21 research outputs found

    Editorial: Polyamines and longevity - role of polyamine in plant survival

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    Polyamines (PAs) are organic polycations involved in stress and developmental processes in plants (Gentile et al., 2012; Gupta et al., 2013). PAs occur in cells and tissues in free (non-conjugated) or conjugated forms by binding to various molecules, including DNA and RNA, proteins, and membrane phospholipids, thus regulating various molecular and cellular processes (Aloisi et al., 2017). In recent years, genetic and molecular evidence points to PAs as essential metabolites required for tolerance to biotic and abiotic stresses. As stress-protective compounds, PAs are involved in developmental processes mediated by specific signaling pathways or in cross-regulation with other plant hormones (Alcázar et al., 2010)

    Plant Transglutaminases: New Insights in Biochemistry, Genetics, and Physiology

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    Transglutaminases (TGases) are calcium-dependent enzymes that catalyse an acyl-transfer reaction between primary amino groups and protein-bound Gln residues. They are widely distributed in nature, being found in vertebrates, invertebrates, microorganisms, and plants. TGases and their functionality have been less studied in plants than humans and animals. TGases are distributed in all plant organs, such as leaves, tubers, roots, flowers, buds, pollen, and various cell compartments, including chloroplasts, the cytoplasm, and the cell wall. Recent molecular, physiological, and biochemical evidence pointing to the role of TGases in plant biology and the mechanisms in which they are involved allows us to consider their role in processes such as photosynthesis, plant fertilisation, responses to biotic and abiotic stresses, and leaf senescence. In the present paper, an in-depth description of the biochemical characteristics and a bioinformatics comparison of plant TGases is provided. We also present the phylogenetic relationship, gene structure, and sequence alignment of TGase proteins in various plant species, not described elsewhere. Currently, our knowledge of these proteins in plants is still insufficient. Further research with the aim of identifying and describing the regulatory components of these enzymes and the processes regulated by them is needed

    Calcium variously mediates the effect of cytokinin on chlorophyll and LHCPII accumulation during greening in barley leaves and cucumber cotyledons

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    Abstract During greening, excised etiolated barley leaves and cucumber cotyledons that were depleted of exogenous Ca2+ by a chelating agent (ethylene glycol-bis (beta aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N`N`-tetraacetic acid, EGTA) showed ∼50% reduced chlorophyll (Chl) accumulation and ∼30% accumulation of apoprotein of the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding protein complex of photosystem II (LHCPII). The Ca2+ channel blocker lanthanum chloride (LaCl3) applied to cucumber cotyledons reduced LHCPII accumulation more than EGTA did. In both plant mate-rials, cytokinins enhanced chlorophyll accumulation by 50-60% and this effect was completely canceled by EGTA application. Hormones significantly increased LHCPII accumulation but EGTA application reduced that effect in barley leaves by ∼30% and in cucumber cotyledons by ∼80%. A similar effect was observed in LaCl3-treated cotyledons. CaCl2 application boosted chlorophyll accumulation in both plant materials. CaCl2 applied together with cytokinin reduced the hormonal effect on chlorophyll accumulation by ∼38% in barley leaves and 23% in cucumber cotyledons, but almost totally inhibited cytokinin-stimulated LHCPII accumulation. Our results indicate that calcium variously mediates the effect of cytokinin on chlorophyll and LHCPII accumulation. Cytokinin-induced enhancement of chlorophyll accumulation seems totally dependent on the exogenous pool of Ca2+, while Ca2+-dependent and Ca2+-independent pathways are involved in the hormonal effect on LHCPII accumulation. The effect of cytokinin on the increase of light-induced LHCPII accumulation appears to be sensitive to exogenously applied Ca2+, which almost totally blocked the hormonal effect. Our results give indirect evidence that the responses to cytokinin and light act on different events leading to Chl and LHCPII accumulation.</jats:p

    Plastid-membrane-associated polyamines and thylakoid transglutaminases during etioplast-to-chloroplast transformation stimulated by kinetin.

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    Abstract The amounts of polyamines (PAs) bound to etioplast membranes varied during chloroplast development in cucumber cotyledons (Cucumis sativus L. cv. Racibór). Putrescine (PU) and spermidine (SD) levels increased in the early greening stage (6 h of light exposure) but decreased in the late greening stage (24 h) in the thylakoid-enriched fraction. In the highly enriched PSII&#945; fraction, the trend of changes in the amount of bound PAs was different: levels of SD and spermine (SM) increased in the late stage. In both fractions, their levels were additionally increased by kinetin treatment. In the presence of exogenous protein transglutaminase (TGase) substrate (N’, N’-dimethylcasein) and 5mM Ca2+, kinetin initially caused a marked increase in thylakoid transglutaminase (ThylTGase) activity (6 h), followed by a decrease at the end of greening. The radiometric assay showed that PU and SM binding to thylakoid proteins was very low, while SD binding was 5 to 7 times higher. Kinetin increased SD conjugation in the early greening stage by about 36%. When chloroplast membranes were fully organized, ThylTGase activity decreased. In etioplast membranes and during the early greening stage, the 77-kDa and 30-kDa bands were mainly immunodetected with antibodies raised against the animal TGase, which were in general slightly stronger for kinetin-treated than the control samples. At the end of greening, the level of 77-kDa ThylTGase dramatically decreased. ThylTGase activity was found to be Ca2+-dependent. PAs conjugated via ThylTGase, in addition to the PAs bound by all possible types of linkage, could represent an important component of the mechanism of stimulation of etioplast-to-chloroplast transformation by kinetin

    Polyamines are common players in different facets of plant programmed cell death

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    Programmed cell death (PCD) is a process that occurs throughout the life span of every plant life, from initial germination of the seed to the senescence of the plant. It is a normal physiological milestone during the plant's developmental process, but it can also be induced by external factors, including a variety of environmental stresses and as a response to pathogen infections. Changes in the morphology of the nucleus is one of the most noticeable during PCD but all the components of the plant cell (cytoplasm, cytoskeleton and organelles) are involved in this fascinating process. To date, relatively little is known about PCD in plants, but several factors, among which polyamines (PAs) and plant growth regulators, have been shown to play an important role in the initiation and regulation of the process. The role of PAs in plant PCD appears to be multifaceted acting in some instances as pro-survival molecules, whereas in others seem to be implicated in accelerating PCD. The molecular mechanism is still under study. Here we present some PCD plant models, focusing on the role of the enzyme responsible for PA conjugation to proteins: transglutaminase (TGase), an enzyme linked with the process of PCD also in some animal models. The role of PAs and plant TGase in the senescence and PCD in flowers, leaf and the self-incompatibility of pollen will be discussed and examined in depth
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