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Reduced plant height and culm robustness are quantitative characteristics important for assuring cereal crop yield and quality under adverse weather conditions. A very limited number of short-culm mutant alleles were introduced into commercial crop cultivars during the Green Revolution. We identified phenotypic traits, including sturdy culm, specific for deficiencies in brassinosteroid biosynthesis and signaling in semidwarf mutants of barley (Hordeum vulgare). This set of characteristic traits was explored to perform a phenotypic screen of near-isogenic short-culm mutant lines from the brachytic, breviaristatum, dense spike, erectoides, semibrachytic, semidwarf, and slender dwarf mutant groups. In silico mapping of brassinosteroid-related genes in the barley genome in combination with sequencing of barley mutant lines assigned more than 20 historic mutants to three brassinosteroid-biosynthesis genes (BRASSINOSTEROID-6-OXIDASE, CONSTITUTIVE PHOTOMORPHOGENIC DWARF, and DIMINUTO) and one brassinosteroid-signaling gene (BRASSINOSTEROID-INSENSITIVE1 [HvBRI1]). Analyses of F2 and M2 populations, allelic crosses, and modeling of nonsynonymous amino acid exchanges in protein crystal structures gave a further understanding of the control of barley plant architecture and sturdiness by brassinosteroid-related genes. Alternatives to the widely used but highly temperature-sensitive uzu1.a allele of HvBRI1 represent potential genetic building blocks for breeding strategies with sturdy and climate-tolerant barley cultivars.The introduction of dwarfing genes to increase culm sturdiness of cereal crops was crucial for the first Green Revolution (Hedden, 2003). The culms of tall cereal crops were not strong enough to support the heavy spikes of high-yielding cultivars, especially under high-nitrogen conditions. As a result, plants fell over, a process known as lodging. This caused losses in yield and grain-quality issues attributable to fungal infections, mycotoxin contamination, and preharvest germination (Rajkumara, 2008). Today, a second Green Revolution is on its way, to revolutionize the agricultural sector and to ensure food production for a growing world population. Concurrently, global climate change is expected to cause more frequent occurrences of extreme weather conditions, including thunderstorms with torrential rain and strong winds, thus promoting cereal culm breakage (Porter and Semenov, 2005; National Climate Assessment Development Advisory Committee, 2013). Accordingly, plant architectures that resist lodging remain a major crop-improvement goal and identification of genes that regulate culm length is required to enhance the genetic toolbox in order to facilitate efficient marker-assisted breeding. The mutations and the corresponding genes that enabled the Green Revolution in wheat (Triticum aestivum) and rice (Oryza sativa) have been identified (Hedden, 2003). They all relate to gibberellin metabolism and signal transduction. It is now known that other plant hormones such as brassinosteroids are also involved in the regulation of plant height. Knowledge of the molecular mechanisms underlying the effects of the two hormones on cell elongation and division has mainly come from studies in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana; Bai et al., 2012). Mutant-based breeding strategies to fine-tune brassinosteroid metabolism and signaling pathways could improve lodging behavior in modern crops (Vriet et al., 2012) such as barley (Hordeum vulgare), which is the fourth most abundant cereal in both area and tonnage harvested (http://faostat.fao.org).A short-culm phenotype in crops is often accompanied by other phenotypic changes. Depending on the penetrance of such pleiotropic characters, but also the parental background and different scientific traditions and expertise, short-culmed barley mutants were historically divided into groups, such as brachytic (brh), breviaristatum (ari), dense spike (dsp), erectoides (ert), semibrachytic (uzu), semidwarf (sdw), or slender dwarf (sld; Franckowiak and Lundqvist, 2012). Subsequent mutant characterization was limited to intragroup screens and very few allelism tests between mutants from different groups have been reported (Franckowiak and Lundqvist, 2012). Although the total number of short-culm barley mutants exceeds 500 (Franckowiak and Lundqvist, 2012), very few have been characterized at the DNA level (Helliwell et al., 2001; Jia et al., 2009; Chandler and Harding, 2013; Houston et al., 2013). One of the first identified haplotypes was uzu barley (Chono et al., 2003). The Uzu1 gene encodes the brassinosteroid hormone receptor and is orthologous to the BRASSINOSTEROID-INSENSITIVE1 (BRI1) gene of Arabidopsis, a crucial promoter of plant growth (Li and Chory, 1997). The uzu1.a allele has been used in East Asia for over a century and is presently distributed in winter barley cultivars in Japan, the Korean peninsula, and China (Saisho et al., 2004). Its agronomic importance comes from the short and sturdy culm that provides lodging resistance, and an upright plant architecture that tolerates dense planting.Today, more than 50 different brassinosteroids have been identified in plants (Bajguz and Tretyn, 2003). Most are intermediates of the complex biosynthetic pathway (Shimada et al., 2001). Approximately nine genes code for the enzymes that participate in the biosynthetic pathway from episterol to brassinolide (Supplemental Fig. S1). Brassinosteroid deficiency is caused by down-regulation of these genes, but it can also be associated with brassinosteroid signaling. The first protein in the signaling network is the brassinosteroid receptor encoded by BRI1 (Li and Chory, 1997; Kim and Wang, 2010). In this work, we show how to visually identify brassinosteroid-mutant barley plants and we describe more than 20 relevant mutations in four genes of the brassinosteroid biosynthesis and signaling pathways that can be used in marker-assisted breeding strategies.  相似文献   
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Sixteen platinum(II) complexes of estrone and estradiol were synthesized in this work to evaluate their cytotoxic activity against several cancer cell lines including estrogen dependent and independent ones. The synthesis of all the complexes was done in three steps. The reaction of steroids with dibromoalkanes was followed by a reaction of the bromoalkyl steroids with 2-(aminomethyl)pyridine or 2-(2-aminoethyl)pyridine. The last step was a reaction of steroidal diamino ligands with potassium tetrachloroplatinate to obtain the desired platinum(II) complexes. Cytotoxicity assays showed that most of the complexes prepared are active against the cancer cell lines used—CEM, U-2 OS, MCF7, MCF7 AL, MDA-MB-468, BT-474, BT-549, and BJ fibroblasts. The six-membered platinum complexes are more active than five-membered ones.  相似文献   
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Journal of Plant Growth Regulation - The original version of this article unfortunately contained an error in Dr. Andrzej Skoczowski’s affiliation. The author would like to correct the error...  相似文献   
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Brassinosteroids (BR) are steroid phytohormones that are involved in the growth and stress response in plants, but the precise mechanisms of their action are still being discovered. In our study we have used BR-deficient barley mutants 522DK and BW084 (which carry missense mutations in the HvDWARF and HvCPD genes, respectively). We have also used a BR-signalling mutant that harbors missense substitutions in the HvBRI1 gene. Our aim was (1) to find out if the content of phytohormones in the mutants grown at 20 °C is different than in the wild types and whether/how the content of phytohormones changes after plant acclimation at temperatures of 5 °C and 27 °C?, (2) to characterise the effectiveness of the light reactions of photosynthesis of the barley mutants in comparison to wild types at various temperatures, and (3) to verify the impact of mutations on the tolerance of barley to high and low temperatures. Hormonal characteristics of the BR mutants of barley show the complexity of the interactions between BR and other plant hormones that are additionally modified by temperature and possibly by other factors. The results suggest the participation of BR in auxin catabolism. Further, BR appears to play a role in maintaining the ABA–ABAGlc balance. As for the gibberellin content in plants at a temperature of 20 °C, more in-depth studies will be required to explain the contradictory effects regarding the accumulation of GA3, GA4 and GA5, which appears to be dependent on the type of mutation and connected to the BR level. A fast-kinetic chlorophyll a fluorescence analysis has revealed that the mutants had lower values of energy absorption than the wild types, but the values of the energy transferred via the electron-transport chain was maintained at the wild-type level. We presumed that BR are involved in regulating plant acclimation to extreme (low/high) temperatures, thus the BR-deficient and BR-signalling mutants should be less tolerant to low/high temperatures when compared to the wild types. Unexpectedly, all of the mutants showed a higher tolerance to high temperatures than the wild types. The BW084 and BW312 mutants were less tolerant to frost than the wild type, but 522DK had a similar frost tolerance as the reference wild-type cultivar.

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Cytokinins (CKs) are pivotal plant hormones that have crucial roles in plant growth and development. However, their isolation and quantification are usually challenging because of their extremely low levels in plant tissues (pmol g?1 fresh weight). We have developed a simple microscale magnetic immunoaffinity‐based method for selective one‐step isolation of CKs from very small amounts of plant tissue (less than 0.1 mg fresh weight). The capacity of the immunosorbent and the effect of the complex plant matrix on the yield of the rapid one‐step purification were tested using a wide range of CK concentrations. The total recovery range of the new microscale isolation procedure was found to be 30–80% depending on individual CKs. Immunoaffinity extraction using group‐specific monoclonal CK antibodies immobilized onto magnetic microparticles was combined with a highly sensitive ultrafast mass spectrometry‐based method with a detection limit close to one attomole. This combined approach allowed metabolic profiling of a wide range of naturally occurring CKs (bases, ribosides and N9‐glucosides) in 1.0‐mm sections of the Arabidopsis thaliana root meristematic zone. The magnetic immunoaffinity separation method was shown to be a simple and extremely fast procedure requiring minimal amounts of plant tissue.  相似文献   
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Journal of Plant Growth Regulation - To better understand the role of phytohormones and antioxidative responses in plant-viroid interaction, changes in endogenous phytohormone contents and...  相似文献   
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