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Institute
- Julius-von-Sachs-Institut für Biowissenschaften (88) (remove)
Sonstige beteiligte Institutionen
Blumeria graminis, the obligate biotrophic grass powdery mildew, is a highly pathogenic fungus capable of inflicting foliar diseases and of causing severe yield losses. There is asexual and sexual propagation in the life cycle of B. graminis. In the epidemiological processes of this pathogen, both types of spores - asexual conidia and sexual ascospores – are crucial.
Conidia of B. graminis are demonstrated to perceive cuticular very-long-chain aldehydes as molecular signal substances notably promoting germination and differentiation of the infection structure (the appressorium) – the prepenetration processes – in a concentration- and chain-length-dependent manner. Conidial germination and appressorium formation are known to be dramatically impeded by the presence of free water on the host surface. However, sexually formed ascospores are reported to easily germinate immersed in water. There are abundant assays on conidial prepenetration processes. However, with respect to the stimulating effects of very-long-chain aldehydes and to the influence of the presence of free water, ascosporic prepenetration processes are still obscure.
In order to study the effects of very-long-chain aldehydes on the ascosporic prepenetration processes of wheat powdery mildew fungus B. graminis f. sp. tritici, Formvar®-based in vitro systems were applied to exclude the secondary host effects (such as host resistance) and to reproducibly provide homogeneous hydrophobic substratum surfaces. By the presence of even-numbered very-long-chain aldehydes (C22 - C30), the appressorium formation of the ascospores was notably triggered in a chain-length dependent manner. N-octacosanal (C28) was the most inducing aldehyde tested. Unlike conidia, ascospores could easily differentiate immersed in water and showed a more variable differentiation pattern even with a single germ tube differentiating an appressorium.
To evaluate the alternative management against barley powdery mildew fungus Blumeria graminis f. sp. hordei, the suppressing effects of UV-C irradiation on the developmental processes of conidia on artificial surfaces (in vitro) and on host leaf surfaces (in vivo) were assayed. In vitro and in vivo, a single dose of 100 J m-2 UV-C was adequate to decrease conidial germination to < 20 % and to reduce appressorium formation to values < 5 %. UV-C irradiation negatively affected colony pustule size and vegetative propagation. Under photoperiodic conditions of 2h light/16h dark, 6h dark/12h light or 6h dark/18h light, UV-C-treated conidia showed photoreactivation (photo-recovery). White light-mediated photoreactivation was most effective immediately after UV-C irradiation, suggesting that a prolonged phase of darkness after UV-C application increased the efficacy of management against B. graminis. UV-C irradiation increased transcript levels of three putative photolyase genes in B. graminis, indicating those were probably involved in photoreactivation processes. However, mere white light or blue light (wavelength peak, 475 nm) could not induce the up-regulation of these genes.
To determine whether visible light directly impacted the prepenetration and penetration processes of this powdery mildew pathogen, conidia of Blumeria graminis f. sp. hordei and Blumeria graminis f. sp. tritici were inoculated onto artificial surfaces and on host leaf surfaces. Samples were analyzed after incubation periods under light conditions (white light intensity and spectral quality). Increasing white light intensities directly impaired conidial prepenetration processes in vitro but not in vivo. Applying an agar layer under the wax membrane compensated for conidial water loss as a consequence of high white light irradiation. Light stimulated in vitro and in vivo the appressorium elongation of B. graminis in a wavelength-dependent manner. Red light was more effective to trigger the elongation of appressorium than blue light or green light assayed.
Taken together, the findings of this study demonstrate that 1) a host surface recognition principle based on cuticular very-long-chain aldehydes is a common feature of B. graminis f. sp. tritici ascospores and conidia; 2) the transcriptional changes of three putative photolyase genes in B. graminis are mediated in a UV-C-dependent manner; 3) light directly affected the (pre)penetration processes of B. graminis.
The discovery, heterologous expression, and characterization of channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2) – a light-sensitive cation channel found in the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii – led to the success of optogenetics as a powerful technology, first in neuroscience. ChR2 was employed to induce action potentials by blue light in genetically modified nerve cells. In optogenetics, exogenous photoreceptors are expressed in cells to manipulate cellular activity. These photoreceptors were in the beginning mainly microbial opsins. During nearly two decades, many microbial opsins and their mutants were explored for their application in neuroscience. Until now, however, the application of optogenetics to plant studies is limited to very few reports. Several optogenetic strategies for plant research were demonstrated, in which most attempts are based on non-opsin optogenetic tools. Opsins need retinal (vitamin A) as a cofactor to generate the functional protein, the rhodopsin. As most animals have eyes that contain animal rhodopsins, they also have the enzyme - a 15, 15'-Dioxygenase - for retinal production from food-supplied provitamin A (beta-carotene). However, higher plants lack a similar enzyme, making it difficult to express functional rhodopsins successfully in plants. But plant chloroplasts contain plenty of beta-carotene. I introduced a gene, coding for a 15, 15'-Dioxygenase with a chloroplast target peptide, to tobacco plants. This enzyme converts a molecule of β-carotene into two of all-trans-retinal. After expressing this enzyme in plants, the concentration of all-trans-retinal was increased greatly. The increased retinal concentration led to increased expression of several microbial opsins, tested in model higher plants. Unfortunately, most opsins were observed intracellularly and not in the plasma membrane. To improve their localization in the plasma membrane, some reported signal peptides were fused to the N- or C-terminal end of opsins. Finally, I helped to identify three microbial opsins -- GtACR1 (a light-gated anion channel), ChR2 (a light-gated cation channel), PPR (a light-gated proton pump) which express and work well in the plasma membrane of plants. The transgene plants were grown under red light to prevent activation of the expressed opsins. Upon illumination with blue or green light, the activation of these opsins then induced the expected change of the membrane potential, dramatically changing the phenotype of plants with activated rhodopsins.
This study is the first which shows the potential of microbial opsins for optogenetic research in higher plants, using the ubq10 promoter for ubiquitous expression. I expect this to be just the beginning, as many different opsins and tissue-specific promoters for selective expression now can be tested for their usefulness. It is further to be expected that the here established method will help investigators to exploit more optogenetic tools and explore the secrets, kept in the plant kingdom.
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.
In order to test the effects of environmental factors on different characteristics of plant leaf waxes, barley plants (Hordeum vulgare) were abiotically stress treated (exposure to darkness, heavy metal, high salt concentrations and drought), and biotically stressed by the infection with powdery mildew (Blumeria graminis f.sp. hordei; Bgh). Different wax parameters like amount, chemical composition, and micromorphology of epicuticular wax crystals, were investigated. Etiolated leaves of barley showed distinctly reduced wax amounts and modifications in their relative composition. The alterations of these wax parameters might be a result of a developmental delay, which could have been caused by a decreased availability of energy for cellular processes, due to lack of light. Cadmium exposure led to a 1.5-fold increase of wax amount, while chemical composition was unaffected. In drought- and salt-stressed plants, all investigated leaf wax parameters remained unaltered. In each of the abiotic treatments, the microstructure of epicuticular wax crystals, formed as typical platelets, was not modified. Even after 6d infection with powdery mildew (Bgh), neither locally nor systemically enforced modifications of wax features were revealed.
The analyzed leave surfaces, resulting from these four abiotic and the biotic treatment (phenotypic approach), were compared to altered leaf surfaces’ characteristics of 18 analyzed eceriferum (cer-) wax mutants (genotypic approach). Within the screening, 5 mutants were selected which distinctly differed from the wild-type in wax amount, portions of epi- and intracuticular wax fraction, relative chemical composition, crystal morphology, and surface wettability (hydrophobicity).
Apart from quantitative and qualitative effects on the leaf waxes, environmentally enforced modifications in cuticular waxes might be reflected in molecular processes of wax biogenesis. Therefore, a barley wax-microarray was established. 254 genes were selected, which are putatively involved in processes of de novo fatty acid biosynthesis, fatty acid elongation, and modification, and which are supposed to take part in lipid-trafficking between cell compartments, and transport of wax components to the outer cell surface. The regulations within the expression pattern evoked by the respective treatments were correlated with the corresponding analytical wax data, and the observed molecular effects of a 3d powdery mildew infection were compared with succeeding fungal morphogenesis. Etiolation and cadmium exposition pointed to transcriptional modifications in the de novo fatty acid synthesis, and in the screened, transport-related mechanisms, which correlate with respective alterations in surface wax characteristics. Moderate changes in the gene expression pattern, evoked by drought- and salinity-stress, might give hints for evolved adaptations in barley to such common habitat stresses. Theinvasion of powdery mildew into the epidermal host cells was reflected in the regulation of several genes. Beside other functions, these genes take part in pathogen defense, and intracellular component transport, or they encode transcription factors. The different modifications within the molecular responses evoked by the investigated abiotic treatments, and the effects of powdery mildew infection representing a biotic stressor, were compared between the different treatments.
In order to test the potential impact of different wax parameters on Bgh, conidia germination and differentiation was comparably investigated on leaf surfaces of abiotically stressed wild-type and cer-mutants, isolated cuticles, and further artificial surfaces. The rates of conidial development were similar on each of the leaf surfaces resulting from the abiotic treatments, while a significant reduction of the germination and differentiation success was revealed for the wax mutant cer-yp.949. Compared to the wild-type, developmental rates on isolated cuticles and extracted leaf waxes of the mutant cer-yp.949 indicated a modified embedding of cuticular waxes, and a possibly changed three-dimensional structure of the cer-yp.949 cuticle, which might explain the reduced conidial developmental rates on leaf surfaces of this particular mutant.
Experiments with Bgh conidia on mechanically de-waxed leaf surfaces (selective mechanical removal of the epicuticular leaf waxes with glue-like gum arabic, followed by an extraction of the intracuticular wax portion with chloroform) demonstrated the importance of the wax coverage for the germination and differentiation of the fungal conidia. On all dewaxed leaf surfaces, except those of cer-yp.949, the differentiation success of the germlings was significantly reduced, by about 20% (“wax-effect”). This result was verified through an artificial system with increased conidia developmental rates on glass slides covered with extracted leaf waxes. Further comparative tests with the major components of barley leaf wax, hexacosanol and hexacosanal, showed that the germination and differentiation of powdery mildew conidia not only depends on the different chemistry, but is also influenced by the respective surface hydrophobicity. Compared to hexacosanol, on hexacosanal coated glass surfaces, higher germination and differentiation rates were achieved, which correlated with increased levels of surface hydrophobicity. Developmental rates of conidia on hydrophobic foils demonstrated that hydrophobicity, as a sole surface factor, may stimulate the conidial germination and differentiation processes. Moreover, the survival of conidia on artificial surfaces is determined by additional surface derived factors, e.g. the availability of water, and a pervadable matrix.
The light-gated cation channel Channelrhodopsin-2 was discovered and characterized in 2003. Already in 2005/2006 five independent groups demonstrated that heterologous expression of Channelrhodopsin-2 is a highly useful and simply applicable method for depolarizing and thereby activating nerve cells. The application of Channelrhodopsin-2 revolutionized neuroscience research and the method was then called optogenetics. In recent years more and more light-sensitive proteins were successfully introduced as “optogenetic tools”, not only in neuroscience. Optogenetic tools for neuronal excitation are well developed with many different cation-conducting wildtype and mutated channelrhodopsins, whereas for inhibition of neurons in the beginning (2007) only hyperpolarizing ion pumps were available. The later discovered light-activated anion channels (anion channelrhodopsins) can be useful hyperpolarizers, but only at low cytoplasmic anion concentration. For this thesis, I optimized CsR, a proton-pumping rhodopsin from Coccomyxa subellipsoidea, which naturally shows a robust expression in Xenopus laevis oocytes and plant leaves. I improved the expression and therefore the photocurrent of CsR about two-fold by N-terminal modification to the improved version CsR2.0, without altering the proton pump function and the action spectrum. A light pulse hyperpolarised the mesophyll cells of CsR2.0-expressing transgenic tobacco plants (N. tabacum) by up to 20 mV from the resting membrane potential of -150 to -200 mV. The robust heterologous expression makes CsR2.0 a promising optogenetic tool for hyperpolarization in other organisms as well. A single R83H point-mutation converted CsR2.0 into a light-activated (passive) proton channel with a reversal potential close to the Nernst potential for intra-/extra-cellular H+ concentration. This light-gated proton channel is expected to become a further useful optogenetic tool, e.g. for analysis of pH-regulation in cells or the intercellular space. Ion pumps as optogenetic tools require high expression levels and high light intensity for efficient pump currents, whereas long-term illumination may cause unwanted heating effects. Although anion channelrhodopsins are effective hyperpolarizing tools in some cases, their effect on neuronal activity is dependent on the cytoplasmic chloride concentration which can vary among neurons. In nerve cells, increased conductance for potassium terminates the action potential and K+ conductance underlies the resting membrane potential in excitable cells. Therefore, several groups attempted to synthesize artificial light-gated potassium channels but 2 all of these published innovations showed serious drawbacks, ranging from poor expression over lacking reversibility to poor temporal precision. A highly potassium selective light-sensitive silencer of action potentials is needed. To achieve this, I engineered a light-activated potassium channel by the genetic fusion of a photoactivated adenylyl cyclase, bPAC, and a cAMP-gated potassium channel, SthK. Illumination activates bPAC to produce cAMP and the elevated cAMP level opens SthK. The slow diffusion and degradation of cAMP makes this construct a very light-sensitive, long-lasting inhibitor. I have successfully developed four variants with EC50 to cAMP ranging from 7 over 10, 21, to 29 μM. Together with the original fusion construct (EC50 to cAMP is 3 μm), there are five different light- (or cAMP-) sensitive potassium channels for researchersto choose, depending on their cell type and light intensity needs.
Optogenetics became successful in neuroscience with Channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2), a light-gated cation channel from the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, as an easy applicable tool. The success of ChR2 inspired the development of various photosensory proteins as powerful actuators for optogenetic manipulation of biological activity. However, the current optogenetic toolbox is still not perfect and further improvements are desirable. In my thesis, I engineered and characterized several different optogenetic tools with new features.
(i) Although ChR2 is the most often used optogenetic actuator, its single-channel conductance and its Ca2+ permeability are relatively low. ChR2 variants with increased Ca2+ conductance were described recently but a further increase seemed possible. In addition, the H+ conductance of ChR2 may lead to cellular acidification and unintended pH-related side effects upon prolonged illumination. Through rational design, I developed several improved ChR2 variants with larger photocurrent, higher cation selectivity, and lower H+ conductance.
(ii) The light-activated inward chloride pump NpHR is a widely used optogenetic tool for neural silencing. However, pronounced inactivation upon long time illumination constrains its application for long-lasting neural inhibition. I found that the deprotonation of the Schiff base underlies the inactivation of NpHR. Through systematically exploring optimized illumination schemes, I found illumination with blue light alone could profoundly increase the temporal stability of the NpHR-mediated photocurrent. A combination of green and violet light eliminates the inactivation effect, similar to blue light, but leading to a higher photocurrent and therefore better light-induced inhibition.
(iii) Photoactivated adenylyl cyclases (PACs) were shown to be useful for light-manipulation of cellular cAMP levels. I developed a convenient in-vitro assay for soluble PACs that allows their reliable characterization. Comparison of different PACs revealed that bPAC from Beggiatoa is the best optogenetic tool for cAMP manipulation, due to its high efficiency and small size. However, a residual activity of bPAC in the dark is unwanted and the cytosolic localization prevents subcellular precise cAMP manipulation. I therefore introduced point mutations into bPAC to reduce its dark activity. Interestingly, I found that membrane targeting of bPAC with different linkers can remarkably alter its activity, in addition to its localization. Taken together, a set of PACs with different activity and subcellular localization were engineered for selection based on the intended usage. The membrane-bound PM-bPAC 2.0 with reduced dark activity is well-tolerated by hippocampal neurons and reliably evokes a transient photocurrent, when co-expression with a CNG channel.
(iv) Bidirectional manipulation of cell activity with light of different wavelengths is of great importance in dissecting neural networks in the brain. Selection of optimal tool pairs is the first and most important step for dual-color optogenetics. Through N- and C-terminal modifications, an improved ChR variant (i.e. vf-Chrimson 2.0) was engineered and selected as the red light-controlled actuator for excitation. Detailed comparison of three two-component potassium channels, composed of bPAC and the cAMP-activated potassium channel SthK, revealed the superior properties of SthK-bP. Combining vf-Chrimson 2.0 and improved SthK-bP “SthK(TV418)-bP” could reliably induce depolarization by red light and hyperpolarization by blue light. A residual tiny crosstalk between vf-Chrimson 2.0 and SthK(TV418)-bP, when applying blue light, can be minimized to a negligible level by applying light pulses or simply lowering the blue
light intensity.
Plants exposed to herbivory may defend themselves by attracting the “enemies of their enemies”, a phenomenon called induced indirect defense (IID). In this process, the de novo production and emission of volatile organic compounds (VOC) by the affected plant is activated via a jasmonic acid (JA) dependent signaling cascade. VOC can be very specific for the inducing herbivore as well as for the emitting plant. Carnivores as predatory mites and parasitoid wasps use these substances as prey- or host-finding cues. If the herbivore is parasitized successfully, its development is slowed and thus the damage of the plant is decreased. Additional abiotic stress may modulate the plant’s ability to produce and/or emit herbivore induced VOC. Ultraviolet (UV) radiation can have multiple physiological effects on plants, amongst others the activation of the expression of genes that are also activated during anti-herbivore defense. To investigate UV effects, foils with different UV transmittance were used to manipulate ambient solar radiation. One foil was permeable for the whole solar spectrum including UV radiation whereas the other excluded radiation below a wavelength of 400 nm. Soybean exposed to UV increased concentrations of isorhamnetin- and quercetin-based flavonoids as effective photo-protective compounds in the leaves and showed a reduced growth compared to plants exposed to ambient radiation lacking UV. The altered chemical composition of the leaves had no effect on food choice and performance of herbivorous Spodoptera frugiperda larvae. Photo-protection by flavonoids seems to be efficient to prevent further UV effects on IID as plants of both treatments emitted the same blend of induced VOC and hence females of the parasitoid Cotesia marginiventris did not prefer plants from on of the treatments in the olfactometer. Nitrogen is one important macronutrient for all trophic levels and thus deficiency of this nutrient was expected to affect IID of soybean profoundly. To manipulate N availability for soybean plants hydroponic culture was used. One treatment was cultured in a standard hydroponic solution whereas in the N deficiency treatment in the solution all salts containing N were replaced with N-free salts. In N deficient plants root biomass was increased to allow the plant to forage more efficiently for the nutrient. Despite this morphological adaptation, photosynthetic efficiency as well as leaf N and soluble protein content were reduced significantly in N deficient soybean. The N deficiency was passed on to the third trophic level as herbivores fed with the affected leaves had a reduced body N content on her part and showed a decreased growth but no feeding preference for the superior food. Parasitoids reared in such N deficient herbivores had significant lower pupal weight compared to parasitoids reared in hosts fed with fully fertilized soybean. N deficient plants emitted a quantitatively altered herbivore induced blend. The two terpenes β-Bergamotene and (E,E)-α-Farnesene were emitted in higher amounts whereas (Z)-3-Hexenyl-α-methylbutyrate was emitted in significantly lower amount. Despite this quantitatively modified VOC blend the parasitoids host-searching behavior was not affected. Heavy metals (HM) are proposed to affect various biochemical pathways in plants including defense pathways by production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the tissue. The ROS on its part may affect production and release of endogenous JA, an important messenger in defense signaling. In this study maize plants were grown hydroponically and exposed to different increased concentrations of copper and cadmium. Maize seems to be able to exclude the excess HM from the leaves because the HM were found mainly in the roots and only to a minor degree in the shoots of the plants. Despite this exclusion the HM significantly affected uptake of other metal ions into the plant. The excess of the HM in combination with the attenuated uptake of other ions led to a reduced growth of roots and shoots as well as to reduced photosynthetic efficiency. Thus the nutritional value of the plants for the herbivore was lowered either by direct toxic effects of the HM or indirectly by altering plant chemical composition. S. frugiperda larvae fed with leaves exposed to high HM concentrations showed a significantly reduced growth but they did prefer neither control nor HM treated plants in a food-choice assay. Cu had a transient priming effect on JA as pre-exposure to a high excess of Cu led to higher amounts of herbivore induced JA compared to control plants exposed only to standard concentration of Cu. As anticipated the increased JA was followed by an increase in herbivore induced VOC in high-Cu treated plants caused by a increase of the green leaf volatiles (E)-3-Hexenal, (Z)-3-Hexenol and (Z)-3-Hexenylacetat and the terpenes Linalool, (E)-α-Bergamotene, (E)-β-Farnesene, and β-Sesquiphellandrene. Despite these profound changes in herbivore induced VOC the parasitoids host searching behavior was not affected. As described, the abiotic stresses UV, N deficiency and excess HM affected the morphology and physiology of soybean and maize, the performance of the herbivore S. frugiperda and even the performance of the parasitoid C. marginiventris. However the host searching behavior of the parasitoid was not affected even if the herbivore induced VOC blend was altered. Thus parasitoids seem to be a very reliable defender for plants and IID a very robust way of herbivore defense.
A part of the plant kingdom consists of a variety of carnivorous plants. Some trap their prey
using sticky leaves, others have pitfall traps where prey cannot escape once it has fallen inside.
A rare trap type is the snap-trap: it appears only twice in the plant kingdom, in the genera
Aldrovanda and Dionaea. Even Charles Darwin himself described Dionaea muscipula, the
Venus flytrap, with the following words “This plant, commonly called Venus' fly-trap, from the
rapidity and force of its movements, is one of the most wonderful in the world”. For a long
time now, the mechanisms of Dionaea’s prey recognition, capture and utilization are of
interest for scientists and have been studied intensively.
Dionaea presents itself with traps wide-open, ready to catch insects upon contact. For this,
the insect has to touch the trigger hairs of the opened trap twice within about 20-30 seconds.
Once the prey is trapped, the trap lobes close tight, forming a hermetically sealed “green
stomach”.
Until lately, there was only limited knowledge about the molecular and hormonal mechanisms
which lead to prey capture and excretion of digestive fluids. It is known that the digestion
process is very water-consuming; therefore, the interplay of digestion-inducing and digestion inhibiting
substances was to be analyzed in this work, to elucidate the fine-tuning of the
digestive pathway. Special attention was given to the impact of phytohormones on mRNA
transcript levels of digestion-related proteins after various stimuli as well as their effect on
Dionaea’s physiological responses.
Jasmonic acid (JA) and its isoleucine-conjugated form, JA-Ile, are an important signal in the
jasmonate pathway. In the majority of non-carnivorous plants, jasmonates are critical for the
defense against herbivory and pathogens. In Dionaea, this defense mechanism has been
restructured towards offensive prey catching. One question in this work was how the
frequency of trigger hair bendings is related to the formation of jasmonates and the induction
of the digestion process. Upon contact of a prey with the trigger hairs in the inside of the trap,
the trap closes and jasmonates are produced biosynthetically. JA-Ile interacts with the COI1-
receptor, thereby activating the digestion pathway which leads to the secretion of digestive
fluid and production of transporters needed to take up prey-derived nutrients. In this work it
could be shown that the number of trigger hair bendings is positively correlated with the level
and duration of transcriptional induction of several digestive enzymes/hydrolases.
Abscisic acid (ABA) acts, along with many other functions, as the plant “drought stress
hormone”. It is synthesized either by roots as the primary sensor for water shortage or by
guard cells in the leaves. ABA affects a network of several thousand genes whose regulation
prepares the plant for drought and initiates protective measurements. It was known from
previous work that the application of ABA for 48 hours increased the required amount of
trigger hair bendings to achieve trap closure. As the digestion process is very water-intensive,
the question arose how exactly the interplay between the jasmonate- and the ABA-pathway
is organized, and if ABA could stop the running digestion process once it had been activated.
In the present work it could be shown that the application of ABA on intact traps prior to
mechanically stimulating the trigger hairs (mechanostimulation) already significantly reduced
the transcription of digestive enzymes for an incubation time as short as 4 h, showing that
already short-term exposure to ABA counteracts the effects of jasmonates when it comes to
initiating the digestion process, but does not inhibit trap closure. Incubation for 24 and 48
hours with 100 μM active ABA had no effect on trap reopening, only very high levels of 200
μM of active ABA inhibited trap reopening but also led to tissue necrosis. As the application
of ABA could reduce the transcription of digestive hydrolases, it is likely that Dionaea can stop
the digestion process, if corresponding external stimuli are received.
Another factor, which only emerged later, was the effect of the wounding-induced systemic
jasmonate burst. As efficient as ABA was in inhibiting marker hydrolase expression after
mechanostimulation in intact plants, the application of ABA on truncated traps was not able
to inhibit mechanostimulation-induced marker hydrolase expression. One reason might be
that the ABA-signal is perceived in the roots, and therefore truncated traps were not able to
react to it. Another reason might be that the wounding desensitized the tissue for the ABAsignal.
Further research is required at this point.
Inhibitors of the jasmonate pathway were also used to assess their effect on the regulation of
Dionaea´s hunting cycle. Coronatine-O-methyloxime proved to be a potent inhibitor of
mechanostimulation-induced expression of digestive enzymes, thus confirming the key
regulatory role of jasmonates for Dionaea´s prey consumption mechanism.
In a parallel project, the generation of in vitro cultures from sterilized seeds and single plant
parts proved successful, which may be important for stock-keeping of future transgenic lines.
Protoplasts were generated from leaf blade tissue and transiently transformed, expressing the
reporter protein YFP after 24 h of incubation. In the future this might be the starting point for
the generation of transgenic lines or the functional testing of DNA constructs.
Flowering plants or angiosperms have developed a fertilization mechanism that involves a female egg and central cell, as well as two male sperm cells. A male gametophyte carries the two non-mobile sperm cells, as they need to be delivered to the female gametophyte, the embryo sac. This transport is initiated by a pollen grain that is transmitted onto the stigma of the angiosperm flower. Here it hydrates, germinates, and forms a pollen tube, which navigates through the female plant tissue towards the ovary. The pollen tube grows into an ovule through the funiculus and into one of the two synergid cells. There, growth arrests and the pollen tube bursts, releasing the two sperm cells. One of the sperm cells fuses with the egg cell, giving rise to the embryo, the other one fuses with the central cell, developing into the endosperm, which nourishes the embryo during its development. After a successful fertilization, each ovule develops into a seed and a fruit is formed. This usually consists of several fertilized ovules.
The directional growth of the pollen tube through the maternal tissues towards the ovule, as well as sperm cell release, requires a complex communication between the male and the female gametophyte to achieve reproductive success. Over the last years many studies have been performed, contributing to the understanding of cell-cell communication events between the two gametophytes, nevertheless still many aspects remain to be elucidated.
This work focused on two topics: i.) Analysis of biological processes affected by pollination and fertilization in the Nicotiana tabacum flower and identification of cysteine rich proteins (CRPs) expressed via isolating and sequencing RNA from the tissue and analyzing the resulting data. ii.) Identification of the defensin-like protein (DEFL) responsible for pollen tube attraction towards the ovule in tobacco.
First, tissue samples of pollen tubes and mature ovules were taken at different stages of the fertilization process (unpollinated ovules, after pollination, and after fertilization of the flower). RNA was then isolated and a transcriptome was created. The resulting reads were assembled and transcriptome data analysis was performed. Results showed that pollen tubes and mature ovules differ severely from each other, only sharing about 23 % of the transcripts, indicating that different biological processes are dominant in the two gametophytes. A MapMan analysis revealed that in the pollen tube the most relevant biological processes are related to the cell wall, signaling, and transport, which supports the fact that the pollen tube grows fast to reach the ovule. On the other hand, in the ovule the values of highest significance were obtained for processes related to protein synthesis and regulation. Upon comparing the transcripts in the ovule before and after pollination, as well as after fertilization, it showed that pollination of the flower causes a bigger alteration in the ovule on the transcriptomic level compared to the step from pollination to fertilization.
A total of 953 CRPs were identified in Nicotiana tabacum, including 116 DEFLs. Among those, the peptide responsible for pollen tube attraction towards the ovule should be found. Based on in-silico analysis four candidate peptides were chosen for further analysis, two of which had increased expression levels upon pollination and fertilization and the other two displayed an opposite expression. Quantitative real time PCR experiments were performed for the candidates, confirming the in-silico data in vivo.
The candidate transcripts were then expressed in a cell free system and applied to pollen tubes in order to test their effect on the growing cells. Positive controls were used, where pollen tubes grew towards freshly dissected ovules. The four candidates did not provoke a pollen tube attraction towards the peptide, leaving open the chance to work on the 112 remaining DEFLs in the future.
Two isoforms of human CD23 (CD23a and CD23b) have been described. They differ by only 6-7 residues in the N-terminal cytoplasmic tail. CD23a is restrictively expressed on B-cells while CD23b is inducible on B-cells, as well as monocytes, eosinophils, macrophages and a variety of other cell types, after IL-4 stimulation. The two isoforms seems to have different functions. CD23a appears to be the isoform associated with endocytosis of IgE immune complexes and mediating antigen presentation on B-cells. CD23b has a phagocytosis motif and seems to be involved in the phagocytosis of IgE-coated particles, cytokine release and the generation of superoxides. Previous studies indicate that the two isoforms connect to different signal transduction pathways. Comparing the cells that express only one or both CD23 isoforms suggests that CD23b is involved in upregulating cAMP and iNOS, whereas CD23a mediates an increase in intracellular calcium. In the main part of the study we investigated how the CD23a B-cell specific expression is regulated. Pax-5 is a B-cell restricted transcription factor with an essential role in early and late B-cell development. Putative Pax-5 binding sites have been predicted in the CD23a proximal promoter. Analyses of the CD23a promoter revealed three putative Pax-5 binding sites with more than 50% homology to the consensus sequence. One of these sites, named CD23-1 can compete a high affinity Pax-5 binding site or can directly bind Pax-5 protein in electrophoretic mobility shift assays. Introducing mutations into this site abrogates the binding. A different approach, in which overlapping peptides covering the length of the CD23a promoter were tested in competition assays against a high affinity binding site, also revealed CD23-1 as the only site that directly binds Pax-5 protein. Expression of Pax-5 in 293 cells resulted in a 7-fold activation of a CD23a core promoter construct. Co-transfection together with STAT6 showed that Pax-5 cooperates with this transcription factor in enhancing the level of transcription of a CD23a extended promoter construct. Most importantly, ectopic expression of Pax-5 in the monocytic cell line U-937 that regularly expresses only the CD23b isoform enabled a significant CD23a expression after stimulation with IL-4 and PMA. Our results suggest that Pax-5 is a key regulator of the B-cell restricted expression of the CD23a isoform. In the second part of the project, we used a yeast two-hybrid system (CytoTrapTM from Stratagene) in order to look for cytoplasmic interaction partners for the CD23 receptor. The system was established in order to reach a high efficiency of transformation and different bait vector constructs were made. The screening was performed using a human spleen library cloned in the target vector of the system. The first bait constructs used (pSosCD23a and pSosCD23b) expressed the very short (22 amino acids) cytoplasmic tails of the isoforms at the C-terminal end of the fusion protein (human SOS). Improved bait constructs, (pSosCD23a+Linker and pSos CD23b+Linker) expressed the cytoplasmic tail of CD23a/b at the N-terminal side of the human SOS and had in consequence the N-terminal part free as a bait, as it occurs in vivo. A flexible linker region separated the fusion proteins in order to make the small amino acid bait chain more obvious. Approximately three million library clones were screened with these various constructs. No “true positive” interaction was detected. A relatively high number of “false positive” clones were obtained and checked in another two-hybrid system. A new bait construct, in which the tyrosine residue in the cytoplasmic tail of CD23a was replaced by a glutamic acid residue will be used for future screening. The system was also used in order to test the interaction between CD23 and p59fyn, a member of the Src family of protein kinases that was mentioned to associate with CD23a. No interaction was detected by using the CytoTrap two-hybrid system. In conclusion, the key result of the study demonstrates that Pax-5 is a main regulator of the B-cell specific expression of the CD23a isoform. In addition, a two-hybrid system was established and employed in order to look for cytoplasmic interaction partners for CD23.