scholarly journals MicroRNA775 targets a β-(1,3)-galactosyltransferase to regulate growth and development in Arabidopsis thaliana

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Parneeta Mishra ◽  
Akanksha Singh ◽  
Ashwani Kumar Verma ◽  
Rajneesh Singh ◽  
Sribash Roy

AbstractMicroRNAs are critical regulators of gene expression in plants and other organisms, and are involved in regulating plethora of developmental processes. Evolutionarily, miRNAs can be ancient and conserved across species or recently evolved and young, which are not conserved across diverse plant groups. miR775 is a non-conserved miRNA identified only in Arabidopsis thaliana. Here, we investigated the functional significance of miR775 in A. thaliana and observed that miR775 targets a probable β-(1,3)-galactosyltransferase gene at post transcriptional level. Phenotypic analysis of miR775 over-expression lines and the target mutant suggested miR775 regulates rosette size by elongating petiole length and increasing leaf area. Further, the expression of miR775 was found to be up-regulated in response to UV-B and hypoxia. Our results also suggest that miR775 regulated β-(1,3)-galactosyltransferase may involve in regulating the β-(1,3)-galactan content of arabinogalactans. Collectively, our findings establish a role of miR775 in regulating growth and development in A. thaliana.HighlightsThe role of an uncharacterized microRNA, miR775 has been exploredmiR775 targets a probable β-(1,3)-galactosyltransferase involved in complex carbohydrate biosynthesismiR775 regulates rosette size in A. thaliana and may play role under UV light and hypoxia

2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (23) ◽  
pp. 6096 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yanchun Cui ◽  
Manling Wang ◽  
Xuming Yin ◽  
Guoyun Xu ◽  
Shufeng Song ◽  
...  

Copper is a mineral element essential for the normal growth and development of plants; however, excessive levels can severely affect plant growth and development. Oryza sativa L. multiple stress-responsive gene 3 (OsMSR3) is a small, low-molecular-weight heat shock protein (HSP) gene. A previous study has shown that OsMSR3 expression improves the tolerance of Arabidopsis to cadmium stress. However, the role of OsMSR3 in the Cu stress response of plants remains unclear, and, thus, this study aimed to elucidate this phenomenon in Arabidopsis thaliana, to further understand the role of small HSPs (sHSPs) in heavy metal resistance in plants. Under Cu stress, transgenic A. thaliana expressing OsMSR3 showed higher tolerance to Cu, longer roots, higher survival rates, biomass, and relative water content, and accumulated more Cu, abscisic acid (ABA), hydrogen peroxide, chlorophyll, carotenoid, superoxide dismutase, and peroxidase than wild-type plants did. Moreover, OsMSR3 expression in A. thaliana increased the expression of antioxidant-related and ABA-responsive genes. Collectively, our findings suggest that OsMSR3 played an important role in regulating Cu tolerance in plants and improved their tolerance to Cu stress through enhanced activation of antioxidative defense mechanisms and positive regulation of ABA-responsive gene expression.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sakil Mahmud ◽  
Chhana Ullah ◽  
Annika Kortz ◽  
Sabarna Bhattacharyya ◽  
Peng Yu ◽  
...  

Jasmonates have a well-documented role in balancing the trade-off between plant growth and defense against biotic stresses. However, the role of jasmonate signaling under abiotic stress is less well studied. Here, we investigated the function of JASMONATE RESISTANT 1 (JAR1) in drought stress in Arabidopsis thaliana. JAR1 converts jasmonic acid (JA) to jasmonyl-L-isoleucine (JA-Ile), the major bioactive form of jasmonates. Comparison of a newly generated over-expression line (JAR1-OE) with jar1-11, a T-DNA insertion line in the JAR1 locus, and Col-0 revealed that constitutively increased JA-Ile production results in stunted growth and a delay in flowering. Upon water limitation, JAR1-OE plants retained more water in their leaves, showed reduced wilting and recovered better from drought stress than the wild type. By contrast, jar1-11 mutant plants were hypersensitive to drought. RNA-seq analysis and hormonal profiling of plants under control and drought stress conditions provided insight into the molecular reprogramming caused by the alteration in JA-Ile content. Especially JAR1-OE plants were affected in many adaptive systems related to drought stress, including stomatal density, stomatal aperture or the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Overall, our data suggest that constitutively increased expression of JAR1 can prime Arabidopsis towards improved drought tolerance.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diogo Jackson Aquino Silva ◽  
Marilia Fernandes Erickson ◽  
Raiane dos Santos Guidi ◽  
Daniel Marques Almeida Pessoa

AbstractColour cues play an important role in sexual selection and conspecific recognition. Literature shows that conspecifics might enjoy their everyday chat, without ever worrying about occasional eavesdroppers (e.g., predators), when information interchange evolves into a private communication channel. Yet, when signalling is converted into foraging cues by predators, their prey must pay the due cost for sustaining conversation. For that matter, fiddler crabs draw attention for having flashy enlarged claws that could potentially attract the attention of many predators. Surprisingly, the costs associated with claw colouration in fiddler crabs are still poorly understood and have never been studied in American species. Here, we initially examine whether hypertrophied claws of American thin-fingered fiddler crabs (Leptuca leptodactyla) reflect UV-light and how conspecific females react to these cues. Then we test two alternative hypotheses concerning the role of claw colouration in fiddler crabs’ mate choice: a) that claw colouration evolved into a private communication channel, which could have significantly lowered signalling costs for males; b) that claw colouration is conspicuous to potential reproductive partners, as well as to predators, making colour signalling by males very costly (i.e., a handicap). Thereafter, we measured the reflectance spectra from several enlarged claws and modelled their chromatic contrast against the background spectrum, considering the visual systems of conspecific fiddler crabs and two kinds of predators (foxes and plovers). We also tested female conspecifics’ preference towards enlarged claws that reflected UV-light or other colour cues, by artificially altering claw colouration. Our results show a clear female preference for UV reflecting males. We also found that natural enlarged claws should be highly detectable by avian predators, refuting the private communication channel hypothesis. Furthermore, since female fiddler crabs select the most flamboyant claws from the sandy background, claw colouration in fiddler crabs can be understood as an honest signal.HIGHLIGHTSThe hypertrophied claws of male Leptuca leptodactyla reflect UV light.Female fiddler crabs display a natural preference for UV light cues.Male enlarged claws are conspicuous to birds and crabs, but cryptic to mammals.Conspicuous claws function as handicaps and may honestly signal individual quality.Our data refute the presence of a private communication channel in L. leptodactyla.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Viviana Escudero ◽  
Álvaro Castro-León ◽  
Darío Ferreira Sánchez ◽  
Isidro Abreu ◽  
María Bernal ◽  
...  

SUMMARYZinc is an essential nutrient at low concentrations, but toxic at slightly higher ones. This could be used by plants to fight pathogens colonization.Elemental distribution in Arabidopsis thaliana leaves inoculated with the necrotrophic fungus Plectosphaerella cucumerina BMM (PcBMM) was determined and compared to mock-inoculated ones. Infection assays were carried out in wild type and long-distance zinc trafficking double mutant hma2hma4, defective in root-to-shoot zinc partitioning. Expression levels of genes involved in zinc homeostasis or in defence phytohormone-mediated pathways were determined.Zinc and manganese levels increased at the infection site. Zinc accumulation was absent in hma2hma4. HMA2 and HMA4 transcription levels were upregulated upon PcBMM inoculation. Consistent with a role of these genes in plant immunity, hma2hma4 mutants were more susceptible to PcBMM infection, phenotype rescued upon zinc supplementation. Transcript levels of genes involved in the salicylic acid, ethylene and jasmonate pathways were constitutively upregulated in hma2hma4 plants.These data are consistent with a role of zinc in plant immunity not only of hyperaccumulator plants, but also of plants containing ordinary levels of zinc. This new layer of immunity seems to run in parallel to the already characterized defence pathways, and its removal has a direct effect on pathogen resistance.


Author(s):  
Dileep Pullepu ◽  
Wasim Uddin ◽  
Aswathy Narayanan ◽  
M. Anaul Kabir

Background and Objectives: Monosomy of chromosome 5 associated with utilization of non-canonical sugar L-sorbose is one of the well-studied aneuploidies in Candida albicans. Stress-induced ploidy changes are crucial determinants for patho- genicity and genetic diversity in C. albicans. The five scattered regulatory regions (A, B, C, 135, and 139) comprising of two functionally redundant pathways (SUR1 and SUR2) were found to be responsible for the growth on L-sorbose. So far, three genes such as CSU51, CSU53 and CSU57 have been identified in region A, region 135 and region C, respectively. In this study we have verified the role of region B in this regulatory pathway. Materials and Methods: We employed a combinatorial gene deletion approach to verify the role of region B followed by co-over expression studies and qRT-PCR to identify the regulatory role of this region. Results: We confirmed the role of region B in the regulation of SOU1 gene expression. The qRT-PCR results showed that regulation occurs at transcriptional level along with other two regions in SUR1 pathway. A previously uncharacterized open reading frame in region B has been implicated in this regulation and designated as CSU52. Integrating multiple copies of CSU52 in the genome at tandem, suppresses the growth of recipient strain on L-sorbose, establishing it as a repressor of SOU1 gene. Conclusion: This finding completes the identification of regulators in SUR1 pathway. This result paves the way to study the underlying molecular mechanisms of SOU1 gene regulation that in-turn helps to understand stress induced aneuploidy.


Plants ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 81 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harmanjit Kaur ◽  
Maria Greger

Silicon (Si) was long listed as a non-essential component for plant growth and development because of its universal availability. However, there has been a resurgence of interest in studying the underlying uptake and transport mechanism of silicon in plants because of the reported dynamic role of silicon in plants under stressed environmental conditions. This uptake and transport mechanism is greatly dependent upon the uptake ability of the plant’s roots. Plant roots absorb Si in the form of silicic acid from the soil solution, and it is moved through different parts of the plant using various influx and efflux transporters. Both these influx and efflux transporters are mostly found in the plasma membrane; however, their location and pattern of expression varies among different plants. The assessment of these features provides a new understanding of different species-dependent Si accumulations, which have been studied in monocots but are poorly understood in other plant groups. Therefore, the present review provides insight into the most recent research exploring the use of Si transporters in angiosperms and cryptogams. This paper presents an extensive representation of data from different families of angiosperms, including monocots and eudicots. Eudicots (previously referred to as dicots) have often been neglected in the literature, because they are categorized as low/intermediate Si accumulators. However, in this review, we attempt to highlight the accumulating species of different plant groups in which Si uptake is mediated through transporters.


2004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Avtar K. Handa ◽  
Yuval Eshdat ◽  
Avichai Perl ◽  
Bruce A. Watkins ◽  
Doron Holland ◽  
...  

General The final goal and overall objective of the current research has been to modify lipid hydroperoxidation in order to create desirable phenotypes in two important crops, potato and tomato, which normally are exposed to abiotic stress associated with such oxidation. The specific original objectives were: (i) the roles of lipoxygenase (LOX) and phospholipids hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase (PHGPx) in regulating endogenous levels of lipid peroxidation in plant tissues; (ii) the effect of modified lipid peroxidation on fruit ripening, tuber quality, crop productivity and abiotic stress tolerance; (iii) the effect of simultaneous reduction of LOX and increase of PHGPx activities on fruit ripening and tuber quality; and (iv) the role of lipid peroxidation on expression of specific genes. We proposed to accomplish the research goal by genetic engineering of the metabolic activities of LOX and PHGPx using regulatable and tissue specific promoters, and study of the relationships between these two consecutive enzymes in the metabolism and catabolism of phospholipids hydroperoxides. USA Significant progress was made in accomplishing all objectives of proposed research. Due to inability to regenerate tomato plants after transforming with 35S-PHGPx chimeric gene construct, the role of low catalase induced oxidative stress instead of PHGPx was evaluated on agronomical performance of tomato plant and fruit quality attributes. Effects of polyamine, that protects DNA from oxidative stress, were also evaluated. The transgenic plants under expressing lipoxygenase (LOX-sup) were crossed with catalase antisense (CAT-anti) plants or polyamine over producing plants (SAM-over) and the lines homozygous for the two transgenes were selected. Agronomical performance of these line showed that low catalase induced oxidative stress negatively affected growth and development of tomato plants and resulted in a massive change in fruit gene expression. These effects of low catalase activity induced oxidative stress, including the massive shift in gene expression, were greatly overcome by the low lipoxygenase activity. Collectively results show that oxidative stress plays significant role in plant growth including the fruit growth. These results also for the first time indicated that a crosstalk between oxidative stress and lipoxygenase regulated processes determine the outcome during plant growth and development. Israel Regarding PHGPx, most of the study has concentrated on the first and the last specific objectives, since it became evident that plant transformation with this gene is not obvious. Following inability to achieve efficient transformation of potato and tomato using a variety of promoters, model plant systems (tobacco and potato cell cultures, tobacco calli and plantlets, and Arabidopsis) were used to establish the factors and to study the obstacles which prohibited the regeneration of plants carrying the genetic machinery for overproduction of PHGPx. Our results clearly demonstrate that while genetic transformation and over-expression of PHGPx occurs in pre-developmental tissue stage (cell culture, calli clusters) or in completed plant (Arabidopsis), it is likely that over-expression of this enzyme before tissue differentiation is leading to a halt of the regeneration process. To support this assumption, experiments, in which genetic engineering of a point-mutated PHGPx gene enable transformation and over-expression in plants of PhSPY modified in its catalytic site and thus inactive enzymatically, were successfully carried out. These combined results strongly suggest, that if in fact, like in animals and as we established in vitro, the plant PHGPx exhibits PH peroxidase activity, these peroxides are vital for the organisms developmental process.


2011 ◽  
Vol 393-395 ◽  
pp. 863-866 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hao Zhou ◽  
Shen Kui Liu ◽  
Chuan Ping Yang

In order to investigate the role of a rice NAD-malic enzyme gene (OsNAD-ME1) under different abiotic stresses, OsNAD-ME1 was constructed into plant expression vector and transformed into Agrobacterium for infecting Arabidopsis thaliana. There were higher transcriptional levels of OsNAD-ME1 in homozygous transgenic lines compared with WT plants as well as higher NAD-ME activity. WT and transgenic Arabidopsis were treated with NaCl, NaHCO3, mannitol and H2O2. And then their root lengths, crown widths and fresh weights were measured and compared. The results showed that over-expression of OsNAD-ME1 in transgenic Arabidopsis increased the resistance to abiotic stresses, which indicated that OsNAD-ME1 was related to stress tolerance.


2016 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 56-62
Author(s):  
R. Iskra ◽  
V. Vlizlo ◽  
R. Fedoruk

The results of our studies and the data of modern literature regarding the biological role of Cr(III) compounds in conditions of their application in the nutrition for pigs and cattle are discussed. The metabolic impact of Cr(III), coming from different sources – mineral and organic compounds, obtained by chemical synthesis or a nanotechnological method (chromium citrate), as well as in the form of biocomplexes from the cultural medium of Saccharomyces cerevisiae yeasts was analyzed. The metabolic connection between the impact of Cr(III) and the biosynthesis of some hormones – insulin, cortisol – as well as the sensitivity of some tissues and organs to the effect of chromium compounds was studied. A considerable part of the review material was dedicated to the metabolic effect of Cr(III) compounds on the reproductive function of pigs and cattle and their impact on the viability of the offspring and gametes of animals. The data about the stimulating effect of Cr(III) on the growth and development of the organism of piglets and calves, meat and milk performance of these species of animals are discussed. The relevance of dosing Cr(III) in the nutrition of pigs and cattle is highlighted.


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