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- Arabidopsis thaliana (2)
- APX2 (1)
- Annamites (1)
- Arabidopsis (1)
- Deakklimatisierung (1)
- Differenzielle Genexpression (1)
- Early Starvation 1 (1)
- Epigenetik (1)
- H3K9ac (1)
- HAC1 (1)
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- Institut für Biochemie und Biologie (16) (entfernen)
Characterization of the role of stress - responsive NAC transcription factors ANAC055 and ATAF1
(2022)
Starch is an insoluble polyglucan, comprises of two polymers, namely, the branched α-1,4: α-1,6-D-glucan amylopectin and the almost unbranched α-1,4-D-glucan amylose. The growth of all plants is directly dependent on the accumulation of transitory starch during the daytime when photosynthesis takes place and subsequently starch degradation during the night. Starch phosphorylation takes place by starch-related dikinases called α-glucan, water dikinase (GWD), and phosphoglucan, water dikinase (PWD), and is a very important step in starch degradation. The biochemical mechanisms of phosphorylation of starch are not properly understood. Recent studies have found that there are two starch binding proteins namely, Early Starvation1 (ESV1) and Like Early Starvation1 (LESV), which play an important role in starch metabolism. It has been shown that ESV1 and LESV proteins affect the starch phosphorylation activity of GWD and PWD enzymes, which control the rate of degradation of starch granules. In this thesis, various in vitro assays were performed to identify and understand the mechanism of recombinant proteins; ESV1 and LESV on the starch degradation. The starch degradation was performed by phosphorylation enzymes, GWD and PWD separately. In various enzymatic assays, the influence of the ESV1 and LESV on the actions of GWD and PWD on the surfaces of different native starch granules were analysed. Furthermore, ESV1 and LESV have specifically shown influences on the phosphorylation activities of GWD and PWD on the starch granule surfaces in an antagonistic pattern in such a way that, the GWD mediated phosphorylation were significantly reduced while PWD mediated phosphorylation were significantly increased respectively. In another set of experiments, ISA and BAM hydrolyzing enzymes were used to alter the structure of starch, and then determine the effect of both dikinases mediated phosphorylation in the presence of ESV1 and LESV on the altered starch granules surfaces. In these results, significant decreases in both GWD and PWD mediated phosphorylation were observed in all the treatments containing either ESV1 or LESV proteins only or both ESV1 and LESV. It was also found that LESV preferentially binds to both amylose and amylopectin, while ESV1 binds to highly ordered glucans such as maltodextrins and amylopectin, which are crystalline in structure. Both ESV1 or LESV proteins either individually or in combination have shown influence on the activity of GWD and PWD phosphate incorporation into the starch granules via reduction even though at different percentages depending on the sources of starch, therefore it is difficult to distinguish the specific function between them. The biochemical studies have shown that protein-glucan interaction specifically between ESV1 or LESV or in combination with different species of starch granules has very strong surface binding, or it might be possible that both the proteins not only bind to the surface of the starch granules but also have entered deep inside the glucan structure of the starch granules. However, the results also revealed that ESV1 and LESV did not alter the autophosphorylation of the dikinases. Also, the chain length distribution pattern of the released glucan chains after treatment of starch with ISA enzyme was evaluated with respect to the degree of polymerization (DP) of the different starch granules. Capillary electrophoresis was employed to study the effect of LESV and ESV1 on the chain length distribution. In summary, this study confirms that ESV1 and LESV play an important role in organizing and regulating the starch metabolism process. In the later half, studies were performed to monitor whether the metabolism of carbohydrates and partitioning, contribute to the higher salt tolerance of the facultative halophyte Hordeum marinum when compared to glycophyte Hordeum vulgare. Seedlings with the same size from both species were hydroponically grown at 0, 150, and 300 mM of NaCl for 3 weeks. H. marinum maintained a high relative growth rate, which was found concomitant in higher aptitude plants to maintain efficient shoot tissue hydration and integrity of membrane under salt conditions when compared to H. vulgare. Hence, our data suggested that the change in the starch storage, distribution of soluble sugar concentrations between source and sink organs, and also changes in the level of enzymes involved in the starch metabolism was significant to give insights into the importance of carbohydrate metabolism in barley species with regards to the salt tolerance. Although these results are still in their nascent state, it could be vital for other researchers to formulate future studies. The preliminary results which were studies about the carbohydrate metabolism and partitioning in salt responses in the halophyte H. marinum and the glycophyte H. vulgare revealed that salt tolerance in barley species is not due to osmotic adjustments, but due to other reasons that were not explored in the past studies. However, the activity of DPE2 in H. vulgare was not hampered by the presence of NaCl as observed. While Pho1 and Pho2, activities were highly increased in cultivated barley. These findings could be suggestive of a possible role of these enzymes in the responses of carbohydrate metabolism to salinity. When sea and cultivated barley species were compared, it was discovered that the former had more versatility in carbohydrate metabolism and distribution.
The Annamites mountain range of Southeast Asia which runs along the border of Viet Nam and Laos is an important biodiversity hotspot with high levels of endemism. However, that biodiversity is threatened by unsustainable hunting, and many protected areas across the region have been emptied of their wildlife. To better protect the unique species in the Annamites, it is crucial to have a better understanding of their ecology and distribution. Additionally, basic genetic information is needed to provide conservation stakeholders with essential information to facilitate conservation breeding and counteract the illegal wildlife trade. To date, this baseline information is lacking for many Annamites species.
This thesis aims to assess the effectiveness of using non-invasive collection methods, i.e. camera-trap surveys and leech-derived wildlife host DNA, in order to improve and enhance our understanding of ecology, distribution, and genetic diversity of the Annamites terrestrial mammals.
In chapter 1, we analysed data from a systematic landscape camera-trap survey using single-species occupancy models to assess the ecology and distribution of two little-known Annamite endemics, the Annamite dark muntjac (Muntiacus rooseveltorum / truongsonensis) and Annamite striped rabbit (Nesolagus timminsi), in multiple protected areas across the Annamites. This chapter provided the first in-depth information on their ecology, as well as distribution patterns at large spatial scales. Most notably, we found that the Annamite dark muntjac was predominantly found at higher elevations, while responses to elevation varied among study areas for the Annamite striped rabbit. We estimated occupancy probabilities for both endemics by using their responses to environmental and anthropogenic influences and used this information to make recommendations for targeted conservation actions. We discuss how the approach we used for these two Annamites endemics can be expanded for other little-known and threatened species in other tropical regions.
As is the case with ecology and distribution, very little is known about the genetic diversity of the Annamite striped rabbit and other mammals of the Annamites. This poor understanding is mainly attributed to the lack of a comprehensive DNA sample collection that covers the species’ entire distribution range, which is believed to be a consequence of the low density of mammals or the remoteness of species’ habitat. In order to overcome the difficulties when trying to collect DNA samples from elusive mammals, we applied invertebrate-derived DNA (iDNA) sampling via hematophagous leeches to indirectly obtain genetic materials of their terrestrial host mammals.
In chapter 2, leech-derived DNA was used to study the genetic diversity of the Annamite striped rabbit population. By analysing the DNA extracted from leech samples collected at multiple study areas of the central Annamites, we found a genetic variation with five haplotypes among nine obtained sequences. Despite this diversity, we found no clear phylogeographic pattern among the lagomorph’s populations in central Annamites. The findings have direct conservation implications for the species, as local stakeholders are currently establishing a conservation rescue and breeding facility for Annamite endemic species. Thus our results suggested that Annamite striped rabbits from multiple protected areas in central Annamites can be used as founders for the breeding program.
In chapter 3, the genetic material of six mammals, which are frequently found in Indochina's illegal wildlife trade, was extracted from leeches collected at six study sites across the Anamites. Species-specific genetic markers were used to obtain DNA fragments that were analysed together with Genbank reference sequences from other parts of the species’ distribution range. Our results showed that invertebrate-derived DNA can be used to fill the sampling gaps and provide genetic reference data that is needed for conservation breeding programmes or to counteract the illegal wildlife trade.
Overal, this dissertation provides the first insights in the ecology, distribution, and genetics of rare and threatened species of the Annamites by utilising camera traps and leech-derived DNA as two non-invasive collection methods. This information is essential for improving conservation efforts of local stakeholders and managers, especially for the Annamite endemics. Results in this dissertation also show the effectiveness of both non-invasive methods for studying terrestrial mammals at a landscape level. By expanding the application of these methods to other protected areas across the Annamites, we will further our understanding of ecology, distribution, and genetics of Annamite endemics. With such landscape-scale surveys, we are able to provide stakeholders with an overview of the current status of wildlife in the Annamites which supports efforts to protect these secretive species from illegal hunting and thus their extinction.
Uncovering the interplay between nutrient availability and cellulose biosynthesis inhibitor activity
(2022)
All plant cells are surrounded by a dynamic, carbohydrate-rich extracellular matrix known as the cell wall. Nutrient availability affects cell wall composition via uncharacterized regulatory mechanisms, and cellulose deficient mutants develop a hypersensitive root response to growth on high concentrations of nitrate. Since cell walls account for the bulk of plant biomass, it is important to understand how nutrients regulate cell walls. This could provide important knowledge for directing fertilizer treatments and engineering plants with higher nutrient use efficiency. The direct effect of nitrate on cell wall synthesis was investigated through growth assays on varying concentrations of nitrate, measuring cellulose content of roots and shoots, and assessing cellulose synthase activity (CESA) using live cell imaging with spinning disk confocal microscopy. A forward genetic screen was developed to isolate mutants impaired in nutrient-mediated cell wall regulation, revealing that cellulose biosynthesis inhibitor (CBI) activity is modulated by nutrient availability. Various non-CESA mutants were isolated that displayed CBI resistance, with the majority of mutations causing perturbation of mitochondria-localized proteins. To investigate mitochondrial involvement, the CBI mechanism of action was investigated using a reverse genetic screen, a targeted pharmacological screen, and -omics approaches. The results generated suggest that CBI-induced cellulose inhibition is due to off-target effects. This provides the groundwork to investigate uncharacterized processes of CESA regulation and adds valuable knowledge to the understanding of CBI activity, which could be harnessed to develop new and improved herbicides.
Novel algorithms for prediction of protein complexes from protein-protein interacton networks
(2022)
Heat stress (HS) is one of the most common abiotic stresses, frequently affecting plant growth and crop production. With its fluctuating nature, HS episodes are frequently interspersed by stress-free intervals. Plants can be primed by HS, allowing them to survive better a recurrent stress episode. A memory of this priming can be maintained during stress-free intervals and this memory is closely correlated with transcriptional memory at several HS-inducible loci. This transcriptional memory is evident from hyper-induction of a locus upon a recurrent HS. ASCORBATE PEROXIDASE 2 (APX2) shows such hyper-induction upon recurring HS, however, the molecular basis of this transcriptional memory is not understood. Previous research showed that the HSinduced transcriptional memory at APX2 can last for up to seven days, and that it is controlled by cis-regulatory elements within the APX2 promoter.
To identify regulators involved in HS transcriptional memory, an unbiased forward genetic screening using EMS mutated seeds of pAPX2::LUC was performed from this screen. Two EMS mutants with affected transcriptional memory of LUC were identified. I confirmed that both two EMS mutants resulted from the gene mutations of HISTONE ACETYLTRANSFERASE 1 (HAC1). Besides pAPX2::LUC, the HS-induced transcription of other HS memory genes were also affected in hac1 mutants. Moreover, HAC1 may promote HS transcriptional memory by acetylating promoters of HS memory genes.
On the other hand, to identify cis-regulatory elements that are required for transcriptional memory of APX2, I performed promoter analysis of the four conserved HSEs identified within a functional APX2 promoter. I found out that one of the HSEs (HSE1) is necessary for both HS-induced APX2 transcription and transcriptional memory, while another one of HSEs (HSE2) is important for HS-induced APX2 transcriptional memory. I also found out that the HSE1 itself (with 10 bp of flanking sequence) is sufficient to confer HS-induced APX2 transcriptional memory, and HSE1 is also necessary for HSFA2 to bind on APX2 promoter and activate APX2 transcription. The findings will provide important clues for the molecular mechanism of transcriptional memory and will enable engineering of enhanced stress tolerance in crops.
Hitze ist eine bedeutende klimatische Bedingung, die das Wachstum und das Überleben von Pflanzen bedroht. Extreme Temperaturereignisse in der Natur werden gravierender, häufiger, länger anhaltend, was sich nachteilig auf die landwirtschaftliche Produktion auswirkt. Daher ist es wichtig, mehr über die Mechanismen zu erfahren, die zu einer erhöhten Hitzetoleranz bei Pflanzen führen. Um auszuhalten und zu überleben, haben höhere Pflanzen komplexe Mechanismen entwickelt, um auf verschiedene Intensitäten von Hitzestress zu reagieren. Pflanzen haben eine thermische Toleranz, die es ihnen ermöglicht, schnelle und dramatische Temperaturanstiege für eine begrenzte Zeit zu überleben. Pflanzen können auch darauf vorbereitet werden, Hitzestress (HS) zu widerstehen, der ansonsten tödlich wäre, indem man sie kurzen, moderaten und nicht-tödlichen HS (als Priming-Stimulus bezeichnet) aussetzt, bevor sie hohem HS ausgesetzt werden. Eine erworbene Thermotoleranz kann bei Pflanzen unter optimalen Bedingungen lange aufrechterhalten werden, was bedeutet, dass Pflanzen während dieser Zeit Informationen speichern können. Mehrere Studien haben gezeigt, dass sich erworbene Thermotoleranz (Thermopriming) auf die erhöhte Widerstandsfähigkeit von Zellen, Geweben und Organismen gegenüber erhöhten Temperaturen nach vorheriger Hitzeeinwirkung bezieht. Die Aufrechterhaltung der erworbenen Thermotoleranz (Thermomemory) ist mit der Synthese von speziellen Stressproteinen verbunden, die am Zellschutz und der beschleunigten Gewebereparatur beteiligt sind, wie z. B. Hitzeschockproteine (HSPs). Neuere Studien haben eine Beteiligung von Hitzeschockproteinen, z.B. HSP21, in Chloroplasten an der Regulation des Thermogedächtnisses belegt. Als wichtiges Organell ist die mitochondriale Funktion entscheidend für die Reaktion von Pflanzenzellen auf Hitze. Es ist jedoch noch unbekannt, wie die molekulare und physiologische Beteiligung von HSPs an der mitochondrialen Funktion im Thermogedächtnis erfolgt. In unserer Studie haben wir gezeigt, dass Thermopriming Transkript- und Proteinspiegel von zwei mitochondrialen kleinen Hitzeschockproteinen, HSP23.56 (AT5G51440) und HSP23.6 (AT4G25200), induziert, die während der Thermogedächtnisphase 2-3 Tage andauern. Die morphologische Analyse von HSP23.5/6-transgenen Pflanzen zeigte eine HSP23.5/6-Funktionsredundanz bei Hitzestress. Wir zeigten, dass hsp23.5/6-Doppel-Knockout-Pflanzen Anomalien im Thermogedächtnis im Keimlingsstadium aufwiesen und dass reife hsp23.5/6-Pflanzen sowohl mit basaler Thermotoleranz als auch mit Thermogedächtnis empfindlicher sind. Die Wärmebehandlung beeinflusste die Atmungsrate von hsp23.5/6-Keimlingen im Vergleich zu WT signifikant, was auf eine mitochondriale Dysfunktion in Abhängigkeit von HSP23.5 und HSP23.6 hinweist. Darüber hinaus haben wir die Chaperon-Aktivität von HSP23.6 gegenüber dem Modellsubstratprotein Malatdehydrogenase (MDH) in vitro getestet und bestätigt, was darauf hindeutet, dass HSP23.6 möglicherweise zur Aufrechterhaltung der zellulären Lebensfähigkeit beiträgt. Darüber hinaus entdeckten wir ein neues HSP23.6-Clientprotein, CIB22, ein mitochondriales Komplex-I-Untereinheitsprotein. Nach experimentellen Daten (BiFC und Co-IP) interagieren HSP23.6 und CIB22 in Pflanzenzellen. Wir identifizierten auch einen Hitzereaktionsphänotyp in der cib22-Mutante im Vergleich zu WT sowie einen CIB22-Proteinabbau in der hsp23.5/6-Mutante, wenn sie Hitze ausgesetzt wurde. Unsere Ergebnisse legen nahe, dass die beiden mitochondrial lokalisierten
Hitzeschockproteine eine Rolle bei der Thermotoleranz spielen, vermutlich indem sie die mitochondriale Funktion und Struktur beeinflussen. Um neue genetische Komponenten zu identifizieren, die mit dem Thermogedächtnis in Pflanzen verbunden sind, haben wir weiterhin ein Proteom-Profiling von Arabidopsis WT (Col-0) -Keimlingen während des Thermogedächtnisses durchgeführt. Mehrere Zeitpunkte von Priming und Triggerung mit Kontrollen wurden gesammelt und analysiert, um dynamische Proteomänderungen während der Gedächtnisphase in
Arabidopsis-Zellen aufzudecken. Unter den Top-gedächtnis-assoziierten Proteinen entdeckten wir, dass HSP70-4 nach dem Priming signifikant hochreguliert wurde und für die nächsten vier Tage auf hohem Niveau bleibt (mindestens 2-fach erhöht). Durch Analyse ihres Hitzestressverhaltens konnten wir verifizieren, dass HSP70-4 an der 7 Reaktion von Pflanzen auf Hitzestress beteiligt ist. Interessant ist, dass HSP70-4-GFP nach dem Priming zytosolische Foci erzeugt, die für einige Tage während der Erholungsphase bestehen bleiben. Wir schlagen vor, dass der Fokus mit SGs verbunden ist, da Cycloheximid (CHX) GFP-Foci-Signale unterdrückt, wenn sie der Hitze ausgesetzt werden. Diese Ergebnisse weisen auf eine HSP70-4-vermittelte Transkriptions- und Translationssteuerungsverbindung (Modul) während der basalen Thermotoleranz und des Thermogedächtnisses sowie auf ihre potenzielle(n) Rolle(n) bei der Reaktion auf Hitzestress hin.
Zusammenfassend bietet unsere Forschung neue Einblicke in die Rolle von Hitzeschockproteinen bei der Kontrolle der Hitzestresstoleranz und des Gedächtnisses.