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191.
Luciferase-dependent assays, important for biochemical analyses of cytotoxicity and reporter genes, may be perturbed by compounds interfering with the luciferase reaction. We analyzed the impact of different aluminum (Al) species on a luciferase-based assay for determination of cellular adenosine triphosphate. Al0 nanoparticles (Al0–NPs) but not Al2O3–NPs decreased luminescence, correlated to high absorbance of Al0–NPs. By contrast, Al ions increased the luminescent signal. Data demonstrate that luciferase-dependent assays can be reciprocally disturbed by Al–NPs or Al ions in a specific manner, depending on the particular Al species. Careful interpretation of data from such experiments is essential in order to obtain conclusive results.  相似文献   
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Linear, branch-chained triterpenes, including squalene (C30), botryococcene (C30), and their methylated derivatives (C31–C37), generated by the green alga Botryococcus braunii race B have received significant attention because of their utility as chemical and biofuel feedstocks. However, the slow growth habit of B. braunii makes it impractical as a production system. In this study, we evaluated the potential of generating high levels of botryococcene in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) plants by diverting carbon flux from the cytosolic mevalonate pathway or the plastidic methylerythritol phosphate pathway by the targeted overexpression of an avian farnesyl diphosphate synthase along with two versions of botryococcene synthases. Up to 544 µg g−1 fresh weight of botryococcene was achieved when this metabolism was directed to the chloroplasts, which is approximately 90 times greater than that accumulating in plants engineered for cytosolic production. To test if methylated triterpenes could be produced in tobacco, we also engineered triterpene methyltransferases (TMTs) from B. braunii into wild-type plants and transgenic lines selected for high-level triterpene accumulation. Up to 91% of the total triterpene contents could be converted to methylated forms (C31 and C32) by cotargeting the TMTs and triterpene biosynthesis to the chloroplasts, whereas only 4% to 14% of total triterpenes were methylated when this metabolism was directed to the cytoplasm. When the TMTs were overexpressed in the cytoplasm of wild-type plants, up to 72% of the total squalene was methylated, and total triterpene (C30+C31+C32) content was elevated 7-fold. Altogether, these results point to innate mechanisms controlling metabolite fluxes, including a homeostatic role for squalene.Terpenes and terpenoids represent a distinct class of natural products (Buckingham, 2003) that are derived from two universal five-carbon precursors: isopentenyl diphosphate (IPP) and dimethylallyl diphosphate (DMAPP). In eukaryotic fungi and animals, IPP and DMAPP are synthesized via the mevalonate (MVA) pathway, whereas in prokaryotes, they are synthesized via the methylerythritol phosphate (MEP) pathway. In higher plants, the pathways are present in separate compartments and are believed to operate independently. The MVA pathway in the cytoplasm is predominantly responsible for sesquiterpene (C15), triterpene (C30), and polyprenol (greater than C45) biosynthesis and associated with the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) system. The MEP pathway resides in plastids and is dedicated to monoterpenes (C10), diterpenes (C20), carotenoids (C40), and long-chain phytol biosynthesis. All these compounds are usually produced by plants for a variety of physiological (i.e. hormones, aliphatic membrane anchors, and maintaining membrane structure) and ecological (i.e. defense compounds and insect/animal attractants) roles (Kempinski et al., 2015). Terpenes are also important for various industrial applications, ranging from flavors and fragrances (Schwab et al., 2008) to medicines (Dewick, 2009; Niehaus et al., 2011; Shelar, 2011).The utility of terpenes as chemical and biofuel feedstocks has also received considerable attention recently. Isoprenoid-derived biofuels include farnesane (Renninger and McPhee, 2008; Rude and Schirmer, 2009), bisabolene (Peralta-Yahya et al., 2011), pinene dimers (Harvey et al., 2010), isopentenal (Withers et al., 2007), and botryococcene (Moldowan and Seifert, 1980; Hillen et al., 1982; Glikson et al., 1989; Mastalerz and Hower, 1996). The richness of branches within these hydrocarbon scaffolds correlate with their high-energy content, which enables them to serve as suitable alternatives to crude petroleum (Peralta-Yahya and Keasling, 2010). Indeed, some of them are already major contributors to current-day petroleum-based fuels. One of the best examples of this is the triterpene oil accumulating in the green alga Botryococcus braunii race B, which is considered a major progenitor to oil and coal shale deposits (Moldowan and Seifert, 1980). This alga has been well studied, and the major constituents of its prodigious hydrocarbon oil are a group of triterpenes including squalene (C30), organism-specific botryococcene (C30), methylated squalene (C31–C34), and methylated botryococcene (C31–C37; Metzger et al., 1988; Huang and Poulter, 1989; Okada et al., 1995), which can be readily converted into all classes of combustible fuels under hydrocracking conditions (Hillen et al., 1982).The unique biosynthetic mechanism for the triterpenes in B. braunii was recently described by Niehaus et al. (2011), and a series of novel squalene synthase-like genes were identified (Fig. 1). In short, squalene synthase-like enzyme, SSL-1, performs a head-to-head condensation of two farnesyl diphosphate (FPP) molecules into presqualene diphosphate, followed by a reductive rearrangement to yield squalene (C30) by the enzyme SSL-2, or is converted by SSL-3 to form botryococcene through a different reductive rearrangement (Niehaus et al., 2011). Methylated derivatives are the dominant triterpene species generated by B. braunii race B (Metzger, 1985; Metzger et al., 1988), and these derivatives are known to yield higher quality fuels due to their high energy content and the hydrocracking products derived by virtue of having more hydrocarbon branches. Triterpene methyltransferases (TMTs) that can methylate squalene and botryococcene have been successfully characterized by Niehaus et al. (2012). TRITERPENE METHYLTRANSFERASE1 (TMT-1) and TMT-2 prefer squalene C30 as their substrate for the production of monomethylated (C31) or dimethylated (C32) squalene, while TMT-3 prefers botryococcene as its substrate for the biosynthesis of monomethylated (C31) or dimethylated (C32) botryococcene (Fig. 1). These TMTs are believed to be insoluble enzymes; they exhibit large hydrophobic areas, and their activities were only observed in vitro using yeast microsomal preparations (no activity was observed when expressed in bacteria; Niehaus et al., 2012).Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Depiction of the catalytic roles of novel SSL and TMT enzymes in B. braunii race B and their putative contributions to the triterpene constituents (Niehaus et al., 2011; Niehaus et al., 2012). SSL-1 catalyzes the condensation of two farnesyl diphosphate (FPP) molecules to presqualene diphosphate (PSPP), which is converted to either squalene or botryococcene by SSL-2 or SSL-3, respectively. Squalene can also be synthesized directly from the condensation of two FPP molecules catalyzed by squalene synthase (SQS). TMT-1 and TMT-2 transfer the methyl donor group from S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) to squalene to form monomethylated and dimethylated squalene, whereas TMT-3 acts on botryococcene to form monomethylated and dimethylated botryococcene (Niehaus et al., 2012).Like the majority of identified methyltransferases, these TMTs utilize the methyl donor S-adenosyl methionine (SAM), which is ubiquitous in prokaryotes and eukaryotes (Scheer et al., 2011; Liscombe et al., 2012). In plants, SAM is one of the most abundant cofactors (Fontecave et al., 2004; Sauter et al., 2013) and is synthesized exclusively in the cytosol (Wallsgrove et al., 1983; Ravanel et al., 1998, 2004; Bouvier et al., 2006). While it is used predominantly as a methyl donor in the methylation reaction (Ravanel et al., 2004), it also serves as the primary precursor for the biosynthesis of ethylene (Wang et al., 2002b), polyamines (Kusano et al., 2008), and nicotianamine (Takahashi et al., 2003), which play a variety of important roles for plant growth and development (Huang et al., 2012; Sauter et al., 2013). The SAM present in organelles, like the chloroplast, appears to be imported from the cytosol by specific SAM/S-adenosylhomocysteine exchange transporters that reside on the envelope membranes of plastids (Ravanel et al., 2004; Bouvier et al., 2006). The imported SAM is involved in the biogenesis of Asp-derived amino acids (Curien et al., 1998; Jander and Joshi, 2009; Sauter et al., 2013) and serves as the methyl donor for the methylation of macromolecules, such as plastid DNA (Nishiyama et al., 2002; Ahlert et al., 2009) and proteins (Houtz et al., 1989; Niemi et al., 1990; Ying et al., 1999; Trievel et al., 2003; Alban et al., 2014), and small molecule metabolites, such as prenylipids (e.g. plastoquinone, tocopherol, chlorophylls, and phylloquinone; Bouvier et al., 2005, 2006; DellaPenna, 2005).Although plants and microbes are the natural sources for useful terpenes, most of them are produced in very small amounts and often as complex mixtures. In contrast, B. braunii produces large quantities of triterpenes, but its slow growth makes it undesirable as a viable production platform (Niehaus et al., 2011). Nevertheless, metabolic engineering and synthetic biology offer many strategies to manipulate terpene metabolism in various biological systems to achieve high-value terpene production with high yield and high fidelity for particular practical applications (Nielsen and Keasling, 2011). Many successes have been achieved in engineering valuable terpenes in heterotrophic microbes, such as Escherichia coli (Nishiyama et al., 2002; Martin et al., 2003; Ajikumar et al., 2010) and Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Ro et al., 2006; Takahashi et al., 2007; Westfall et al., 2012; Zhuang and Chappell, 2015). The strategies developed in these efforts usually take advantage of specific microbe strains whose innate biosynthetic machinery is genetically modified to accumulate certain prenyldiphosphate precursors (e.g. IPP or FPP), which can be utilized by other introduced terpene synthase(s) for the production of the desired terpene(s). For example, greater than 900 mg L−1 bisabolene was produced when bisabolene synthase genes from plants were introduced into FPP-overproducing E. coli or S. cerevisiae strains (Peralta-Yahya et al., 2011). High levels of farnesane production for diesel fuels were also achieved by reductive hydrogenation of its precursor farnesene, which was generated from a genetically engineered yeast (e.g. Saccharomyces cerevisiae) strain using plant farnesene synthases (Renninger and McPhee, 2008; Ubersax and Platt, 2010). However, terpene production using microbial platforms is still dependent on exogenous feedstocks (i.e. sugars) and elaborate production facilities, both of which add significantly to their production costs.Compared with microbial systems, engineering terpene production in plant systems seems like an attractive target as well. This is because plants can take advantage of photosynthesis by using atmospheric CO2 as their carbon resource instead of relying on exogenous carbon feedstocks. Moreover, crop plants such as tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) can generate a large amount of green tissues efficiently when grown for biomass production (Schillberg et al., 2003; Andrianov et al., 2010), making them a robust, sustainable, and scalable platform for large-scale terpene production. Nonetheless, compared with microbial platforms, there are only a few examples of elevating terpene production in bioengineered plants. This is due partly to higher plants being complex multicellular organisms, in which terpene metabolism generally utilizes more complex innate machinery that can be compartmentalized intracellularly and to cell/tissue specificities (Lange and Ahkami, 2013; Kempinski et al., 2015). Significant efforts have been made to overcome these obstacles to improve the production of valuable terpenes in plants, including monoterpenes (Lücker et al., 2004; Ohara et al., 2010; Lange et al., 2011), sesquiterpenes (Aharoni et al., 2003; Kappers et al., 2005; Wu et al., 2006; Davidovich-Rikanati et al., 2008), diterpenes (Besumbes et al., 2004; Anterola et al., 2009), and triterpenes (Inagaki et al., 2011; Wu et al., 2012). Among these, engineering terpene metabolism into a subcellular organelle, where the engineered enzymes/pathways can utilize unlimited/unregulated precursors as substrates, appears most successful. For example, Wu et al. (2006, 2012) expressed an avian farnesyl diphosphate synthase (FPS) with foreign sesquiterpene/triterpene synthases targeted to the plastid to divert the IPP/DMAPP pool from the plastidic MEP pathway to synthesize high levels of the novel sesquiterpenes patchoulol and amorpha-4,11-diene up to 30 µg g−1 fresh weight and the triterpene squalene up to 1,000 µg g−1 fresh weight. This strategy appears to be particularly robust because it avoids possible endogenous regulation of sesquiterpene and triterpene biosynthesis, which occurs normally in the cytoplasm, and relies upon more plastic precursor pools of IPP/DMAPP inherent in the plastid, which are primarily derived from the local CO2 fixation (Wright et al., 2014).The goal of this study was to evaluate the prospects for engineering advanced features of triterpene metabolism from B. braunii into tobacco and, thus, to probe the innate intricacies of isoprenoid metabolism in plants. In order to achieve this, we first introduced the key steps of botryococcene biosynthesis into specific subcellular compartments of tobacco cells under the direction of constitutive or trichome-specific promoters. The transgenic lines expressing the enzymes in the chloroplast were found to accumulate the highest levels of botryococcene. Triterpene methyltransferases were next introduced into the same intracellular compartments of selected high-triterpene-accumulating lines. A high yield of methylated triterpenes was also achieved in transgenic lines when the TMTs were targeted to the chloroplast. Through careful comparison of the levels of triterpenes and the methylated triterpene products in the various transgenic lines, we have also gained a deeper insight into the subcellular distribution of the triterpene products in these transgenic lines as well as a better understanding of methylation metabolism for specialized metabolites in particular compartments. These findings all contribute to our understanding of the regulatory elements that control carbon flux through the innate terpene biosynthetic pathways operating in plants.  相似文献   
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Virus‐like particles (VLPs) derived from nonenveloped viruses result from the self‐assembly of capsid proteins (CPs). They generally show similar structural features to viral particles but are noninfectious and their inner cavity and outer surface can potentially be adapted to serve as nanocarriers of great biotechnological interest. While a VLP outer surface is generally amenable to chemical or genetic modifications, encaging a cargo within particles can be more complex and is often limited to small molecules or peptides. Examples where both inner cavity and outer surface have been used to simultaneously encapsulate and expose entire proteins remain scarce. Here, we describe the production of spherical VLPs exposing fluorescent proteins at either their outer surface or inner cavity as a result of the self‐assembly of a single genetically modified viral structural protein, the CP of grapevine fanleaf virus (GFLV). We found that the N‐ and C‐terminal ends of the GFLV CP allow the genetic fusion of proteins as large as 27 kDa and the plant‐based production of nucleic acid‐free VLPs. Remarkably, expression of N‐ or C‐terminal CP fusions resulted in the production of VLPs with recombinant proteins exposed to either the inner cavity or the outer surface, respectively, while coexpression of both fusion proteins led to the formation hybrid VLP, although rather inefficiently. Such properties are rather unique for a single viral structural protein and open new potential avenues for the design of safe and versatile nanocarriers, particularly for the targeted delivery of bioactive molecules.  相似文献   
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Background

Orangutans have one of the slowest-paced life histories of all mammals. Whereas life-history theory suggests that the time to reach adulthood is constrained by the time needed to reach adult body size, the needing-to-learn hypothesis instead suggests that it is limited by the time needed to acquire adult-level skills.To test between these two hypotheses, we compared the development of foraging skills and growth trajectories of immature wild orangutans in two populations: at Tuanan (Pongo pygmaeus wurmbii), Borneo, and Suaq Balimbing (Pongo abelii), Sumatra. We collected behavioral data on diet repertoire, feeding rates and ranging competence during focal follows, and estimated growth through non-invasive laser photogrammetry.

Results

We found that adult-like diet repertoires are attained around the age of weaning and that female immatures increase their repertoire size faster than their male peers. Adult-level feeding rates of easy techniques are reached just after weaning, but several years later for more difficult techniques, albeit always before adulthood (i.e. age at first reproduction). Independent immatures had faster feeding rates for easy to process items than their mothers, with male immatures achieving faster feeding rates earlier in development relative to females. Sumatran immatures reach adult-level feeding rates 2–3 years later than their Bornean peers, in line with their higher dietary complexity and later weaning. The range-use competence of independently ranging and weaned immatures is similar to that of adult females. Body size measurements showed, immatures grow until female age of first reproduction.

Conclusions

In conclusion, unlike in humans, orangutan foraging skills are in place prior to reproduction. Growth trajectories suggest that energetic constraints, rather than skills, best explain the length of immaturity. However, skill competence for dietary independence is reached later where the adult niche is more complex, which is consistent with the relatively later weaning age with increasing brain size found generally in primates, and apes in particular.
  相似文献   
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Dendrite branching is an essential process for building complex nervous systems. It determines the number, distribution and integration of inputs into a neuron, and is regulated to create the diverse dendrite arbor branching patterns characteristic of different neuron types. The microtubule cytoskeleton is critical to provide structure and exert force during dendrite branching. It also supports the functional requirements of dendrites, reflected by differential microtubule architectural organization between neuron types, illustrated here for sensory neurons. Both anterograde and retrograde microtubule polymerization occur within growing dendrites, and recent studies indicate that branching is enhanced by anterograde microtubule polymerization events in nascent branches. The polarities of microtubule polymerization events are regulated by the position and orientation of microtubule nucleation events in the dendrite arbor. Golgi outposts are a primary microtubule nucleation center in dendrites and share common nucleation machinery with the centrosome. In addition, pre-existing dendrite microtubules may act as nucleation sites. We discuss how balancing the activities of distinct nucleation machineries within the growing dendrite can alter microtubule polymerization polarity and dendrite branching, and how regulating this balance can generate neuron type-specific morphologies.  相似文献   
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Activating mutations of the NRAS (neuroblastoma rat sarcoma viral oncogene) protein kinase, present in many cancers, induce a constitutive activation of both the RAS-RAF-MEK-ERK mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signal transduction pathway and the PI(3)K-AKT-mTOR, pathway. This in turn regulates the formation of the eIF4F eukaryotic translation initiation complex, comprising the eIF4E cap-binding protein, the eIF4G scaffolding protein and the eIF4A RNA helicase, which binds to the 7-methylguanylate cap (m(7)G) at the 5′ end of messenger RNAs. Small molecules targeting MEK (MEKi: MEK inhibitors) have demonstrated activity in NRAS-mutant cell lines and tumors, but resistance sets in most cases within months of treatment. Using proximity ligation assays, that allows visualization of the binding of eIF4E to the scaffold protein eIF4G, generating the active eIF4F complex, we have found that resistance to MEKi is associated with the persistent formation of the eIF4F complex in MEKi-treated NRAS-mutant cell lines. Furthermore, inhibiting the eIF4A component of the eIF4F complex, with a small molecule of the flavagline/rocaglate family, synergizes with inhibiting MEK to kill NRAS-mutant cancer cell lines.  相似文献   
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