995 resultados para Plants-maturation
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This work aimed to evaluate the influence of naphthaleneacetic acid (NAA) and gibberellic acid (GA3) plant regulators in in vitro etiolation and subsequent regeneration of the PE x SC-60 pineapple hybrid. Nodal segments of in vitro plants with approximately 5-7 cm height were incubated in basic MS culture medium supplemented with 0.0; 0.5 and 1.0 mg L-1 of naphthaleneacetic acid (NAA) in combination with gibberellic acid (GA3) in concentrations of 0.0; 0.5 and 1.0 mg L-1, and maintained at 27 ºC under dark condition. Evaluations were carried out at 90 and 180 days after incubation period. The best results for length of etiolated stems were obtained with 1.0 mg L-1 of NAA. In the experiment followed by the regeneration, stems with 3 cm from the etiolation treatment, were cultivated in proliferation medium and the number of regenerated plants per treatment was evaluated at 60 days of cultivation. The treatment that promoted the best etiolation of plants also promoted the worst regeneration rates, demonstrating the residual effect of the auxin used in the previous step in the regeneration of plants of the pineapple hybrid evaluated.
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Selostus: Pellavan ja kuituhampun mikrobiologinen laatu kasvukauden aikana
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Despite the importance of peach (Prunus persica (L.) Batsch) in Rio Grande do Sul, little is known about mites fluctuation population considered important to this crop. The objective of this study was to know the population diversity and fluctuation of mite species associated with Premier and Eldorado varieties in Roca Sales and Venâncio Aires counties, Rio Grande do Sul. The study was conducted from July 2008 to June 2009 when 15 plants were randomly chosen in each area. The plants were divided in quadrants and from each one a branch was chosen from which three leaves were removed: one collected in the apical region, another in the medium and the other in the basal region, totalizing 180 leaves/area. Five of the most abundant associated plants were collected monthly in enough amounts for the screening under the stereoscopic microscope during an hour. A total of 1,124 mites were found belonging to 14 families and 28 species. Tetranychus ludeni Zacher, 1913, Panonychus ulmi (Koch, 1836) and Mononychellus planki (McGregor, 1950) were the most abundant phytophagous mites, whereas Typhlodromalus aripo Deleon, 1967 and Phytoseiulus macropilis (Banks, 1904) the most common predatory mites. The period of one hour under stereoscopic microscope was enough to get a representative sample. In both places evaluated the ecologic indices were low, but little higherin Premier (H' 0.56; EqJ: 0.43) when compared to Eldorado (H' 0.53; EqJ 0.40). In Premier constant species were not observed and accessory only Brevipalpus phoenicis (Geijskes, 1939), T. ludeni and T. aripo. Higher abundance was observed in December and January and bigger amount in April. Already in Eldorado, T. ludeni and P. ulmi were constants. Greater abundance was observed in November and December, whereas grater richness in December and January. In both orchards were not found mites in buds. Tetranychus ludeni is the most abundant phytophagous mites with outbreak population in November, December and January and high predator diversity was observed on associated plants and on peach plants, indicating the existence of species mobility in peach orchard.
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Wheat plants (Triticum durum Desf., cv. Regallo) were grown in the field to study the effects of contrasting [CO2] conditions (700 versus 370 μmol mol−1) on growth, photosynthetic performance, and C management during the post-anthesis period. The aim was to test whether a restricted capacity of sink organs to utilize photosynthates drives a loss of photosynthetic capacity in elevated CO2. The ambient 13C/12C isotopic composition (δ13C) of air CO2 was changed from-10.2 in ambient [CO2] to-23.6 under elevated [CO2] between the 7th and the 14th days after anthesis in order to study C assimilation and partitioning between leaves and ears. Elevated [CO2] had no significant effect on biomass production and grain filling, and caused an accumulation of C compounds in leaves. This was accompanied by up-regulation of phosphoglycerate mutase and ATP synthase protein content, together with down-regulation of adenosine diphosphate glucose pyrophosphatase protein. Growth in elevated [CO2] negatively affected Rubisco and Rubisco activase protein content and induced photosynthetic down-regulation. CO2 enrichment caused a specific decrease in Rubisco content, together with decreases in the amino acid and total N content of leaves. The C labelling revealed that in flag leaves, part of the C fixed during grain filling was stored as starch and structural C compounds whereas the rest of the labelled C (mainly in the form of soluble sugars) was completely respired 48 h after the end of labelling. Although labelled C was not detected in the δ13C of ear total organic matter and respired CO2, soluble sugar δ13C revealed that a small amount of labelled C reached the ear. The 12CO2 labelling suggests that during the beginning of post-anthesis the ear did not contribute towards overcoming flag leaf carbohydrate accumulation, and this had a consequent effect on protein expression and photosynthetic acclimation.
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Species of the Annonaceae family are used all over the tropics in traditional medicine in tropical regions for the treatment of malaria and other illnesses. Phytochemical studies of this family have revealed chemical components which could offer new alternatives for the treatment and control of malaria. Searches in scientific reference sites (SciFinder Scholar, Scielo, PubMed, ScienceDirect and ISI Web of Science) and a bibliographic literature search for species of Annonaceae used traditionally to treat malaria and fever were carried out. This family contains 2,100 species in 123 genera. We encountered 113 articles reporting medicinal use of one or more species of this family including 63 species in 27 genera with uses as antimalarials and febrifuges. Even though the same species of Annonaceae are used by diverse ethnic groups, different plant parts are often chosen for applications, and diverse methods of preparation and treatment are used. The ethanol extracts of Polyalthia debilis and Xylopia aromatica proved to be quite active against Plasmodium falciparum in vitro (median inhibition concentration, IC50 < 1.5 µg/mL). Intraperitoneal injection of Annickia chlorantha aqueous extracts (cited as Enantia chlorantha) cleared chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium yoelii nigeriensis from the blood of mice in a dose-dependant manner. More phytochemical profiles of Annonaceous species are required; especially information on the more commonly distributed antimalarial compounds in this family.
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Schizophrenia pathophysiology implies both abnormal redox control and dysconnectivity of the prefrontal cortex, partly related to oligodendrocyte and myelin impairments. As oligodendrocytes are highly vulnerable to altered redox state, we investigated the interplay between glutathione and myelin. In control subjects, multimodal brain imaging revealed a positive association between medial prefrontal glutathione levels and both white matter integrity and resting-state functional connectivity along the cingulum bundle. In early psychosis patients, only white matter integrity was correlated with glutathione levels. On the other side, in the prefrontal cortex of peripubertal mice with genetically impaired glutathione synthesis, mature oligodendrocyte numbers, as well as myelin markers, were decreased. At the molecular levels, under glutathione-deficit conditions induced by short hairpin RNA targeting the key glutathione synthesis enzyme, oligodendrocyte progenitors showed a decreased proliferation mediated by an upregulation of Fyn kinase activity, reversed by either the antioxidant N-acetylcysteine or Fyn kinase inhibitors. In addition, oligodendrocyte maturation was impaired. Interestingly, the regulation of Fyn mRNA and protein expression was also impaired in fibroblasts of patients deficient in glutathione synthesis. Thus, glutathione and redox regulation have a critical role in myelination processes and white matter maturation in the prefrontal cortex of rodent and human, a mechanism potentially disrupted in schizophrenia.
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Glucose-induced insulin secretion is an essential function of pancreatic β-cells that is partially lost in individuals affected by Type 2 diabetes. This unique property of β-cells is acquired through a poorly understood postnatal maturation process involving major modifications in gene expression programs. Here we show that β-cell maturation is associated with changes in microRNA expression induced by the nutritional transition that occurs at weaning. When mimicked in newborn islet cells, modifications in the level of specific microRNAs result in a switch in the expression of metabolic enzymes and cause the acquisition of glucose-induced insulin release. Our data suggest microRNAs have a central role in postnatal β-cell maturation and in the determination of adult functional β-cell mass. A better understanding of the events governing β-cell maturation may help understand why some individuals are predisposed to developing diabetes and could lead to new strategies for the treatment of this common metabolic disease.
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Glyoxysomes are specialized peroxisomes present in various plant organs such as germinating cotyledons or senescing leaves. They are the site of beta-oxidation and of the glyoxylate cycle. These consecutive pathways are essential to the maintenance of gluconeogenesis initiated by the degradation of reserve or structural lipids. In contrast to mitochondrial beta-oxidation, which is prevalent in animal cells, glyoxysomal beta-oxidation and the glyoxylate cycle have no direct access to the mitochondrial respiratory chain because of the impermeability of the glyoxysomal membrane to the reduced cofactors. The necessity of NAD(+) regeneration can conceivably be fulfilled by membrane redox chains and/or by transmembrane shuttles. Experimental evidence based on the active metabolic roles of higher plant glyoxysomes and yeast peroxisomes suggests the coexistence of two mechanisms, namely a reductase/peroxidase membrane redox chain and a malate/aspartate shuttle susceptible to transfer electrons to the mitochondrial ATP generating system. Such a model interconnects beta-oxidation, the glyoxylate cycle, the respiratory chain and gluconeogenesis in such a way that glyoxysomal malate dehydrogenase is an essential and exclusive component of beta-oxidation (NAD(+) regeneration). Consequently, the classical view of the glyoxylate cycle is superseded by a tentative reactional scheme deprived of cyclic character.
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Post-translational protein modifications are crucial for many fundamental cellular and extracellular processes and greatly contribute to the complexity of organisms. Human HCF-1 is a transcriptional co-regulator that undergoes complex protein maturation involving reversible and irreversible post-translational modifications. Upon synthesis as a large precursor protein, HCF-1 undergoes extensive reversible glycosylation with β-N-acetylglucosamine giving rise to O-linked-β-N-acetylglucosamine (O-GlcNAc) modified serines and threonines. HCF-1 also undergoes irreversible site-specific proteolysis, which is important for one of HCF-1's major functions - the regulation of the cell-division cycle. HCF-1 O-GlcNAcylation and site-specific proteolysis are both catalyzed by a single enzyme with an unusual dual enzymatic activity, the O-GlcNAc transferase (OGT). HCF-1 is cleaved by OGT at any of six highly conserved 26 amino acid repeated sequences (HCF-1PRO repeats), but the mechanisms and the substrate requirements for OGT-mediated cleavage are not understood. In the present work, I characterized substrate requirements for OGT-mediated cleavage and O-GlcNAcylation of HCF-1. I identified key elements within the HCF-1PRO-repeat sequence that are important for proteolysis. Remarkably, an invariant single amino acid side-chain within the HCF-1PRO-repeat sequence displays particular OGT-binding properties and is essential for proteolysis. Additionally, I characterized substrate requirements for proteolysis outside of the HCF-1PRO repeat and identified a novel, highly O-GlcNAcylated OGT-binding sequence that enhances cleavage of the first HCF-1PRO repeat. These results link OGT association and its O-GlcNAcylation activities to HCF-1PRO-repeat proteolysis.
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Plants must constantly adapt to a changing light environment in order to optimize energy conversion through the process of photosynthesis and to limit photodamage. In addition, plants use light cues for timing of key developmental transitions such as initiation of reproduction (transition to flowering). Plants are equipped with a battery of photoreceptors enabling them to sense a very broad light spectrum spanning from UV-B to far-red wavelength (280-750nm). In this review we briefly describe the different families of plant photosensory receptors and the mechanisms by which they transduce environmental information to influence numerous aspects of plant growth and development throughout their life cycle.
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SKI-l/SlP protease is a member of the proprotein convertase family, with several functions in cellular metabolism and homeostasis. It is responsible for the processing of several cellular substrates, including ATF6, SREBPs, and GlcNAc-1- phosphotranspherase. Furthermore, SKI-1/SlP is also responsible for maturation of arenavirus surface glycoprotein into GP1 and GP2 subunits. This processing is a strict requirement in order to achieve fully mature and fusion-competent virions. Furthermore, SKI-1/SlP itself is synthesized as an inactive zymogen, requiring sequential autocatalytic processing at several sites (B'/B and C) in its prodomain in order to mature and become fully active. Our project focused on the analysis of SKI- 1/S1P prodomain in the biogenesis of the active enzyme. In this context we have additionally developed and characterized a novel cell-based sensor for assessment of cellular activity of the enzyme, with a potential application in screening for novel SKI- 1/S1P inhibitors. In a first aim we have analysed the relevance of cleavage motifs found in the enzyme prodomain. Using molecular and biochemistry tools we have identified and characterized a novel C' maturation site. Furthermore, we found that SKI-1/SlP autoprocessing results in intermediates whose catalytic domain remains associated with prodomain fragments of different lengths. Contrasting with other proprotein convertases, incompletely matured intermediates of SKI-1/SlP exhibit full catalytic activity toward selected substrates. In a second aim, we turned our attention to the structural basis of SKI-1/SlP N- terminus assisted folding. Studying the folding and activity of prodomain-truncated forms of the enzyme we found that a minimal folding unit is contained in the AB region. Deletion of the BC sequence affected auto-maturation but not folding, and partial activity was retained. However, the BC region seemed required for complete and full activity. Phylogenetic analyses showed that the AB sequence is highly conserved, while the BC fragment is variable in sequence and length. Specifically, replacement of the human prodomain with that of Drosophila, resulted in a fully mature and active chimeric enzyme, suggesting an evolution process of SKI-1/SlP prodomain towards a more complex arrangement and steps of activation. Overall, the additional data we have produced might provide fundamental knowledge crucial for the development of novel SKI-1/SlP inhibitors while also providing new SKI- 1/S1P variants with potential use in crystallization purpose. -- SKI-l/SlP est une protéase membre de la famille des proprotéines convertases (PCs), avec plusieurs fonctions dans le métabolisme cellulaire et de l'homéostasie. Il est responsable pour la maturation de plusieurs substrats cellulaires, y compris ATF6, SREBPs et GlcNAc-1-phosphotranspherase. SKI-l/SlP est également responsable pour la maturation de la glycoprotéine des arénavirus, une exigence stricte pour atteindre des virions infectieuse. Synthétisé comme un zymogène inactif, SKI-l/SlP nécessite d'un traitement autocatalytique séquentiel sur plusieurs sites (B'/B et C) de son prodomaine afin de devenir pleinement active. Notre projet était axé sur l'analyse de SKI-l/SlP prodomaine dans la biogenèse de l'enzyme. Dans ce contexte, nous avons développé un nouveau senseur-cellulaire pour l'évaluation de l'activité de l'enzyme. Ce dernier pourrait avoir une potentielle application dans l'identification de nouveaux inhibiteurs de SKI-l/SlP. Premièrement, nous avons analysé la pertinence des motifs de clivage trouvés dans le prodomaine de l'enzyme. En utilisant des outils moléculaires et biochimiques, nous avons identifié et caractérisé un nouveau site de maturation (C'). Aussi, nous avons constaté que la maturation de SKI-l/SlP a des intermédiaires dont le domaine catalytique reste associé à des fragments du prodomaine de différentes longueurs. Contrastant avec d'autres PCs, les intermédiaires partiellement matures de SKI-1 / SIP présentent une activité catalytique complète envers des substrats spécifiques. Dans un deuxième but nous avons tourné notre attention sur la base structurelle du pliage de SKI-l/SlP assisté par son N-terminus: En étudiant l'activité et pliage des formes tronquées dans le prodomaine de l'enzyme, nous avons constaté qu'une unité de pliage minimale est contenue dans la région de l'AB. La suppression de la séquence d'auto-BC affecte la maturation mais pas le pliage, et l'activité partielle est maintenue. Cependant, la région BC semble nécessaire pour une activité complète. Les analyses phylogénétiques ont montré que la séquence AB est fortement conservée, tandis que le fragment de BC est variable en longueur et en séquence. En particulier, le remplacement du prodomaine humain avec celui de la drosophile, a donné lieu à une enzyme chimérique complètement mature et active. Suggérant un processus d'évolution du prodomaine vers un arrangement et des mesures d'activation plus complexe. Globalement, ces donnees supplémentaires augment les connaissances fondamentales cruciales pour le développement de nouveaux inhibiteurs de SKI-1/ SIP, tout en offrant de nouvelles variantes SKI-1 / SIP dans le but d'obtenir la structure cristallographique de l'enzyme.