Protoplast-Based Transient Expression Combined with Plant Cultivation Systems as a Valuable Tool for Floral Thermogenesis Studies in Aroids

Author(s):  
Haruhiko Maekawa ◽  
Miyabi Otsubo ◽  
Koichiro Mizoguchi ◽  
Daiki Koyamatsu ◽  
Takehito Inaba ◽  
...  

Abstract Floral thermogenesis in plants plays a significant role in their reproductive function. Thermogenic aroids constitute a large family in highly thermogenic angiosperms, many of which possess intense heat-producing abilities. Several genes have been proposed to be involved in floral thermogenesis of aroids, but the biological tools to identify the functions of those genes at cellular and molecular levels are lacking. Among the many thermogenic aroids, we focused on skunk cabbage (Symplocarpus renifolius) because of its ability to produce intense, durable heat and small aboveground parts compared with other thermogenic aroids. In this study, leaf protoplasts were isolated from potted and shoot tip-cultured skunk cabbage plants and used to develop transient assay systems. The isolation protocol included an additional, sucrose gradient centrifugation step, which yielded high-purity protoplasts from both types of plants. The isolation and transfection efficiency of the protoplasts exceeded 1.0 × 105/g fresh weight and 50%, respectively, in both potted and shoot tip-cultured plants. Using this protoplast-based transient expression (PTE) system, we determined the protein localization of three mitochondrial energy-dissipating proteins, SrAOX, SrUCPA, and SrNDA1, fused to green fluorescent protein (GFP). In skunk cabbage leaf protoplasts, these three GFP-fused proteins were localized in MitoTracker-stained mitochondria. However, the green fluorescent particles in protoplasts expressing SrUCPA-GFP were enlarged compared with those in protoplasts expressing SrAOX-GFP and SrNDA1-GFP. Our PTE system is a powerful tool for functional gene analysis not only in thermogenic aroids but also in non-thermogenic aroids.

2009 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 224-226 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chengda Zhang ◽  
James B. Konopka

ABSTRACT Fusions to the green fluorescent protein (GFP) are an effective way to monitor protein localization. However, altered codon usage in Candida species has delayed implementation of new variants. Examination of three new GFP variants in Candida albicans showed that one has higher signal intensity and increased resistance to photobleaching.


2005 ◽  
Vol 342 (2) ◽  
pp. 341-344 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dineshkumar H. Dandekar ◽  
Manish Kumar ◽  
Jayashree S. Ladha ◽  
Krishna N. Ganesh ◽  
Debashis Mitra

2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 12
Author(s):  
Mahipal Singh ◽  
Xiaoling Ma

Dermal fibroblasts are useful for production of genetically engineered biologically active factors for development of cellular therapies and tissue engineering products for regenerative medicine. However, their transfection efficiencies using traditional non-viral methods are low and vary based on cell-type and species-specific differences. Using nucleofection technology, here we show that the transfection efficiency of primary fibroblasts established after 0-, 35-, and 65-days of postmortem storage of sheep skin tissues in a refrigerator was 59.49 % ± 9.66 %, 59.33 % ± 11.59 %, and 43.48 % ± 8.09 % respectively, as determined by analysis of green fluorescent protein (GFP) expression. 


2001 ◽  
Vol 281 (2) ◽  
pp. C486-C495 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melissa H. Little ◽  
Lorine Wilkinson ◽  
Darren L. Brown ◽  
Michael Piper ◽  
Toshiya Yamada ◽  
...  

Drosophila slit is a secreted protein involved in midline patterning. Three vertebrate orthologs of the fly slit gene, Slit1, 2, and 3, have been isolated. Each displays overlapping, but distinct, patterns of expression in the developing vertebrate central nervous system, implying conservation of function. However, vertebrate Slit genes are also expressed in nonneuronal tissues where their cellular locations and functions are unknown. In this study, we characterized the cellular distribution and processing of mammalian Slit3 gene product, the least evolutionarily conserved of the vertebrate Slit genes, in kidney epithelial cells, using both cellular fractionation and immunolabeling. Slit3, but not Slit2, was predominantly localized within the mitochondria. This localization was confirmed using immunoelectron microscopy in cell lines and in mouse kidney proximal tubule cells. In confluent epithelial monolayers, Slit3 was also transported to the cell surface. However, we found no evidence of Slit3 proteolytic processing similar to that seen for Slit2. We demonstrated that Slit3 contains an NH2-terminal mitochondrial localization signal that can direct a reporter green fluorescent protein to the mitochondria. The equivalent region from Slit1 cannot elicit mitochondrial targeting. We conclude that Slit3 protein is targeted to and localized at two distinct sites within epithelial cells: the mitochondria, and then, in more confluent cells, the cell surface. Targeting to both locations is driven by specific NH2-terminal sequences. This is the first examination of Slit protein localization in nonneuronal cells, and this study implies that Slit3 has potentially unique functions not shared by other Slit proteins.


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