scholarly journals Gene expression patterns underlying changes in xylem structure and function in response to increased nitrogen availability in hybrid poplar

2012 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 186-199 ◽  
Author(s):  
LENKA PLAVCOVÁ ◽  
UWE G. HACKE ◽  
ADRIANA M. ALMEIDA-RODRIGUEZ ◽  
ERYANG LI ◽  
CARL J. DOUGLAS
2014 ◽  
Vol 80 (18) ◽  
pp. 5828-5835 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jill Gaskell ◽  
Amber Marty ◽  
Michael Mozuch ◽  
Philip J. Kersten ◽  
Sandra Splinter BonDurant ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTWe examined gene expression patterns in the lignin-degrading fungusPhanerochaete chrysosporiumwhen it colonizes hybrid poplar (Populus alba×tremula) and syringyl (S)-rich transgenic derivatives. A combination of microarrays and liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) allowed detection of a total of 9,959 transcripts and 793 proteins. Comparisons ofP. chrysosporiumtranscript abundance in medium containing poplar or glucose as a sole carbon source showed 113 regulated genes, 11 of which were significantly higher (>2-fold,P< 0.05) in transgenic line 64 relative to the parental line. Possibly related to the very large amounts of syringyl (S) units in this transgenic tree (94 mol% S), several oxidoreductases were among the upregulated genes. Peptides corresponding to a total of 18 oxidoreductases were identified in medium consisting of biomass from line 64 or 82 (85 mol% S) but not in the parental clone (65 mol% S). These results demonstrate thatP. chrysosporiumgene expression patterns are substantially influenced by lignin composition.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thurston Lacalli

Heterochrony has played a key role in the evolution of invertebrate larval types, producing “head larvae” in diverse taxa, where anterior structures are accelerated and specialized at the expense of more caudal ones. For chordates, judging from amphioxus, the pattern has been more one of repeated acceleration of adult features so that they function earlier in development, thus converting the ancestral larva, whether it was a head larva or not, into something progressively more chordate-like. Recent molecular data on gene expression patterns in the anterior nerve cord of amphioxus point to a similar process being involved in the origin of the telencephalon. As vertebrates evolved, a combination of acceleration and increasing egg size appears here to have allowed the development of a structure that would originally have emerged only gradually in the post-embryonic phase of the life history to be compressed into embryogenesis. The question then is what, in functional terms, makes the telencephalon so important to the survival of post-embryonic ancestral vertebrates that this was adaptively advantageous. A better understanding of the function this brain region performs in amphioxus may help provide the answer.


Pneumologie ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 72 (S 01) ◽  
pp. S8-S9
Author(s):  
M Bauer ◽  
H Kirsten ◽  
E Grunow ◽  
P Ahnert ◽  
M Kiehntopf ◽  
...  

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