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The review tracks the history of electrical long-distance signals from the first recordings of action potentials (APs) in sensitive Dionea and Mimosa plants at the end of the 19th century to their re-discovery in common plants in the 1950''s, from the first intracellular recordings of APs in giant algal cells to the identification of the ionic mechanisms by voltage-clamp experiments. An important aspect is the comparison of plant and animal signals and the resulting theoretical implications that accompany the field from the first assignment of the term “action potential” to plants to recent discussions of terms like plant neurobiology.Key Words: action potentials, slow wave potentials, plant nerves, plant neurobiology, electrical signaling in plants and animailsFor a long time plants were thought to be living organisms whose limited ability to move and respond was appropriately matched by limited abilities of sensing.1 Exceptions were made for plants with rapid and purposeful movements such as Mimosa pudica (also called the sensitive plant), Drosera (sundews), Dionea muscipula (flytraps) and tendrils of climbing plants. These sensitive plants attracted the attention of outstanding pioneer researchers like Pfeffer,2,3 Burdon-Sanderson,4,5 Darwin,6 Haberlandt79 and Bose.1013 They found them not only to be equipped with various mechanoreceptors exceeding the sensitivity of a human finger but also to trigger action potentials (APs) that implemented these movements.The larger field of experimental electrophysiology started with Luigi Galvani''s discovery of “animal electricity” or contractions of isolated frog legs suspended between copper hooks and the iron grit of his balcony.14 It soon became clear that the role of the electric current was not to provide the energy for the contraction but to simulate a stimulus that existed naturally in the form of directionally transmitted electrical potentials. Studies by both Matteucci and Du Bois-Reymond15 recognized that wounding of nerve strands generated the appearance of a large voltage difference between the wounded (internal) and intact (external) site of nerves. This wound or injury potential was the first, crude measurement of what later became known as membrane or resting potential of nerve cells. It was also found that various stimuli reduced the size of the potential (in modern terms: they caused a depolarization), and to describe the propagating phenomenon novel terms such as action potential (AP) and action current were created (reviewed in refs. 15 and 16). Rather than relying on such indirect methods, the membrane theory of exicitation proposed by Bernstein in 191217 made it desirable to directly measure the value of cell membrane potentials. Such progress soon became possible by the introduction of microelectrodes (KCl-filled glass micropipettes with a tip diameter small enough to be inserted into living cells) to record intracellular, i.e., the real membrane potentials (Vm). The new technique was simultaneously adopted for giant cells (axons) of cephalopods such as Loligo and Sepia18 and giant internodal cells of Charophytic green algae. In the 1930s Umrath and Osterhout1921 not only made the first reliable, intracellular measurements of membrane potentials in plant cells (reporting Vm values between −100 to −170 mV) but the first intracellular recordings of plant APs as well. When this technique was complemented with precise electronic amplifiers and voltage clamp circuits in the 1940s, one could measure ion currents (instead of voltages) and so directly monitor the activity of ion channels. The smart application of these methods led to a new, highly detailed understanding of the ionic species and mechanisms involved in Vm changes, especially APs.2227 Whereas the depolarizing spike in animal nerve cells is driven by an increased influx of Na+ ions, plant APs were found to involve influx of Ca2+ and/or efflux of Cl−1 ions.The first extracellular recording of a plant AP was initiated by Charles Darwin and performed on leaves of the Venus flytrap (Dionea muscipula Ellis) by the animal physiologist Burdon-Sanderson in 1873.46 Ever since APs have often been considered to fulfil comparable roles in plants and nerve-muscle preparations of animals. However, this was never a generally accepted view. While it is commonly assumed that the AP causes the trap closure, this had not been definitely shown (see refs. 28 and 29). Kunkel (1878) and Bose (1907, 1926) measured action spikes also in Mimosa plants where they preceded the visible folding movements of the leaflets.1213,3031 Dutrochet and Pfeffer23 had already found before that interrupting vascular bundles by incision prevented the excitation from propagating beyond the cut and concluded that the stimulus must move through the vascular bundles, in particular the woody or hadrome part (in modern terms the xylem). Haberlandt7 cut or steam-killed the external, nonwoody part of the vascular bundles and concluded that the phloem strands were the path for the excitation, a notion which is confirmed by a majority of recent studies in Mimosa and other plant species. APs have their largest amplitude near and in the phloem and there again in the sieve cells.2324,3235 Moreover, APs can be recorded through the excised stylets of aphids known to be inserted in sieve tube elements.3637 Other studies found that AP-like signals propagate with equal rate and amplitude through all cells of the vascular bundle.38 Starting studies with isolated vascular bundles (e.g., from the fern Adiantum), Bose found increasing amplitudes of heat-induced spikes by repeated stimulation (tetanisation) and incubation in 0.5 % solution of sodium carbonate.1013 Since the electrical behavior of isolated vascular strands was comparable to that of isolated frog nerves, Bose felt justified to refer to them as plant nerves.Although at the time a hardly noticed event, the discovery that normal plants such as pumpkins had propagating APs just as the esoteric “sensitive” plants was a scientific breakthrough with important consequences.3940,32 First, it corrected the long-held belief that normal plants are simply less sensitive and responsive than the so-called “sensitive plants” from Mimosa to Venus flytraps. Second, it led to the stimulating belief that so widely distributed electric signals must carry important messages.41 The ensuing studies made considerable progress in linking electrical signals with respiration and photosynthesis,4042 pollination,4344 phloem transport33,3637,45 and the rapid, plant-wide deployment of plant defenses.4653The detailed visualization of nerve cells with silver salts by the Spanish zoologist S. Ramon y Cajal, the demonstrated existence of APs in Dionea and Mimosa as well as the discovery of plant mechanoreceptors in these and other plants9 at the end of the century was sufficient stimulation to start a search for structures that could facilitate the rapid propagation of these and other excitation signals. Researchers began to investigate easily stainable intracellular plasma strands that run across the lumen of many plant cells, and sometimes even continue over several cells for their potential role as nerve-like, excitation-conducting structures. Such strands were shown to occur in traumatized areas of many roots54 and in insectivorous butterworts where they connect the glue-containing hair tips with the basal peptidase-producing glands of the Pinguicula leaves.5556 However, after investigating these claims, Haberlandt came to the conclusion that the only nerve-like structures of plants were situated the long phloem cells of the vascular bundles.78 From that time on papers, lectures and textbooks reiterated statements that “plants have no nerves”.This unproductive expression ignores the work of Darwin, Haberlandt, Pfeffer and Bose together with the fact that in spite of their anatomical differences, nerve cell networks and vascular bundles share the analog function of conducting electrical signals. Similar anatomical differences have not been an obstacle to stating that both plants and animals consist of cells. The mechanistic similarity of excitations (consisting of a transient decline in cell input resistance) in plant and nerve cells was later elegantly demonstrated by the direct comparison of action potentials in Nitella and the giant axon of squids.5758 Today, consideration of nerve-like structures in plants involves increasingly more aspects of comparison. We know that many plants can efficiently produce electric signals in the form of action potentials and slow wave potentials (= variation potentials) and that the long-distance propagation of these signals proceeds in the vascular bundles. We also know that plants like Dionea can propagate APs with high efficiency and speed without the use of vascular bundles, probably because their cells are electrically coupled through plasmodesmata. Other analogies with neurobiology include vesicle-operated intercellular clefts in axial root tissues (the so-called plant synapses)59 as well as the certain existence and operation of substances like neurotransmitters and synaptotagmins in plant cells (e.g., refs. 60 and 61). The identification of the role(s) of these substances in plants will have important implications. Altogether, modern plant neurobiology might emerge as a coherent science.62Electrophysiological and other studies of long-distance signals in plants and animals greatly contributed to our knowledge of the living world by revealing important similarities and crucial differences between plants and animals in an area that might directly relate to their different capacities to respond to environmental signals. Even at this stage the results are surprising. Rather than lacking electric signals, higher plants have developed more than just one signal type that is able to cover large distances. In addition to APs that occur also in animals and lower plants,63 higher plants feature an additional, unique, hydraulically propagated type of electric signals called slow wave potentials.64  相似文献   

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Plant defensins are small, highly stable, cysteine-rich peptides that constitute a part of the innate immune system primarily directed against fungal pathogens. Biological activities reported for plant defensins include antifungal activity, antibacterial activity, proteinase inhibitory activity and insect amylase inhibitory activity. Plant defensins have been shown to inhibit infectious diseases of humans and to induce apoptosis in a human pathogen. Transgenic plants overexpressing defensins are strongly resistant to fungal pathogens. Based on recent studies, some plant defensins are not merely toxic to microbes but also have roles in regulating plant growth and development.Key words: defensin, antifungal, antimicrobial peptide, development, innate immunityDefensins are diverse members of a large family of cationic host defence peptides (HDP), widely distributed throughout the plant and animal kingdoms.13 Defensins and defensin-like peptides are functionally diverse, disrupting microbial membranes and acting as ligands for cellular recognition and signaling.4 In the early 1990s, the first members of the family of plant defensins were isolated from wheat and barley grains.5,6 Those proteins were originally called γ-thionins because their size (∼5 kDa, 45 to 54 amino acids) and cysteine content (typically 4, 6 or 8 cysteine residues) were found to be similar to the thionins.7 Subsequent “γ-thionins” homologous proteins were indentified and cDNAs were cloned from various monocot or dicot seeds.8 Terras and his colleagues9 isolated two antifungal peptides, Rs-AFP1 and Rs-AFP2, noticed that the plant peptides'' structural and functional properties resemble those of insect and mammalian defensins, and therefore termed the family of peptides “plant defensins” in 1995. Sequences of more than 80 different plant defensin genes from different plant species were analyzed.10 A query of the UniProt database (www.uniprot.org/) currently reveals publications of 371 plant defensins available for review. The Arabidopsis genome alone contains more than 300 defensin-like (DEFL) peptides, 78% of which have a cysteine-stabilized α-helix β-sheet (CSαβ) motif common to plant and invertebrate defensins.11 In addition, over 1,000 DEFL genes have been identified from plant EST projects.12Unlike the insect and mammalian defensins, which are mainly active against bacteria,2,3,10,13 plant defensins, with a few exceptions, do not have antibacterial activity.14 Most plant defensins are involved in defense against a broad range of fungi.2,3,10,15 They are not only active against phytopathogenic fungi (such as Fusarium culmorum and Botrytis cinerea), but also against baker''s yeast and human pathogenic fungi (such as Candida albicans).2 Plant defensins have also been shown to inhibit the growth of roots and root hairs in Arabidopsis thaliana16 and alter growth of various tomato organs which can assume multiple functions related to defense and development.4  相似文献   

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The opioid overdose epidemic is a major threat to the public’s health, resulting in the development and implementation of a variety of strategies to reduce fatal overdose [1-3]. Many strategies are focused on primary prevention and increased access to effective treatment, although the past decade has seen an exponential increase in harm reduction initiatives. To maximize identification of opportunities for intervention, initiatives focusing on prevention, access to effective treatment, and harm reduction are examined independently, although considerable overlap exists. Particular attention is given to harm reduction approaches, as increased public and political will have facilitated widespread implementation of several initiatives, including increased distribution of naloxone and policy changes designed to increase bystander assistance during a witnessed overdose [4-7].  相似文献   

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Depending on the threat to a plant, different pattern recognition receptors, such as receptor-like kinases, identify the stress and trigger action by appropriate defense response development.1,2 The plant immunity system primary response to these challenges is rapid accumulation of phytohormones, such as ethylene (ET), salicylic acid (SA), and jasmonic acid (JA) and its derivatives. These phytohormones induce further signal transduction and appropriate defenses against biotic threats.3,4 Phytohormones play crucial roles not only in the initiation of diverse downstream signaling events in plant defense but also in the activation of effective defenses through an essential process called signaling pathway crosstalk, a mechanism involved in transduction signals between two or more distinct, “linear signal transduction pathways simultaneously activated in the same cell.”5  相似文献   

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Callose in polypodiaceous ferns performs multiple roles during stomatal development and function. This highly dynamic (1→3)-β-D-glucan, in cooperation with the cytoskeleton, is involved in: (a) stomatal pore formation, (b) deposition of local GC wall thickenings and (c) the mechanism of stomatal pore opening and closure. This behavior of callose, among others, probably relies on the particular mechanical properties as well as on the ability to form and degrade rapidly, to create a scaffold or to serve as a matrix for deposition of other cell wall materials and to produce fibrillar deposits in the periclinal GC walls, radially arranged around the stomatal pore. The local callose deposition in closing stomata is an immediate response of the external periclinal GC walls experiencing strong mechanical forces induced by the neighboring cells. The radial callose fibrils transiently co-exist with radial cellulose microfibrils and, like the latter, seem to be oriented via cortical MTs.Key words: callose, cytoskeleton, fern stomata, guard cell wall thickening, stomatal function, stomatal pore formationCallose represents a hemicellulosic matrix cell wall component, usually of temporal appearance, which is synthesized by callose synthases, enzymes localized in the plasmalemma and degraded by (1→3)-β-glucanases.14 It consists of triple helices of a linear homopolymer of (1→3)-β-glucose residues.57 The plant cell is able to form and degrade callose in a short time. On the surface of the plasmolyzed protoplast a thin callose surface film may arise within seconds.8 Callose is the only cell wall component that is implicated in a great variety of developmental plant processes, like cell plate formation,911 microspore development,1214 trafficking through plasmodesmata,15,16 formation and closure of sieve pores,16 response of the plant cells to multiple biotic and abiotic stresses,4,5 establishment of distinct “cell cortex domains”,17 etc.Despite the widespread occurrence of callose, its general function(s) is (are) not well understood (reviewed in refs. 4 and 5). It may serve as: a matrix for deposition of other cell wall materials, as in developing cell plates;9 a cell wall-strengthening material, as in cotton seed hairs and growing pollen tubes;18 a sealing or plugging material at the plasma membrane of pit fields, plasmodesmata and sieve plate pores;16 a mechanical obstruction to growth of fungal hyphae or a special permeability barrier, as in pollen mother cell walls and muskmelon endosperm envelopes.4,19,20 The degree of polymerization, age and thickness of callose deposits may cause variation in its physical properties.5Evidence accumulated so far showed that a significant number of ferns belonging to Polypodiales and some other fern classes forms intense callose deposits in the developing GC wall thickenings.2128 This phenomenon has not been observed in angiosperm stomata, although callose is deposited along the whole surface of the young VW and in the VW ends of differentiating and mature stomata (our unpublished data; reviewed in refs 29 and 30).Stomata are specialized epidermal bicellular structures (Fig. 1A) regulating gas exchange between the aerial plant organs and the external environment. Their appearance in the first land plants was crucial for their adaptation and survival in the terrestrial environment. The constituent GCs have the ability to undergo reversible changes in shape, leading to opening and closure of the stomatal pore (stomatal movement). The mechanism by which GCs change shape is based on: (a) the particular mechanical properties of GC walls owed to their particular shape, thickening, fine structure and chemical composition and (b) the reversible changes in vacuole volume, in response to environmental factors, through fairly complicated biochemical pathways.3033Open in a separate windowFigure 1(A) Diagrammatic representation of an elliptical stoma. (B–E) Diagram to show the process of stomatal pore formation in angiosperms (B and C) and Polypodiales ferns (D and E). The arrows in (B) indicate the forming stomatal pore. DW, dorsal wall; EPW, external periclinal wall; GC, guard cell; IPW, internal periclinal wall; ISP, internal stomatal pore; PE polar ventral wall end; VW, ventral wall.The present review is focused on the multiple-role of callose in differentiating and functioning fern stomata, as they are substantiated by the available information, including some unpublished data, and in particular in: stomatal pore formation, deposition of GC wall thickenings and opening and closure of the stomatal pore. The mode of deposition of fibrillar callose deposits in GC walls and the mechanism of their alignment are also considered.  相似文献   

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The mechanism of cold perception by plants is still poorly understood. It was found that temperature drop evokes changes in the activity of ion pumps and channels, which leads to plasma membrane depolarization.1,2 The nature of the primary step of its action (alteration in membrane composition,3 transient influx of Ca2+ etc.,2) has not been elicited yet. Our electrophysiological experiments conducted on the liverwort Conocephalum conicum showed that its cells respond not only to sudden cooling4 but also to menthol, generating depolarization of the plasma membrane and action potentials (APs). Similar results are well documented in mammals; cold or “cooling compounds” including menthol cause activation of thermosenstitive channel TRPM8 permeable to Ca2+ and generation of AP series.5 TRP receptors are detected, among others, in green and brown algae. Possible existence of TRPM8-like channel-receptor in Conocephalum conicum is discussed here.Key words: action potential, cold, liverwort, menthol, thermoreceptors, voltage transient  相似文献   

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The soil phytopathogen Agrobacterium has the unique ability to introduce single-stranded transferred DNA (T-DNA) from its tumor-inducing (Ti) plasmid into the host cell in a process known as horizontal gene transfer. Following its entry into the host cell cytoplasm, the T-DNA associates with the bacterial virulence (Vir) E2 protein, also exported from Agrobacterium, creating the T-DNA nucleoprotein complex (T-complex), which is then translocated into the nucleus where the DNA is integrated into the host chromatin. VirE2 protects the T-DNA from the host DNase activities, packages it into a helical filament and interacts with the host proteins, one of which, VIP1, facilitates nuclear import of the T-complex and its subsequent targeting to the host chromatin. Although the VirE2 and VIP1 protein components of the T-complex are vital for its intracellular transport, they must be removed to expose the T-DNA for integration. Our recent work demonstrated that this task is aided by an host defense-related F-box protein VBF that is induced by Agrobacterium infection and that recognizes and binds VIP1. VBF destabilizes VirE2 and VIP1 in yeast and plant cells, presumably via SCF-mediated proteasomal degradation. VBF expression in and export from the Agrobacterium cell lead to increased tumorigenesis. Here, we discuss these findings in the context of the “arms race” between Agrobacterium infectivity and plant defense.Key words: Arabidopsis, defense response, proteasomal degradation, bacterial infection, F-box proteinAgrobacterium infection of plants consists of a chain of events that usually starts in physically wounded tissue which produces Plant defense pathways subverted by Agrobacterium for genetic transformation small phenolic molecules, such as acetosyringone (AS).1 These phenolics serve as chemotactic agents and activating signals for the virulence (vir) gene region of the Ti plasmid.2,3 The vir gene products then process the T-DNA region of the Ti plasmid to a single-stranded DNA molecule that is exported with several Vir proteins into the host cell cytoplasm, in which it forms a the T-DNA nucleoprotein complex (T-complex).4,5 The plant responds to the coming invasion by expressing and activating several defense-related proteins,5 such as VBF6 and VIP1,7 aimed at suppressing the pathogen. However, the Agrobacterium has evolved mechanisms to take advantage of these host defense proteins.8 Some of the unique strategies for achieving this goal include (1) the use of VIP1 to bind the T-complex—via the VIP1 interaction with the T-DNA packaging protein VirE2,9,10—and assist its nuclear import7 and chromatin targeting,11 and (2) the use of VBF to mark VIP1 and its associated VirE2 for proteasomal degradation, presumably for uncoating the T-complex prior to the T-DNA integration into the plant genome.6,12 Here, we examine these subversion strategies in the context of “arms race” between Agrobacterium and plants.  相似文献   

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The role of medical anthropology in tackling the problems and challenges at the intersections of public health, medicine, and technology was addressed during the 2009 Society for Medical Anthropology Conference at Yale University in an interdisciplinary panel session entitled Training, Communication, and Competence: The Making of Health Care Professionals.The discipline of medical anthropology is not very formalized in the health setting. Although medical anthropologists work across a number of health organizations, including schools of public health, at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), and at non-governmental organizations (NGOs), there is an emerging demand for an influential applied medical anthropology that contributes both pragmatically and theoretically to the health care field.The role of anthropology at the intersections of public health, medicine, and technology was addressed during the 2009 Society for Medical Anthropology Conference at Yale University in September. In a conference session entitled Training, Communication, and Competence: The Making of Health Care Professionals, health professional career issues, including training and education, medical entrepreneurship, and the maintenance of clinical relationships with patients were examined. The presentations encompassed macro approaches to institutional reform in training, education, and health care delivery, as well as micro studies of practitioner-patient interaction. Seemingly disparate methodological, disciplinary, and theoretical orientations were united to assess the increasing relevance of medically oriented anthropology in addressing the challenges of health care delivery, health education, and training.Margaret Bentley, a professor of public health at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, spoke about the increasing “epidemic of global health” in universities, noting a doubling of global health majors within the past three years. Despite this expansion of the field, a common discipline of global health continues to be developed. In September, the Association of Schools of Public Health (ASPH) and the University of Minnesota hosted a Global Health Core Competency Development Consensus Conference with the initiative to explore “workforce needs, practice settings, and to identify core constructs, competency domains, and a preliminary global health competency model”1. Given the current variability in training, Bentley believes medical anthropology is uniquely suited to inform training in global health because of its offerings in the way of interdisciplinary methods and team-based applied field experience.Anthropologists Carl Kendall of Tulane University and Laetitia Atlani of Université de Paris X Nanterre have seen medical anthropologists examine models of health strictly within a clinical experience. Understanding of the social determinants of epidemiology, methodological issues of population health, and survey research is crucial. However, training individuals through a more formalized program (currently in development in Europe) will allow anthropologists to better understand context, explain complex models, humanize aggregate statistics, and articulate methods of the multidimensional “social field” of health outside of the clinical experience.The social field of health, however, as Robert Like of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey explained, shares an uncomfortable interface with clinical medicine. Recent efforts by the New Jersey Board of Examiners to incorporate cultural competency legislation have been robustly criticized. Evaluations of six-hour training sessions on cultural competency training have revealed health professionals’ frustration with the health care system’s inability to deal with “culturally different” individuals. In fact, the majority of health professionals who were required to complete the training believe cultural competency to be an area of study that is a “waste of time.”This opposition to cross-cultural education and the value of “cultural competence” training also has been a topic of great debate among anthropologists and health researchers. Despite the ubiquitous use of the term among research and health professionals, cultural competency is a term that cannot be defined precisely enough to operationalize.In “Anthropology in the Clinic: The Problem of Cultural Competency and How to Fix It,” Arthur Kleinman and Peter Benson asserted that the static notion of culture in the medical field “suggests that a culture can be reduced to a technical skill for which clinicians can be trained to develop expertise” [1]. T.S. Harvey, a linguistic and medical anthropologist at the University of California, Riverside, expounded on Kleinman’s opposition to competence as an acquired “technical skill” [1] and suggested reconceptualizing the approach to competence as communication. Although Kleinman’s explanatory models approach [2] provides a health care professional with what to ask the patient, Harvey pulls from Dell Hymes’ communicative competence [3] to understand how to ask it. Harvey recommended viewing competence as a “sociolinguistic acquisition … like a foreign language” where competencies are rule-governed and communication and speech events are formulaic.Harvey also noted that the “onus of cultural competency” is too often placed on the practitioner. Inevitably, there is an asymmetry in every clinical encounter, whereby the “would-be patient” is perpetually considered the “passive receptor.” Patients also share a stake in their health and, as such, should be taught communicative competence as well.Harvey also noted that the “onus of cultural competency” is too often placed on the practitioner. Inevitably, there is an asymmetry in every clinical encounter, whereby the “would-be patient” is perpetually considered the “passive receptor.” Patients also share a stake in their health and, as such, should be taught communicative competence as well.The role of the patient is made ever more complex by the power relationship that exists in the patient-provider context. Through ethnographic research, Sylvie Fainzang, director of research in the Inserm (Cermes), examines how doctors and patients lie. She argues that lying, in the context of secrecy, is an indication of a power relationship [4]. Fainzaing’s further research on the relationship between doctors and patients has yielded additional information on how patients learn about their diagnoses and how they will react to these diagnoses. Though a clinical encounter between a doctor and patient is expected to be one of informed consent, doctors often judge patients upon their ability to “intellectually understand” [4] and assess who is “psychologically ready” [4] to bear the information. This leads to manipulated, misinformed, and “resigned consent” [4]. This sort of social training of obligation of a subject to medical authority provides the patient with the choice either to conform or overthrow the rules as defined by society.Collectively, this interdisciplinary panel worked to inform the discussion on how medical anthropology can address training, communication, and competence at the intersections of medicine, public health, and education. By reviewing health professionals’ growing interest in public health, training in health education and competence, and the patient-provider relationship, medical anthropology can be seen as both relevant and necessary to addressing the challenges faced by the medical and health community today.  相似文献   

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Plants are complex living beings, extremely sensitive to environmental factors, continuously adapting to the ever changing environment. Emerging research document that plants sense, memorize, and process experiences and use this information for their adaptive behavior and evolution. As any other living and evolving systems, plants act as knowledge accumulating systems. Neuronal informational systems are behind this concept of organisms as knowledge accumulating systems because they allow the most rapid and efficient adaptive responses to changes in environment. Therefore, it should not be surprising that neuronal computation is not limited to animal brains but is used also by bacteria and plants. The journal, Plant Signaling & Behavior, was launched as a platform for exchanging information and fostering research on plant neurobiology in order to allow our understanding of plants in their whole integrated, communicative, and behavioral complexity.
I always go by official statistics because they are very carefully compounded and, even if they are false, we have no others …∼ Jaroslav Hašek, 1911
Key Words: plant neurobiology, sensory biology, behavior, biological complexity, evolution, signal integrationThis quotation of writer and mystificator Jaroslav Hašek is from his electorial speech aimed to get a seat in the Austro-Hungarian parliament for his imaginary political party ‘Moderate Progress within the Limits of the Law’ in 1911. It indicates how statistics can be misused for manipulation of public opinion, sometimes allegedly for general good. This quotation is partially relevant also for recent biology which is passing through a critical cross-road from reductionist-mechanistic concepts and methodologies towards the post-genomic, holistic, systems-based analysis of integrated and communicative hierarchic networks known as life processes.There is a message hidden in this Hašek''s aphorism. All those mathematical models, scientific theories and concepts, however appealing, harmonious and long-standing … but which do not correspond to reality …; inevitably will be ‘killed by ugly’ facts generated by scientific progress, and finally replaced by new models, theories, and concepts.1Despite the indisputable success of the reductionistic approach in providing many discoveries regarding single cells and their components, it is increasingly clear that promises of ‘mechanistic’ genocentric biology were just chimeras and that living organisms are much more complex than the sum of their constituents. Ernst Mayr, in his final opus, almost a testament published at his age of 100, strongly opposed the belief that the reductionism at the molecular level could help to explain the complexity of life. He stressed that the concept of biological “emergence”, which deals with the occurrence of unexpected features in complex living systems, is not fully accessible using only physical and chemical approaches.2Themes of hierarchy, continuity, and order dominated biology before the turn of the century, but these have in many cases been replaced by images of the workshop. Examples include such terms as ‘machineries’, ‘mechanistic understanding’, ‘mechanistic explanation’, ‘motors’, ‘machines’, ‘clocks’ etc. This shift may well reflect the characteristic style of our age. These concepts, although useful for mining of details, do not reveal the true complexity of life and can be misleading. Even a one-celled organism is made up of ‘millions’ of subcellular parts. Concerning the great complexity of unicellular creatures Ilya Prigogine (1973) wrote: “… but let us have no illusions, our research would still leave us quite unable to grasp the extreme complexity of the simplest of organism.”3 Moreover, eukaryotic cell proved to be, in fact, ‘cells within cell’,48 while there are numerous supracellular situations, the most dramatic one is represented by plants when all cells are interconnected via plasmodesmata into supracellular organism.6 All this collectively indicate that the currently valid ‘Cell Theory’ dogma is approaching its replacement with a new updated concept of a basic unit of eukaryotic life.68All those mathematical models, scientific theories and concepts, however appealing, harmonious and long-standing … but which do not correspond to reality …; inevitably will be ‘killed by ugly’ facts generated by scientific progress, and finally replaced by new models, theories, and concepts.Furthermore, genomes are much more complex and dynamic as we ever anticipated.9,10 They often have as much as 99% of non-coding DNA sequences,11 which is not ‘junk DNA’ but rather DNA which is part of multitask networks integrating coding DNA.12 In genomes exposed to stress (like mutations), changes are scored preferentially in non-coding sequences which regain a new balance by complex changes in genome composition and activity.9,10,13,14 There are several definitions regarding what is gene11 and molecular biologists and genetics are learning to be careful not to make strong conclusions from under-expression, knocking-out, or overexpression of any particular gene. It is increasingly clear that mutations in single genes are accompanied with altered expressions of other genes and non-coding DNA sequences too, and even subtle re-arrangements of chromatin structure and genome architecture are possible. The dynamic genome actively regains the lost balance, also via extensive re-shufflings of non-coding DNA.After complete sequencing of numerous genomes, it is clear that our understanding of what constitutes life and what distinguishes living biological systems from non-living chemical - biochemical systems is not much better than our understanding before the start of the genomics era some 60 years ago. Yet, it is also obvious that living systems, whether single cells or whole complex organisms like animals and plants, are not machines and automata which respond to external signals via a limited set of predefined responses and automatic reflexes. While humans and other animals, even insects, are already out of this ‘mechanistic’ trap15,16 which can be traced back to Descartes,17 plants are still considered to act only in predetermined automatic fashions, as mechanical devices devoid of any possibility for choice and planning of their activities. In contrast to machines, life systems are based on wet chemistry, being systems of hierarchical and dynamic integration, communication and emergence.1,18Recently, a critical mass of data has accumulated demanding reconsideration of this mechanistic view of plants.19,20 Plants are complex living beings, extremely sensitive to environmental factors and continuously adapting to the ever changing environment.21 In addition, plants respond to environmental stimuli as integrated organisms. Often, plants make important decisions, such as onset or breakage of dormancy and onset of flowering, which implicate some central or decentralized command center. Moreover, roots and shoots act in an integrated manner allowing dynamic balance of above-ground and below-ground organs. The journal, Plant Signaling & Behavior, was launched as a platform for exchange of information about the integration of discrete processes, including subcellular signalling integrated with higher-level processes. Signal integration and communication results in adaptive behavior of whole supracellular organisms, encompassing also complex, and still elusive, plant-plant, plant-insect, and plant-animal communications. Coordinated behavior based on sensory perception is inherent for neurobiological systems.22 Therefore, plants can be considered for neuronal individuals. Moreover, plants are also able to share knowledge perceived from environment with other plants, communicating both private and public messages.23,24 This implicates social learning and behavioral inheritance in plants too.After complete sequencing of numerous genomes, it is clear that our understanding of what constitutes life and what distinguishes living biological systems from non-living chemical - biochemical systems is not much better than our understanding before the start of genomics era some 60 years ago.

Behavior

  1. An activity of a defined organism: observable activity when measurable in terms of quantitative effects of the environment whether arising from internal or external stimuli.
  2. Anything that an organism does that involves action and response to stimulation.
(Webster Third New International Dictionary 1961).Neuronal informational systems allow the most rapid and efficient adaptive responses. Therefore, it should not be surprising that neuronal computation is not limited to animal brains but is used also by bacteria and plants.Some of our colleagues assert that plants do not exhibit any integrated neuronal principles.25 They maintain that plants do not show complex experience- or learning-based behavior. Plants, they aver, act rather as machines manifesting predefined reflexes. Yet recent studies indicate that even prokaryotic bacteria exhibit cognitive behavior26,27 and posses linguistic communication and rudimentary intelligence.2830 Therefore, it should not be too surprising that plants also show features of communication and even plant-specific cognition.19,20,31,3235 As any other living systems, plants act as ‘knowledge accumulating systems’.1 In fact, in order to adapt, all organisms continuously generate hypotheses about their environment via well formulated ‘questions’ which are solved by an increasing set of possible ‘answers’ in order to adapt.1 Neuronal informational systems are behind this concept of organisms as ‘knowledge accumulating systems’ because they allow the most rapid and efficient adaptive responses.22 As a consequence, neuronal computation is not limited to animal brains but is used also by bacteria and plants.Reductionistic approaches will continue to “atomize” biological systems. Nevertheless, the avalanche of new data will be in need of functional integration, winning adherents to the idea that plants have integrated signaling and communicative systems that endowed them with complex and adaptive behavior. We trust that Plant Signaling & Behavior, will become an important platform for exchange of these ideas. With progress of sciences, plants show more and more similarities to animals despite obviously plant-specific evolutionary origins, cellular basis, and multicellularity. We can just mention sexuality and sex organs, embryos, stem cells, immunity, circadian rhythms, hormonal and peptide signaling, sensory perception and bioelectricity including action potentials, communication and neurobiological aspects of signal integration. The whole picture strongly suggest that convergent evolution is much more important36,37 than currently envisioned in evolutionary theories.Reductionistic approaches will continue to “atomize” biological systems. Nevertheless, the avalanche of new data will be in need of functional integration, winning adherents to the idea that plants have integrated signaling and communicative systems that endowed them with complex and adaptive behavior.We have started with Jaroslav Hašek and we close with him as well. His quotation from 1911 is also a warning for future that we should stay open-minded. We should not slip into dogmatic ‘traps’ which have been so characteristic for the mechanistic and genocentric biology. Mathematics and computational biology are important tools, and surely will play decisive role in systems biology in the future. But they can be easily misinterpreted, and even misused. Plant systems biology, and the whole biology in general, must overcome dogmas of mechanistic genocentric biology. We hope that characterizing plants in their whole behavioral and communicative complexity will allow us to better understand what is life and how it emerged from chemical and biochemical complex systems.  相似文献   

15.
In young Arabidopsis seedlings, retrograde signaling from plastids regulates the expression of photosynthesis-associated nuclear genes in response to the developmental and functional state of the chloroplasts. The chloroplast-located PPR protein GUN1 is required for signalling following disruption of plastid protein synthesis early in seedling development before full photosynthetic competence has been achieved. Recently we showed that sucrose repression and the correct temporal expression of LHCB1, encoding a light-harvesting chlorophyll protein associated with photosystem II, are perturbed in gun1 mutant seedlings.1 Additionally, we demonstrated that in gun1 seedlings anthocyanin accumulation and the expression of the “early” anthocyanin-biosynthesis genes is perturbed. Early seedling development, predominantly at the stage of hypocotyl elongation and cotyledon expansion, is also affected in gun1 seedlings in response to sucrose, ABA and disruption of plastid protein synthesis by lincomycin. These findings indicate a central role for GUN1 in plastid, sucrose and ABA signalling in early seedling development.Key words: ABA, ABI4, anthocyanin, chloroplast, GUN1, retrograde signalling, sucroseArabidopsis seedlings develop in response to light and other environmental cues. In young seedlings, development is fuelled by mobilization of lipid reserves until chloroplast biogenesis is complete and the seedlings can make the transition to phototrophic growth. The majority of proteins with functions related to photosynthesis are encoded by the nuclear genome, and their expression is coordinated with the expression of genes in the chloroplast genome. In developing seedlings, retrograde signaling from chloroplasts to the nucleus regulates the expression of these nuclear genes and is dependent on the developmental and functional status of the chloroplast. Two classes of gun (genomes uncoupled) mutants defective in retrograde signalling have been identified in Arabidopsis: the first, which comprises gun2–gun5, involves mutations in genes encoding components of tetrapyrrole biosynthesis.2,3 The other comprises gun1, which has mutations in a nuclear gene encoding a plastid-located pentatricopeptide repeat (PPR) protein with an SMR (small MutS-related) domain near the C-terminus.4,5 PPR proteins are known to have roles in RNA processing6 and the SMR domain of GUN1 has been shown to bind DNA,4 but the specific functions of these domains in GUN1 are not yet established. However, GUN1 has been shown to be involved in plastid gene expression-dependent,7 redox,4 ABA1,4 and sucrose signaling,1,4,8 as well as light quality and intensity sensing pathways.911 In addition, GUN1 has been shown to influence anthocyanin biosynthesis, hypocotyl extension and cotyledon expansion.1,11  相似文献   

16.
The pathogenicity of Clostridium difficile (C. difficile) is mediated by the release of two toxins, A and B. Both toxins contain large clusters of repeats known as cell wall binding (CWB) domains responsible for binding epithelial cell surfaces. Several murine monoclonal antibodies were generated against the CWB domain of toxin A and screened for their ability to neutralize the toxin individually and in combination. Three antibodies capable of neutralizing toxin A all recognized multiple sites on toxin A, suggesting that the extent of surface coverage may contribute to neutralization. Combination of two noncompeting antibodies, denoted 3358 and 3359, enhanced toxin A neutralization over saturating levels of single antibodies. Antibody 3358 increased the level of detectable CWB domain on the surface of cells, while 3359 inhibited CWB domain cell surface association. These results suggest that antibody combinations that cover a broader epitope space on the CWB repeat domains of toxin A (and potentially toxin B) and utilize multiple mechanisms to reduce toxin internalization may provide enhanced protection against C. difficile-associated diarrhea.Key words: Clostridium difficile, toxin neutralization, therapeutic antibody, cell wall binding domains, repeat proteins, CROPs, mAb combinationThe most common cause of nosocomial antibiotic-associated diarrhea is the gram-positive, spore-forming anaerobic bacillus Clostridium difficile (C. difficile). Infection can be asymptomatic or lead to acute diarrhea, colitis, and in severe instances, pseudomembranous colitis and toxic megacolon.1,2The pathological effects of C. difficile have long been linked to two secreted toxins, A and B.3,4 Some strains, particularly the virulent and antibiotic-resistant strain 027 with toxinotype III, also produce a binary toxin whose significance in the pathogenicity and severity of disease is still unclear.5 Early studies including in vitro cell-killing assays and ex vivo models indicated that toxin A is more toxigenic than toxin B; however, recent gene manipulation studies and the emergence of virulent C. difficile strains that do not express significant levels of toxin A (termed “A B+”) suggest a critical role for toxin B in pathogenicity.6,7Toxins A and B are large multidomain proteins with high homology to one another. The N-terminal region of both toxins enzymatically glucosylates small GTP binding proteins including Rho, Rac and CDC42,8,9 leading to altered actin expression and the disruption of cytoskeletal integrity.9,10 The C-terminal region of both toxins is composed of 20 to 30 residue repeats known as the clostridial repetitive oligopeptides (CROPs) or cell wall binding (CWB) domains due to their homology to the repeats of Streptococcus pneumoniae LytA,1114 and is responsible for cell surface recognition and endocytosis.12,1517C. difficile-associated diarrhea is often, but not always, induced by antibiotic clearance of the normal intestinal flora followed by mucosal C. difficile colonization resulting from preexisting antibiotic resistant C. difficile or concomitant exposure to C. difficile spores, particularly in hospitals. Treatments for C. difficile include administration of metronidazole or vancomycin.2,18 These agents are effective; however, approximately 20% of patients relapse. Resistance of C. difficile to these antibiotics is also an emerging issue19,20 and various non-antibiotic treatments are under investigation.2025Because hospital patients who contract C. difficile and remain asymptomatic have generally mounted strong antibody responses to the toxins,26,27 active or passive immunization approaches are considered hopeful avenues of treatment for the disease. Toxins A and B have been the primary targets for immunization approaches.20,2833 Polyclonal antibodies against toxins A and B, particularly those that recognize the CWB domains, have been shown to effectively neutralize the toxins and inhibit morbidity in rodent infection models.31 Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against the CWB domains of the toxins have also demonstrated neutralizing capabilities; however, their activity in cell-based assays is significantly weaker than that observed for polyclonal antibody mixtures.3336We investigated the possibility of creating a cocktail of two or more neutralizing mAbs that target the CWB domain of toxin A with the goal of synthetically re-creating the superior neutralization properties of polyclonal antibody mixtures. Using the entire CWB domain of toxin A, antibodies were raised in rodents and screened for their ability to neutralize toxin A in a cell-based assay. Two mAbs, 3358 and 3359, that (1) both independently demonstrated marginal neutralization behavior and (2) did not cross-block one another from binding toxin A were identified. We report here that 3358 and 3359 use differing mechanisms to modify CWB-domain association with CHO cell surfaces and combine favorably to reduce toxin A-mediated cell lysis.  相似文献   

17.
For the first time in human history, more than half of the world''s population lives in urban areas and this is projected to increase to two-thirds by 2030. This increased urbanity of the world''s population has substantial public health implications. Nearly a century of research has shown higher risk of mental disorder among persons living in urban versus rural areas. Epidemiologic research has documented that associations between particular features of the urban environment, such as concentrated disadvantage, residential segregation and social norms, contribute to the risk of mental illness. We propose that changes in DNA methylation may be one potential mechanism through which features of the urban environment contribute to psychopathology. Recent advances in animal models and human correlation studies suggest DNA methylation as a promising mechanism that can explain how the environment “gets under the skin.” Aberrant DNA methylation signatures characterize mental disorders in community settings. Emerging evidence of associations between exposure to features of the environment and methylation patterns may lead toward the identification of mechanisms that explain the link between urban environments and mental disorders. Importantly, evidence that epigenetic changes are reversible offers new opportunities for ameliorating the impact of adverse urban environments on human health.Key words: urban environment, mental disorders, DNA methylation, epigenetics, posttraumatic stress disorder, depressionThe 20th century has been characterized by the world-wide movement of populations from rural to urban areas. For the first time in human history, more than half of the world''s population lives in urban areas and this is projected to increase to two-thirds by 2030. The movement of populations to urban environments is probably the most important demographic shift in the past century. In particular, the increased urbanity of the world''s population has substantial public health implications. A body of research has long shown that there are different burdens of disease and disability in urban vs. non-urban areas and more recent work has linked specific features of the urban environment to particular health indicators (for reviews of the literature about urban health see refs. 1 and 2).Some of the more promising work in this area concerns research that has shown relations between urbanity and mental disorders. There is more than a century of work that has shown higher risk of most mental disorders among persons living in urban versus rural areas.38 Early research proposed several factors that may explain this association including selective migration and social disorganization.3 For example, it has been proposed that persons within disadvantaged areas may have a more difficult time building and sustaining supportive social relationships, therefore increasing susceptibility to mental illness. Subsequent work has shown associations between particular features of the urban environment and risk of mental illness. Living in poorer urban neighborhoods is associated with greater risk of new episodes of depression compared to living in richer neighborhoods, even when accounting for individual income or exposure to stressful or adverse circumstances.6,9,10 Living in neighborhoods characterized by residential racial segregation is associated with a greater risk of depression and anxiety, compared to living in less segregated neighborhoods.11 Other evidence suggests that neighborhood collective efficacy and norms are associated with the risk of substance use disorders12 and suicide attempts,13 again when taking into account individual experiences.Coincident with the growing number of studies that have demonstrated links between features of the urban environment and mental health, there has been an increase in work that has sought to understand the mechanisms underlying these epidemiologic observations. In particular, there is an emerging interest in identifying biologic explanations that may clarify the link between features of the urban environment and individual mental health. Existing research has documented a role for changes in immune function,14 gene-environment interactions15 and psychological mechanisms,16 among others, that may explain the links between the urban environment and mental health. This paper adds to this growing field and proposes that changes in DNA methylation may be one potential mechanism through which features of the urban environment contribute to psychopathology.  相似文献   

18.
Root elongation occurs by the generation of new cells from meristematic tissue within the apical 1–2 mm region of root tips. Therefore penetration of the soil environment is carried out by newly synthesized plant tissue, whose cells are inherently vulnerable to invasion by pathogens. This conundrum, on its face, would seem to reflect an intolerable risk to the successful establishment of root systems needed for plant life. Yet root tip regions housing the meristematic tissues repeatedly have been found to be free of microbial infection and colonization. Even when spore germination, chemotaxis, and/or growth of pathogens are stimulated by signals from the root tip, the underlying root tissue can escape invasion. Recent insights into the functions of root border cells, and the regulation of their production by transient exposure to external signals, may shed light on long-standing observations.Key words: border cells, chemotaxis, zoospores, neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs)The evidence suggests that there has evolved within plants, mechanisms for extremely rapid adjustment to changes in the soil environment. The logical conclusion is that plants can and do selectively manipulate the ecological balances within the rhizosphere to their own advantage.1“Sloughed root cap cells” that detach from the root tip were long presumed to be moribund tissue serving to lubricate passage of the elongating root.2 The discovery nearly a century ago that these cells from Zea mays L. and Pisum sativum L. can remain 100% viable for weeks after detachment into hydroponic culture did not alter this perception.3 In recent decades, studies have shown that the cells from root caps of most species are metabolically active and can survive even after detachment into the soil.4 Moreover, the cell populations express distinct patterns of gene expression reflecting tissue specialization and were therefore given the name root ‘border’ cells.5 Like ‘border towns’ that exist at the boundary of disparate countries and cultures, border cells are part of the plant and part of the soil, yet distinct from both.The soil is a dynamic environment whose pH, surface charge, water availability, texture and composition can range markedly on a large and small scale.1,6,7 The concept of a ‘microniche’ emphasizes that the biological requirements for a particular soil microorganism may be met within one site but not another site only a micron away.8 Thus, the rhizosphere—the region adjacent to root surfaces—can support much higher levels of microorganisms than bulk soil a few millimeters distant.9 This phenomenon is recognized to be driven by an increased availability of nutrients released from plants into the external environment.10 Less well recognized is the dynamic variation that occurs along the root surface, and its significance in patterns of disease development. As roots emerge and the new tissue differentiates progressively through stages from root cap, root apical meristem, elongation zone, and finally mature roots with lignified cell walls, the material released into the environment also changes.1113 More than 90% of bulk carbon released from young roots of legumes is delivered by the root cap, a 1 mm zone at the apex.14 Some pathogens are attracted specifically to the root tip region, presumably in response to such exudates.15,16 For example, instantaneous swarming occurs when a cotton root is placed into a suspension of Pythium dissotocum zoospores (Sup. Fig. 1). This host-specific attraction is specific to the root tip region where border cells are present (Sup. Fig. 2). Border cells remain attractive to zoospores when removed from the root (Sup. Fig. 3). The nature of the attractant is not known, but its impact is localized and transient (Sup. Fig. 4).Newly generated tissue is highly susceptible to infection by pathogens, in general, so elongating root tips would be predicted to be vulnerable to invasion. And yet, root apices repeatedly have been found to escape infection and colonization.1719 Recent discoveries about parallels between mammalian white blood cells and root border cells may provide new insight into this apparent conundrum.20 Neutrophils, a type of white blood cell, are produced in response to infection. Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) then attract and kill the invader through a process that requires extracellular DNA (exDNA) and an array of extracellular proteins.21,22 Border cell production, like that of neutrophils, also is induced in response to signals from pathogens and root tip resistance to infection requires exDNA and an array of extracellular proteins.20,23 Root tip specific chemotaxis, like that seen with Pythium zoospores, has been presumed to involve steps in a process of pathogen invasion.15,16 It may, instead, involve a process of extracellular trapping and killing by cells designed to protect root meristems from invasion, in a manner analogous to that which occurs in mammalian defense. If tests confirm this model, the mystery of how root tips escape infection by soilborne pathogens they attract could be resolved.  相似文献   

19.
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) have been recognized as important regulators in plant response to nutrient deficiencies. Of particular interest is the discovery that miR399 functions systemically in the maintenance of phosphate (Pi) homeostasis in response to external Pi fluctuation. Recent studies have further implicated both miR399 and sugars (mainly sucrose) as potential signal molecules in the shoot-to-root communication of phosphorus (P) status. Given that both miR399 and sucrose are transported via the phloem, their potential interaction (or cross-talk) along the signaling pathway is especially appealing for further exploration. In this mini-review, we highlight recent progress in unraveling crucial roles of both sucrose and miR399 in P-deficiency signaling. In particular, we further discuss recent findings that photosynthetic carbon (C) assimilation and subsequent partitioning, by overriding signaling of low external Pi, act as checkpoints upstream of miR399 for the onset of a systemic P-deficiency status.Key words: sucrose, microRNA399, systemic signaling, P deficiencyPhosphorus (P) is an essential macronutrient for plant growth and development. Phosphate (Pi) availability is a limiting factor for crop productivity in many parts of the world''s arable land.1 Because P fertilizer is a non-renewable resource and its mining is becoming ever more expensive, P has been recently highlighted as “the disappearing nutrient” of strategic importance in a recent NEWS FEATURE in the Nature.2Plant acclimation to P deficiency is a highly coordinated process with an extensive re-programming of biochemical and metabolic pathways. Altered carbon allocation between shoots and roots is a hallmark of most P-deficient plants resulting in a higher root-to-shoot ratio. In this process, sucrose, the main form of carbon (C) source from shoots to roots, has also been implicated to act as a secondary messenger for shoot-to-root signaling of P status to regulate gene expression and Pi uptake in roots.3 Sucrose has been found to be either required for or to enhance P deficiency-regulated gene expression in several plant species.46 In recent years, microRNAs (miRNAs) have been recognized as crucial regulators in plant response to P deficiency. The mode of miRNA action is strictly based on the degree of sequence complementarity with target gene(s). It has been demonstrated that miR399 serves as a systemic signaling molecule in regulating systemic Pi homeostasis.79 Both sucrose and miR399 are phloemmobile.1014 Several excellent reviews have been published recently to elucidate the roles of sucrose, miR399 and other aspects of P signaling.3,1418 However, a paradox arises between the seemingly ubiquitous role of sucrose in signaling various nutrient deficiencies, including those of nitrogen (N) and P, and the stringent specificity of plant responses to a particular nutrient deficiency. Here, we summarize recent advances in understanding the roles of both sucrose and miR399, as modulated by light regime and phloem transport, and discuss how plants may adopt C as a “common currency”, primarily in the form of sucrose, to initiate specific responses to P deficiency by regulating miRNA399 expression.  相似文献   

20.
During the development of the murine neocortex, time-lapse imaging and microsurgical experiments demonstrate that distinct mechanical forces may be acting on the migration of delaminating daughter cells. Bipolar daughter cells transform into a unipolar morphology as they detach from the inner ventricular surface along the embryonic cerebral wall. Twisting and stretching of their distally remaining pial process establishes a spring-like mechanism that efficiently pulls the soma of these transforming cells to the outer pial surface. The significance of this physical contraction observed in transforming bipolar cells is highlighted when compared to the migration of pin-like daughter cells that lack a pial process. While bipolar and pin-like cells each initially appear epithelial with a ventricular process integrated into the adherence junction meshwork at the ventricular surface, the pin-like cells instead show a transient adventricular somal movement. Consequently, pin-like cells exit from the ventricular zone much more slowly than bipolar cells. Thus, these contrasting movements of daughter cells suggest that differential pulling forces may act separately on their pial and ventricular processes as they delaminate from the telencephalic germinal zone.Key words: cerebral cortex, neuroepithelium, delamination, mechanical force, neuronal migration, slice cultureThe molecular mechanisms of cell migration that ultimately forms the brain should be studied based on the precise understanding of the morphology and behavior of the migrating cells. While within the outer part of the embryonic cerebral wall that subsequently matures into the cerebral cortex how neurons move has been progressing (reviewed in refs. 16), the beginning of a neuron''s life, i.e., birth and start of migration, is not fully understood. This is because live observation of the birth of neurons, i.e., mitosis of their progenitor cells (Fig. 1, left), in the intact neuroepithelia or in the cerebral walls taken from mammalian embryos has only recently become possible.79 In these and other three-dimensional time-lapse studies, it was commonly observed that daughter cells generated at the ventricular (or apical) surface of the neuroepithelium had integrated their processes into the surface.8,1017 This phenomenon was not surprising at all when the daughter cells were thought to behave as progenitor cells that had been well known to join the apical junctional meshwork.18 For neocortical daughter cells to differentiate and migrate towards the pial (or basal) side, however, it was rather unexpected. Differentiating cells were generally thought to be free from the ventricular surface from the very beginning of their life. Many of these apically-connected daughter cells that I observed (steps 1–2 in Fig. 1) then retracted their ventricular process (step 3) and migrated towards the pial side (step 4),8,1214,16,17,24 indicating that they were committed to the neuronal lineage. Although it is still possible that a certain type of daughter cell is produced without inheriting the apex of its progenitor cell and does not join the junctional meshwork,7,19,20 we should recognize that for many daughter cells to migrate towards the pial side, “delamination” (or de-epithelialization) from the neuroepithelium or the ventricular zone (VZ) (step 3) is an important initial task.21Open in a separate windowFigure 1Two types of “departure” exhibited by daughter cells in the mouse neocortical primordium. A pin-like cell (type A) and a bipolar cell (type B) are similar in their initial connection (steps 1–2) to the ventricular surface, i.e., their birth place (left), but they differ in somal movement during which they retract a ventricular process (step 3). Forces likely to be acting in the pial and ventricular processes are illustrated.Two different patterns of “delamination” have been captured so far in the mid-embryonic mouse cerebral wall. The first pattern is exhibited by cells that do not have a pial process (“type A” in Fig. 1; Supplemental Movie 1). These cells move the soma abventricularly while extending their ventricular process (steps 1–2), thereby taking a pin-like morphology.13,14,17 After retracting their ventricular process (step 3), these cells transform into a multipolar morphology in the subventricular zone (SVZ) and in the intermediate zone (IZ), zones basal to the VZ, and then either divide there to give rise to neuronal pairs13,14,22 or migrate further basally to fully differentiate into young neurons.9,13,17,23 We find that the majority of pin-like cells during process retraction (step 3) show a somal movement towards the ventricular surface,17 and we speculate that this phenomenon may be explained by a contraction-like mechanism (green arrows) that involves microtubules within the shortening ventricular process and the centrosome at the tip of the process, as well as the actomyosin system. How such an adventricular somal movement stops and changes to an abventricular movement to SVZ (step 4) remains unknown.In contrast, the second pattern of delamination (“type B” in Fig. 1; Supplemental Movie 2) is exhibited by the bipolar cells that connect to the ventricular and pial surfaces (reflecting the inheritance of the pial process from the parent cell) and transform into a unipolar shape by releasing their ventricular connection.8,14,24 During this bipolar-to-unipolar (B-U) transformation (step 3), the soma moves abventricularly (without any retardation or reverse movement as in the pin-like cells) and the pial process forms coils or a hairpin loop, raising the possibility that the pial process had been twisted and stretched (at step 2) such that a spring-like mechanism pulls the soma when the stretch is released by ventricular detachment (step 3).Indeed, it is now possible to observe with high-magnification confocal microscopic and scanning electron microscopic examinations exactly such process twisting (at step 2). Moreover, transection of a ventricular process using fine glass capillaries (at step 2; at the level of IZ or SVZ) results in the retraction of cut ends and the buckling of the pial processes. This result, together with the fact that B-U transforming cells exit from VZ much more quickly than pin-like cells, strongly suggests that the pial process-mediated spring-like mechanism contributes to the abventricular somal movement of this type of delaminating cell.24 It is likely that the force generated within the pial process (magenta arrows) is greater than within the ventricular process (green arrows). Passive stretching of the pial process (steps 1–2) may be due to cell crowding in the progressively thickening cerebral wall. How the process becomes twisted needs to be examined further (reviewed in ref. 25), although process transection experiments in the presence of cytoskeletal inhibitors suggest that intermediate filaments, rather than microtubules and actomyosin, are the major contributor to the process twisting.24 Additionally, live observation of a newly growing pial process (not illustrated in Fig. 1) suggests that it may rotationally extend like a screw.24These results tell us that the mechanical properties of cells migrating in vivo brain tissues must be further examined. It is necessary to establish 3D experimental systems in which the length and tension of elongated cells, as well as pressures exerted on these cells, can be manipulated so that the significance of these physical parameters on histogenetic behaviors can directly be assessed.  相似文献   

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