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Temperature passively affects biological processes involved in plant growth. Therefore, it is challenging to study the dedicated temperature signalling pathways that orchestrate thermomorphogenesis, a suite of elongation growth-based adaptations that enhance leaf-cooling capacity. We screened a chemical library for compounds that restored hypocotyl elongation in the pif4-2–deficient mutant background at warm temperature conditions in Arabidopsis thaliana to identify modulators of thermomorphogenesis. The small aromatic compound ‘Heatin’, containing 1-iminomethyl-2-naphthol as a pharmacophore, was selected as an enhancer of elongation growth. We show that ARABIDOPSIS ALDEHYDE OXIDASES redundantly contribute to Heatin-mediated hypocotyl elongation. Following a chemical proteomics approach, the members of the NITRILASE1-subfamily of auxin biosynthesis enzymes were identified among the molecular targets of Heatin. Our data reveal that nitrilases are involved in promotion of hypocotyl elongation in response to high temperature and Heatin-mediated hypocotyl elongation requires the NITRILASE1-subfamily members, NIT1 and NIT2. Heatin inhibits NIT1-subfamily enzymatic activity in vitro and the application of Heatin accordingly results in the accumulation of NIT1-subfamily substrate indole-3-acetonitrile in vivo. However, levels of the NIT1-subfamily product, bioactive auxin (indole-3-acetic acid), were also significantly increased. It is likely that the stimulation of hypocotyl elongation by Heatin might be independent of its observed interaction with NITRILASE1-subfamily members. However, nitrilases may contribute to the Heatin response by stimulating indole-3-acetic acid biosynthesis in an indirect way. Heatin and its functional analogues present novel chemical entities for studying auxin biology.  相似文献   
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Water use by plants in landscapes with shallow saline groundwater may lead to the accumulation of salt in the root zone. We examined the accumulation of Na+ and Cl? around the roots of the halophyte Atriplex nummularia Lindl. and the impacts of this increasing salinity for stomatal conductance, water use and growth. Plants were grown in columns filled with a sand–clay mixture and connected at the bottom to reservoirs containing 20, 200 or 400 mM NaCl. At 21 d, Na+ and Cl? concentrations in the soil solution were affected by the salinity of the groundwater, height above the water table and the root fresh mass density at various soil depths (P  < 0.001). However, by day 35, the groundwater salinity and height above the water table remained significant factors, but the root fresh mass density was no longer significant. Regression of data from the 200 and 400 mM NaCl treatments showed that the rate of Na+ accumulation in the soil increased until the Na+ concentration reached ~250 mM within the root zone; subsequent decreases in accumulation were associated with decreases in stomatal conductance. Salinization of the soil solution therefore had a feedback effect on further salinization within the root zone.  相似文献   
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Hydraulic redistribution: limitations for plants in saline soils   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Hydraulic redistribution (HR), the movement of water from wet to dry patches in the soil via roots, occurs in different ecosystems and plant species. By extension of the principle that HR is driven by gradients in soil water potential, HR has been proposed to occur for plants in saline soils. Despite the inherent spatial patchiness and salinity gradients in these soils, the lack of direct evidence of HR in response to osmotic gradients prompted us to ask the question: are there physical or physiological constraints to HR for plants in saline environments? We propose that build‐up of ions in the root xylem sap and in the leaf apoplast, with the latter resulting in a large predawn disequilibrium of water potential in shoots compared with roots and soil, would both impede HR. We present a conceptual model that illustrates how processes in root systems in heterogeneous salinity with water potential gradients, even if equal to those in non‐saline soils, will experience a dampened magnitude of water potential gradients in the soil–plant continuum, minimizing or preventing HR. Finally, we provide an outlook for understanding the relevance of HR for plants in saline environments by addressing key research questions on plant salinity tolerance.  相似文献   
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Background

Based on clinical representation of disease symptoms multiple sclerosis (MScl) patients can be divided into two major subtypes; relapsing remitting (RR) MScl (85–90%) and primary progressive (PP) MScl (10–15%). Proteomics analysis of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) has detected a number of proteins that were elevated in MScl patients. Here we specifically aimed to differentiate between the PP and RR subtypes of MScl by comparing CSF proteins.

Methodology/Principal Findings

CSF samples (n = 31) were handled according to the same protocol for quantitative mass spectrometry measurements we reported previously. In the comparison of PP MScl versus RR MScl we observed a number of differentially abundant proteins, such as protein jagged-1 and vitamin D-binding protein. Protein jagged-1 was over three times less abundant in PP MScl compared to RR MScl. Vitamin D-binding protein was only detected in the RR MScl samples. These two proteins were validated by independent techniques (western blot and ELISA) as differentially abundant in the comparison between both MScl types.

Conclusions/Significance

The main finding of this comparative study is the observation that the proteome profiles of CSF in PP and RR MScl patients overlap to a large extent. Still, a number of differences could be observed. Protein jagged-1 is a ligand for multiple Notch receptors and involved in the mediation of Notch signaling. It is suggested in literature that the Notch pathway is involved in the remyelination of MScl lesions. Aberration of normal homeostasis of Vitamin D, of which approximately 90% is bound to vitamin D-binding protein, has been widely implicated in MScl for some years now. Vitamin D directly and indirectly regulates the differentiation, activation of CD4+ T-lymphocytes and can prevent the development of autoimmune processes, and so it may be involved in neuroprotective elements in MScl.  相似文献   
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Here we describe a new method to identify calcium-binding sites in proteins using high-resolution liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry in concert with calcium-directed collision-induced dissociations. Our method does not require any modifications to the liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry apparatus, uses standard digestion protocols, and can be applied to existing high-resolution MS data files. In contrast to NMR, our method is applicable to very small amounts of complex protein mixtures (femtomole level). Calcium-bound peptides can be identified using three criteria: (1) the calculated exact mass of the calcium containing peptide; (2) specific dissociations of the calcium-containing peptide from threonine and serine residues; and (3) the very similar retention times of the calcium-containing peptide and the free peptide.Calcium-dependent protein interactions mostly organized in protein networks are responsible for the regulation of cell cycle progression, cell growth, differentiation, secretion, and cytoskeletal organization (13). As many of these proteins are linked to various pathological conditions, they are clinically important. The speed at which calcium can have an interplay between various cellular components is impressive and comes notably detectable in neurological processes and in muscle contraction. Calcium binding sites in proteins can be determined by NMR spectroscopy (4, 5). For example, by such NMR measurements, the Ca2+-binding sites of the tellurite-resistance protein TerD from Klebsiella pneumoniae were found to be formed in part by a highly conserved motif of 13 residues specified by the sequence GDN(R/L)TG(E/A)GDGDDE (4).Although NMR is the gold standard to study calcium binding in proteins, this approach has several drawbacks. For instance, protein size is limited (< 30 kDa) and proteins should be pure and isotopically labeled. In addition, although the information content is high, NMR is relatively insensitive compared with other techniques such as MS and fluorescence spectroscopy, and relatively large quantities of material (typically 0.5 ml at 0.5–1.0 mm in biological samples) are needed, although efforts are devoted to improve sensitivity in NMR, such as stripline NMR (6).In bottom-up proteomics, proteolytic peptides, generated by enzymatic digestion of complex protein mixtures, are sequenced by MS-based methods (MS/MS (7, 8)) using collision-induced dissociations. Because of the even higher complexity of these peptide mixtures, liquid chromatography (LC)1 is used to separate the peptides prior to sequencing. In such an LC-MS/MS procedure, many peptides can be identified belonging to the same protein. It has been stated (9) that by this procedure more peptides are analyzed than strictly necessary for identification purposes, but it can equally well be argued that such large coverages enable more reliable protein identifications; moreover, these larger coverages allow the detection of post-translational modifications, including specific calcium complexation as described here.Considering the need of identifying calcium-bound proteins in complex biological samples at low concentrations, we set out to develop a novel method for detecting Ca2+-binding sites in proteins based on LC-MS.  相似文献   
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Summary Mechanical responses of the radular protractor and retractor, the odontophore retractor and the radular sac muscles ofBusycon canaliculatum were compared. The radular protractor responded to both ACh and high K salines with similar slow, smooth contractures showing no evidence of fast twitch activity. The radular sac, odontophore retractor, and radular retractor muscles responded to low K salines with bursts of fast twitches at a mechanical threshold below that for responses in the radular protractor. With high K salines these three muscles showed inactivation of fast twitch activity and replacement by slow maintained tonic force. With rare exceptions, the ACh responses of all four muscles consisted of slow, maintained tonic contractures with no fast twitch activity, although individual muscles differed in their ACh sensitivity. A scheme is presented to explain the mechanical modus operandi of this complex organ by the co-operative actions of these four physiologically diverse muscles. It is proposed that fast twitch responses depend upon the activity of fast transient Ca channels showing strong voltage sensitivity and ready voltage inactivation. It is proposed that maintained tonic contractures in all the muscles depends upon the activity of slow long-lasting voltage-dependent Ca channels which only open with substantial membrane depolarization. It is suggested that K-induced and ACh-induced responses may activate a similar cellular Ca pool but by different membrane transduction routes.  相似文献   
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