4 resultados para frost tolerance genes

em Deakin Research Online - Australia


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Metagenomics provides culture-independent access to gene pool of the whole microbial communities. To identify genes responsible for salt tolerance in unculturable bacteria, Escherichia coli clones were enriched with an ability to grow at inhibitory NaCl concentrations (750 mM) from a pond water metagenomic library. From two unique clones, genes encoding for proteins with similarity to a putative general stress protein (GspM) harbouring GsiB domain and a putative enoyl-CoA hydratase (EchM) were identified to be responsible for salt tolerance. The gspM was expressed by its native promoter whereas the echM was expressed from the lacZ promoter of the plasmid. EchM was overexpressed with a hexahistidyl tag. Purified EchM showed crotonyl-CoA hydratase activity. These genes have potential application in generating salt tolerant recombinant bacteria or transgenic plants.

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The mechanisms of how tea and epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG) lower body fat are not completely understood. This study investigated long-term administration of green tea (GT), black tea (BT), or isolated EGCG (1 mg/kg per day) on body composition, glucose tolerance, and gene expression related to energy metabolism and lipid homeostasis; it was hypothesized that all treatments would improve the indicators of metabolic syndrome. Rats were fed a 15% fat diet for 6 months from 4 weeks of age and were supplied GT, BT, EGCG, or water. GT and BT reduced body fat, whereas GT and EGCG increased lean mass. At 16 weeks GT, BT, and EGCG improved glucose tolerance. In the liver, GT and BT increased the expression of genes involved in fatty acid synthesis (SREBP-1c, FAS, MCD, ACC) and oxidation (PPAR-α, CPT-1, ACO); however, EGCG had no effect. In perirenal fat, genes that mediate adipocyte differentiation were suppressed by GT (Pref-1, C/EBP-β, and PPAR-γ) and BT (C/EBP-β), while decreasing LPL, HSL, and UCP-2 expression; EGCG increased expression of UCP-2 and PPAR-γ genes. Liver triacylglycerol content was unchanged. The results suggest that GT and BT suppressed adipocyte differentiation and fatty acid uptake into adipose tissue, while increasing fat synthesis and oxidation by the liver, without inducing hepatic fat accumulation. In contrast, EGCG increased markers of thermogenesis and differentiation in adipose tissue, while having no effect on liver or muscle tissues at this dose. These results show novel and separate mechanisms by which tea and EGCG may improve glucose tolerance and support a role for these compounds in obesity prevention.

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Zinc homeostasis was investigated in Nostoc punctiforme. Cell tolerance to Zn2+ over 14 days showed that ZnCl2 levels above 22 µM significantly reduced cell viability. After 3 days in 22 µM ZnCl2, ca. 12% of the Zn2+ was in an EDTA-resistant component, suggesting an intracellular localization. Zinquin fluorescence was detected within cells exposed to concentrations up to 37 µM relative to 0 µM treatment. Radiolabeled 65Zn showed Zn2+ uptake increased over a 3-day period, while efflux occurred more rapidly within a 3-h time period. Four putative genes involved in Zn2+ uptake and efflux in N. punctiforme were identified: (i) the predicted Co/Zn/Cd cation transporter, putative CDF; (ii) the predicted divalent heavy-metal cation transporter, putative Zip; (iii) the ATPase component and Fe/Zn uptake regulation protein, putative Fur; and (iv) an ABC-type Mn/Zn transport system, putative zinc ZnuC, ZnuABC system component. Quantitative real-time PCR indicated the responsiveness of all four genes to 22 µM ZnCl2 within 3 h, followed by a reduction to below basal levels after 24 h by putative ZIP, ZnuC, and Fur and a reduction to below basal level after 72 h by putative CDF efflux gene. These results demonstrate differential regulation of zinc transporters over time, indicating a role for them in zinc homeostasis in N. punctiforme.

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DNA repair mechanisms constitute an essential cellular response to DNA damage arising either from metabolic processes or from environmental sources such as ultraviolet radiation. Repair of these lesions may be via direct reversal, or by processes such as nucleotide excision repair (NER), a coordinated pathway in which lesions and the surrounding nucleotides are excised and replaced via DNA resynthesis. The importance of repair is illustrated by human disease states such as xeroderma pigmentosum and Cockayne's syndrome which result from defects in the NER system arising from mutations in XP- genes or XP- and CS- genes respectively Little detail is known of DNA damage repair processes in plants, despite the economic and ecological importance of these organisms. This study aimed to expand our knowledge of the process of NER in plants, largely via a polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based approach involving amplification, cloning and characterisation of plant genomic DNA and cDNA. Homologues of the NER components XPF/RAD1 and XPD/RAD3 were isolated as both genomic and complete cDNA sequences from the model dicotyledonous plant Arabidopsis thaliana. The sequence of the 3'-untranslated region of atXPD was also determined. Comparison of genomic and cDNA sequences allowed a detailed analysis of gene structures, including details of intron/exon processing. Variable transcript processing to produce three distinct transcripts was found in the case of atXPF. In an attempt to validate the proposed homologous function of these cDNAs, assays to test complementation of resistance to ultraviolet radiation in the relevant yeast mutants were performed. Despite extensive amino acid sequence conservation, neither plant cDNA was able to restore UV-resistance. As the yeast RAD3 gene product is also involved in vivo in transcription, and so is required for viability, the atXPD cDNA was tested in a complementation assay for this function in an appropriate yeast mutant. The plant cDNA was found to substantially increase the viability of the yeast mutant. The structural and functional significance of these results is discussed comparatively with reference to yeast, human and other known homologues. Other putative NER homologues were identified in A. thaliana database sequences, including those of ERCC1/RAD10 and XPG/ERCC5/RAD2, and are now the subjects of ongoing investigations. This study also describes preliminary investigations of putative REVS and RAD30 translesion synthesis genes from A. thaliana.