932 resultados para TRANSGENIC ARABIDOPSIS
Resumo:
Diamide oxidizes cellular thiols and induces oxidative stress. To isolate plant genes which may, when overexpressed, increase tolerance of plants toward oxidative damage, an in vivo diamide tolerance screening in yeasts was used. An Arabidopsis cDNA library in a yeast expression vector was used to transform a yeast strain with intact antioxidant defense. Cells from approximately 10(5) primary transformants were selected for resistance to diamide. Three Arabidopsis cDNAs which confer diamide tolerance were isolated. This drug tolerance was specific and no cross tolerance toward hydroperoxides was found. One cDNA (D3) encodes a polypeptide which has an amino-terminal J domain characteristic of a divergent family of DnaJ chaperones. Another (D18) encodes a putative dTDP-D-glucose 4,6-dehydratase. Surprisingly, the third cDNA (D22) encodes a plant homolog of gamma-glutamyltransferases. It would have been difficult to predict that the expression of those genes would lead to an improved survival under conditions of depletion of cellular thiols. Hence, we suggest that this cloning approach may be a useful contribution to the isolation of plant genes that can help to cope with oxidative stress.
Resumo:
We have generated transgenic mice bearing the diphtheria toxin A chain (DTA) gene under the control of granzyme A (GrA) promoter sequences (GrA-DTA). GrA is expressed in activated cytotoxic cells but not in their immediate progenitors. These GrA-DTA mice are deficient in cytotoxic functions, indicating that most cytotoxic cells express GrA in vivo. Surprisingly, one founder strain containing a multicopy GrA-DTA insert show a marked and selective deficiency in CD8+ cells in peripheral lymphoid organs. This depletion was not observed in thymus, where the distribution of CD4+ and CD8+ cells is normal. Moreover, the emigration of T cells from thymus is normal, indicating that the depletion occurs in the periphery. GrA-DTA mice should be useful as models to dissect the role of cytotoxic cells in immune responses and as recipients of normal and neoplastic hematopoietic cells. The selective depletion of CD8+ cells in one founder strain could have implications for postthymic T-cell development.