@phdthesis{Mueller2017, author = {M{\"u}ller, Stephanie}, title = {Plant thermotolerance: The role of heat stress-induced triacylglycerols in \(Arabidopsis\) \(thaliana\)}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-152829}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2017}, abstract = {Plants are exposed to high temperature, especially during hot summer days. Temperatures are typically lowest in the morning and reach a maximum in the afternoon. Plants can tolerate and survive short-term heat stress even on hot summer days. A. thaliana seedlings have been reported to tolerate higher temperatures for different time periods, a phenomenon that has been termed basal thermotolerance. In addition, plants have the inherent capacity to acclimate to otherwise lethal temperatures. Arabidopsis thaliana seedlings acclimate at moderately elevated temperatures between 32-38° C. During heat acclimation, a genetically programmed heat shock response (HSR) is triggered that is characterized by a rapid activation of heat shock transcription factors (HSFs), which trigger a massive accumulation of heat shock proteins that are chiefly involved in protein folding and protection. Although the HSF-triggered heat-shock response is well characterized, little is known about the metabolic adjustments during heat stress. The aim of this work was to get more insight into heat-responsive metabolism and its importance for thermotolerance. In order to identify the response of metabolites to elevated temperatures, global metabolite profiles of heat-acclimated and control seedlings were compared. Untargeted metabolite analyses revealed that levels of polyunsaturated triacylglycerols (TG) rapidly increase during heat acclimation. TG accumulation was found to be temperature-dependent in a temperature range from 32-50° C (optimum at 42° C). Heat-induced TG accumulation was localized in extra-chloroplastic compartments by chloroplast isolation as well as by fluorescence microscopy of A. thaliana cell cultures. Analysis of mutants deficient in all four HSFA1 master regulator genes or the HSFA2 gene revealed that TG accumulation occurred independently to HSF. Moreover, the TG response was not limited to heat stress since drought and salt stress (but not short-term osmotic, cold and high light stress) also triggered an accumulation of TGs. In order to reveal the origin of TG synthesis, lipid analysis was carried out. Heat-induced accumulation of TGs does not derive from massive de novo fatty acid (FA) synthesis. On the other hand, lipidomic analyses of A. thaliana seedlings indicated that polyunsaturated FA from thylakoid galactolipids are incorporated into cytosolic TGs during heat stress. This was verified by lipidomic analyses of A. thaliana fad7/8 transgenic seedlings, which displayed altered FA compositions of plastidic lipids. In addition, wild type A. thaliana seedlings displayed a rapid conversion of plastidic monogalactosyldiacylglycerols (MGDGs) into oligogalactolipids, acylated MGDGs and diacylglycerols (DGs). For TG synthesis, DG requires a FA from the acyl CoA pool or phosphatidylcholine (PC). Seedlings deficient in phospholipid:diacylglycerol acyltransferase1 (PDAT1) were unable to accumulate TGs following heat stress; thus PC appears to be the major FA donor for TGs during heat treatment. These results suggest that TG and oligogalactolipid accumulation during heat stress is driven by post-translationally regulated plastid lipid metabolism. TG accumulation following heat stress was found to increase basal thermotolerance. Pdat1 mutant seedlings were more sensitive to severe heat stress without prior acclimatization, as revealed by a more dramatic decline of the maximum efficiency of PSII and lower survival rate compared to wild type seedlings. In contrast, tgd1 mutants over-accumulating TGs and oligogalactolipids displayed a higher basal thermotolerance compared to wild type seedlings. These results therefore suggest that accumulation of TGs increases thermotolerance in addition to the genetically encoded heat shock response.}, subject = {Triglyceride}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Zhang2014, author = {Zhang, Yi}, title = {Regulation of Agrobacterial Oncogene Expression in Host Plants}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-102578}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2014}, abstract = {Virulent Agrobacterium tumefaciens strains transfer and integrate a DNA region of the tumor-inducing (Ti) plasmid, the T-DNA, into the plant genome and thereby cause crown gall disease. The most essential genes required for crown gall development are the T-DNA-encoded oncogenes, IaaH (indole-3-acetamide hydrolase), IaaM (tryptophan monooxygenase) for auxin, and Ipt (isopentenyl transferase) for cytokinin biosynthesis. When these oncogenes are expressed in the host cell, the levels of auxin and cytokinin increase and cause cell proliferation. The aim of this study was to unravel the molecular mechanisms, which regulate expression of the agrobacterial oncogenes in plant cells. Transcripts of the three oncogenes were expressed in Arabidopsis thaliana crown galls induced by A. tumefaciens strain C58 and the intergenic regions (IGRs) between their coding sequences (CDS) were proven to have promoter activity in plant cells. These promoters possess eukaryotic sequence structures and contain cis-regulatory elements for the binding of plant transcription factors. The high-throughput protoplast transactivation (PTA) system was used and identified the Arabidopsis thaliana transcription factors WRKY18, WRKY40, WRKY60 and ARF5 to activate the Ipt oncogene promoter. No transcription factor promoted the activity of the IaaH and IaaM promoters, despite the fact that the sequences contained binding elements for type B ARR transcription factors. Likewise, the treatment of Arabidopsis mesophyll protoplasts with cytokinin (trans-zeatin) and auxin (1-NAA) exerted no positive effect on IaaH and IaaM promoter activity. In contrast, the Ipt promoter strongly responded to a treatment with auxin and only modestly to cytokinin. The three Arabidopsis WRKYs play a role in crown gall development as the wrky mutants developed smaller crown galls than wild-type plants. The WRKY40 and WRKY60 genes responded very quickly to pathogen infection, two and four hours post infection, respectively. Transcription of the WRKY18 gene was induced upon buffer infiltration, which implicates a response to wounding. The three WRKY proteins interacted with ARF5 and with each other in the plant nucleus, but only WRKY40 together with ARF5 increased activation of the Ipt promoter. Moreover, ARF5 activated the Ipt promoter in an auxin-dependent manner. The severe developmental phenotype of the arf5 mutant prevented studies on crown gall development, nevertheless, the reduced crown gall growth on the transport inhibitor response 1 (TIR1) tir1 mutant, lacking the auxin sensor, suggested that auxin signaling is required for optimal crown gall development. In conclusion, A. tumefaciens recruits the pathogen defense related WRKY40 pathway to activate Ipt expression in T-DNA-transformed plant cells. IaaH and IaaM gene expression seems not to be controlled by transcriptional activators, but the increasing auxin levels are signaled via ARF5. The auxin-depended activation of ARF5 boosts expression of the Ipt gene in combination with WRKY40 to increase cytokinin levels and induce crown gall development.}, subject = {Agrobacterium tumefaciens}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Karimi2021, author = {Karimi, Sohail Mehmood}, title = {A Comparative Study on Guard Cell Function of the Glycophyte \(Arabidopsis\) \(thaliana\) and the Halophyte \(Thellungiella\) \(salsuginea\) Under Saline Growth Conditions}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-19094}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-190942}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2021}, abstract = {The greatest problems faced during the 21st century is climate change which is a big threat to food security due to increasing number of people. The increase in extreme weather events, such as drought and heat, makes it difficult to cultivate conventional crops that are not stress tolerant. As a result, increasing irrigation of arable land leads to additional salinization of soils with plant-toxic sodium and chloride ions. Knowledge about the adaptation strategies of salt-tolerant plants to salt stress as well as detailed knowledge about the control of transpiration water loss of these plants are therefore important to guarantee productive agriculture in the future. In the present study, I have characterized salt sensitive and salt tolerant plant species at physiological, phenotypic and transcriptomic level under short (1x salt) and long-time (3x) saline growth conditions. Two approaches used for long-time saline growth conditions (i.e increasing saline conditions (3x salt) and constant high saline conditions (3x 200 mM salt) were successfully developed in the natural plant growth medium i.e soil. Salt sensitive plants, A. thaliana, were able to survive and successfully set seeds at the toxic concentrations on the increasing saline growth mediums, with minor changes in the phenotype. However, under constant high saline conditions they could not survive. This was due to keeping low potassium, and high salt ions (sodium and chloride) in the photosynthetic tissue i.e leaf. Similarly, high potassium and low salt ions in salt tolerant T. salsuginea on both saline environments were the key for survival of this plant species. Being salt tolerant, T. salsuginea always kept high potassium levels and low sodium (during 1x) and chloride levels (during both 1x and 3x) in the leaf tissue. A strict control over transpirational water loss via stomata (formed by pair of guard cells) is important to maintain plant water balance. Aperture size of the stomata is regulated by the turgidity of the guard cells. More turgid the guard cells, bigger the apertures are and hence more transpiration. Under osmotic stress, the water loss is reduced which was evident in the salt sensitive A. thaliana plants under both short and long-time saline growth conditions. As the osmotic stress was only increased during long time saline growth conditions in T. salsuginea therefore, water loss was also decreased only under these saline conditions. Environmental CO2 assimilation also takes place via stomata in plants which then is used for photosynthesis. Stomatal apertures also influence CO2 assimilation. As the light absorbing photosynthetic pigments were more affected in A. thaliana, therefore photosynthetic activity of the whole plant was also reduced. Similarly, both short and long-time saline growth conditions also reduced the effective quantum yield of A. thaliana guard cells. Growth of the plant is dependent on energy which comes from photosynthesis. Reduced environmental CO2 assimilation would affect photosynthesis and hence growth, which was clearly observed in A. thaliana guard cells under long-time saline growth conditions. Major differences in both guard cells types were observed in their chloride and potassium levels. Energy Dispersive X-Ray Analysis (EDXA) suggested strict control of chloride accumulation in T. salsuginea guard cells as the levels remain unchanged under all conditions. Similarly, use of sodium in place of potassium for osmotic adjustments seems to be dependent on Na+/K+ rations in both guard cell types. Increased salt ions and reduced potassium levels in A. thaliana guard cells posed negative effect on photochemistry which in turn increased ROS metabolism and reduced energy related pathways at transcriptomic level in this plant species. Moreover, photosynthesis was strongly affected in A. thaliana guard cells both at transcriptomic and physiological levels. Similarly, global phytohormones induced changes were more evident in A. thaliana guard cells especially on 3x salt medium. Among all phytohormones, genes under the control of auxin were more differentially expressed in A. thaliana guard cells which suggests wide changes in growth and development in this plant species under salinity. Phytohormone, ABA is vital for closing the stomata under abiotic stress conditions. Increased levels of ABA during saline conditions led to efflux of potassium and counter anions (chloride, malate, nitrate) from the guard cells which caused the outward flow of water and hence reduction in turgor pressure. Reduced turgor pressure led to reduced water loss and CO2 assimilation especially in A. thaliana. Guard cells of both plant species synthesized ABA during saline conditions which was reflected from transcriptomic data and ABA quantification in the guard cells. ABA induced signaling in both plant species varied at the ABA receptor (PYL/PYR) levels where totally contrasting responses were observed. PYL2, PYL8 and PYL9 were specific to A. thaliana, furthermore, PYL2 was found to be differentially expressed only under 3x salt growth conditions thus suggesting its role during long term salt stress in this plant species. Protein phosphatases, which negatively regulate ABA signaling on one hand and act as ABA sensor on the other hand were found to be more differentially expressed in A. thaliana than T. salsuginea guard cells, which suggests their diverse role in both plant species under saline conditions. Differential expression of more ABA signaling players in long time saline conditions was prominent which could be because of darkness, as it is well known that rapid closure of stomata under dark conditions require ABA signaling. Moreover, representation of these components in dark also suggests that plants become more sensitive to dark under saline conditions which is also evident from the transpiration rates. Altogether, increased salt ions in A. thaliana guard cells and leaves led to pigment degradation and ABA induced reduction in transpiration which in turn influenced its growth. In contrast, T. salsuginea is the salt excluder and therefore keeps low levels of salt ions especially the chloride both in leaves and guard cells which mildly affects its growth. Guard cells of A. thaliana encounter severe energy problems at physiological and transcriptomic level. Main differences in the ABA signalling between both plant species were observed at the ABA receptor level.}, language = {en} }