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971.
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Genomic constitution and taxonomy of the Chinese hexaploids Elymus cylindricus and E. breviaristatus (Poaceae: Triticeae) 下载免费PDF全文
Cai‐Rong Yang Bernard‐R. Baum Wei‐Huan Chen Hai‐Qin Zhang Xiao‐Yan Liu Xing Fan Li‐Na Sha Hou‐Yang Kang Yi Wang Yong‐Hong Zhou 《Botanical journal of the Linnean Society. Linnean Society of London》2016,182(3):650-657
Elymus cylindricus (2n = 6x = 42) and E. breviaristatus (2n = 6x = 42) are distributed in grasslands and deserts of northern and north‐western China. Their genomic constitution and taxonomic status are unclear. Elymus cylindricus was crossed with E. wawawaiensis J.R.Carlson & Barkworth ( StH ), Roegneria grandis Keng ( StY ) and Campeiostachys dahurica (Turcz. ex Griseb.) B.R.Baum, J.L. Y ang & C. Y en var. dahurica ( StYH ). Meiotic pairing in the hybrids E. cylindricus × E. wawawaiensis ( StH ), E. cylindricus × R. grandis ( StY ) and E. cylindricus × C. dahurica var. dahurica ( StYH ) showed on average 10.00, 11.30 and 20.92 bivalents per cell, respectively. Elymus breviaristatus was crossed with C. dahurica var. dahurica ( StYH ) and E. cylindricus. Chromosome pairing in the hybrids of E. breviaristatus × C. dahurica var. dahurica and E. breviaristatus × E. cylindricus showed on average 19.60 and 19.27 bivalents, respectively. Genomic in situ hybridization (GI SH ) revealed the presence of St , Y and H genomes in E. cylindricus and E. breviaristatus. An intergenomic rearrangement was observed in E. cylindricus using GI SH . Meiotic pairing data and GI SH indicated that both E. cylindricus and E. breviaristatus are allohexaploids containing the StYH genomes. Elymus cylindricus and E. breviaristatus should be treated as Campeiostachys dahurica var. cylindrica and Campeiostachys breviaristata, respectively. 相似文献
973.
Molecular phylogeography of four endemic Sagittaria species (Alismataceae) in the Sino‐Japanese Floristic Region of East Asia 下载免费PDF全文
Yi‐Ying Liao Andrew Wanyoike Gichira Qing‐Feng Wang Jin‐Ming Chen 《Botanical journal of the Linnean Society. Linnean Society of London》2016,180(1):6-20
To reveal the role of climate oscillations of the Quaternary in forming the contemporary plant diversity in the temperate Sino‐Japanese Floristic Region of mainland China, we assess the phylogeographical patterns of four Sagittaria species in the region using sequence data from plastid DNA non‐coding regions (psbA‐trnH, the rpl16 intron and trnC‐ycf6) and the internal transcribed spacers of nuclear ribosomal DNA (nrITS). Based on both datasets, the divergence time among the four studied species was estimated to fall in the Late Tertiary (plastid DNA: 7.1–13.7 Mya; ITS: 11.1–16.1 Mya). The ancestral distribution analyses revealed that regions with a great diversity in topography, climate and ecological conditions, e.g. the Hengduan Mountains, Central China and East China, were the areas where the endemics originated. Mismatch distribution analyses revealed that each species had experienced a range expansion in response to Quaternary climatic oscillations. Our findings contradict the hypothesis of Quaternary origins of the endemic Sagittaria spp.; we support the view that modern species in the Northern Hemisphere originated mostly during the Tertiary. Range expansion may have profoundly modified the current distribution ranges of Sagittaria species in the Sino‐Japanese Floristic Region. © 2015 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2016, 180 , 6–20. 相似文献
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ORM Expression Alters Sphingolipid Homeostasis and Differentially Affects Ceramide Synthase Activity
Athen N. Kimberlin Gongshe Han Kyle D. Luttgeharm Ming Chen Rebecca E. Cahoon Julie M. Stone Jonathan E. Markham Teresa M. Dunn Edgar B. Cahoon 《Plant physiology》2016,172(2):889-900
Sphingolipid synthesis is tightly regulated in eukaryotes. This regulation in plants ensures sufficient sphingolipids to support growth while limiting the accumulation of sphingolipid metabolites that induce programmed cell death. Serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT) catalyzes the first step in sphingolipid biosynthesis and is considered the primary sphingolipid homeostatic regulatory point. In this report, Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) putative SPT regulatory proteins, orosomucoid-like proteins AtORM1 and AtORM2, were found to interact physically with Arabidopsis SPT and to suppress SPT activity when coexpressed with Arabidopsis SPT subunits long-chain base1 (LCB1) and LCB2 and the small subunit of SPT in a yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) SPT-deficient mutant. Consistent with a role in SPT suppression, AtORM1 and AtORM2 overexpression lines displayed increased resistance to the programmed cell death-inducing mycotoxin fumonisin B1, with an accompanying reduced accumulation of LCBs and C16 fatty acid-containing ceramides relative to wild-type plants. Conversely, RNA interference (RNAi) suppression lines of AtORM1 and AtORM2 displayed increased sensitivity to fumonisin B1 and an accompanying strong increase in LCBs and C16 fatty acid-containing ceramides relative to wild-type plants. Overexpression lines also were found to have reduced activity of the class I ceramide synthase that uses C16 fatty acid acyl-coenzyme A and dihydroxy LCB substrates but increased activity of class II ceramide synthases that use very-long-chain fatty acyl-coenzyme A and trihydroxy LCB substrates. RNAi suppression lines, in contrast, displayed increased class I ceramide synthase activity but reduced class II ceramide synthase activity. These findings indicate that ORM mediation of SPT activity differentially regulates functionally distinct ceramide synthase activities as part of a broader sphingolipid homeostatic regulatory network.Sphingolipids play critical roles in plant growth and development as essential components of endomembranes, including the plasma membrane, where they constitute more than 40% of the total lipid (Sperling et al., 2005; Cacas et al., 2016). Sphingolipids also are highly enriched in detergent-insoluble membrane fractions of the plasma membrane that form microdomains for proteins with important cell surface activities, including cell wall biosynthesis and hormone transport (Cacas et al., 2012, 2016; Perraki et al., 2012; Bayer et al., 2014). In addition, sphingolipids, particularly those with very-long-chain fatty acids (VLCFAs), are integrally associated with Golgi-mediated protein trafficking that underlies processes related to the growth of plant cells (Bach et al., 2008, 2011; Markham et al., 2011; Melser et al., 2011). Furthermore, sphingolipids function through their bioactive long-chain base (LCB) and ceramide metabolites to initiate programmed cell death (PCD), important for mediating plant pathogen resistance through the hypersensitive response (Greenberg et al., 2000; Liang et al., 2003; Shi et al., 2007; Bi et al., 2014; Simanshu et al., 2014).Sphingolipid biosynthesis is highly regulated in all eukaryotes. In plants, the maintenance of sphingolipid homeostasis is vital to ensure sufficient sphingolipids for growth (Chen et al., 2006; Kimberlin et al., 2013) while restricting the accumulation of PCD-inducing ceramides and LCBs until required for processes such as the pathogen-triggered hypersensitive response. Serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT), which catalyzes the first step in LCB synthesis, is generally believed to be the primary control point for sphingolipid homeostasis (Hanada, 2003). SPT synthesizes LCBs, unique components of sphingolipids, by catalyzing a pyridoxal phosphate-dependent condensation of Ser and palmitoyl (16:0)-CoA in plants (Markham et al., 2013). Similar to other eukaryotes, the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) SPT is a heterodimer consisting of LCB1 and LCB2 subunits (Chen et al., 2006; Dietrich et al., 2008; Teng et al., 2008). Research to date has shown that SPT is regulated primarily by posttranslational mechanisms involving physical interactions with noncatalytic, membrane-associated proteins that confer positive and negative regulation of SPT activity (Han et al., 2009, 2010; Breslow et al., 2010). These proteins include a 56-amino acid small subunit of SPT (ssSPT) in Arabidopsis, which was recently shown to stimulate SPT activity and to be essential for generating sufficient amounts of sphingolipids for pollen and sporophytic cell viability (Kimberlin et al., 2013).Evidence from yeast and mammalian research points to a more critical role for proteins termed ORMs (for orosomucoid-like proteins) in sphingolipid homeostatic regulation (Breslow et al., 2010; Han et al., 2010). The Saccharomyces cerevisiae Orm1p and Orm2p negatively regulate SPT through reversible phosphorylation of these polypeptides in response to intracellular sphingolipid levels (Breslow et al., 2010; Han et al., 2010; Roelants et al., 2011; Gururaj et al., 2013; Muir et al., 2014). Phosphorylation/dephosphorylation of ORMs in S. cerevisiae presumably affects the higher order assembly of SPT to mediate flux through this enzyme for LCB synthesis (Breslow, 2013). In this sphingolipid homeostatic regulatory mechanism, the S. cerevisiae Orm1p and Orm2p are phosphorylated at their N termini by Ypk1, a TORC2-dependent protein kinase (Han et al., 2010; Roelants et al., 2011). The absence of this phosphorylation domain in mammalian and plant ORM homologs brings into question the nature of SPT reversible regulation by ORMs in other eukaryotic systems (Hjelmqvist et al., 2002).Sphingolipid synthesis also is mediated by the N-acylation of LCBs by ceramide synthases to form ceramides, the hydrophobic backbone of the major plant glycosphingolipids, glucosylceramide (GlcCer) and glycosyl inositolphosphoceramide (GIPC). Two functionally distinct classes of ceramide synthases occur in Arabidopsis, designated class I and class II (Chen et al., 2008). Class I ceramide synthase activity resulting from the Longevity Assurance Gene One Homolog2 (LOH2)-encoded ceramide synthase acylates, almost exclusively, LCBs containing two hydroxyl groups (dihydroxy LCBs) with 16:0-CoA to form C16 ceramides, which are used primarily for GlcCer synthesis (Markham et al., 2011; Ternes et al., 2011; Luttgeharm et al., 2016). Class II ceramide synthase activities resulting from the LOH1- and LOH3-encoded ceramide synthases are most active in the acylation of LCBs containing three hydroxyl groups (trihydroxy LCBs) with VLCFA-CoAs, including primarily C24 and C26 acyl-CoAs (Markham et al., 2011; Ternes et al., 2011; Luttgeharm et al., 2016). Class II (LOH1 and LOH3) ceramide synthase activity is essential for producing VLCFA-containing glycosphingolipids to support the growth of plant cells, whereas class I (LOH2) ceramide synthase activity is nonessential under normal growth conditions (Markham et al., 2011; Luttgeharm et al., 2015b). It was speculated recently that LOH2 ceramide synthase functions, in part, as a safety valve to acylate excess LCBs for glycosylation, resulting in a less cytotoxic form (Luttgeharm et al., 2015b; Msanne et al., 2015). Recent studies have shown that the Lag1/Lac1 components of the S. cerevisiae ceramide synthase are phosphorylated by Ypk1, and this phosphorylation stimulates ceramide synthase activity in response to heat and reduced intracellular sphingolipid levels (Muir et al., 2014). This finding points to possible coordinated regulation of ORM-mediated SPT and ceramide synthase activities to regulate sphingolipid homeostasis, which is likely more complicated in plants and mammals due to the occurrence of functionally distinct ceramide synthases in these systems (Stiban et al., 2010; Markham et al., 2011; Ternes et al., 2011; Luttgeharm et al., 2016).RNA interference (RNAi) suppression of ORM genes in rice (Oryza sativa) has been shown to affect pollen viability (Chueasiri et al., 2014), but no mechanistic characterization of ORM proteins in plants has yet to be reported. Here, we describe two Arabidopsis ORMs, AtORM1 and AtORM2, that suppress SPT activity through direct interaction with the LCB1/LCB2 heterodimer. We also show that strong up-regulation of AtORM expression impairs growth. In addition, up- or down-regulation of ORMs is shown to differentially affect the sensitivity of Arabidopsis to the PCD-inducing mycotoxin fumonisin B1 (FB1), a ceramide synthase inhibitor, and to differentially affect the activities of class I and II ceramide synthases as a possible additional mechanism for regulating sphingolipid homeostasis. 相似文献
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Daniel C. Ilut Alexander E. Lipka Namhee Jeong Dong Nyuk Bae Dong Hyun Kim Ji Hong Kim Neelam Redekar Kiwoung Yang Won Park Sung-Taeg Kang Namshin Kim Jung-Kyung Moon M. A. Saghai Maroof Michael A. Gore Soon-Chun Jeong 《TAG. Theoretical and applied genetics. Theoretische und angewandte Genetik》2016,129(3):453-468