651 resultados para A. thaliana


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Ethylene is an essential plant hormone involved in nearly all stages of plant growth and development. EIN2 (ETHYLENE INSENSITIVE2) is a master positive regulator in the ethylene signaling pathway, consisting of an N-terminal domain and a C-terminal domain. The EIN2 N-terminal domain localizes to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane and shows sequence similarity to Nramp metal ion transporters. The cytosolic C-terminal domain is unique to plants and signals downstream. There have been several major gaps in our knowledge of EIN2 function. It was unknown how the ethylene signal gets relayed from the known upstream component CTR1 (CONSTITUTIVE RESPONSE1) a Ser/Thr kinase at the ER, to EIN2. How the ethylene signal was transduced from EIN2 to the next downstream component transcription factor EIN3 (ETHYLENE INSENSITIVE3) in the nucleus was also unknown. The N-terminal domain of EIN2 shows homology to Nramp metal ion transporters and whether EIN2 can also function as a metal transporter has been a question plaguing the ethylene field for almost two decades. Here, EIN2 was found to interact with the CTR1 protein kinase, leading to the discovery that CTR1 phosphorylates the C-terminal domain of EIN2 in Arabidopsis thaliana. Using tags at the termini of EIN2, it was deduced that in the presence of ethylene, the EIN2 C-terminal domain is cleaved and translocates into the nucleus, where it could somehow activate downstream ethylene responses. The EIN2 C-terminal domain interacts with nuclear proteins, RTE3 and EER5, which are components of the TREX-2 mRNA export complex, although the role of these interactions remains unclear. The EIN2 N-terminal domain was found to be capable of divalent metal transport when expressed in E. coli and S. cerevisiae leading to the hypothesis that metal transport plays a role in ethylene signaling. This hypothesis was tested using a novel missense allele, ein2 G36E, substituting a highly conserved residue that is required for metal transport in Nramp proteins. This G36E substitution did not disrupt metal ion transport of EIN2, but the ethylene insensitive phenotype of this mutant indicates that the EIN2 N-terminal domain is important for positively regulating the C-terminal domain. The defect of the ein2 G36E mutant does not prevent proper expression or subcellular localization, but might affect protein modifications. The ein2 G36E allele is partially dominant, mostly likely displaying haploinsufficiency. Overexpression of the EIN2 N-terminal domain in the ein2 G36E mutant did not rescue ethylene insensitivity, suggesting the N-terminal domain functions in cis to regulate the C-terminal domain. These findings advance our knowledge of EIN2, which is critical to understanding ethylene signaling.

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Hydroxyproline O-arabinosyltransferases (HPATs) are members of a small, deeply conserved family of plant-specific glycosyltransferases that add arabinose sugars to diverse proteins including cell wall-associated extensins and small signaling peptides. Recent genetic studies in flowering plants suggest that different HPAT homologs have been co-opted to function in diverse species-specific developmental contexts. However, nothing is known about the roles of HPATs in basal plants. We show that complete loss of HPAT function in Arabidopsis thaliana and the moss Physcomitrella patens results in a shared defect in gametophytic tip cell growth. Arabidopsis hpat1/2/3 triple knockout mutants suffer from a strong male sterility defect as a consequence of pollen tubes that fail to fully elongate following pollination. Knocking out the two HPAT genes of Physcomitrella results in larger multicellular filamentous networks due to increased elongation of protonemal tip cells. Physcomitrella hpat mutants lack cell-wall associated hydroxyproline arabinosides and can be rescued with exogenous cellulose, while global expression profiling shows that cell wall-associated genes are severely misexpressed, implicating a defect in cell wall formation during tip growth. Our findings point to a major role for HPATs in influencing cell elongation during tip growth in plants.

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Thesis (Master, Biology) -- Queen's University, 2016-09-29 20:09:46.997

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A apirenia é uma das características mais apreciadas em uvas de mesa. Estudos anteriores permitiram confirmar o papel do gene VvAGL11 no controle do desenvolvimento de sementes em videira. O objetivo deste estudo foi avaliar a função gênica de VvAGL11 em Arabidopsis thaliana e em videiras.

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A macieira é uma árvore de clima temperado pertencente à família Rosaceae. Árvores de macieira entram em um período de dormência durante o inverno, o que garante a sobrevivência dessas plantas frente a temperaturas abaixo de zero e permite à planta retomar o crescimento vegetativo e reprodutivo na primavera. A indução, progressão e liberaão da dormência é dependente de temperaturas abaixo de 7,2°C e é regulada por um mecanismo molecular endógeno de gemas. Em estudos anteriores do Laboratório de Genética Molecular Vegetal, foi identificado um importante QTL no cromossomo 9 de macieira que explica mais de 50% da variaão fenotípica observada para o tempo de floraão. Dois genes candidatos, MdFLC-like e MdPRE1, foram localizados dentro do intervalo de confiança deste QTL. Na planta modelo Arabidopsis thaliana, FLC e PRE1 estão envolvidos no processo de floraão e crescimento, respectivamente, o que reforça um possível papel de MdFLC-like e MdPRE1 na regulaão do tempo de floraão em macieira. No presente estudo, está sendo investigado o papel dos genes MdFLC-like e MdPRE1 na progressão e liberaão da dormência em gemas de macieira.