@article{LissoAltmannMuessig2006, author = {Lisso, Janina and Altmann, Thomas and M{\"u}ssig, Carsten}, title = {The AtNFXL1 gene encodes a NF-X1 type zinc finger protein required for growth under salt stress}, series = {FEBS letters : the journal for rapid publication of short reports in molecular biosciences}, volume = {580}, journal = {FEBS letters : the journal for rapid publication of short reports in molecular biosciences}, number = {22}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {Amsterdam}, issn = {0014-5793}, doi = {10.1016/j.febslet.2006.07.079}, pages = {4851 -- 4856}, year = {2006}, abstract = {The human NF-X1 protein and homologous proteins in eukaryotes represent a class of transcription factors which are characterised. by NF-X1 type zinc finger motifs. The Arabidopsis genome encodes two NF-X1 homologs, which we termed AtNFXL1 and AtNFXL2. Growth and survival was impaired in atnfxl1 knock-out mutants and AtNFXL1-antisense plants under salt stress in comparison to wild-type plants. In contrast, 35S: :AtNFXL1 plants showed higher survival rates. The AtNFXL2 protein potentially plays an antagonistic role. The Arabidopsis NF-X1 type zinc finger proteins likely are part of regulatory mechanisms, which protect major processes such as photosynthesis.}, language = {en} } @article{SchwarteTiedemann2011, author = {Schwarte, Sandra and Tiedemann, Ralph}, title = {A Gene Duplication/Loss Event in the Ribulose-1,5-Bisphosphate-Carboxylase/Oxygenase (Rubisco) Small Subunit Gene Family among Accessions of Arabidopsis thaliana}, series = {Molecular biology and evolution}, volume = {28}, journal = {Molecular biology and evolution}, number = {6}, publisher = {Oxford Univ. Press}, address = {Oxford}, issn = {0737-4038}, doi = {10.1093/molbev/msr008}, pages = {1861 -- 1876}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Rubisco (ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase; EC 4.1.1.39), the most abundant protein in nature, catalyzes the assimilation of CO(2) (worldwide about 10(11) t each year) by carboxylation of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate. It is a hexadecamer consisting of eight large and eight small subunits. Although the Rubisco large subunit (rbcL) is encoded by a single gene on the multicopy chloroplast genome, the Rubisco small subunits (rbcS) are encoded by a family of nuclear genes. In Arabidopsis thaliana, the rbcS gene family comprises four members, that is, rbcS-1a, rbcS-1b, rbcS-2b, and rbcS-3b. We sequenced all Rubisco genes in 26 worldwide distributed A. thaliana accessions. In three of these accessions, we detected a gene duplication/loss event, where rbcS-1b was lost and substituted by a duplicate of rbcS-2b (called rbcS-2b*). By screening 74 additional accessions using a specific polymerase chain reaction assay, we detected five additional accessions with this duplication/loss event. In summary, we found the gene duplication/loss in 8 of 100 A. thaliana accessions, namely, Bch, Bu, Bur, Cvi, Fei, Lm, Sha, and Sorbo. We sequenced an about 1-kb promoter region for all Rubisco genes as well. This analysis revealed that the gene duplication/loss event was associated with promoter alterations (two insertions of 450 and 850 bp, one deletion of 730 bp) in rbcS-2b and a promoter deletion (2.3 kb) in rbcS-2b* in all eight affected accessions. The substitution of rbcS-1b by a duplicate of rbcS-2b (i.e., rbcS-2b*) might be caused by gene conversion. All four Rubisco genes evolve under purifying selection, as expected for central genes of the highly conserved photosystem of green plants. We inferred a single positive selected site, a tyrosine to aspartic acid substitution at position 72 in rbcS-1b. Exactly the same substitution compromises carboxylase activity in the cyanobacterium Anacystis nidulans. In A. thaliana, this substitution is associated with an inferred recombination. Functional implications of the substitution remain to be evaluated.}, language = {en} } @article{FettkeNunesNesiFernieetal.2011, author = {Fettke, J{\"o}rg and Nunes-Nesi, Adriano and Fernie, Alisdair R. and Steup, Martin}, title = {Identification of a novel heteroglycan-interacting protein, HIP 1.3, from Arabidopsis thaliana}, series = {Journal of plant physiology : biochemistry, physiology, molecular biology and biotechnology of plants}, volume = {168}, journal = {Journal of plant physiology : biochemistry, physiology, molecular biology and biotechnology of plants}, number = {12}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {Jena}, issn = {0176-1617}, doi = {10.1016/j.jplph.2010.09.008}, pages = {1415 -- 1425}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Plastidial degradation of transitory starch yields mainly maltose and glucose. Following the export into the cytosol, maltose acts as donor for a glucosyl transfer to cytosolic heteroglycans as mediated by a cytosolic transglucosidase (DPE2; EC 2.4.1.25) and the second glucosyl residue is liberated as glucose. The cytosolic phosphorylase (Pho2/PHS2; EC 2.4.1.1) also interacts with heteroglycans using the same intramolecular sites as DPE2. Thus, the two glucosyl transferases interconnect the cytosolic pools of glucose and glucose 1-phosphate. Due to the complex monosaccharide pattern, other heteroglycan-interacting proteins (Hips) are expected to exist. Identification of those proteins was approached by using two types of affinity chromatography. Heteroglycans from leaves of Arabidopsis thaliana (Col-0) covalently bound to Sepharose served as ligands that were reacted with a complex mixture of buffer-soluble proteins from Arabidopsis leaves. Binding proteins were eluted by sodium chloride. For identification, SDS-PAGE, tryptic digestion and MALDI-TOF analyses were applied. A strongly interacting polypeptide (approximately 40 kDa; designated as HIP1.3) was observed as product of locus At1g09340. Arabidopsis mutants deficient in HIP1.3 were reduced in growth and contained heteroglycans displaying an altered monosaccharide pattern. Wild type plants express HIP1.3 most strongly in leaves. As revealed by immuno fluorescence, HIP1.3 is located in the cytosol of mesophyll cells but mostly associated with the cytosolic surface of the chloroplast envelope membranes. In an HIP1.3-deficient mutant the immunosignal was undetectable. Metabolic profiles from leaves of this mutant and wild type plants as well were determined by GC-MS. As compared to the wild type control, more than ten metabolites, such as ascorbic acid, fructose, fructose bisphosphate, glucose, glycine, were elevated in darkness but decreased in the light. Although the biochemical function of HIP1.3 has not yet been elucidated, it is likely to possess an important function in the central carbon metabolism of higher plants.}, language = {en} } @article{ParlitzKunzeMuellerRoeberetal.2011, author = {Parlitz, Steffi and Kunze, Reinhard and M{\"u}ller-R{\"o}ber, Bernd and Balazadeh, Salma}, title = {Regulation of photosynthesis and transcription factor expression by leaf shading and re-illumination in Arabidopsis thaliana leaves}, series = {Journal of plant physiology : biochemistry, physiology, molecular biology and biotechnology of plants}, volume = {168}, journal = {Journal of plant physiology : biochemistry, physiology, molecular biology and biotechnology of plants}, number = {12}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {Jena}, issn = {0176-1617}, doi = {10.1016/j.jplph.2011.02.001}, pages = {1311 -- 1319}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Leaf senescence of annual plants is a genetically programmed developmental phase. The onset of leaf senescence is however not exclusively determined by tissue age but is modulated by various environmental factors. Shading of individual attached leaves evokes dark-induced senescence. The initiation and progression of dark-induced senescence depend on the plant and the age of the affected leaf, however. In several plant species dark-induced senescence is fully reversible upon re-illumination and the leaves can regreen, but the regreening ability depends on the duration of dark incubation. We studied the ability of Arabidopsis thaliana leaves to regreen after dark-incubation with the aim to identify transcription factors (TFs) that are involved in the regulation of early dark-induced senescence and regreening. Two days shading of individual attached leaves triggers the transition into a pre-senescence state from which the leaves can largely recover. Longer periods of darkness result in irreversible senescence. Large scale qRT-PCR analysis of 1872 TF genes revealed that 649 of them are regulated in leaves during normal development, upon shading or re-illumination. Leaf shading triggered upregulation of 150 TF genes, some of which are involved in controlling senescence. Of those, 39 TF genes were upregulated after two days in the dark and regained pre-shading expression level after two days of re-illumination. Furthermore, a larger number of 422 TF genes were down regulated upon shading. In TF gene clusters with different expression patterns certain TF families are over-represented.}, language = {en} } @article{GonzalezRiedelsbergerMoralesNavarroetal.2012, author = {Gonzalez, Wendy and Riedelsberger, Janin and Morales-Navarro, Samuel E. and Caballero, Julio and Alzate-Morales, Jans H. and Gonzalez-Nilo, Fernando D. and Dreyer, Ingo}, title = {The pH sensor of the plant K+-uptake channel KAT1 is built from a sensory cloud rather than from single key amino acids}, series = {The biochemical journal}, volume = {442}, journal = {The biochemical journal}, number = {7}, publisher = {Portland Press}, address = {London}, issn = {0264-6021}, doi = {10.1042/BJ20111498}, pages = {57 -- 63}, year = {2012}, abstract = {The uptake of potassium ions (K+) accompanied by an acidification of the apoplasm is a prerequisite for stomatal opening. The acidification (approximately 2-2.5 pH units) is perceived by voltage-gated inward potassium channels (K-in) that then can open their pores with lower energy cost. The sensory units for extracellular pH in stomatal K-in channels are proposed to be histidines exposed to the apoplasm. However, in the Arabidopsis thaliana stomatal K-in channel KAT1, mutations in the unique histidine exposed to the solvent (His(267)) do not affect the pH dependency. We demonstrate in the present study that His(267) of the KAT1 channel cannot sense pH changes since the neighbouring residue Phe(266) shifts its pK(a) to undetectable values through a cation-pi interaction. Instead, we show that Glu(240) placed in the extracellular loop between transmembrane segments S5 and S6 is involved in the extracellular acid activation mechanism. Based on structural models we propose that this region may serve as a molecular link between the pH- and the voltage-sensor. Like Glu(240), several other titratable residues could contribute to the pH-sensor of KAT1, interact with each other and even connect such residues far away from the voltage-sensor with the gating machinery of the channel.}, language = {en} } @article{ChristianBraginetsSchulzeetal.2012, author = {Christian, Jan-Ole and Braginets, Rostyslav and Schulze, Waltraud X. and Walther, Dirk}, title = {Characterization and prediction of protein phosphorylation hotspots in Arabidopsis thaliana}, series = {Frontiers in plant science}, volume = {3}, journal = {Frontiers in plant science}, publisher = {Frontiers Research Foundation}, address = {Lausanne}, issn = {1664-462X}, doi = {10.3389/fpls.2012.00207}, pages = {14}, year = {2012}, abstract = {The regulation of protein function by modulating the surface charge status via sequence-locally enriched phosphorylation sites (P-sites) in so called phosphorylation "hotspots" has gained increased attention in recent years. We set out to identify P-hotspots in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. We analyzed the spacing of experimentally detected P-sites within peptide-covered regions along Arabidopsis protein sequences as available from the PhosPhAt database. Confirming earlier reports (Schweiger and Lanial, 2010), we found that, indeed, P-sites tend to cluster and that distributions between serine and threonine P-sites to their respected closest next P-site differ significantly from those for tyrosine P-sites. The ability to predict P-hotspots by applying available computational P-site prediction programs that focus on identifying single P-sites was observed to be severely compromised by the inevitable interference of nearby P-sites. We devised a new approach, named HotSPotter, for the prediction of phosphorylation hotspots. HotSPotter is based primarily on local amino acid compositional preferences rather than sequence position-specific motifs and uses support vector machines as the underlying classification engine. HotSPotter correctly identified experimentally determined phosphorylation hotspots in A. thaliana with high accuracy. Applied to the Arabidopsis proteome, HotSPotter-predicted 13,677 candidate P-hotspots in 9,599 proteins corresponding to 7,847 unique genes. Hotspot containing proteins are involved predominantly in signaling processes confirming the surmised modulating role of hotspots in signaling and interaction events. Our study provides new bioinformatics means to identify phosphorylation hotspots and lays the basis for further investigating novel candidate P-hotspots. All phosphorylation hotspot annotations and predictions have been made available as part of the PhosPhAt database at http://phosphat.mpimp-golm.mpg.de.}, language = {en} } @article{MeyerWituckaWallBecheretal.2012, author = {Meyer, Rhonda C. and Witucka-Wall, Hanna and Becher, Martina and Blacha, Anna Maria and Boudichevskaia, Anastassia and D{\"o}rmann, Peter and Fiehn, Oliver and Friedel, Svetlana and von Korff, Maria and Lisec, Jan and Melzer, Michael and Repsilber, Dirk and Schmidt, Renate and Scholz, Matthias and Selbig, Joachim and Willmitzer, Lothar and Altmann, Thomas}, title = {Heterosis manifestation during early Arabidopsis seedling development is characterized by intermediate gene expression and enhanced metabolic activity in the hybrids}, series = {The plant journal}, volume = {71}, journal = {The plant journal}, number = {4}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, address = {Hoboken}, issn = {0960-7412}, doi = {10.1111/j.1365-313X.2012.05021.x}, pages = {669 -- 683}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Heterosis-associated cellular and molecular processes were analyzed in seeds and seedlings of Arabidopsis thaliana accessions Col-0 and C24 and their heterotic hybrids. Microscopic examination revealed no advantages in terms of hybrid mature embryo organ sizes or cell numbers. Increased cotyledon sizes were detectable 4 days after sowing. Growth heterosis results from elevated cell sizes and numbers, and is well established at 10 days after sowing. The relative growth rates of hybrid seedlings were most enhanced between 3 and 4 days after sowing. Global metabolite profiling and targeted fatty acid analysis revealed maternal inheritance patterns for a large proportion of metabolites in the very early stages. During developmental progression, the distribution shifts to dominant, intermediate and heterotic patterns, with most changes occurring between 4 and 6 days after sowing. The highest incidence of heterotic patterns coincides with establishment of size differences at 4 days after sowing. In contrast, overall transcript patterns at 4, 6 and 10 days after sowing are characterized by intermediate to dominant patterns, with parental transcript levels showing the largest differences. Overall, the results suggest that, during early developmental stages, intermediate gene expression and higher metabolic activity in the hybrids compared to the parents lead to better resource efficiency, and therefore enhanced performance in the hybrids.}, language = {en} } @misc{SharmaDreyerRiedelsberger2013, author = {Sharma, Tripti and Dreyer, Ingo and Riedelsberger, Janin}, title = {The role of K+ channels in uptake and redistribution of potassium in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana}, series = {Frontiers in plant science}, volume = {4}, journal = {Frontiers in plant science}, publisher = {Frontiers Research Foundation}, address = {Lausanne}, issn = {1664-462X}, doi = {10.3389/fpls.2013.00224}, pages = {16}, year = {2013}, abstract = {Potassium (K+) is inevitable for plant growth and development. It plays a crucial role in the regulation of enzyme activities, in adjusting the electrical membrane potential and the cellular turgor, in regulating cellular homeostasis and in the stabilization of protein synthesis. Uptake of K+ from the soil and its transport to growing organs is essential for a healthy plant development. Uptake and allocation of K+ are performed by K+ channels and transporters belonging to different protein families. In this review we summarize the knowledge on the versatile physiological roles of plant K+ channels and their behavior under stress conditions in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana.}, language = {en} } @article{BeninaObataMehterovetal.2013, author = {Benina, Maria and Obata, Toshihiro and Mehterov, Nikolay and Ivanov, Ivan and Petrov, Veselin and Toneva, Valentina and Fernie, Alisdair R. and Gechev, Tsanko S.}, title = {Comparative metabolic profiling of Haberlea rhodopensis, Thellungiella halophyla, and Arabidopsis thaliana exposed to low temperature}, series = {Frontiers in plant science}, volume = {4}, journal = {Frontiers in plant science}, number = {1}, publisher = {Frontiers Research Foundation}, address = {Lausanne}, issn = {1664-462X}, doi = {10.3389/fpls.2013.00499}, pages = {11}, year = {2013}, abstract = {Haberlea rhodopensis is a resurrection species with extreme resistance to drought stress and desiccation but also with ability to withstand low temperatures and freezing stress. In order to identify biochemical strategies which contribute to Haberlea's remarkable stress tolerance, the metabolic reconfiguration of H. rhodopensis during low temperature (4 degrees C) and subsequent return to optimal temperatures (21 degrees C) was investigated and compared with that of the stress tolerant Thellungiella halophyla and the stress sensitive Arabidopsis thaliana. Metabolic analysis by GC-MS revealed intrinsic differences in the metabolite levels of the three species even at 21 degrees C. H. rhodopensis had significantly more raffinose, melibiose, trehalose, rhamnose, myo-inositol, sorbitol, galactinol, erythronate, threonate, 2-oxoglutarate, citrate, and glycerol than the other two species. A. thaliana had the highest levels of putrescine and fumarate, while T halophila had much higher levels of several amino acids, including alanine, asparagine, beta-alanine, histidine, isoleucine, phenylalanine, serine, threonine, and valine. In addition, the three species responded differently to the low temperature treatment and the subsequent recovery, especially with regard to the sugar metabolism. Chilling induced accumulation of maltose in H. rhodopensis and raffinose in A. thaliana but the raffinose levels in low temperature exposed Arabidopsis were still much lower than these in unstressed Haberlea. While all species accumulated sucrose during chilling, that accumulation was transient in H. rhodopensis and A. thaliana but sustained in T halophila after the return to optimal temperature. Thus, Haberlea's metabolome appeared primed for chilling stress but the low temperature acclimation induced additional stress-protective mechanisms. A diverse array of sugars, organic acids, and polyols constitute Haberlea's main metabolic defence mechanisms against chilling, while accumulation of amino acids and amino acid derivatives contribute to the low temperature acclimation in Arabidopsis and Thellungiella. Collectively, these results show inherent differences in the metabolomes under the ambient temperature and the strategies to respond to low temperature in the three species.}, language = {en} } @article{NguyenSchippersGoniRamosetal.2013, author = {Nguyen, Hung M. and Schippers, Jos H. M. and Goni-Ramos, Oscar and Christoph, Mathias P. and Dortay, Hakan and van der Hoorn, Renier A. L. and M{\"u}ller-R{\"o}ber, Bernd}, title = {An upstream regulator of the 26S proteasome modulates organ size in Arabidopsis thaliana}, series = {The plant journal}, volume = {74}, journal = {The plant journal}, number = {1}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, address = {Hoboken}, issn = {0960-7412}, doi = {10.1111/tpj.12097}, pages = {25 -- 36}, year = {2013}, abstract = {In both animal and plant kingdoms, body size is a fundamental but still poorly understood attribute of biological systems. Here we report that the Arabidopsis NAC transcription factor Regulator of Proteasomal Gene Expression' (RPX) controls leaf size by positively modulating proteasome activity. We further show that the cis-element recognized by RPX is evolutionarily conserved between higher plant species. Upon over-expression of RPX, plants exhibit reduced growth, which may be reversed by a low concentration of the pharmacological proteasome inhibitor MG132. These data suggest that the rate of protein turnover during growth is a critical parameter for determining final organ size.}, language = {en} }