite profiling succeeded in identifying 79 intermediates within the central metabolism, some of which differed quantitatively between the two accessions and displayed a significant shift corresponding to flux. An RNA-Seq based transcriptome analysis revealed a large number of genes which were differentially transcribed in the two accessions, including some enzymes/proteins active in major metabolic pathways. With a few exceptions, differential activity in the major pathways (glycolysis, TCA cycle, amino acid, and fatty acid synthesis) was not reflected in contrasting abundances of the relevant transcripts. The conclusion was that transcript abundance on its own cannot be used to infer metabolic activity/fluxes in central plant metabolism. This limitation needs to be borne in mind in evaluating transcriptome data and designing metabolic engineering experiments
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