958 resultados para HEAT STRESS


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Eine funktionierende Proteinqualitätskontrolle ist essenziell für die Vitalität einer Zelle. Das dynamische Gleichgewicht zwischen Proteinfaltung und -degradation wird von molekularen Chaperonen aufrechterhalten, deren Aktivität wiederum durch die Interaktion mit zahlreichen Cochaperonen moduliert wird. Das Cochaperon CHIP ist ein zentraler Faktor in Proteintriage-Entscheidungsprozessen, da es als Ubiquitinligase Chaperonsubstrate dem Abbau zuführt und somit die Chaperonmaschinerie direkt mit den Systemen der Proteindegradation verbindet. Um Polypeptide vor einem vorzeitigen Abbau zu schützen, wird die destruktive Aktivität von CHIP durch weitere Cochaperone reguliert. rnIn dieser Arbeit konnte die Hemmung der Ligaseaktivität von CHIP durch das Cochaperon BAG2 mechanistisch erstmals in einem zellulären System nachgewiesen werden. Dazu wurde die humane IMR-90 Fibroblasten Zelllinie verwendet. Die Ubiquitinierungsaktivität von CHIP wurde anhand von HSP72 als Modell-CHIP-Substrat untersucht. Durch die verringerte Ubiquitinierung, und damit dem reduzierten Abbau von HSP72, regulierte BAG2 dessen intrazelluläre Proteinspiegel, ohne dabei selbst eine Hitzeschockantwort zu induzieren. Überexprimiertes BAG2 wirkte sich trotz stabilisierter HSP72-Spiegel bei einem appliziertem Hitzestresses negativ auf die Zellvitalität aus, vermutlich da BAG2 durch die Inhibition von CHIP-vermittelter Ubiquitinierung massiv in das Gleichgewicht zwischen Substratfaltung und -degradation eingreift.rnDa sich die Mechanismen der Proteinqualitätskontrolle in der Alterung stark verändern und sich den wandelnden Bedingungen in der Zelle anpassen, wurde in einem zweiten Teil dieser Arbeit mit Hilfe des IMR-90 Zellsystems als etabliertes Modell zellulärer Seneszenz analysiert, inwieweit sich die Aktivität und die Regulation von CHIP durch BAG2 in der zellulären Alterung ändern. In seneszenten Zellen war HSP72 erheblich weniger ubiquitiniert als in jungen Fibroblasten, was auf eine reduzierte CHIP-Aktivität hinweist. Diese blieb jedoch durch BAG2 weiterhin modulierbar. Die Funktion von BAG2 als Inhibitor der Ubiquitinligase CHIP blieb demnach in seneszenten Zellen bestehen. In gealterten Fibroblasten regulierte BAG2 außerdem die Proteinspiegel des CHIP-Substrates und Seneszenzinitiators p53, was BAG2 eine mögliche Rolle in der Etablierung des Seneszenz-Phänotyps zuspricht. Weiterhin unterlagen die Proteinspiegel der beiden funktionell redundanten CHIP-Modulatoren BAG2 und HSPBP1 in der zellulären Alterung einer reziproken Regulation. In gealterten Mäusen trat die gegenläufige Veränderung der beiden Cochaperone gewebsspezifisch in der Lunge auf. Außerdem waren die BAG2-Proteinspiegel im Hippocampus gealterter Tiere signifikant erhöht.rnZusammenfassend konnte anhand der erzielten Ergebnisse die Funktion von BAG2 als Inhibitor von CHIP im zellulären System bestätigt werden. Außerdem durchlaufen die Aktivität und die Regulation von CHIP einen seneszenzspezifischen Adaptationsprozess, welcher für die Erhaltung der Proteostase in der Alterung relevant sein könnte und in welchem die Funktion von BAG2 als CHIP-Modulator möglicherweise eine wichtige Rolle spielt.rnZukünftige Studien könnten die komplexen Mechanismen weiterführend aufklären, mit denen CHIP-Aktivität reguliert wird. Dies kann helfen, der altersbedingten Abnahme an proteostatischer Kontrolle entgegenzuwirken und aberrante Proteinaggregation in altersassoziierten Erkrankungen vorzubeugen.rn

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Die Proteinhomöostase wird in der Zelle von drei Stoffwechselwegen reguliert: den molekularen Chaperonen, dem Ubiquitin-Proteasom-System und dem autophagosomalen Abbauweg. Die (Makro)Autophagie verpackt und transportiert zytosolische Komponenten in Autophagosomen zu den Lysosomen, wo sie abgebaut werden. Eine Störung dieses Abbauwegs wirkt auf die Proteostase.rnIn dieser Dissertation wurde C. elegans als Modellorganismus zur Erforschung von Proteinstabilität genutzt. In einer RNAi-vermittelten Proteostase-Analyse von Chromosom I und ausgewählter zusätzlicher Gene wurde ein Wurmstamm, der ein Luc::GFP-Konstrukt im Muskel exprimiert, genutzt. Dieses Reporterprotein aggregiert unter Hitzestressbedingungen und diese Aggregation kann durch Modulatoren der Proteostase beeinflusst werden. Dabei wurden mögliche neue Faktoren der Proteinhomöostase entdeckt. Durch weitere Experimente bei denen die Aggregation von PolyQ35::YFP im AM140-System, der Paralyse-Phänotyp und die Akkumulation Thioflavin S-gefärbter Aggregate von Aβ42 im CL2006-Wurmstamm und die Effekte auf die Autophagie mittels eines GFP::LGG1-Konstrukt analysiert wurden, konnten rbg-1 und rbg-2 als neue Modulatoren der Proteinhomöostase, insbesondere der Autophagie, identifiziert werden.rnIm Säuger bilden beide Orthologe dieser Gene, RAB3GAP1 und RAB3GAP2 den heterodimeren RAB3GAP-Komplex, der bisher nur bekannt war für die Stimulation der Umwandlung der GTP-gebundenen aktiven Form zur GDP-gebundenen inaktiven Form der RAB GTPase RAB3. In Immunoblot-Analysen und mikroskopischen Darstellungen im Säugersystem konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Effekte auf die Proteostase über den autophagosomalen Abbauweg wirken. RAB3GAP1/2 wirken als positive Stimulatoren, wenn die Lipidierung von LC3-I und der autophagische Flux von LC3-II und p62/SQSTM1 betrachtet werden. Diese Effekte werden aber nicht über die RAB GTPase RAB3 vermittelt. Die Proteine FEZ1 und FEZ2 haben einen antagonistischen Effekt auf die Autophagie und wenn alle vier Komponenten RAB3GAP1, RAB3GAP2, FEZ1 und FEZ2 zusammen herunter- oder hochreguliert werden, heben sich diese Effekte auf. In Co-Immunopräzipitationen und proteomischen Analysen konnte keine direkte Interaktion zwischen dem RAB3GAP-Komplex und FEZ1/2 oder zu anderen Autophagie-Genen nachgewiesen werden.rnHier konnte der RAB3GAP-Komplex funktionell mit Proteostase und Autophagie in C. elegans und Säugerzellen assoziiert werden. Dieser Komplex zeigt Einflüsse auf die autophagosomale Biogenese indem sie die Proteostase und die Bildung von (prä)autophagosomalen Strukturen in C. elegans und die Lipidierung von LC3 und damit den autophagischen Flux der Autophagiesubstrate LC3-II und p62/SQSTM1 in Säugerzellen beeinflusst. Darüber hinaus wirkt RAB3GAP der komplexen Autophagie-Unterdrückung durch FEZ1 und FEZ2 entgegen. Somit konnte gezeigt werden, dass RAB3GAP als neuartiger Faktor auf die autophagosomale Biogenese und somit auf die Proteostase wirkt.rn

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Climate models predict more frequent and more severe extreme events (e.g., heat waves, extended drought periods, flooding) in many regions for the next decades. The impact of adverse environmental conditions on crop plants is ecologically and economically relevant. This review is focused on drought and heat effects on physiological status and productivity of agronomically important plants. Stomatal opening represents an important regulatory mechanism during drought and heat stress since it influences simultaneously water loss via transpiration and CO2 diffusion into the leaf apoplast which further is utilized in photosynthesis. Along with the reversible short-term control of stomatal opening, stomata and leaf epidermis may produce waxy deposits and irreversibly down-regulate the stomatal conductance and non-stomatal transpiration. As a consequence photosynthesis will be negatively affected. Rubisco activase—a key enzyme in keeping the Calvin cycle functional—is heat-sensitive and may become a limiting factor at elevated temperature. The accumulated reactive oxygen species (ROS) during stress represent an additional challenge under unfavorable conditions. Drought and heat cause accumulation of free amino acids which are partially converted into compatible solutes such as proline. This is accompanied by lower rates of both nitrate reduction and de novo amino acid biosynthesis. Protective proteins (e.g., dehydrins, chaperones, antioxidant enzymes or the key enzyme for proline biosynthesis) play an important role in leaves and may be present at higher levels under water deprivation or high temperatures. On the whole plant level, effects on long-distance translocation of solutes via xylem and phloem and on leaf senescence (e.g., anticipated, accelerated or delayed senescence) are important. The factors mentioned above are relevant for the overall performance of crops under drought and heat and must be considered for genotype selection and breeding programs.

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We tested the hypothesis that development of the Antarctic urchin Sterechinus neumayeri under future ocean conditions of warming and acidification would incur physiological costs, reducing the tolerance of a secondary stressor. The aim of this study is twofold: (1) quantify current austral spring temperature and pH near sea urchin habitat at Cape Evans in McMurdo Sound, Antarctica and (2) spawn S. neumayeri in the laboratory and raise early developmental stages (EDSs) under ambient (-0.7 °C; 400 µatm pCO2) and future (+2.6 °C; 650 and 1,000 µatm pCO2) ocean conditions and expose four EDSs (blastula, gastrula, prism, and 4-arm echinopluteus) to a one hour acute heat stress and assess survivorship. Results of field data from 2011 to 2012 show extremely stable inter-annual pH conditions ranging from 7.99 to 8.08, suggesting that future ocean acidification will drastically alter the pH-seascape for S. neumayeri. In the laboratory, S. neumayeri EDSs appear to be tolerant of temperatures and pCO2 levels above their current habitat conditions. EDSs survived acute heat exposures >20 °C above habitat temperatures of -1.9 °C. No pCO2 effect was observed for EDSs reared at -0.7 °C. When reared at +2.6 °C, small but significant pCO2 effects were observed at the blastula and prism stage, suggesting that multiple stressors are more detrimental than single stressors. While surprisingly tolerant overall, blastulae were the most sensitive stage to ocean warming and acidification. We conclude that S. neumayeri may be unexpectedly physiologically tolerant of future ocean conditions.

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The effects of elevated CO2 and temperature on photosynthesis and calcification of two important calcifying reef algae (Halimeda macroloba and Halimeda cylindracea) were investigated with O2 microsensors and chlorophyll a fluorometry through a combination of two pCO2 (400 and 1,200 µatm) and two temperature treatments (28 and 32 °C) equivalent to the present and predicted conditions during the 2100 austral summer. Combined exposure to pCO2 and elevated temperature impaired calcification and photosynthesis in the two Halimeda species due to changes in the microenvironment around the algal segments and a reduction in physiological performance. There were no significant changes in controls over the 5-week experiment, but there was a 50-70 % decrease in photochemical efficiency (maximum quantum yield), a 70-80 % decrease in O2 production and a threefold reduction in calcification rate in the elevated CO2 and high temperature treatment. Calcification in these species is closely coupled with photosynthesis, such that a decrease in photosynthetic efficiency leads to a decrease in calcification. Although pH seems to be the main factor affecting Halimeda species, heat stress also has an impact on their photosystem II photochemical efficiency. There was a strong combined effect of elevated CO2 and temperature in both species, where exposure to elevated CO2 or temperature alone decreased photosynthesis and calcification, but exposure to both elevated CO2 and temperature caused a greater decline in photosynthesis and calcification than in each stress individually. Our study shows that ocean acidification and ocean warming are drivers of calcification and photosynthesis inhibition in Halimeda. Predicted climate change scenarios for 2100 would therefore severely affect the fitness of Halimeda, which can result in a strongly reduced production of carbonate sediments on coral reefs under such changed climate conditions.

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With global climate change, ocean warming and acidification occur concomitantly. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that increasing CO2 levels affect the acid-base balance and reduce the activity capacity of the Arctic spider crab Hyas araneus, especially at the limits of thermal tolerance. Crabs were acclimated to projected oceanic CO2 levels for 12 days (today: 380, towards the year 2100: 750 and 1,120 and beyond: 3,000 ?atm) and at two temperatures (1 and 4 °C). Effects of these treatments on the righting response (RR) were determined (1) at acclimation temperatures followed by (2) righting when exposed to an additional acute (15 min) heat stress at 12 °C. Prior to (resting) and after the consecutive stresses of combined righting activity and heat exposure, acid-base status and lactate contents were measured in the haemolymph. Under resting conditions, CO2 caused a decrease in haemolymph pH and an increase in oxygen partial pressure. Despite some buffering via an accumulation of bicarbonate, the extracellular acidosis remained uncompensated at 1 °C, a trend exacerbated when animals were acclimated to 4 °C. The additional combined exposure to activity and heat had only a slight effect on blood gas and acid-base status. Righting activity in all crabs incubated at 1 and 4 °C was unaffected by elevated CO2 levels or acute heat stress but was significantly reduced when both stressors acted synergistically. This impact was much stronger in the group acclimated at 1 °C where some individuals acclimated to high CO2 levels stopped responding. Lactate only accumulated in the haemolymph after combined righting and heat stress. In the group acclimated to 1 °C, lactate content was highest under normocapnia and lowest at the highest CO2 level in line with the finding that RR was largely reduced. In crabs acclimated to 4 °C, the RR was less affected by CO2 such that activity caused lactate to increase with rising CO2 levels. In line with the concept of oxygen and capacity limited thermal tolerance, all animals exposed to temperature extremes displayed a reduction in scope for performance, a trend exacerbated by increasing CO2 levels. Additionally, the differences seen between cold- and warm-acclimated H. araneus after heat stress indicate that a small shift to higher acclimation temperatures also alleviates the response to temperature extremes, indicating a shift in the thermal tolerance window which reduces susceptibility to additional CO2 exposure.

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Las temperaturas extremas, la sequía y otros estreses abióticos limitan la producción forestal de forma significativa, causando grandes pérdidas económicas en el sector. Los árboles, al ser organismos sésiles, han desarrollado una serie de estrategias para percibir dichos factores, activando respuestas defensivas apropiadas. Entre ellas ocupa un lugar preeminente la síntesis de proteínas con actividad chaperona molecular. Las chaperonas moleculares interaccionan con proteínas desnaturalizadas total o parcialmente, promoviendo su correcto plegamiento y ensamblaje. Las chaperonas moleculares que se sintetizan de forma predominante en plantas, pero no en otros eucariotas, pertenecen a la familia sHSP (small heat-shock proteins). Se trata de una familia inusualmente compleja y heterogénea, cuyos miembros son de pequeño tamaño (16-42 kD) y poseen un dominio “alfa-cristalina” muy conservado. Estas proteínas están implicadas en protección frente a estrés abiótico mediante la estabilización de proteínas y membranas, si bien su mecanismo de acción se conoce de forma incompleta. A pesar del evidente potencial aplicado de las proteínas sHSP, son muy escasos los estudios realizados hasta el momento con un enfoque netamente biotecnológico. Por otra parte, casi todos ellos se han llevado a cabo en especies herbáceas de interés agronómico o en especies modelo, como Arabidopsis thaliana. De ahí que las sHSP de arbóreas hayan sido mucho menos caracterizadas estructural y funcionalmente, y ello a pesar del interés económico y ecológico de los árboles y de su prolongada exposición vital a múltiples factores estresantes. La presente Tesis Doctoral se centra en el estudio de sHSP de varias especies arbóreas de interés económico. El escrutinio exhaustivo de genotecas de cDNA de órganos vegetativos nos ha permitido identificar y caracterizar los componentes mayoritarios de tallo en dos especies productoras de madera noble: nogal y cerezo. También hemos caracterizado la familia completa en chopo, a partir de su secuencia genómica completa. Mediante expresión heteróloga en bacterias, hemos analizado el efecto protector de estas proteínas in vivo frente a distintos tipos de estrés abiótico, relevantes para el sector productivo. Los resultados demuestran que las proteínas sHSP-CI: (i) aumentan la viabilidad celular de E.coli frente a casi todos estos factores, aplicados de forma individual o combinada; (ii) ejercen un rol estabilizador de las membranas celulares frente a condiciones adversas; (iii) sirven para mejorar la producción de otras proteínas recombinantes de interés comercial. El efecto protector de las proteínas sHSP-CI también ha sido analizado in planta, mediante la expresión ectópica de CsHSP17.5-CI en chopos. En condiciones normales de crecimiento no se han observado diferencias fenotípicas entre las líneas transgénicas y los controles, lo que demuestra que se pueden sobre-expresar estas proteínas sin efectos pleiotrópicos deletéreos. En condiciones de estrés térmico, por el contrario, los chopos transgénicos mostraron menos daños y un mejor crecimiento neto. En línea con lo anterior, las actividades biológicas de varias enzimas resultaron más protegidas frente a la inactivación por calor, corroborando la actividad chaperona propuesta para la familia sHSP y su conexión con la tolerancia al estrés abiótico. En lo que respecta a la multiplicación y propagación de chopo in vitro, una forma de cultivo que comporta estrés para las plantas, todas las líneas transgénicas se comportaron mejor que los controles en términos de producción de biomasa (callos) y regeneración de brotes, incluso en ausencia de estrés térmico. También se comportaron mejor durante su cultivo ex vitro. Estos resultados tienen gran potencial aplicado, dada la recalcitrancia de muchas especies vegetales de interés económico a la micropropagación y a la manipulación in vitro en general. Los resultados derivados de esta Tesis, aparte de aportar datos nuevos sobre el efecto protector de las proteínas sHSP citosólicas mayoritarias (clase CI), demuestran por vez primera que la termotolerancia de los árboles puede ser manipulada racionalmente, incrementando los niveles de sHSP mediante técnicas de ingeniería genética. Su interés aplicado es evidente, especialmente en un escenario de calentamiento global. ABSTRACT Abiotic stress produces considerable economic losses in the forest sector, with extreme temperature and drought being amongst the most relevant factors. As sessile organisms, plants have acquired molecular strategies to detect and recognize stressful factors and activate appropriate responses. A wealth of evidence has correlated such responses with the massive induction of proteins belonging to the molecular chaperone family. Molecular chaperones are proteins which interact with incorrectly folded proteins to help them refold to their native state. In contrast to other eukaryotes, the most prominent stress-induced molecular chaperones of plants belong to the sHSP (small Heat Shock Protein) family. sHSPs are a widespread and diverse class of molecular chaperones that range in size from 16 to 42k Da, and whose members have a highly conserved “alpha-crystallin” domain. sHSP proteins play an important role in abiotic stress tolerance, membrane stabilization and developmental processes. Yet, their mechanism of action remains largely unknown. Despite the applied potential of these proteins, only a few studies have addressed so far the biotechnological implications of this protein family. Most studies have focused on herbaceous species of agronomic interest or on model species such as Arabidopsis thaliana. Hence, sHSP are poorly characterized in long-lived woody species, despite their economic and ecological relevance. This Thesis studies sHSPs from several woody species of economic interest. The most prominent components, namely cytosolic class I sHSPs, have been identified and characterized, either by cDNA library screening (walnut, cherry) or by searching the complete genomic sequence (poplar). Through heterologous bacterial expression, we analyzed the in vivo protective effects of selected components against abiotic stress. Our results demonstrate that sHSP-CI proteins: (i) protect E. coli cells against different stressful conditions, alone or combined; (ii) stabilize cell membranes; (iii) improve the production of other recombinant proteins with commercial interest. The effects of CsHSP17.5-CI overexpression have also been studied in hybrid poplar. Interestingly, the accumulation of this protein does not have any appreciable phenotypic effects under normal growth conditions. However, the transgenic poplar lines showed enhanced net growth and reduced injury under heat-stress conditions compared to vector controls. Biochemical analysis of leaf extracts revealed that important enzyme activities were more protected in such lines against heat-induced inactivation than in control lines, lending further support to the chaperone mode of action proposed for the sHSP family. All transgenic lines showed improved in vitro and ex vitro performance (calli biomass, bud induction, shoot regeneration) compared to controls, even in the absence of thermal stress. Besides providing new insights on the protective role of HSP-CI proteins, our results bolster the notion that heat stress tolerance can be readily manipulated in trees through genetic engineering. The applied value of these results is evident, especially under a global warming scenario.

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This study explored the utility of the impact response surface (IRS) approach for investigating model ensemble crop yield responses under a large range of changes in climate. IRSs of spring and winter wheat Triticum aestivum yields were constructed from a 26-member ensemble of process-based crop simulation models for sites in Finland, Germany and Spain across a latitudinal transect. The sensitivity of modelled yield to systematic increments of changes in temperature (-2 to +9°C) and precipitation (-50 to +50%) was tested by modifying values of baseline (1981 to 2010) daily weather, with CO2 concentration fixed at 360 ppm. The IRS approach offers an effective method of portraying model behaviour under changing climate as well as advantages for analysing, comparing and presenting results from multi-model ensemble simulations. Though individual model behaviour occasionally departed markedly from the average, ensemble median responses across sites and crop varieties indicated that yields decline with higher temperatures and decreased precipitation and increase with higher precipitation. Across the uncertainty ranges defined for the IRSs, yields were more sensitive to temperature than precipitation changes at the Finnish site while sensitivities were mixed at the German and Spanish sites. Precipitation effects diminished under higher temperature changes. While the bivariate and multi-model characteristics of the analysis impose some limits to interpretation, the IRS approach nonetheless provides additional insights into sensitivities to inter-model and inter-annual variability. Taken together, these sensitivities may help to pinpoint processes such as heat stress, vernalisation or drought effects requiring refinement in future model development.

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Net photosynthesis (Pn) is inhibited by moderate heat stress. To elucidate the mechanism of inhibition, we examined the effects of temperature on gas exchange and ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) activation in cotton and tobacco leaves and compared the responses to those of the isolated enzymes. Depending on the CO2 concentration, Pn decreased when temperatures exceeded 35–40°C. This response was inconsistent with the response predicted from the properties of fully activated Rubisco. Rubisco deactivated in leaves when temperature was increased and also in response to high CO2 or low O2. The decrease in Rubisco activation occurred when leaf temperatures exceeded 35°C, whereas the activities of isolated activase and Rubisco were highest at 42°C and >50°C, respectively. In the absence of activase, isolated Rubisco deactivated under catalytic conditions and the rate of deactivation increased with temperature but not with CO2. The ability of activase to maintain or promote Rubisco activation in vitro also decreased with temperature but was not affected by CO2. Increasing the activase/Rubisco ratio reduced Rubisco deactivation at higher temperatures. The results indicate that, as temperature increases, the rate of Rubisco deactivation exceeds the capacity of activase to promote activation. The decrease in Rubisco activation that occurred in leaves at high CO2 was not caused by a faster rate of deactivation, but by reduced activase activity possibly in response to unfavorable ATP/ADP ratios. When adjustments were made for changes in activation state, the kinetic properties of Rubisco predicted the response of Pn at high temperature and CO2.

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We examined the genetic basis of clinal adaptation by determining the evolutionary response of life-history traits to laboratory natural selection along a gradient of thermal stress in Drosophila serrata. A gradient of heat stress was created by exposing larvae to a heat stress of 36degrees for 4 hr for 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 days of larval development, with the remainder of development taking place at 25degrees. Replicated lines were exposed to each level of this stress every second generation for 30 generations. At the end of selection, we conducted a complete reciprocal transfer experiment where all populations were raised in all environments, to estimate the realized additive genetic covariance matrix among clinal environments in three life-history traits. Visualization of the genetic covariance functions of the life-history traits revealed that the genetic correlation between environments generally declined as environments became more different and even became negative between the most different environments in some cases. One exception to this general pattern was a life-history trait representing the classic trade-off between development time and body size, which responded to selection in a similar genetic fashion across all environments. Adaptation to clinal environments may involve a number of distinct genetic effects along the length of the cline, the complexity of which may not be fully revealed by focusing primarily on populations at the ends of the cline.

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Six Bos taurus (Hereford) steers (body weight 324 22 kg) were used in a 45-day study with a replicated 3 x 3 Latin-square design. Three treatments [ad libitum feeding (ADLIB); limit feeding, 85% of ad libitum (LIMIT); bunk management feeding where steers were only given access to feed from 1600 to 0800 hours the following day (BUNK)] were imposed over 3 periods, with 2 steers assigned to each treatment in each period. Cattle were managed in a temperature-controlled metabolism unit and were exposed to both thermoneutral (17.7degreesC-26.1degreesC) and hot (16.7degreesC-32.9degreesC) environmental conditions. By design, during the thermoneutral period, the ADLIB cattle displayed greater intake (P < 0.05) than the LIMIT group, with the BUNK group being intermediate. However, during the hot period, both the LIMIT and BUNK treatment groups increased feed intake 4-5%, whereas feed intake of the ADLIB treatment group declined nearly 2%. During both periods respiration rate (RR, breath/min) followed the same pattern that was observed for feed intake, with the greatest (P < 0.05) RR found in the ADLIB treatment group (81.09 and 109.55, thermoneutral and hot, respectively) and lowest (P < 0.05) RR in the LIMIT treatment group (74.47 and 102.76, thermoneutral and hot, respectively). Rectal temperature (RT) did not differ among treatments during the thermoneutral period or the first hot day, although during the thermoneutral period the ADLIB treatment group did tend to display a lower RT, possibly as a result of other physiological processes (pulse rate and RR) aiding to keep RT lower. During the hot period, differences in RT were found on Day 5, with the LIMIT cattle having lower (P < 0.10) RT (38.92degreesC) than the ADLIB (39.18degreesC) cattle, with BUNK cattle RT (39.14degreesC) being intermediate. However, when hourly data were examined, the ADLIB cattle had greater(P < 0.05) RT than the BUNK and LIMIT at 1800 hours and greater RT (P < 0.05) than the LIMIT group at 1400, 1500, and 1600 hours. Clearly, a change in diurnal RT pattern was obtained by using the LIMIT and BUNK feeding regimen. Both of these groups displayed a peak RT during the hot conditions, between 2100 and 2200 hours, whereas the ADLIB group displayed a peak RT between 1400 and 1500 hours, a time very close to when peak climatic stress occurs. Based on these results it is apparent that feedlot managers could alleviate the effects of adverse hot weather on cattle by utilising either a limit-feeding regimen or altering bunk management practices to prevent feed from being consumed several hours prior to the hottest portion of the day.

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A controlled crossover experimental design was used to determine the effect of altered water sprinkling duration on heifers subjected to heat stress conditions. Heifers were subjected to 3 days of thermoneutral conditions followed by 3 days of hot conditions accompanied by water sprinkling between 1300 and 1500 h (HOT1-3). Then on the following 2 days (HOT4-5), environmental conditions remained similar, but 3 heifers were sprinkled between 1200 and 1600 h ( WET) and 3 were not sprinkled (NONWET). This was followed by a 1-day period (HOT6) in which environmental conditions and sprinkling regimen were similar to HOT1-3. Rectal temperature (RT) was collected hourly, and respiration rate (RR) was monitored every 2 h on HOT Days 2, 4, 5, and 6. Dry matter intake and rate of eating were also determined. Sprinkling reduced RR and RT (P < 0.01) of all heifers during HOT1-3. During HOT4-5, WET heifers had lower (P < 0.05) RT than NONWET from 1300 to 700 h and lower RR from 1400 to 2000 h. Dry matter intake of NONWET heifers was reduced by 30.6% (P < 0.05) during HOT4-5 and by 51.2% on HOT6. On HOT4-5 the dry matter intakes of WET heifers were similar to intakes under thermoneutral conditions. During HOT6, RT was again reduced following sprinkling in all heifers. Comparison of RT and RR of NONWET and WET heifers on HOT1-3 v. HOT6 revealed that under similar environmental conditions, NONWET heifers had increased RT, partially due to carry-over from HOT4-5. However, NONWET heifers had 40% lower feed intake but tended to have lower RR on HOT6 v. HOT1-3. Only RR of WET heifers was greater on HOT6, possibly a result of switching from a 4-h back to a 2-h sprinkling period, while maintaining a 62% greater intake (5.80 v. 3.58 kg/day) than NONWET heifers during this time. Results suggest that inconsistent cooling regimens may increase the susceptibility of cattle to heat stress and elicit different physiological and metabolic responses.

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Eighteen Angus steers exposed to high heat load conditions were used to assess the effectiveness of four spray cooling systems, on reducing the effects of heat load, the impact on microclimate and water usage. The steers were housed in groups of nine in a fully enclosed shed and were exposed to high heat load conditions for four days. The cooling systems used were water applied via a hose, via overhead sprinklers, via sprinklers at leg height and via misters. The water used was approximately 31 oC and contained 3% NaCl. Fans were used to ensure adequate air movement over the cattle. The animal parameters measured were feed intake, respiration rate, panting score and behaviour. Climatic factors were ambient temperature and wet bulb temperature. Ammonia levels were also measured. The hose, overhead sprinklers and misting were successful in reducing heat load on the cattle. The leg wetting system did not work because the dominant cattle blocked access to the sprinklers. The misting system used the most water (5483 L) and the hose the least (845 L). The application of water had minor impacts on wet bulb temperature, but resulted in significant reductions in dry bulb temperatures.

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Gli organismi vegetali mostrano una notevole capacità di adattamento alle condizioni di stress e lo studio delle componenti molecolari alla base dell'adattamento in colture cerealicole di interesse alimentare, come il frumento, è di particolare interesse per lo studio di varietà che consentano una buona produzione con basso input anche in condizioni ambientali non ottimali. L'esposizione delle colture cerealicole a stress termico durante determinate fasi del ciclo vitale influisce negativamente sulla resa e sulla qualità, a questo fine è necessario chiarire le basi genetiche e molecolari della termotolleranza per identificare geni e alleli vantaggiosi da impiegare in programmi di incrocio volti al miglioramento genetico. Numerosi studi dimostrano il coinvolgimento delle sHSP a localizzazione cloroplastica (in frumento sHSP26) nel meccanismo di acquisizione della termotolleranza e la loro interazione con diverse componenti del fotosistema II (PSII) che determinerebbe un’azione protettiva in condizioni di stress termico e altri tipi di stress. Lo scopo del progetto è quello di caratterizzare in frumento duro nuove varianti alleliche correlate alla tolleranza a stress termico mediate l'utilizzo del TILLING (Target Induced Local Lesion In Genome), un approccio di genetica inversa che prevede la mutagenesi e l'identificazione delle mutazioni indotte in siti di interesse. Durante la tesi sono state isolate e caratterizzate 3 sequenze geniche complete per smallHsp26 denominate TdHsp26-A1; TdHsp26-A2; TdHsp26-B1 e un putativo pseudogene denominato TdHsp26-A3. I geni isolati sono stati usati come target in analisi di TILLING in due popolazioni di frumento duro mutagenizzate con EMS (EtilMetanoSulfonato). Nel nostro studio sono stati impiegati due differenti approcci di TILLING: un approccio di TILLING classico mediante screening con High Resolution Melting (HRM) e un approccio innovativo che sfrutta un database di TILLING recentemente sviluppato. La popolazione di mutanti cv. Kronos è stata analizzata per la presenza di mutazioni in tutti e tre i geni individuati mediante ricerca online nel database di TILLING, il quale sfrutta la tecnica dell’exome capture sulla popolazione di TILLING seguito da sequenziamento ad alta processività. Attraverso questa tecnica sono state individuate, nella popolazione mutagenizzata di frumento duro cv. Kronos, 36 linee recanti mutazioni missenso. Contemporaneamente lo screening con HRM, effettuato su 960 genotipi della libreria di TILLING di frumento duro cv. Cham1 ha consentito di individuare mutazioni in una regione di 211bp di interesse funzionale del gene TdHsp26-B1, tra le quali 3 linee mutanti recanti mutazioni missenso in omozigosi. Alcune mutazioni missenso individuate sui due geni TdHsp26-A1 e TdHsp26-B1 sono state confermate in vivo nelle piante delle rispettive linee mutanti generando marcatori codominanti KASP (Kompetitive Allele Specific PCR) con cui è stato possibile verificare anche il grado di zigosità di tali mutazioni. Al fine di ridurre il numero di mutazioni non desiderate nelle linee risultate più interessanti, è stato eseguito il re-incrocio dei mutanti con i relativi parentali wild type ed inoltre sono stati generati alcuni doppi mutanti che consentiranno di comprendere meglio i meccanismi molecolari presieduti da questa classe genica. Gli individui F1 degli incroci sono stati poi genotipizzati con i medesimi marcatori KASP specifici per la mutazione di interesse per verificare la buona riuscita dell’incrocio. Questo approccio ha permesso di individuare ed implementare risorse genetiche utili ad intraprendere studi funzionali relativi al ruolo di smallHSP plastidiche implicate nella acquisizione di termotolleranza in frumento duro e di generare marcatori potenzialmente utili in futuri programmi di breeding.