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111.
The lipid composition of plasma membrane (PM) and the corresponding detergent-insoluble membrane (DIM) fraction were analyzed with a specific focus on highly polar sphingolipids, so-called glycosyl inositol phosphorylceramides (GIPCs). Using tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) ‘Bright Yellow 2’ cell suspension and leaves, evidence is provided that GIPCs represent up to 40 mol % of the PM lipids. Comparative analysis of DIMs with the PM showed an enrichment of 2-hydroxylated very-long-chain fatty acid-containing GIPCs and polyglycosylated GIPCs in the DIMs. Purified antibodies raised against these GIPCs were further used for immunogold-electron microscopy strategy, revealing the distribution of polyglycosylated GIPCs in domains of 35 ± 7 nm in the plane of the PM. Biophysical studies also showed strong interactions between GIPCs and sterols and suggested a role for very-long-chain fatty acids in the interdigitation between the two PM-composing monolayers. The ins and outs of lipid asymmetry, raft formation, and interdigitation in plant membrane biology are finally discussed.Eukaryotic plasma membranes (PMs) are composed of three main classes of lipids, glycerolipids, sphingolipids, and sterols, which may account for up to 100,000 different molecular species (Yetukuri et al., 2008; Shevchenko and Simons, 2010). Overall, all glycerolipids share the same molecular moieties in plants, animals, and fungi. By contrast, sterols and sphingolipids are different and specific to each kingdom. For instance, the plant PM contains an important number of sterols, among which β-sitosterol, stigmasterol, and campesterol predominate (Furt et al., 2011). In addition to free sterols, phytosterols can be conjugated to form steryl glycosides (SG) and acyl steryl glycosides (ASG) that represent up to approximately 15% of the tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) PM (Furt et al., 2010). As for sphingolipids, sphingomyelin, the major phosphosphingolipid in animals, which harbors a phosphocholine as a polar head, is not detected in plants. Glycosyl inositol phosphorylceramides (GIPCs) are the major class of sphingolipids in plants, but they are absent in animals (Sperling and Heinz, 2003; Pata et al., 2010). Sphingolipidomic approaches identified up to 200 plant sphingolipids (for review, see Pata et al., 2010; Cacas et al., 2013).Although GIPCs belong to one of the earliest classes of plant sphingolipids that were identified in the late 1950s (Carter et al., 1958), only a few GIPCs have been structurally characterized to date because of their high polarity and a limited solubility in typical lipid extraction solvents. For these reasons, they were systematically omitted from published plant PM lipid composition. GIPCs are formed by the addition of an inositol phosphate to the ceramide moiety, the inositol headgroup of which can then undergo several glycosylation steps. The dominant glycan structure, composed of a hexose-GlcA linked to the inositol, is called series A. Polar heads containing three to seven sugars, so-called series B to F, have been identified and appeared to be species specific (Buré et al., 2011; Cacas et al., 2013; Mortimer et al., 2013). The ceramide moiety of GIPCs consists of a long-chain base (LCB), mainly t18:0 (called phytosphingosine) or t18:1 compounds (for review, see Pata et al., 2010), to which is amidified a very-long-chain fatty acid (VLCFA), the latter of which is mostly 2-hydroxylated (hVLCFA) with an odd or even number of carbon atoms. In plants, little is known about the subcellular localization of GIPCs. It is assumed, however, that they would be highly represented in the PM (Worrall et al., 2003; Sperling et al., 2005), even if this remains to be experimentally proven. The main argument supporting such an assumption is the strong enrichment of trihydroxylated LCB (t18:n) in detergent-insoluble membrane (DIM) fractions (Borner et al., 2005; Lefebvre et al., 2007), LCB being known to be predominant in GIPC’s core structure as aforementioned.In addition to this chemical complexity, lipids are not evenly distributed within the PM. Sphingolipids and sterols can preferentially interact with each other and segregate to form microdomains dubbed the membrane raft (Simons and Toomre, 2000). The membrane raft hypothesis suggests that lipids play a regulatory role in mediating protein clustering within the bilayer by undergoing phase separation into liquid-disordered and liquid-ordered phases. The liquid-ordered phase, termed the membrane raft, was described as enriched in sterol and saturated sphingolipids and is characterized by tight lipid packing. Proteins, which have differential affinities for each phase, may become enriched in, or excluded from, the liquid-ordered phase domains to optimize the rate of protein-protein interactions and maximize signaling processes. In animals, rafts have been implicated in a huge range of cellular processes, such as hormone signaling, membrane trafficking in polarized epithelial cells, T cell activation, cell migration, and the life cycle of influenza and human immunodeficiency viruses (Simons and Ikonen, 1997; Simons and Gerl, 2010). In plants, evidence is increasing that rafts are also involved in signal transduction processes and membrane trafficking (for review, see Mongrand et al., 2010; Simon-Plas et al., 2011; Cacas et al., 2012a).Moreover, lipids are not evenly distributed between the two leaflets of the PM. Within the PM of eukaryotic cells, sphingolipids are primarily located in the outer monolayer, whereas unsaturated phospholipids are predominantly exposed on the cytosolic leaflet. This asymmetrical distribution has been well established in human red blood cells, in which the outer leaflet contains sphingomyelin, phosphatidylcholine, and a variety of glycolipids like gangliosides. By contrast, the cytoplasmic leaflet is composed mostly of phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylserine, phosphatidylinositol, and their phosphorylated derivatives (Devaux and Morris, 2004). With regard to sphingolipids and glycerolipids, the asymmetry of the former is established during their biosynthesis and that of the latter requires ATPases such as the aminophospholipid translocase that transports lipids from the outer to the inner leaflet as well as multiple drug resistance proteins that transport phosphatidylcholine in the opposite direction (Devaux and Morris, 2004). This ubiquitous scheme encountered in animal cells could apply in plant cells as proposed (Tjellstrom et al., 2010). Indeed, the authors showed that there is a pronounced transverse lipid asymmetry in root at the PM. Phospholipids and galactolipids dominate the cytosolic leaflet, whereas the apoplastic leaflet is enriched in sphingolipids and sterols.From such a high diversity of the plant PM thus arises the question of the respective contribution of lipids to membrane suborganization. Our group recently tackled this aspect by characterizing the order level of liposomes prepared from various plant lipids and labeled with the environment-sensitive probe di-4-ANEPPDHQ (Grosjean et al., 2015). Fluorescence spectroscopy experiments showed that, among phytosterols, campesterol exhibits the strongest ability to order model membranes. In agreement with these data, spatial analysis of the membrane organization through multispectral confocal microscopy pointed to the strong ability of campesterol to promote liquid-ordered domain formation and organize their spatial distribution at the membrane surface. Conjugated sterols also exhibit a striking ability to order membranes. In addition, GIPCs enhance the sterol-induced ordering effect by emphasizing the formation and increasing the size of sterol-dependent ordered domains.The aim of this study was to reinvestigate the lipid composition and organization of the PM with a particular focus on GIPCs using tobacco leaves and cv Bright Yellow 2 (BY-2) cell cultures as models. Analyzing all membrane lipid classes at once, including sphingolipids, is challenging because they all display dramatically different chemical polarity, from very apolar (like free sterols) to highly polar (like polyglycosylated GIPCs) molecules. Most lipid extraction techniques published thus far use a chloroform/methanol mixture and phase partition to remove contaminants, resulting in the loss GIPCs, which remain in the aqueous phase, unextracted in the insoluble pellet, or at the interphase (Markham et al., 2006). In order to gain access to both glycerolipid and sphingolipid species at a glance, we developed a protocol whereby the esterifed or amidified fatty acids were hydrolyzed from the glycerol backbone (glycerolipids) or the LCB (sphingolipids) of membrane lipids, respectively. Fatty acids were then analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) with appropriate internal standards for quantification. We further proposed that the use of methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE) ensures the extraction of all classes of plant polar lipids. Our results indicate that GIPCs represent up to 40 mol % of total tobacco PM lipids. Interestingly, polyglycolyslated GIPCs are 5-fold enriched in DIMs of BY-2 cells when compared with the PM. Further investigation led us to develop a preparative purification procedure that allowed us to obtain enough material to raise antibodies against GIPCs. Using immunogold labeling on PM vesicles, it was found that polyglycosylated GIPCs cluster in membrane nanodomains, strengthening the idea that lateral nanosegregation of sphingolipids takes place at the PM in plants. Multispectral confocal microscopy was performed on vesicles prepared using GIPCs, phospholipids, and sterols and labeled with the environment-sensitive probe di-4-ANEPPDHQ. Our results show that, despite different fatty acid and polar head compositions, GIPCs extracted from tobacco leaves and BY-2 cells have a similar intrinsic propensity of enhancing vesicle global order together with sterols. Assuming that GIPCs are mostly present in the outer leaflet of the PM, interactions between sterols and sphingolipids were finally studied by the Langmuir monolayer technique, and the area of a single molecule of GIPC, or in interaction with phytosterols, was calculated. Using the calculation docking method, the energy of interaction between GIPCs and phytosterols was determined. A model was proposed in which GIPCs and phytosterols interact together to form liquid-ordered domains and in which the VLCFAs of GIPCs promote the interdigitation of the two membrane leaflets. The implications of domain formation and the asymmetrical distribution of lipids at the PM in plants are also discussed. Finally, we propose a model that reconsiders the intricate organization of the plant PM bilayer.  相似文献   
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The introduction of organisms within the native range of wild conspecifics is a widespread phenomenon and locally modifies patterns in intraspecific diversity. However, our knowledge of the resulting ecological effects, as opposed to those caused by invasion‐induced changes in interspecific diversity, is still limited. Here, we investigated the ecological effects of native and non‐native invaders across levels of biological organisations and recipient organisms using the global and long history introductions of salmonids. Our meta‐analysis demonstrated that the global effects of native species introductions exceeded those induced by non‐native invaders. The impacts of native invaders were primarily manifested at the individual level on wild conspecifics, but remained largely unexplored on other native organisms and at the community and ecosystem levels. Overlooked and poorly appreciated, quantifying the impacts of native invaders has important implications because human‐assisted introductions of domesticated organisms are ubiquitous and likely to proliferate in the future.  相似文献   
114.
Nicotianamine (NA) is a non‐protein amino acid involved in fundamental aspects of metal uptake, transport and homeostasis in all plants and constitutes the biosynthetic precursor of mugineic acid family phytosiderophores (MAs) in graminaceous plant species. Nicotianamine synthase (NAS) genes, which encode enzymes that synthesize NA from S‐adenosyl‐L‐methionine (SAM), are differentially regulated by iron (Fe) status in most plant species and plant genomes have been found to contain anywhere from 1 to 9 NAS genes. This study describes the identification of 21 NAS genes in the hexaploid bread wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) genome and their phylogenetic classification into two distinct clades. The TaNAS genes are highly expressed during germination, seedling growth and reproductive development. Fourteen of the clade I NAS genes were up‐regulated in root tissues under conditions of Fe deficiency. Protein sequence analyses revealed the presence of endocytosis motifs in all of the wheat NAS proteins as well as chloroplast, mitochondrial and secretory transit peptide signals in four proteins. These results greatly expand our knowledge of NAS gene families in graminaceous plant species as well as the genetics underlying Fe nutrition in bread wheat.  相似文献   
115.
Discoveries made over the past ten years have provided evidence that invertebrate antiparasitic responses may be primed in a sustainable manner, leading to the failure of a secondary encounter with the same pathogen. This phenomenon called “immune priming” or "innate immune memory" was mainly phenomenological. The demonstration of this process remains to be obtained and the underlying mechanisms remain to be discovered and exhaustively tested with rigorous functional and molecular methods, to eliminate all alternative explanations. In order to achieve this ambitious aim, the present study focuses on the Lophotrochozoan snail, Biomphalaria glabrata, in which innate immune memory was recently reported. We provide herein the first evidence that a shift from a cellular immune response (encapsulation) to a humoral immune response (biomphalysin) occurs during the development of innate memory. The molecular characterisation of this process in Biomphalaria/Schistosoma system was undertaken to reconcile mechanisms with phenomena, opening the way to a better comprehension of innate immune memory in invertebrates. This prompted us to revisit the artificial dichotomy between innate and memory immunity in invertebrate systems.  相似文献   
116.
Electromagnetic field (EMF) treatment has proven to be effective against mineral scaling in water systems. Therefore, it should be assessed for the treatment of other deposits such as biofilms. In this study, a commercial device producing low-frequency EMF (1–10 kHz) was applied to a reactor fed with natural water for 45 days. The treatment promoted the concentration of microorganisms in suspension and limited the amount of sessile microorganisms in the biofilm, as determined by the measurement of total DNA, qPCR and microscopy. The structure of the bacterial community was assessed by t-RFLP and pyrosequencing analysis. The results showed that EMF treatment affected both planktonic and sessile community composition. EMFs were responsible for a shift in classes of Proteobacteria during development of the biofilm. It may be speculated that the EMF treatment affected particle solubility and/or microorganism hydration. This study indicated that EMFs modulated biofilm formation in natural water.  相似文献   
117.
Microtubules (MTs) are cytoskeletal polymers that participate in diverse cellular functions, including cell division, intracellular trafficking, and templating of cilia and flagella. MTs undergo dynamic instability, alternating between growth and shortening via catastrophe and rescue events. The rates and frequencies of MT dynamic parameters appear to be characteristic for a given cell type. We recently reported that all MT dynamic parameters vary throughout differentiation of a smooth muscle cell type in intact Caenorhabditis elegans. Here we describe local differences in MT dynamics and a novel MT behavior: an abrupt change in growth rate (deceleration) of single MTs occurring in the cell periphery of these cells. MT deceleration occurs where there is a decrease in local soluble tubulin concentration at the cell periphery. This local regulation of tubulin concentration and MT deceleration are dependent on two novel homologues of human cylicin. These novel ORFs, which we name cylc-1 and -2, share sequence homology with stathmins and encode small, very basic proteins containing several KKD/E repeats. The TOG domain–containing protein ZYG-9TOGp is responsible for the faster polymerization rate within the cell body. Thus we have defined two contributors to the molecular regulation for this novel MT behavior.  相似文献   
118.
Potent estrogen receptor ligands typically contain a phenolic hydrogen-bond donor. The indazole of the selective estrogen receptor degrader (SERD) ARN-810 is believed to mimic this. Disclosed herein is the discovery of ARN-810 analogs which lack this hydrogen-bond donor. These SERDs induced tumor regression in a tamoxifen-resistant breast cancer xenograft, demonstrating that the indazole NH is not necessary for robust ER-modulation and anti-tumor activity.  相似文献   
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