排序方式: 共有63条查询结果,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Moltó E Bonzón-Kulichenko E Gallardo N Andrés A 《Archives of biochemistry and biophysics》2007,467(1):31-40
Metallothioneins are cysteine-rich proteins, with a high capacity to bind metallic ions, and for which a precise biological role has not been established. Here we investigated the effects of MTPA, a metallothionein from the lobster Panulirus argus, on mitochondrial oxygen consumption and ROS production. An HPLC-RP-ESI-MS analysis of recombinant MTPA showed that despite its extra Cys, MTPA binds 6 Zn2+ per molecule akin to other crustacean metallothioneins with 18 Cys. The extra Cys is not involved in zinc binding, since its side-chain would be oriented to the outside of the molecule according to a preliminary model of the tridimensional structure of MTPA. MTPA-Zn2+6 is imported into the hepatopancreatic mitochondria intermembrane space and inhibits mitochondrial oxygen consumption, increasing thereby ROS production. Nevertheless, the stimulation of ROS production by MT-bound Zn2+ is weaker compared to equivalent amounts of free Zn2+, suggesting that MTPA protects against oxidative stress. This constitutes the first report on metallothioneins effects on mitochondrial function in invertebrates and agrees with the results described for mammals, suggesting a connection between metallothioneins and energy metabolism. 相似文献
2.
Nilda Roma Burgos Vijay Singh Te Ming Tseng Howard Black Nelson D. Young Zhongyun Huang Katie E. Hyma David R. Gealy Ana L. Caicedo 《Plant physiology》2014,166(3):1208-1220
The use of herbicide-resistant (HR) Clearfield rice (Oryza sativa) to control weedy rice has increased in the past 12 years to constitute about 60% of rice acreage in Arkansas, where most U.S. rice is grown. To assess the impact of HR cultivated rice on the herbicide resistance and population structure of weedy rice, weedy samples were collected from commercial fields with a history of Clearfield rice. Panicles from each weedy type were harvested and tested for resistance to imazethapyr. The majority of plants sampled had at least 20% resistant offspring. These resistant weeds were 97 to 199 cm tall and initiated flowering from 78 to 128 d, generally later than recorded for accessions collected prior to the widespread use of Clearfield rice (i.e. historical accessions). Whereas the majority (70%) of historical accessions had straw-colored hulls, only 30% of contemporary HR weedy rice had straw-colored hulls. Analysis of genotyping-by-sequencing data showed that HR weeds were not genetically structured according to hull color, whereas historical weedy rice was separated into straw-hull and black-hull populations. A significant portion of the local rice crop genome was introgressed into HR weedy rice, which was rare in historical weedy accessions. Admixture analyses showed that HR weeds tend to possess crop haplotypes in the portion of chromosome 2 containing the ACETOLACTATE SYNTHASE gene, which confers herbicide resistance to Clearfield rice. Thus, U.S. HR weedy rice is a distinct population relative to historical weedy rice and shows modifications in morphology and phenology that are relevant to weed management.Weedy rice (Oryza sativa), a conspecific weed of cultivated rice, is a global threat to rice production (Delouche et al., 2007). Classified as the same species as cultivated rice, it is highly competitive (Diarra et al., 1985; Pantone and Baker, 1991; Burgos et al., 2006), difficult to control without damaging cultivated rice, and can cause almost total crop failure (Diarra et al., 1985). The competition of cultivated rice with weedy rice can lead to yield losses from less than 5% to 100% (Kwon et al., 1991; Watanabe et al., 2000; Chen et al., 2004; Ottis et al., 2005; Shivrain et al., 2009b). Besides being difficult to control, weedy rice persists in rice fields because of key weedy traits, including variable emergence (Shivrain et al., 2009b), high degree of seed shattering (Eleftherohorinos, et al., 2002; Thurber et al., 2010), high diversity in seed dormancy (Do Lago, 1982; Noldin, 1995; Vidotto and Ferrero, 2000; Burgos et al., 2011; Tseng et al., 2013), and its seed longevity in soil (Goss and Brown, 1939). Weedy rice is a problem mainly in regions with large farm sizes where direct-seeded rice culture is practiced (Delouche et al., 2007). It is not a major problem in transplanted rice culture, where roguing weeds is possible and hand labor is available. The severity of the problem has increased in recent decades because of the significant shift to direct seeding from transplanting (Pandey and Velasco, 2002; Rao et al., 2007; Chauhan et al., 2013), which is driven by water scarcity (Kummu et al., 2010; Turral et al., 2011), increasing labor costs, and migration of labor to urban areas (Grimm et al., 2008).The herbicide-resistant (HR) Clearfield rice technology (Croughan, 2003) provides an option to control weedy rice in rice using imidazolinone herbicides, in particular, imazethapyr. Imidazolinones belong to group 2 herbicides, also known as ACETOLACTATE SYNTHASE (ALS) inhibitors. Examples of herbicides in this group are imazamox, imazapic, imazaquin, and imazethapyr. Developed through mutagenesis of the ALS locus (Croughan, 1998), Clearfield rice was first commercialized in 2002 in the southern U.S. rice belt (Tan et al., 2005). Low levels of natural hybridization are known to occur between the crop and weedy rice. Gene flow generally ranges from 0.003% to 0.25% (Noldin et al., 2002; Song et al., 2003; Messeguer et al., 2004; Gealy, 2005; Shivrain et al., 2007, 2008). After the adoption of Clearfield technology, resistant weedy outcrosses were soon detected in commercial fields (Fig. 1), generally after two cropping seasons of Clearfield rice, where escaped weedy rice was able to produce seed (Zhang et al., 2006; Burgos et al., 2007, 2008). Similar observations have been reported outside the United States, in other regions adopting the technology (Gressel and Valverde, 2009; Busconi et al., 2012).Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Suspected herbicide-resistant weedy rice in a rice field previously planted with Clearfield rice along the Mississippi River Delta in Arkansas. More than 10 morphotypes of weedy rice were observed in this field, with different maturity periods. In the foreground is a typical weedy rice with pale green leaves; the rice cultivar has dark green leaves. The inset shows a weedy morphotype that matured earlier than cultivated rice.Despite this complication, the adoption of Clearfield rice technology is increasing, albeit at a slower pace than that of glyphosate-resistant crops. After a decade of commercialization, 57% of the rice area in Arkansas was planted with Clearfield rice cultivars in 2013 (J. Hardke, personal communication). Clearfield technology has been very successful at controlling weedy rice, and polls among rice growers suggest that farmers have kept the problem of HR weeds in check by following the recommended stewardship practices (Burgos et al., 2008). The most notable of these are (1) implementation of herbicide programs that incorporate all possible modes of action available for rice production; (2) ensuring maximum efficacy of the herbicides used; (3) preventing seed production from escaped weedy rice, remnant weedy rice after crop harvest, or volunteer rice and weedy rice in the next crop cycle; (4) rotating Clearfield rice with other crops to break the weedy rice cycle; and (5) practicing zero tillage to avoid burying HR weedy rice seed (Burgos et al., 2008).Clearfield rice has gained a foothold in Asia, where rice cultivation originated (Londo and Schaal, 2007; Zong et al., 2007). Clearfield rice received government support for commercialization in Malaysia in 2010 (Azmi et al., 2012) because of the severity of the weedy rice problem there. Dramatic increases in rice yields (from 3.5 to 7 metric tons ha−1) were reported in Malaysia where Clearfield rice was planted (Sudianto et al., 2013). However, the risk of gene flow and evolution of resistant weedy rice populations is high in the tropics, where up to three rice crops are planted each year, and freezing temperatures, which would reduce the density of volunteer plants, do not occur.In the United States, where Clearfield technology originated and has been used for the longest time, the interaction between HR cultivated rice and weedy rice is not yet fully understood. Two main populations of weedy rice are known to occur in the southern United States and can be found in the same cultivated rice fields. These populations are genetically differentiated, are largely distinct at the phenotypic level, and have separate evolutionary origins (Reagon et al., 2010). One group tends to have straw-colored hulls and is referred to as the SH population; a second group tends to have black-colored hulls and awns and is referred to as the BHA population (Reagon et al., 2010). Genomic evidence suggests that both groups descended from cultivated ancestors but not from the tropical japonica subgroup varieties that are grown commercially in the United States. Instead, the SH group evolved from indica, a subgroup of rice commonly grown in the lowland tropics, and the BHA group descended from aus, a related cultivated subgroup typically grown in Bangladesh and the West Bengal region (Reagon et al., 2010). Weed-weed and weed-crop hybrids are also known to occur, but prior to Clearfield commercialization, these hybrids had occurred at low frequency (Reagon et al., 2010; Gealy et al., 2012). With the advent and increased adoption of Clearfield cultivars, the impact on U.S. weedy rice population structure and the prevalence of the SH and BHA groups are unknown.Efforts to predict the possible consequences of HR or genetically modified rice on weedy rice have been a subject of discussion for many years. Both weedy rice and cultivated rice are primarily self-fertilizing, but, as mentioned above, low levels of gene flow are known to occur. Additional environmental and intrinsic genetic factors can act as prezygotic and postzygotic mating barriers between cultivated and weedy rice and influence the possibility and levels of gene flow between these groups (Craig et al., 2014; Thurber et al., 2014). However, once gene flow occurs between cultivated and weedy rice, and if the resulting hybrids are favored by selection, the resulting morphological, genetic, and physiological changes in weedy rice populations can alter the way that weedy rice evolves and competes. For example, herbicide-resistant weed outcrosses in an experimental field have been observed to be morphologically diverse (Shivrain et al., 2006), with some individuals carrying major weedy traits and well adapted to rice agriculture. Such weedy plants could be more problematic than their normal weedy counterparts. Thus, introgression of crop genes into weedy populations has the potential to change the population dynamic, genetic structure, and morphological profile of weedy plants. This, in turn, must alter our crop management practices. To increase our understanding of the impact of HR rice on the evolution of weedy rice, in this article we aim to (1) assess the frequency of herbicide resistance in weedy rice in southern U.S. rice fields with a history of Clearfield use; (2) characterize the weedy attributes of resistant populations; and (3) determine the genetic origins of herbicide-resistant weeds in U.S. fields. 相似文献
3.
Caveolae are membrane microdomains enriched in cholesterol, ganglioside M1 (GM1) and caveolin-1. We explored whether caveolae facilitate the entry of Leishmania chagasi into murine macrophages. Transient depletion of macrophage membrane cholesterol by 1 h exposure to methyl-beta-cyclodextrin (MbetaCD) impaired the phagocytosis of non-opsonized and serum-opsonized virulent L. chagasi. In contrast, MbetaCD did not affect the phagocytosis of opsonized attenuated L. chagasi. As early as 5 min after phagocytosis, virulent L. chagasi colocalized with the caveolae markers GM1 and caveolin-1, and colocalization continued for over 48 h. We explored the kinetics of lysosome fusion. Whereas fluorescent-labelled dextran entered macrophage lysosomes by 30 min after addition, localization of L. chagasi in lysosomes was delayed for 24-48 h after phagocytosis. However, after transient depletion of cholesterol from macrophage membrane with MbetaCD, the proportion of L. chagasi-containing phagosomes that fused with lysosomes increased significantly. Furthermore, intracellular replication was impaired in parasites entering after transient cholesterol depletion, even though lipid microdomains were restored by 4 h after treatment. These observations suggest that virulent L. chagasi localize in caveolae during phagocytosis by host macrophages, and that cholesterol-containing macrophage membrane domains, such as caveolae, target parasites to a pathway that promotes delay of lysosome fusion and intracellular survival. 相似文献
4.
Norikiyo Ueno Carol L. Bratt Nilda E. Rodriguez Mary E. Wilson 《Cellular microbiology》2009,11(12):1827-1841
The obligate intracellular protozoan, Leishmania infantum chagasi (Lic) undergoes receptor-mediated phagocytosis by macrophages followed by a transient delay in phagolysosome maturation. We found differences in the pathway through which virulent Lic metacyclic promastigotes or avirulent logarithmic promastigotes are phagocytosed by human monocyte-derived macrophages (MDMs). Both logarithmic and metacyclic promastigotes entered MDMs through a compartment lined by the third complement receptor (CR3). In contrast, many logarithmic promastigotes entered through vacuoles lined by mannose receptors (MR) whereas most metacyclic promastigotes did not ( P < 0.005). CR3-positive vacuoles containing metacyclic promastigotes stained for caveolin-1 protein, suggesting CR3 localizes in caveolae during phagocytosis. Following entry, the kinetics of phagolysosomal maturation and intracellular survival also differed. Vacuoles containing metacyclic parasites did not accumulate lysosome-associated membrane protein-1 (LAMP-1) at early times after phagocytosis, whereas vacuoles with logarithmic promastigotes did. MDMs phagocytosed greater numbers of logarithmic than metacyclic promastigotes, yet metacyclics ultimately replicated intracellularly with greater efficiency. These data suggest that virulent metacyclic Leishmania promastigotes fail to ligate macrophage MR, and enter through a path that ultimately enhances intracellular survival. The relatively quiescent entry of virulent Leishmania spp. into macrophages may be accounted for by the ability of metacyclic promastigotes to selectively bypass deleterious entry pathways. 相似文献
5.
Luis Muñoz-Castellanos Nilda Espinola-Zavaleta Magdalena Kuri-Nivón Candace Keirns 《Cardiovascular ultrasound》2007,5(1):1-10
Background
Carotid intima-media thickness (CIMT) measured by B-mode ultrasonography is a marker of atherosclerosis and is commonly used as an outcome in intervention trials. We have developed DICOM-based software that measures CIMT rapidly on multiple end-diastolic image frames. The aims of this study were to compare the performance of our new software with older bitmap-based CIMT measurement software and to determine whether a ten-fold increase in the number of measurements used to calculate mean CIMT would improve reproducibility.Methods
Two independent sonographers recorded replicate carotid scans in thirty volunteers and two blinded observers measured CIMT off-line using the new DICOM-based software and older bitmap-based software. A Bland-Altman plot was used to compare CIMT results from the two software programs and t-tests were used to compare analysis times. F-tests were used to compare the co-efficients of variation (CVs) from a standard six-frame measurement protocol with CVs from a sixty-frame measurement protocol. Ordinary least products (OLP) regression was used to test for sonographer and observer biases.Results
The new DICOM-based software was much faster than older bitmap-based software (average measurement time for one scan 3.4 ± 0.6 minutes versus 8.4 ± 1.8 minutes, p < 0.0001) but CIMT measurements were larger than those made using the alternative software (+0.02 mm, 95%CI 0.01–0.03 mm). The sixty-frame measurement protocol had worse reproducibility than the six-frame protocol (inter-observer CV 5.1% vs 3.5%, p = 0.004) and inter and intra-observer biases were more pronounced in the sixty-frame than the six-frame results.Conclusion
While the use of DICOM-based software significantly reduced analysis time, a ten-fold increase in the number of measurements used to calculate CIMT did not improve reproducibility. In addition, we found that observer biases caused differences in mean CIMT of a magnitude commonly reported as significant in intervention trials. Our results highlight the importance of good study design with concurrent controls and the need to ensure that no observer drift occurs between baseline and follow-up measurements when CIMT is used to monitor the effect of an intervention. 相似文献6.
Muñoz NM Meliton AY Arm JP Bonventre JV Cho W Leff AR 《Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950)》2007,179(7):4800-4807
We investigated the role of group V phospholipase A2 (gVPLA2) in OVA-induced inflammatory cell migration and airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) in C57BL/6 mice. Repeated allergen challenge induced biosynthesis of gVPLA2 in airways. By aerosol, gVPLA2 caused dose-related increase in airway resistance in saline-treated mice; in allergic mice, gVPLA2 caused persistent airway narrowing. Neither group IIa phospholipase A2, a close homolog of gVPLA2, nor W31A, an inactive gVPLA2 mutant with reduced activity, caused airway narrowing in immune-sensitized mice. Pretreatment with MCL-3G1, a blocking Ab against gVPLA2, before OVA challenge blocked fully gVPLA2-induced cell migration and airway narrowing as marked by reduction of migrating leukocytes in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid and decreased airway resistance. We also assessed whether nonspecific AHR caused by methacholine challenge was elicited by gVPLA2 secreted from resident airway cells of immune-sensitized mice. MCL-3G1 also blocked methacholine-induced airway bronchoconstriction in allergic mice. Blockade of bronchoconstriction by MCL-3G1 was replicated in allergic pla2g5-/- mice, which lack the gene encoding gVPLA2. Bronchoconstriction caused by gVPLA2 in pla2g4-/- mice was comparable to that in pla2g4+/+ mice. Our data demonstrate that gVPLA2 is a critical messenger enzyme in the development of AHR and regulation of cell migration during immunosensitization by a pathway that is independent of group IVa phospholipase A2. 相似文献
7.
Marinei Cristina Pereira Ribeiro Nilda Berenice de Vargas Barbosa Tielle Moraes de Almeida Lutiane Mozzaquatro Parcianello Juliano Perottoni Daiana Silva de vila Joo Batista Teixeira Rocha 《Cell biochemistry and function》2009,27(7):473-478
This study evaluated the effect of possible synergic interaction between high fat diet (HF) and hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ) on biochemical parameters of oxidative stress in brain. Rats were fed for 16 weeks with a control diet or with an HF, both supplemented with different doses of HCTZ (0.4, 1.0, and 4.0 g kg−1 of diet). HF associated with HCTZ caused a significant increase in lipid peroxidation and blood glucose levels. In addition, HF ingestion was associated with an increase in cerebral lipid peroxidation, vitamin C and non‐protein thiol groups (NPSH) levels. There was an increase in vitamin C as well as NPSH levels in HCTZ (1.0 and 4.0 g kg−1 of diet) and HF plus HCTZ groups. Na+–K+‐ATPase activity of HCTZ (4.0 g kg−1 of diet) and HCTZ plus HF‐fed animals was significantly inhibited. Our data indicate that chronic intake of a high dose of HCTZ (4 g kg−1 of diet) or HF change biochemical indexes of oxidative stress in rat brain. Furthermore, high‐fat diets consumption and HCTZ treatment have interactive effects on brain, showing that a long‐term intake of high‐fat diets can aggravate the toxicity of HCTZ. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. 相似文献
8.
Kim YJ Kim KP Han SK Munoz NM Zhu X Sano H Leff AR Cho W 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2002,277(39):36479-36488
We reported previously that exogenously added human group V phospholipase A(2) (hVPLA(2)) could elicit leukotriene B(4) (LTB(4)) biosynthesis in human neutrophils (Han, S. K., Kim, K. P., Koduri, R., Bittova, L., Munoz, N. M., Leff, A. R., Wilton, D. C., Gelb, M. H., and Cho, W. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 11881-11888). To determine the mechanism of the hVPLA(2)-induced LTB(4) biosynthesis in neutrophils, we thoroughly examined the effects of hVPLA(2) and their lipid products on the activity of group IVA cytosolic PLA(2) (cPLA(2)) and LTB(4) biosynthesis under different conditions. As low as 1 nm exogenous hVPLA(2) was able to induce the release of arachidonic acid (AA) and LTB(4). Typically, AA and LTB(4) were released in two phases, which were synchronized with a rise in intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) near the perinuclear region and cPLA(2) phosphorylation. A cellular PLA(2) assay showed that hVPLA(2) acted primarily on the outer plasma membrane, liberating fatty acids and lysophosphatidylcholine (lyso-PC), whereas cPLA(2) acted on the perinuclear membrane. Lyso-PC and polyunsaturated fatty acids including AA activated cPLA(2) and 5-lipoxygenase by increasing [Ca(2+)](i) and inducing cPLA(2) phosphorylation, which then led to LTB(4) biosynthesis. The delayed phase was triggered by the binding of secreted LTB(4) to the cell surface LTB(4) receptor, which resulted in a rise in [Ca(2+)](i) and cPLA(2) phosphorylation through the activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase, extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2. These results indicate that a main role of exogenous hVPLA(2) in neutrophil activation and LTB(4) biosynthesis is to activate cPLA(2) and 5-lipoxygenase primarily by liberating from the outer plasma membrane lyso-PC that induces [Ca(2+)](i) increase and cPLA(2) phosphorylation and that hVPLA(2)-induced LTB(4) production is augmented by the positive feedback activation of cPLA(2) by LTB(4). 相似文献
9.
10.
Identification of an equilibrium intermediate in the unfolding process of galectin-1, which retains its carbohydrate-binding specificity 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Iglesias MM Elola MT Martinez V Fink N Wolfenstein-Todel C 《Biochimica et biophysica acta》2003,1648(1-2):164-173
The unfolding process of galectin-1 (Gal-1) in the presence of a denaturing agent was examined using fluorescence and far-UV circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy determinations, and was found to be completely reversible. The data showed that the transitions of guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl)-induced lectin unfolding, in the absence of ligand, were biphasic in nature, clearly showing the existence of at least one stable intermediate. On the other hand, the unfolding in the presence of disaccharide yielded data that could fit very well to a two-state model, indicating a stabilizing effect of the ligand. The folding intermediate was further characterized by size exclusion chromatography, near-UV CD and anilinonaphtalene sulfonate binding, and shown to belong to the molten globule type. Strikingly, this intermediate retained its carbohydrate-binding specificity, as evidenced by the tryptophan fluorescence changes detected upon its interaction with lactose. 相似文献