997 resultados para resurrection plant
Resumo:
干旱对植物的影响和植物对干旱的反应是十分复杂的,涉及到植物的各种生理活动,由胁迫强度及时间、植物本身的遗传特性、发育阶段和生理状况以及其他环境因子共同决定。现代分子生物学和生物技术的发展深化了对植物逆境反应的研究,对植物抗旱分子反应的研究成为这个领域的热点,也引发了抗逆基因资源的争夺战。 以拟南芥等植物为实验材料的研究对深入了解植物对干旱胁迫感知和反应机制提供了重要信息, 但对植物抗旱机制的了解仍然十分匮乏。其中, 限制人们对抗旱机制深入了解的一个重要因素就是植物抗旱机制的复杂性和多样性,这种抗旱机制的复杂性决定了不是所有的机制都可通过拟南芥等植物来加以揭示。因此利用特殊生境植物来研究相关基因的表达对揭示植物对环境适应机制有着极为重要的价值。 我们实验室以复苏被子植物旋蒴苣苔(Boea hygrometrica (Bunge) R Br.,牛耳草)为实验材料,开展了多方面的工作,以期从复苏植物的角度加深人们对抗旱机制的了解。目前我们实验室已成功地建立了利用cDNA微阵列技术研究牛耳草基因表达谱的体系,并比较了4562个cDNA克隆在干旱前后的表达差异, 发现434个cDNA在干旱条件下表达水平增加一倍以上。 本工作是在上述工作的基础上,对这些表达差异的cDNA克隆并测序,利用Northern blot进一步验证这些基因。序列分析表明,这434个cDNA片段实际上代表着42个基因。根据序列同源性分析表明其中36个克隆与已知功能的基因具有同源性,它们分别是细胞壁相关基因、LEA基因和糖类、抗氧化酶类的编码基因等。另外,4个克隆未能找到同源序列,这可能意味着它们是一些新基因;2个克隆虽找到同源基因但功能未知。36个克隆中有3个编码的是细胞壁相关基因,它们在干旱早期就被诱导,而编码LEA蛋白的基因在干旱中期或后期大量诱导,这说明牛耳草耐旱反应的启动是程序化的,随干旱时间的延长和程度的加强,一步步地启动相应的基因来发挥作用,多方面地对植物细胞进行保护和修复。 本实验室的前期工作表明牛耳草脱水复水过程中细胞超微结构分发生了明显变化,其中细胞壁脱水时发生折叠复水时恢复原状。鉴于细胞壁如此显著的变化及其重要作用,我们以两个细胞壁相关的基因BhGRP1和BhGLP1为对象,对其表达的时间空间特点和对不同胁迫信号的应答、编码产物的理化性质、过量表达或抑制表达的转基因植物的表现型及转基因植物对不同逆境胁迫的抗/感性状等方面的进行研究,综合分析其在耐旱反应中可能参与的代谢途径或信号途径,以期为揭示牛耳草耐旱复苏机制提供有力的佐证。 我们利用Northern blot和半定量RT-PCR对两基因进行了表达模式分析,发现BhGRP1在干旱早期被诱导,干旱后期其转录本水平下降。而BhGLP1在早期诱导后一直保持高的表达。两者在不同胁迫、激素等处理下都有不同的响应。经PSORT分析两基因编码的蛋白都具有N-端信号肽,意味着两蛋白定位于胞外基质。构建BhGRP1-GFP和BhGLP1-GFP融合蛋白进行亚细胞定位分析,质壁分离后BhGRP1-GFP的信号仅保留在细胞壁,而BhGLP1-GFP则在胞壁胞膜上都存在。过量表达BhGRP1后发现它能赋予植物更强的耐旱复苏能力及机械强度,而抑制GLP表达的植株的抗旱性明显弱于野生型,表明BhGRP1和BhGLP1与牛耳草的耐旱复苏有密切的关系。
Resumo:
Previous works suggested that Pleurostima purpurea (Velloziaceae-Barbacenioideae) shows a remarkable capacity to endure desiccation of its vegetative tissues. P. purpurea occurs in monocotyledons mats on soil islands in the Pao de Acucar (Sugar Loaf) one of the most recognizable rock outcrops of the world, in Rio de Janeiro, southeastern Brazil. Mats of P. purpurea occur in cliffs by the sea some meters above the tidal zone. Although living in rock outcrops almost devoid of any soil cover, P. purpurea seems to occur preferably on less exposed rock faces and slightly shady sites. Usually, less extreme adaptations to drought would be expected in plants with the habitat preference of P. purpurea. Relying on this observation, we argue if a combination of different strategies of dealing with low water availability can be found in P. purpurea as on other desiccation tolerant angiosperms. This study aims to examine the occurrence of desiccation tolerant behavior in P. purpurea together with the expression of drought avoidance mechanisms during dehydration progression. For this, it was analyzed the gas exchanges, leaf pigments and relative leaf water content during desiccation and rehydration of cultivated mature individuals. P. purpurea behaved like typical drought avoiders under moderated drought condition with stomatal closure occurring around a relative leaf water content up to 90%. During this process, it was observed a delay in the leaf relative water content (RWC(leaf)) decrease comparing to the plant-soil relative water content (RWC(plant-soil)). As soil dehydration worsened, gas exchanges restrictions progressed until a lack of activity which characterizes anabiosis. The loss of chlorophyll occurs before the end of total dehydration, characterizing the presence of poikilochlorophylly. The chlorophyll degradation follows the RWC(leaf) decrease, which achieved the minimum average value of 17% without incurring in leaf abscission. The chlorophyll re-synthesis seems to start well after the full rehydration of the leaf. During all of this process, carotenoid content remained stable. These results are coherent with a combination of drought avoidance and desiccation tolerance in P. purpurea which seems to be coherent with the amplitude of water availability in the rock outcrop habitat where it occurs, suggesting that the periods of water availability are sufficiently long for the success of the costly desiccation tolerant behavior but too short to make a typical drought avoider species win the competition for exploring the rock outcrop substrate where P. purpurea occurs.
Resumo:
The accumulation of the disaccharide trehalose in anhydrobiotic organisms allows them to survive severe environmental stress. A plant cDNA, SlTPS1, encoding a 109-kD protein, was isolated from the resurrection plant Selaginella lepidophylla, which accumulates high levels of trehalose. Protein-sequence comparison showed that SlTPS1 shares high similarity to trehalose-6-phosphate synthase genes from prokaryotes and eukaryotes. SlTPS1 mRNA was constitutively expressed in S. lepidophylla. DNA gel-blot analysis indicated that SlTPS1 is present as a single-copy gene. Transformation of a Saccharomyces cerevisiae tps1Δ mutant disrupted in the ScTPS1 gene with S. lepidophylla SlTPS1 restored growth on fermentable sugars and the synthesis of trehalose at high levels. Moreover, the SlTPS1 gene introduced into the tps1Δ mutant was able to complement both deficiencies: sensitivity to sublethal heat treatment at 39°C and induced thermotolerance at 50°C. The osmosensitive phenotype of the yeast tps1Δ mutant grown in NaCl and sorbitol was also restored by the SlTPS1 gene. Thus, SlTPS1 protein is a functional plant homolog capable of sustaining trehalose biosynthesis and could play a major role in stress tolerance in S. lepidophylla.
Resumo:
There is an urgent need to develop crops that can withstand future climates. Results from this thesis demonstrated that a native Australian resurrection grass exhibits structural, physiological and metabolic strategies to tolerate drying. These strategies may be utilized for the generation of stress tolerant crops.
Resumo:
The specific mechanisms by which selective pressures affect individuals are often difficult to resolve. In tephritid fruit flies, males respond strongly and positively to certain plant derived chemicals. Sexual selection by female choice has been hypothesized as the mechanism driving this behaviour in certain species, as females preferentially mate with males that have fed on these chemicals. This hypothesis is, to date, based on studies of only very few species and its generality is largely untested. We tested the hypothesis on different spatial scales (small cage and seminatural field-cage) using the monophagous fruit fly, Bactrocera cacuminata. This species is known to respond to methyl eugenol (ME), a chemical found in many plant species and one upon which previous studies have focused. Contrary to expectation, no obvious female choice was apparent in selecting ME-fed males over unfed males as measured by the number of matings achieved over time, copulation duration, or time of copulation initiation. However, the number of matings achieved by ME-fed males was significantly greater than unfed males 16 and 32 days after exposure to ME in small cages (but not in a field-cage). This delayed advantage suggests that ME may not influence the pheromone system of B. cacuminata but may have other consequences, acting on some other fitness consequence (e.g., enhancement of physiology or survival) of male exposure to these chemicals. We discuss the ecological and evolutionary implications of our findings to explore alternate hypotheses to explain the patterns of response of dacine fruit flies to specific plant-derived chemicals.
Resumo:
Microclimate and host plant architecture significantly influence the abundance and behavior of insects. However, most research in this field has focused at the invertebrate assemblage level, with few studies at the single-species level. Using wild Solanum mauritianum plants, we evaluated the influence of plant structure (number of leaves and branches and height of plant) and microclimate (temperature, relative humidity, and light intensity) on the abundance and behavior of a single insect species, the monophagous tephritid fly Bactrocera cacuminata (Hering). Abundance and oviposition behavior were signficantly influenced by the host structure (density of foliage) and associated microclimate. Resting behavior of both sexes was influenced positively by foliage density, while temperature positively influenced the numbers of resting females. The number of ovipositing females was positively influenced by temperature and negatively by relative humidity. Feeding behavior was rare on the host plant, as was mating. The relatively low explanatory power of the measured variables suggests that, in addition to host plant architecture and associated microclimate, other cues (e.g., olfactory or visual) could affect visitation and use of the larval host plant by adult fruit flies. For 12 plants observed at dusk (the time of fly mating), mating pairs were observed on only one tree. Principal component analyses of the plant and microclimate factors associated with these plants revealed that the plant on which mating was observed had specific characteristics (intermediate light intensity, greater height, and greater quantity of fruit) that may have influenced its selection as a mating site.
Resumo:
Callus was initiated in three different ‘‘esculenta’’ taro cultivars by culturing corm slices in the dark on half-strength MS medium supplemented with 2.0 mg/l 2,4- dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) for 20 days followed by subculture of all corm slices to half-strength MS medium containing 1.0 mg/l thidiazuron (TDZ). Depending on the cultivar, 20–30% of corm slices produced compact, yellow, nodular callus on media containing TDZ. Histological studies revealed the presence of typical embryogenic cells which were small, isodiametric with dense cytoplasms. Somatic embryos formed when callus was transferred to hormone-free medium and *72% of the embryos germinated into plantlets on this medium. Simultaneous formation of roots and shoots during germination, and the presence of shoot and root poles revealed by histology, confirmed that these structures were true somatic embryos. Plants derived from somatic embryos appeared phenotypically normal following 2 months growth in a glasshouse. This method is a significant advance on those previously reported for the esculenta cultivars of taro due to its efficiency and reproducibility.
Resumo:
Embryogenic callus was initiated by culturing in vitro taro corm slices on agar-solidified half-strength MS medium containing 2.0 mg/L 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) for 20 days followed by transfer to 1.0 mg/L thidiazuron (TDZ). Callus was subsequently proliferated on solid medium containing 1.0 mg/L TDZ, 0.5 mg/L 2,4- D and 800 mg/L glutamine before transfer to liquid medium containing the same components but with reduced glutamine (100 mg/L). After 3 months in liquid culture on an orbital shaker, cytoplasmically dense cell aggregates began to form. Somatic embryogenesis was induced by plating suspension cells onto solid media containing reduced levels of hormones (0.1 mg/L TDZ, 0.05 mg/L 2,4-D), high concentrations of sucrose (40–50 g/L) and biotin (1.0 mg/L). Embryo maturation and germination was then induced on media containing 0.05 mg/L benzyladenine (BA) and 0.1 mg/L indole-3-acetic acid (IAA). Histological studies of the developing embryos revealed the presence of typical shoot and root poles suggesting that these structures were true somatic embryos. The rate of somatic embryos formation was 500–3,000 per mL settledcell volume while approximately 60% of the embryos regenerated into plants.
Resumo:
In this research the reliability and availability of fiberboard pressing plant is assessed and a cost-based optimization of the system using the Monte- Carlo simulation method is performed. The woodchip and pulp or engineered wood industry in Australia and around the world is a lucrative industry. One such industry is hardboard. The pressing system is the main system, as it converts the wet pulp to fiberboard. The assessment identified the pressing system has the highest downtime throughout the plant plus it represents the bottleneck in the process. A survey in the late nineties revealed there are over one thousand plants around the world, with the pressing system being a common system among these plants. No work has been done to assess or estimate the reliability of such a pressing system; therefore this assessment can be used for assessing any plant of this type.