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1.
In plants and other eukaryotes, long-chain acyl-CoAs are assumed to be imported into peroxisomes for beta-oxidation by an ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporter. However, two genes in Arabidopsis thaliana, LACS6 and LACS7, encode peroxisomal long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase (LACS) isozymes. To investigate the biochemical and biological roles of peroxisomal LACS, we identified T-DNA knockout mutants for both genes. The single-mutant lines, lacs6-1 and lacs7-1, were indistinguishable from the wild type in germination, growth, and reproductive development. By contrast, the lacs6-1 lacs7-1 double mutant was specifically defective in seed lipid mobilization and required exogenous sucrose for seedling establishment. This phenotype is similar to the A. thaliana pxa1 mutants deficient in the peroxisomal ABC transporter and other mutants deficient in beta-oxidation. Our results demonstrate that peroxisomal LACS activity and the PXA1 transporter are essential for early seedling growth. The peroxisomal LACS activity would be necessary if the PXA1 transporter delivered unesterified fatty acids into the peroxisomal matrix. Alternatively, PXA1 and LACS6/LACS7 may act in parallel pathways that are both required to ensure adequate delivery of acyl-CoA substrates for beta-oxidation and successful seedling establishment.  相似文献   

2.
Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA, C22:6n-3) is essential for normal brain and retinal development. The nature and subcellular location of the terminal steps in DHA biosynthesis have been controversial. Rather than direct Delta4-desaturation of C22:5n-3, it has been proposed that this intermediate is elongated to C24:5n-3, desaturated to C24:6n-3, and "retroconverted" to DHA via peroxisomal beta-oxidation. However, this hypothesis has recently been challenged. The goal of this study was to determine the mechanism and specific enzymes required for the retroconversion step in human skin fibroblasts. Cells from patients with deficiencies of either acyl-CoA oxidase or D-bifunctional protein, the first two enzymes of the peroxisomal straight-chain fatty acid beta-oxidation pathway, exhibited impaired (5-20% of control) conversion of either [1-14C]18:3n-3 or [1-14C]22:5n-3 to DHA as did cells from peroxisome biogenesis disorder patients comprising eight distinct genotypes. In contrast, normal DHA synthesis was observed in cells from patients with rhizomelic chondrodysplasia punctata, Refsum disease, X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy, and deficiency of mitochondrial medium- or very long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase. Acyl-CoA oxidase-deficient cells accumulated 2-5 times more radiolabeled C24:6n-3 than did controls. Our data are consistent with the retroconversion hypothesis and demonstrate that peroxisomal beta-oxidation enzymes acyl-CoA oxidase and D-bifunctional protein are essential for this process in human skin fibroblasts.  相似文献   

3.
Acyl-CoA oxidase, the first enzyme of the peroxisomal β-oxidation, was proved to be rate-limiting for this process in homogenates of rat liver, kidney, adrenal gland, heart and skeletal muscle. Acyl-CoA oxidase activity, based on H2O2-dependent leuko-dichlorofluorescein oxidation in tissue extract, was compared with radiochemically assayed peroxisomal β-oxidation rates. Dichlorofluorescein production was a valid measure of peroxisomal fatty acid oxidation only in liver and kidney, but not in adrenal gland, heart or skeletal muscle. Production of 14C-labeled acid-soluble products from 1-14C-labeled fatty acids in the presence of antimycin-rotenone appears to be a more accurate and sensitive estimate of peroxisomal β-oxidation than the acyl-CoA oxidase activity on base of H2O2 production. Chain-length specificity of acyl-CoA oxidase changed with the acyl-CoA concentrations used. Below 80 μM, palmitoyl-CoA showed the highest activity of the measured substrates in rat liver extract. No indications were obtained for the presence in rat liver of more forms of acyl-CoA oxidase with different chain-length specificity.  相似文献   

4.
Acyl-CoA oxidase from Candida tropicalis   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The preparation of a highly purified acyl-CoA oxidase from the cell extract of an n-alkane-utilizing yeast, Candida tropicalis, is described. It can be crystallized from ammonium sulfate solutions without an increase in specific activity, and is homogeneous on ultracentrifuge and disc electrophoresis. The enzyme is an octamer with approximately a 600,000 molecular weight, and has an isoelectric point of 5.5. It exhibits a typical flavoprotein spectrum with absorption maxima at 277, 365 and 445 nm, and contains 8 mol of FAD per mol of enzyme. The enzyme catalyzes the stoichiometric conversion of palmitoyl-CoA and O2 into 2-hexadecenoyl-CoA and H2O2. It oxidizes acyl-CoAs with carbon chain lengths of 4 to 20, and is most active toward lauroyl-CoA, but acetyl- and succinyl-CoAs are not oxidized. The enzyme is sulfhydryl dependent and is inactivated by silver and mercury compounds.  相似文献   

5.
Acyl-CoA oxidase from Candida tropicalis   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Z Jiang  C Thorpe 《Biochemistry》1983,22(16):3752-3758
Acyl coenzyme A oxidase (acyl-CoA oxidase) has been isolated in good yield from Candida tropicalis pK 233 grown on n-alkanes. Gel filtration, sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and measurement of flavin content suggest that the oxidase is an octamer of Mr 75 000 subunits each containing one flavin. The oxidase yields the red semiquinone form on dithionite or photochemical reduction, slowly forms an N-5 adduct with 0.16 M sulfite at pH 7.4, and is rapidly reduced by borohydride, forming the 3,4-dihydroflavin isomer. The red flavosemiquinone is only kinetically stabilized with respect to disproportionation in the free enzyme but is thermodynamically stabilized on binding enoyl-CoA derivatives. The enzyme is reduced by butyryl-, octanoyl-, and palmitoyl-CoA without formation of prominent long-wavelength bands. Acyl-CoA oxidase and the acyl-CoA dehydrogenases share many similarities in their interaction with CoA derivatives. For example, both enzymes stabilize the anionic radical on binding enoyl-CoA derivatives, both dehydrogenate 2-oxoheptadecyldethio-CoA but cannot utilize S-heptadecyl-CoA, both form long-wavelength bands with CoA persulfide species, and both enzymes are attacked by the suicide substrates 3,4-pentadienoyl-CoA and (methylene-cyclopropyl)acetyl-CoA at the flavin prosthetic group.  相似文献   

6.
Seed storage oil, in the form of triacylglycerol (TAG), is degraded to provide carbon and energy during germination and early seedling growth by the fatty acid β-oxidation in the peroxisome. Although the pathways for lipid degradation have been uncovered, understanding of the exact involved enzymes in soybean is still limited. Long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase (ACSL) is a critical enzyme that activates free fatty acid released from TAG to form the fatty acyl-CoA. Recent studies have shown the importance of ACSL in lipid degradation and synthesis, but few studies were focused on soybean. In this work, we cloned a ACSL gene from soybean and designated it as GmACSL2. Sequence analysis revealed that GmACSL2 encodes a protein of 733 amino acid residues, which is highly homologous to the ones in other higher plants. Complementation test showed that GmACSL2 could restore the growth of an ACS-deficient yeast strain (YB525). Co-expression assay in Nicotiana benthamiana indicated that GmACSL2 is located at peroxisome. Expression pattern analysis showed that GmACSL2 is highly expressed in germinating seedling and strongly induced 1 day after imbibition, which indicate that GmACSL2 may take part in the seed germination. GmACSL2 overexpression in yeast and soybean hairy root severely reduces the contents of the lipids and fatty acids, compared with controls in both cells, and enhances the β-oxidation efficiency in yeast. All these results suggest that GmACSL2 may take part in fatty acid and lipid degradation. In conclusion, peroxisomal GmACSL2 from Glycine max probably be involved in the lipid degradation during seed germination.  相似文献   

7.
The peroxisomal acyl-CoA oxidase family plays an essential role in lipid metabolism by catalyzing the conversion of acyl-CoA into trans-2-enoyl-CoA during fatty acid beta-oxidation. Here, we report the X-ray structure of the FAD-containing Arabidopsis thaliana acyl-CoA oxidase 1 (ACX1), the first three-dimensional structure of a plant acyl-CoA oxidase. Like other acyl-CoA oxidases, the enzyme is a dimer and it has a fold resembling that of mammalian acyl-CoA oxidase. A comparative analysis including mammalian acyl-CoA oxidase and the related tetrameric mitochondrial acyl-CoA dehydrogenases reveals a substrate-binding architecture that explains the observed preference for long-chained, mono-unsaturated substrates in ACX1. Two anions are found at the ACX1 dimer interface and for the first time the presence of a disulfide bridge in a peroxisomal protein has been observed. The functional differences between the peroxisomal acyl-CoA oxidases and the mitochondrial acyl-CoA dehydrogenases are attributed to structural differences in the FAD environments.  相似文献   

8.
A major strength of Arabidopsis thaliana as a model lies in the availability of a large number of naturally occurring inbred lines. Recent studies of A. thaliana population structure, using thousands of accessions from stock center and natural collections, have revealed a robust pattern of isolation by distance at several spatial scales, such that genetically identical individuals are generally found close to each other. However, some individual accessions deviate from this pattern. While some of these may be the products of rare long‐distance dispersal events, many deviations may be the result of mis‐identification, in the sense that the data regarding location of origin data are incorrect. Here, we aim to identify such discrepancies. Of the 5965 accessions examined, we conclude that 286 deserve special attention as being potentially mis‐identified. We describe these suspicious accessions and their possible origins, and advise caution with regard to their use in experiments in which accurate information on geographic origin is important. Finally, we discuss possibilities for maintaining the integrity of stock lines.  相似文献   

9.
10.
In studies using primary cultures of adult rat hepatocytes in serum-free medium, peroxisomal fatty acyl-CoA oxidase activity was not altered by the presence of 3,5,3'-triiodothyronine, whereas time- and dose-dependent increases in the thyroid hormone-responsive enzyme mitochondrial glycero-3-phosphate dehydrogenase were seen. Activity of peroxisomal oxidase was stimulated with clofibric acid in the absence of 3,5,3'-triiodothyronine. The results demonstrate that hepatic peroxisomal fatty acyl-CoA oxidase activity is not directly regulated by 3,5,3'-triiodothyronine and that stimulation of peroxisomal fatty acyl-CoA oxidase activity by clofibric acid does not require thyroid hormone.  相似文献   

11.
12.
13.
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Estimates of the amount of nuclear DNA of Arabidopsis thaliana, known to be among the lowest within angiosperms, vary considerably. This study aimed to determine genome size of a range of accessions from throughout the entire Eurasian range of the species. METHODS: Twenty accessions from all over Europe and one from Japan were examined using flow cytometry. KEY RESULTS: Significant differences in mean C-values were detected over a 1.1-fold range. Mean haploid (1C) genome size was 0.215 pg (211 Mbp) for all analysed accessions. Two accessions were tetraploid. CONCLUSIONS: A closer investigation of the DNA fractions involved in intraspecific genome size differences in this experimentally accessible species may provide information on the factors involved in stability and evolution of genome sizes.  相似文献   

14.
The genome of Arabidopsis thaliana contains 13 myosin XI isoforms. Here we prepared a specific antibody against a peptide that mimics a unique C-terminal region from the myosin XI isoform, MYA2. The resulting antibody was used to demonstrate that MYA2 in Arabidopsis protein extracts co-sedimented with actin filaments and dissociated from the filaments with ATP treatment. Immunolocalization studies showed that MYA2 co-localized predominantly with actin filaments in clustered punctuate dots in leaf epidermal cells, root hair cells and suspension-cultured cells. In a transgenic plant in which peroxisomes are labeled with green fluorescent protein, some MYA2 signals were localized on peroxisomes in an actin-dependent manner. We propose that the peroxisome is one of the cargos translocated by MYA2 on actin filaments.  相似文献   

15.
Several recent proteomic studies of plant peroxisomes indicate that the peroxisomal matrix harbors multiple ATP-dependent enzymes and chaperones. However, it is unknown whether plant peroxisomes are able to produce ATP by substrate-level phosphorylation or whether external ATP fuels the energy-dependent reactions within peroxisomes. The existence of transport proteins that supply plant peroxisomes with energy for fatty acid oxidation and other ATP-dependent processes has not previously been demonstrated. Here, we describe two Arabidopsis thaliana genes that encode peroxisomal adenine nucleotide carriers, PNC1 and PNC2. Both proteins, when fused to enhanced yellow fluorescent protein, are targeted to peroxisomes. Complementation of a yeast mutant deficient in peroxisomal ATP import and in vitro transport assays using recombinant transporter proteins revealed that PNC1 and PNC2 catalyze the counterexchange of ATP with ADP or AMP. Transgenic Arabidopsis lines repressing both PNC genes were generated using ethanol-inducible RNA interference. A detailed analysis of these plants showed that an impaired peroxisomal ATP import inhibits fatty acid breakdown during early seedling growth and other β-oxidation reactions, such as auxin biosynthesis. We show conclusively that PNC1 and PNC2 are essential for supplying peroxisomes with ATP, indicating that no other ATP generating systems exist inside plant peroxisomes.The β-oxidation of fatty acids, a process that exclusively occurs within peroxisomes in plants and yeast, plays an important role in storage oil mobilization to support seedling establishment of oilseed plants, such as Arabidopsis thaliana (Graham and Eastmond, 2002; Baker et al., 2006; Graham, 2008). Upon germination, fatty acids are released from storage oil triacylglycerol (TAG) by lipolysis, degraded via β-oxidation in specialized peroxisomes, termed glyoxysomes, and subsequently converted to sucrose, which drives growth and development until seedlings become photoautotrophic (Graham and Eastmond, 2002; Baker et al., 2006; Graham, 2008). Before the fatty acids can enter β-oxidation, they are imported into peroxisomes by a peroxisomal ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporter, variously known as CTS (COMATOSE), At PXA1 (Arabidopsis peroxisomal ABC transporter), or PED3 (peroxisomal defective 3) and hereafter referred to as CTS (Zolman et al., 2001; Footitt et al., 2002; Hayashi et al., 2002). Subsequently, the imported fatty acids are activated by esterification to CoA. This ATP-dependent reaction within peroxisomes is catalyzed by long-chain acyl-CoA synthetases 6 and 7 (LACS6 and LACS7, respectively), which are named according to their substrate specificity for long-chain fatty acids, which are significant components of seed storage oil in Arabidopsis (Fulda et al., 2002, 2004).In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, two mechanisms exist for import and activation of fatty acids, depending on chain length (Hettema et al., 1996). Long-chain fatty acids (C16 and C18) are converted to acyl-CoA esters in the cytosol prior to transport by the heterodimeric peroxisomal ABC transporter, Pxa1p/Pxa2 (Hettema et al., 1996). By contrast, short- and medium-chain fatty acids (≤C14) that enter the peroxisomes by passive diffusion or by an unknown transport protein are activated within peroxisomes (Hettema et al., 1996). The possibility cannot be excluded, though, that CTS imports the corresponding CoA derivatives, as is the case for the yeast Pxa1p/Pxa2p heterodimer (Hettema et al., 1996; Verleur et al., 1997), implicating a cytosolic activation of the fatty acids, catalyzed by a hitherto unknown enzyme. The actual substrates transported by CTS in Arabidopsis have not yet been experimentally determined (Theodoulou et al., 2006). However, the sucrose-dependent seedling growth phenotype of the lacs6 lacs7 double knockout mutant demonstrated that peroxisomal activation is essential for lipid mobilization to provide energy for early seedling growth (Fulda et al., 2004). The lacs6 lacs7 mutant is impaired in the degradation of fatty acids, leading to growth arrest shortly after germination (Fulda et al., 2004).Besides fatty acid mobilization, β-oxidation is also involved in generation of signaling molecules, such as the phytohormones auxin and fatty acid–derived jasmonic acid (JA) (Zolman et al., 2000; Schaller et al., 2004; Delker et al., 2007). By analogy to fatty acids released from storage oil, the precursors of these signaling molecules require CoA esterification before they can enter β-oxidation (Baker et al., 2006; Goepfert and Poirier, 2007). While the enzymes responsible for ATP-dependent activation of natural auxin (indole butyric acid [IBA]) and proherbicide 2,4-dichlorophenoxybutyric acid (2,4-DB) are currently unknown, several enzymes belonging to the acyl-activating enzyme (AAE) family have been implicated in jasmonate biosynthesis (Schneider et al., 2005; Koo et al., 2006; Kienow et al., 2008). Moreover, several as yet uncharacterized members of the large AAE family carry a putative peroxisome targeting signal (PTS) and thus might be good candidates to activate the additional β-oxidation substrates within peroxisomes (Shockey et al., 2002, 2003).In the case where activation of fatty acids or other substrates takes place within peroxisomes, the question arises as to how these ATP-dependent reactions are supplied with ATP. It is currently unknown whether plant peroxisomes are able to produce ATP by substrate-level phosphorylation or whether they depend on external ATP to supply energy-dependent reactions within peroxisomes. So far, transport proteins that supply plant peroxisomes with energy for fatty acid oxidation have not been characterized. However, in bakers'' yeast, a peroxisomal adenine nucleotide transporter, ANT1, that is required for the ATP-dependent activation of medium-chain fatty acids inside peroxisomes has been characterized (Palmieri et al., 2001).ATP transport proteins play an important role in the distribution of the primary agent coupling endergonic and exergonic reactions in every cellular compartment (Winkler and Neuhaus, 1999). In Arabidopsis and other plants, various adenine nucleotide carriers have been identified at the molecular level. The mitochondrial ADP/ATP carrier mediates the export of ATP that is synthesized in the mitochondrion to provide energy for cellular metabolism (Heimpel et al., 2001; Haferkamp et al., 2002). The plastidial ATP/ADP transporter (nucleotide transporter) is involved in ATP uptake by both chloroplasts and heterotrophic plastids, to enable the nocturnal ATP supply required for chlorophyll biosynthesis (Reiser et al., 2004; Reinhold et al., 2007), as well as by heterotrophic plastids to drive starch biosynthesis (Batz et al., 1992; Tjaden et al., 1998). Yet another ATP/ADP antiporter located in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane provides energy by importing ATP into the ER for the accumulation of ER-related storage lipids and proteins (Leroch et al., 2008).In this study, we identified two novel peroxisomal adenine nucleotide carrier proteins (PNC1 and PNC2) from Arabidopsis. Colocalization studies demonstrated that these proteins are targeted to peroxisomes. Yeast complementation and in vitro ATP uptake assays showed that both PNC1 and PNC2 catalyze the counterexchange of ATP with AMP. Using an inducible RNA interference (RNAi) repression strategy, we further established several transgenic Arabidopsis lines with reduced expression levels of both PNC1 and PNC2. Our results showed that import of ATP into peroxisomes that is catalyzed by PNC1 and PNC2 is essential for activation of fatty acids during seedling germination and plays a role in other β-oxidation reactions in peroxisomes, such as auxin metabolism. Analysis of PNC1 and PNC2 repression lines further indicates that no other ATP generating systems exist inside plant peroxisomes and that ATP import is the only way to supply the peroxisomal matrix with ATP.  相似文献   

16.
Narang RA  Bruene A  Altmann T 《Plant physiology》2000,124(4):1786-1799
The morphological and physiological characteristics of Arabidopsis accessions differing in their phosphate acquisition efficiencies (PAEs) when grown on a sparingly soluble phosphate source (hydroxylapatite) were analyzed. A set of 36 accessions was subjected to an initial PAE evaluation following cultivation on synthetic, agarose-solidified media containing potassium phosphate (soluble) or hydroxylapatite (sparingly soluble). From the five most divergent accessions identified in this way, C24, Co, and Cal exhibited high PAEs, whereas Col-0 and Te exhibited low PAEs. These five accessions were analyzed in detail. Significant differences were found in root morphology, phosphate uptake kinetics, organic acid release, rhizosphere acidification, and the ability of roots to penetrate substrates. Long root hairs at high densities, high uptake per unit root length, and high substrate penetration ability in the efficient accessions C24 and Co mediate their high PAEs. The third accession with high PAE, Cal, exhibits a high shoot-to-root ratio, long roots with long root hairs, and rhizosphere acidification. These results are consistent with previous observations and highlight the suitability of using Arabidopsis accessions to identify and isolate genes determining the PAE in plants.  相似文献   

17.
Recently, we isolated the sulfite oxidase (SO) gene from Arabidopsis thaliana and characterized the purified SO protein. The purpose of the present study was to determine the subcellular localization of this novel plant enzyme. Immunogold electron-microscopic analysis showed the gold labels nearly exclusively in the peroxisomes. To verify this finding, green fluorescent protein was fused to full-length plant SO including the putative peroxisomal targeting signal 1 (PTS1) 'SNL' and expressed in tobacco leaves. Our results showed a punctate fluorescence pattern resembling that of peroxisomes. Co-labelling with MitoTracker-Red excluded that the observed fluorescence was due to mitochondrial sorting. By investigation of deleted or mutated PTS1, no functional peroxisomal targeting signal 2 (PTS2) could be detected in plant SO. This conclusion is supported by expression studies in Pichia pastoris mutants with defined defects either in PTS1- or PTS2-mediated peroxisomal import.  相似文献   

18.
? The exploitation of natural variation in Arabidopsis thaliana (Arabidopsis) provides a huge potential for the identification of the molecular mechanisms underlying this variation as a result of the availability of a vast array of genetic and genomic resources for this species. Eighty-six Arabidopsis accessions were screened for natural variation in flooding tolerance. This forms the first step towards the identification and characterization of the role of candidate genes contributing to flooding tolerance. ? Arabidopsis accessions at the 10-leaf stage were subjected to complete submergence in the dark. Survival curves were plotted to estimate median lethal times as a measure of tolerance. Flooding-associated survival parameters, such as root and shoot oxygen content, initial carbohydrate content and petiole elongation under water, were also measured. ? There was a significant variation in submergence tolerance among Arabidopsis accessions. However, the order of tolerance did not correlate with root and shoot oxygen content or initial amounts of shoot starch and total soluble sugars. A negative correlation was observed between submergence tolerance and underwater petiole elongation. ? Arabidopsis accessions show considerable variation in the ability to tolerate complete submergence, making it a good species in which to identify and characterize genes and to study mechanisms that contribute to survival under water.  相似文献   

19.
Rhizomelic chondrodysplasia punctata (RCDP) is a group of disorders with overlapping clinical features including rhizomelia, chondrodysplasia punctata, coronal clefts, cervical dysplasia, congenital cataracts, profound postnatal growth retardation, severe intellectual disability, and seizures. Mutations in PEX7, GNPAT, and AGPS, all involved in the plasmalogen-biosynthesis pathway, have been described in individuals with RCDP. Here, we report the identification of mutations in another gene in plasmalogen biosynthesis, fatty acyl-CoA reductase 1 (FAR1), in two families affected by severe intellectual disability, early-onset epilepsy, microcephaly, congenital cataracts, growth retardation, and spasticity. Exome analyses revealed a homozygous in-frame indel mutation (c.495_507delinsT [p.Glu165_Pro169delinsAsp]) in two siblings from a consanguineous family and compound-heterozygous mutations (c.[787C>T];[1094A>G], p.[Arg263];[Asp365Gly]) in a third unrelated individual. FAR1 reduces fatty acids to their respective fatty alcohols for the plasmalogen-biosynthesis pathway. To assess the pathogenicity of the identified mutations, we transfected human embryonic kidney 293 cells with plasmids encoding FAR1 with either wild-type or mutated constructs and extracted the lipids from the cells. We screened the lipids with gas chromatography and mass spectrometry and found that all three mutations abolished the reductase activity of FAR1, given that no fatty alcohols could be detected. We also observed reduced plasmalogens in red blood cells in one individual to a range similar to that seen in individuals with RCDP, further supporting abolished FAR1 activity. We thus expand the spectrum of clinical features associated with defects in plasmalogen biosynthesis to include FAR1 deficiency as a cause of syndromic severe intellectual disability with cataracts, epilepsy, and growth retardation but without rhizomelia.  相似文献   

20.
The analytical power of Arabidopsis thaliana genomics has turned its local varieties (accessions) from divergent habitats into important genetic resources. Variant alleles harbored in those accessions are used to identify loci controlling important plant traits with enormous benefits for analytical as well as applied purposes. We argue here that the information derived from Arabidopsis accessions can be further expanded, if a systematic effort for recording the growth conditions of new Arabidopsis accessions is rapidly implemented. The modest and feasible changes in genetic sampling practice that we propose will dramatically increase the quality and quantity of data obtained from Arabidopsis accessions. The broader data set will no longer focus solely on the genetic mechanism within the plant, but will also address the plant''s interaction with its environment. We suggest (a) a modified sampling strategy involving sample size and the recording of additional growth conditions (Appendix) and (b) the establishment of a centralized and expandable database to cover all available information regarding the habitats of Arabidopsis accessions.Key words: adaptation, Arabidopsis, ecology, evolution, genetic resources, sampling strategyThe influence of the immediate abiotic and biotic environment on the evolution of developmental, physiological, reproductive, defense-related and a variety of ecological characteristics of plants is well documented,13 but is rarely connected to the level of individual gene activities. This is partly because for most plants, the genetic dissection of adaptation processes at the individual, population and evolutionary levels is inherently difficult. The current and foreseeable wealth of molecular insights in the Arabidopsis model system could fill this void. With its very wide natural geographic distribution over large parts of Asia and Europe4 and it''s more recent (human-induced) colonization of habitats in America, Arabidopsis thaliana provides immediate opportunities for studying adaptation processes in great molecular and genetic detail. Therefore, it is not surprising that Arabidopsis has also been used as a model system for population genetics and ecological adaptation in recent years.58 In a parallel dramatic development, increasing numbers of Arabidopsis accessions are currently being characterized in unprecedented molecular detail to be used as parental lines in QTL mapping studies. These two lines of research could most productively benefit from each other, if habitat information for each accession would become available.An example of a relevant question is: how are environmental variables correlated to phenotypic or gene expression profiles of Arabidopsis accessions? An expandable list of such variables to be recorded at the sampling site would include elevation, aspect (facing north, south, east or west), soil type and soil conditions, rainfall, temperature regime, wind direction and velocity, exposure to sun irradiation, level of shade, UV level, photoperiod, snow cover, local plant communities, herbivore diversity, frequency and pressure, fire history, evidence of various disturbances and apparent diseases. We know, for instance, that various characters, such as vascular structure, fiber length and density, cuticle thickness, stomata density and pigment composition, can be subject to selection even within small, locally restricted populations.912 At a time when phenotypic and molecular profiles of Arabidopsis accession are being scrutinized with ever increasing precision, it would be an inexcusable loss, if the corresponding habitat data for those accessions were simply not recorded or retrievable. It seems evident that with a small, but well-coordinated additional effort, it could be possible to address a much wider array of questions and to direct the power of Arabidopsis genomics and genetics to the study of plant adaptations and evolution. Specifically, we propose that a standard list of environmental data should be provided with each accession of seeds, together with multiple deposited plants as well as electronic images of the exact site and general environment and a precise geographical position (GPS) of the sampling site (see appendix). Precise site documentation may enable re-sampling of populations to study their genetic changes over time.Detailed recording of accession habitats and the collection of multiple plants at each location would reciprocally benefit QTL mapping efforts. First, it would firmly establish that the parental lines of a mapping cross are true natural genotypes. This is important, because any exploitation of natural alleles in breeding and biotechnology should rely in the assumption that these alleles have passed the test of natural selection and are not spontaneous mutants or propagation contaminants. Secondly, emerging correlations between habitat conditions and phenotype can guide accession choices for the establishment of new mapping populations. Phenotyping of accessions for specific cell biological or biochemical traits can be labor intensive. To keep numbers manageable, habitat properties with predictive power would be highly desirable.In summary, we do not consider our suggestions of approximately 30 parameters (see the appendix) to be more than the beginning of a discussion. However, it seems to us that the need for organized habitat characterization and sampling is so urgent that this discussion should begin immediately.  相似文献   

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