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Erscheinungsjahr
- 2024 (5) (entfernen)
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- Dissertation (5) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- Arabidopsis thaliana (1)
- BMP-2 (1)
- Baumphysiologie (1)
- Climate change (1)
- Dionaea muscipula (1)
- Dürrestress (1)
- Jasmonate info (1)
- Kaliumkanal (1)
- Klimawandel (1)
- Klimaänderung (1)
- Knochen-Morphogenese-Proteine (1)
- Patch-Clamp-Methode (1)
- Pflanzenhydraulik (1)
- Pflanzenökologie (1)
- Plant Biology (1)
- Plant Ecology (1)
- Plant hydraulic (1)
- Posttranslationale Änderung (1)
- SV/TPC1 (1)
- Spaltöffnung (1)
- Stomaschluss (1)
- Tree physiology (1)
- Trockenstress (1)
- Venusfliegenfalle (1)
- Vicia faba (1)
- action potential (1)
- carnivorous plants (1)
- defence mechanisms (1)
- jasmonic acid (1)
- luminal Ca2+ sensing sites (1)
- luminale Ca2+-Sensorstellen (1)
- mechanosensation (1)
- molecular pathways (1)
- touch (1)
- transcriptomics (1)
- trap closure (1)
- vacuole (1)
- wounding (1)
Institut
- Julius-von-Sachs-Institut für Biowissenschaften (5) (entfernen)
Sonstige beteiligte Institutionen
Plants are able to sense mechanical forces in order to defend themselves against predators,
for instance by synthesizing repellent compounds. Very few plants evolved extremely sensitive
tactile abilities that allow them to perceive, interpret and respond by rapid movement in the
milliseconds range. One such rarity is the charismatic Venus flytrap (Dionaea muscipula) - a
carnivorous plant which relies on its spectacular active trapping strategy to catch its prey. The
snapping traps are equipped with touch-specialised trigger hairs, that upon bending elicit an
action potential (AP). This electrical signal originates within the trigger hairs’ mechanosensory
cells and further propagates throughout the whole trap, alerting the plant of potential prey.
Two APs triggered within thirty seconds will set off the trap and more than five APs will
initiate the green stomach formation for prey decomposition and nutrient uptake. Neither
the molecular components of the plant’s AP nor the Venus flytrap’s fast closure mechanism
have been fully elucidated yet. Therefore, the general objective of this study is to expound
on the molecular basis of touch perception: from AP initiation to trap closure and finally to
stomach formation.
The typical electrical signal in plants lasts for minutes and its shape is determined by the
intensity of the mechanical force applied. In contrast, the Venus flytrap’s one-second AP is of
all-or-nothing type, similar in shape to the animal AP. In order to gain more insight into the
molecular components that give rise to the Venus flytrap’s emblematic AP, the transcriptomic
landscape of its unique mechanotransducer - the trigger hair – was compared to the rest
of the non-specialised tissues and organs. Additionally, the transcriptome of the electrically
excitable fully-developed adult trap was compared to non-excitable juvenile traps that are
unable to produce sharp APs. Together, the two strategies helped with the identification of
electrogenic channels and pumps for each step of the AP as follows: (1) the most specific to
the trigger hair was the mechanosensitive channel DmMSL10, making up the best candidate for
the initial AP depolarization phase, (2) the K+ outward rectifier DmSKOR could be responsible
for repolarisation, (3) further, the proton pump DmAHA4, might kick in during repolarisation
and go on with hyperpolarisation and (4) the hyperpolarization- and acid-activated K+ inward
rectifier KDM1 might contribute to the re-establishment of electrochemical gradient and
the resting potential. Responsible for the AP-associated Ca2+ wave and electrical signal
propagation, the glutamate-like receptor DmGLR3.6 was also enriched in the trigger hairs.
Together, these findings suggest that the reuse of genes involved in electrical signalling in
ordinary plants can give rise to the Venus flytrap’s trademark AP.
The Venus flytrap has been cultivated ever since its discovery, generating more than one
hundred cultivars over the years. Among them, indistinguishable from a normal Venus flytrap
at first sight, the ’ERROR’ cultivar exhibits a peculiar behaviour: it is unable to snap its traps
upon two APs. Nevertheless, it is still able to elicit normal APs. To get a better understanding
of the key molecular mechanisms and pathways that are essential for a successful trap closure,
the ’ERROR’ mutant was compared to the functional wild type.
Timelapse photography led to the observation that the ’ERROR’ mutants were able to leisurely
half close their traps when repeated mechanostimulation was applied (10 minutes after 20
APs, 0.03 Hz). As a result of touch or wounding in non-carnivorous plants, jasmonic acid
(JA) is synthesized, alerting the plants of potential predators. Curiously, the JA levels were reduced upon mechanostimulation and completely impaired upon wounding in the ’ERROR’
mutant. In search of genes accountable for the ’ERROR’ mutant’s defects, the transcriptomes
of the two phenotypes were compared before and after mechanostimulation (1h after 10
APs, 0.01 Hz). The overall dampened response of the mutant compared to the wild type,
was reflected at transcriptomic level as well. Only about 50% of wild type’s upregulated
genes after touch stimulation were differentially expressed in ’ERROR’ and they manifested
only half of the wild type’s expression amplitude. Among unresponsive functional categories
of genes in ’ERROR’ phenotype, there were: cell wall integrity surveilling system, auxin
biosynthesis and stress-related transcription factors from the ethylene-responsive AP2/ERF and
C2H2-ZF families. Deregulated Ca2+-decoding as well as redox-related elements together with
JA-pathway components might also contribute to the malfunctioning of the ’ERROR’ mutant. As
the mutant does not undergo full stomach formation after mechanical treatment, these missing
processes represent key milestones that might mediate growth-defence trade-offs under JA
signalling. This confirms the idea that carnivory has evolved by recycling the already available
molecular machineries of the ubiquitous plant immune system.
To better understand the mutant’s defect in the trap snapping mechanism, the ground states
(unstimulated traps) of the two phenotypes were compared. In this case, many cell wall-related
genes (e.g. expansins) were downregulated in the ’ERROR’ mutant. For the first time, these
data point to the importance of a special cell wall architecture of the trap, that might confer
the mechanical properties needed for a functional buckling system - which amplifies the speed
of the trap closure.
This study provides candidate channels for each of the AP phases that give rise to and shape
the sharp Venus flytrap-specific AP. It further underlines the possible contribution of the cell
wall architecture to the metastable ready-to-snap configuration of the trap before stimulation
- which might be crucial for the buckling-dependent snapping. And finally, it highlights
molecular milestones linked to defence responses that ensure trap morphing into a green
stomach after mechanostimulation. Altogether, these processes prove to be interdependent
and essential for a successful carnivorous lifestyle.
Bone Morphogenetic Proteins (BMPs) sind potente Differenzierungs- und Wachstumsfaktoren, die strukturell der Transforming Growth Factor-β (TGF-β) - Superfamilie zugeordnet werden. Sie spielen eine Schlüsselrolle in einer Vielzahl an zellulären Prozessen ab den frühen Stadien der Embryogenese. Dadurch sind BMPs nicht nur für die korrekte Festlegung der embryonalen Körperachse verantwortlich, sondern regulieren als multifunktionale Mediatoren neben der Morphogenese auch Proliferation, Differenzierung und Apoptose unterschiedlicher Zelltypen. Bone Morphogenetic Proteins sind somit für die Aufrechthaltung der Homöostase im adulten Körper mitverantwortlich. Ihre Funktionalität vermitteln die BMPs über eine Signalkaskade, indem sie als dimeres Protein spezifische transmembrane Serin/Threonin-Kinaserezeptoren von Typ I und Typ II in einem heteromeren Komplex assemblieren. Die intrazelluläre Signalweiterleitung verläuft über verschiedene Signalkaskaden (Smad-Proteine oder MAPKs), wodurch final im Zellkern Änderungen auf der Ebene der Gentranskription ausgelöst werden. Laut der namensgebenden Eigenschaft fungieren einige Wachstumsfaktoren als aktive Induktoren der Knochenbiosynthese. Ihre Anwesenheit ist essentiell für die vielen zellulären Prozesse, die während einer Frakturheilung auftreten, wobei eine Knochenneubildung ebenso stark abhängig ist vom Zusammenspiel verschiedener Stimulatoren und Inhibitoren, die die BMPs in ihrer Aktivität regulieren. Bedingt durch ihr großes Potential fanden die erstmals durch Marshal Urist 1965 aus Knochenmaterial isolierten BMP-Proteine ihren Einsatz in der regenerativen Medizin. Kommerziell erhältlich und bereits seit vielen Jahren in der klinischen Anwendung befindet sich derzeit das rhBMP-2 und rhBMP-7. Diese beiden Wachstumsfaktoren werden u.a. verwendet, um die Heilungsprozesse von langwierigen Schienbeinfrakturen zu verbessern, aber auch bei degenerativen Wirbelsäulenerkrankungen und in der Kieferchirurgie. Jedoch führt die schlechte Löslichkeit des BMPs aufgrund der ausgeprägten Aggregationstendenz zu gravierenden Problemen, nicht nur während der biotechnologischen Herstellung, sondern auch bei der klinischen Anwendung.
Der Schwerpunkt des Optimierungsbedarfs der BMP-2 Herstellung im Rahmen dieser Doktorarbeit lag daher auf der Etablierung eines prokaryotischen Expressionssystems für die lösliche Produktion von BMP-2. Dafür wurde zunächst der Fokus auf die ungünstigen Löslichkeitseigenschaften des Wachstumsfaktors gelegt. Um die hohe Aggregationsneigung des BMP-2 während der Produktion in Escherichia coli zu minimieren, wurden anhand einer Algorithmus-basierten Analyse BMP-2-Varianten entworfen, in denen Aminosäuren mit stark hydrophoben Eigenschaften gegen solche mit hydrophilem Charakter ausgetauscht wurden. Hierdurch konnten die zur Aggregation neigenden Bereiche des BMP-2 weitestgehend eliminiert werden. Es wurden für die bezüglich ihrer Löslichkeit optimierten Proteinvarianten unterschiedliche Expressionsstrategien etabliert, wodurch dimere BMP-2-Muteine in angepassten chromatographischen Profilen mit einem Aufreinigungsschritt und ohne jegliche Renaturierungsmaßnahmen gewonnen wurden. Allerdings verbleiben hierbei Restmengen an bakteriellen Kontaminationen, die vorwiegend aus endogenen ribosomalen E. coli-Proteinen stammen und nicht vollständig entfernt werden konnten. Während der umfassenden in vitro Charakterisierung der BMP-2-Varianten konnte durch massenspektroskopische Analysen die Gesamtmasse beider Zielproteine bestätigt werden, wobei sequenzspezifische Fragmente eine eindeutige Identifikation der eingebrachten Mutationen ermöglichten. CD-spektroskopische Analysen erweitert um Auswertealgorithmen konnten die wesentlichen Wt-BMP-2-typischen Sekundärstrukturelemente identifizieren. Die neu generierten BMP-2-Varianten zeigen in der dynamischen Lichtstreuungsanalyse stark verminderte Aggregationstendenz im Vergleich zum Wildtyp-BMP-2. Dessen Aggregationsverhalten wurde durch die kombinierte Analytik seiner mikrofluidischen Diffusion und der dynamischen Lichtstreuung zum ersten Mal über den Konzentrationsbereich von 0.5 µM bis 100 mM genau charakterisiert. Erste zellbiologische Versuche verliefen ohne Erfolg, wodurch die biologische Aktivität der BMP-Varianten nicht abschließend geklärt werden konnte.
Die simple Methode zur Expression und Aufreinigung der hydrophilisierte BMP-2-Muteine aus dieser Dissertation kann leicht in einen größeren Produktionsmaßstab überführt werden. BMP 2 kann dadurch schneller und kostengünstiger hergestellt werden. Final bleibt es jedoch erforderlich, die biologische Aktivität der neuen löslichen BMP-2-Varianten vollständig zu charakterisieren, um deren ganzes Funktionsspektrum zu entdecken. Der Fokus weiterer Forschung sollte zudem auf die verbleibende Oligomerisierungstendenz und die bestehende Kontamination mit Fremdproteinen gelegt werden, da diese beiden Faktoren letztendlich die Ausbeute an dimeren BMP-2 Varianten aus diesem System derzeit minimieren.
In the scope of climate warming and the increase in frequency and intensity of severe heat waves in Central Europe, identification of temperate tree species that are suited to cope with these environmental changes is gaining increasing importance. A number of tree physiological characteristics are associated with drought-stress resistance and survival following severe heat, but recent studies have shown the importance of plant hydraulic and anatomical traits for predicting drought-induced tree mortality, such as vessel diameter, and their potential to predict species distribution in a changing climate.
A compilation of large global datasets is required to determine traits related to drought-induced embolism and test whether embolism resistance can be determined solely by anatomical traits. However, most measurements of plant hydraulic traits are labour-intense and prone to measurement artefacts. A fast, accurate and widely applicable technique is necessary for estimating xylem embolism resistance (e.g., water potential at 50% loss of conductivity, P50), in order to improve forecasts of future forest changes. These traits and their combination must have evolved following the selective pressure of the environmental conditions in which each species occurs. Describing these environmental-trait relationships can be useful to assess potential responses to environmental change and mitigation strategies for tree species, as future warmer temperatures may be compounded by drier conditions.
Maintaining the balance between CO2 uptake and transpiration is important for plants and depends on tightly controlled turgor changes caused by the activity of various anion and cation channels. These channels are part of signaling cascades triggered, for example, by phytohormones such as ABA (abscisic acid) and JA (jasmonate), both of which act during drought stress in guard cells. In addition, JA is known to be involved in the plant's response to pathogen attack or wounding.
GORK (guard cell outward rectifying K+ channel) is the only known outward rectifying K+ channel in guard cells and therefore responsible for K+ efflux during stomatal closure.
In the course of this work it could be demonstrated by stomatal aperture assays, that GORK is an essential part of JA-induced stomatal closure. This is true for both triggers, leaf wounding as well as direct MeJA (methyl jasmonate) application. Patch clamp experiments on guard cell protoplasts backed this finding by revealing GORK K+ outward currents as a target of JA signaling in guard cells. As cytosolic Ca2+ signals are known to be involved in both ABA as well as JA signaling, the interaction of GORK with Ca2+-dependent kinases was examined consequently. An antagonistic regulation of GORK by
CIPK5-CBL1/9 complexes and ABI2 was identified by DEVC (double electrode voltage clamp) and protein-protein interaction experiments and backed up by in vitro kinase assays. Patch-clamp recordings on guard cell protoplasts of cipk5-2 kinase loss-of-function mutant revealed the importance of CIPK5 for JA-triggered stomatal closure via activation of GORK. The interaction of different CDPKs (Ca2+-dependent protein kinases) with GORK was also investigated.
Besides Ca2+ signaling also ROS (reactive oxygen species) production is essential in ABA and MeJA signaling. In DEVC experiments a reversible effect of ROS on GORK channel activity could be demonstrated, which could be one piece in the explanation of those ROS effects in ABA and MeJA signaling.
The slowly activating vacuolar SV/TPC1 channel is ubiquitously expressed in plants and provides a large cation conductance in the vacuolar membrane. Thereby, monovalent (K+, Na+) and in principle also divalent cations, such as Ca2+, can pass through the channel. The SV/TPC1 channel is activated upon membrane depolarization and cytosolic Ca2+ but inhibited by luminal calcium. With respect to the latter, two luminal Ca2+ binding sites (site 1 Asp240/Asp454/Glu528, site 2 Glu239/Asp240/Glu457) were identified to coordinate luminal Ca2+. In this work, the characteristics of the SV/TPC1 channels in terms of regulation and function were further elucidated, focusing on the TPC1s of Arabidopsis thaliana and Vicia faba. For electrophysiological analysis of the role of distinct pore residues for channel gating and luminal Ca2+ sensing, TPC1 channel variants were generated by site-directed mutagenesis and transiently expressed as eGFP/eYFP-fusion constructs in Arabidopsis thaliana mesophyll protoplasts of the TPC1 loss-of-function mutant attpc1-2.
1. As visualized by confocal fluorescence laser-scanning microscopy, all AtTPC1 (WT, E605A/Q, D606N, D607N, E605A/D606N, E605Q/D606N/D607N, E457N/E605A/D606N) and VfTPC1 channel variants (WT, N458E/A607E/ N608D) were correctly targeted to the vacuole membrane.
2. Patch-clamp studies revealed that removal of one of the negative charges at position Glu605 or Asp606 was already sufficient to promote voltage-dependent channel activation with higher voltage sensitivity. The combined neutralization of these residues (E605A/D606N), however, was required to additionally reduce the luminal Ca2+ sensitivity of the AtTPC1 channel, leading to hyperactive AtTPC1 channels. Thus, the residues Glu605/Asp606 are functionally coupled with the voltage sensor of AtTPC1 channel, thereby modulating channel gating, and form a novel luminal Ca2+ sensing site 3 in AtTPC1 at the luminal entrance of the ion transport pathway.
3. Interestingly, this novel luminal Ca2+ sensing site 3 (Glu605/Asp606) and Glu457 from the luminal Ca2+ sensing site 2 of the luminal Ca2+-sensitive AtTPC1 channel were neutralized by either asparagine or alanine in the TPC1 channel from Vicia faba and many other Fabaceae. Moreover, the VfTPC1 was validated to be a hyperactive TPC1 channel with higher tolerance to luminal Ca2+ loads which was in contrast to the AtTPC1 channel features. As a result, VfTPC1 but not AtTPC1 conferred the hyperexcitability of vacuoles. When AtTPC1 was mutated for the three VfTPC1-homologous polymorphic site residues, the AtTPC1 triple mutant (E457N/E605A/D606N) gained VfTPC1-like characteristics. However, when VfTPC1 was mutated for the three AtTPC1-homologous polymorphic site residues, the VfTPC1 triple mutant (N458E/A607E/N608D) still sustained VfTPC1-WT-like features. These findings indicate that the hyperactivity of VfTPC1 is achieved in part by the loss of negatively charged amino acids at positions that - as part of the luminal Ca2+ sensing sites 2 and 3 – are homologous to AtTPC1-Glu457/Glu605/Asp606 and are likely stabilized by other unknown residues or domains.
4.The luminal polymorphic pore residues (Glu605/Asp606 in AtTPC1) apparently do not contribute to the unitary conductance of TPC1. Under symmetrical K+ conditions, a single channel conductance of about 80 pS was determined for AtTPC1 wild type and the AtTPC1 double mutant E605A/D606A. This is in line with the three-fold higher unitary conductance of VfTPC1 (232 pS), which harbors neutral luminal pore residues at the homologous sites to AtTPC1.
In conclusion, by studying TPC1 channel from Arabidopsis thaliana and Vicia faba, the present thesis provides evidence that the natural TPC1 channel variants exhibit differences in voltage gating, luminal Ca2+ sensitivity and luminal Ca2+ binding sites.