580 Pflanzen (Botanik)
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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.
A first assessment of canopy cover loss in Germany's forests after the 2018–2020 drought years
(2022)
Central Europe was hit by several unusually strong periods of drought and heat between 2018 and 2020. These droughts affected forest ecosystems. Cascading effects with bark beetle infestations in spruce stands were fatal to vast forest areas in Germany. We present the first assessment of canopy cover loss in Germany for the period of January 2018–April 2021. Our approach makes use of dense Sentinel-2 and Landsat-8 time-series data. We computed the disturbance index (DI) from the tasseled cap components brightness, greenness, and wetness. Using quantiles, we generated monthly DI composites and calculated anomalies in a reference period (2017). From the resulting map, we calculated the canopy cover loss statistics for administrative entities. Our results show a canopy cover loss of 501,000 ha for Germany, with large regional differences. The losses were largest in central Germany and reached up to two-thirds of coniferous forest loss in some districts. Our map has high spatial (10 m) and temporal (monthly) resolution and can be updated at any time.
A novel method for detecting and delineating coppice trees in UAV images to monitor tree decline
(2022)
Monitoring tree decline in arid and semi-arid zones requires methods that can provide up-to-date and accurate information on the health status of the trees at single-tree and sample plot levels. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) are considered as cost-effective and efficient tools to study tree structure and health at small scale, on which detecting and delineating tree crowns is the first step to extracting varied subsequent information. However, one of the major challenges in broadleaved tree cover is still detecting and delineating tree crowns in images. The frequent dominance of coppice structure in degraded semi-arid vegetation exacerbates this problem. Here, we present a new method based on edge detection for delineating tree crowns based on the features of oak trees in semi-arid coppice structures. The decline severity in individual stands can be analyzed by extracting relevant information such as texture from the crown area. Although the method presented in this study is not fully automated, it returned high performances including an F-score = 0.91. Associating the texture indices calculated in the canopy area with the phenotypic decline index suggested higher correlations of the GLCM texture indices with tree decline at the tree level and hence a high potential to be used for subsequent remote-sensing-assisted tree decline studies.
Background: Members of the TGF-b superfamily are characterized by a highly promiscuous ligand-receptor interaction as is readily apparent from the numeral discrepancy of only seven type I and five type II receptors available for more than 40 ligands. Structural and functional studies have been used to address the question of how specific signals can be deduced from a limited number of receptor combinations and to unravel the molecular mechanisms underlying the protein-protein recognition that allow such limited specificity. Principal Findings: In this study we have investigated how an antigen binding antibody fragment (Fab) raised against the extracellular domain of the BMP receptor type IA (BMPR-IA) recognizes the receptor’s BMP-2 binding epitope and thereby neutralizes BMP-2 receptor activation. The crystal structure of the complex of the BMPR-IA ectodomain bound to the Fab AbD1556 revealed that the contact surface of BMPR-IA overlaps extensively with the contact surface for BMP-2 interaction. Although the structural epitopes of BMPR-IA to both binding partners coincides, the structures of BMPR-IA in the two complexes differ significantly. In contrast to the structural differences, alanine-scanning mutagenesis of BMPR-IA showed that the functional determinants for binding to the antibody and BMP-2 are almost identical. Conclusions: Comparing the structures of BMPR-IA bound to BMP-2 or bound to the Fab AbD1556 with the structure of unbound BMPR-IA shows that binding of BMPR-IA to its interaction partners follows a selection fit mechanism, possibly indicating that the ligand promiscuity of BMPR-IA is inherently encoded by structural adaptability. The functional and structural analysis of the BMPR-IA binding antibody AbD1556 mimicking the BMP-2 binding epitope may thus pave the way for the design of low-molecular weight synthetic receptor binders/inhibitors.
Marine sponges and their associated bacteria have been proven to be a rich source of novel secondary metabolites with therapeutic usefulness in infection and autoimmunity. This Ph.D. project aimed to isolate bioactive secondary metabolites from the marine sponges Amphimedon compressa, Aiolochroia crassa and Theonella swinhoei as well as from bacteria associated with different Caribbean sponges, specifically actinomycetes and sphingomonads. In this study, amphitoxin was isolated from the crude methanol extract of the sponge A. compressa and it was found to have antibacterial and anti-parasitic activities. Amphitoxin showed protease inhibitory activity when tested against the mammalian protease cathepsin B and the parasitic proteases rhodesain and falcipain-2. Furthermore, miraziridine A was identified in the dichloromethane extract of the sponge T. swinhoei collected offshore Israel in the Red Sea. Miraziridine A, a natural peptide isolated previously from the marine sponge Theonella aff. mirabilis, is a potent cathepsin B inhibitor with an IC50 value of 1.4 g/mL (2.1 M). Secondary metabolites from sponge-derived bacteria were also isolated and identified. A total of 79 strains belonging to 20 genera of the order Actinomycetales and seven strains belonging to two genera of the order Sphingomonadales were cultivated from 18 different Caribbean sponges and identified by 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Seven of these strains are likely to represent novel species. Crude extracts from selected strains were found to exhibit protease inhibition against cathepsins B and L, rhodesain, and falcipain-2 as well as immunomodulatory activities such as induction of cytokine release by human peripheral blood mononuclear cells. The isolates Sphingobium sp. CO105 and Lapillicoccus sp. BA53 were selected for cultivation, extraction and purification of bioactive metabolites based on initial bioactive screening results. The isoalloxazine isolumichrome was isolated from the strain Sphingobium sp. CO105 which inhibited the protease rhodesain with an IC50 of 0.2 M. The strain Lapillicoccus sp. BA53 was found to produce p-aminosalicylic acid methyl ester, which showed activity against the proteases cathepsins B and L, falcipain-2 and rhodesain. These results highlight the significance of marine sponge-associated bacteria to produce bioactive secondary metabolites with therapeutic potential in the treatment of infectious diseases and disorders of the immune system.
Polygonum cuspidatum (Japanese knotweed, also known as Huzhang in Chinese), a plant that produces bioactive components such as stilbenes and quinones, has long been recognized as important in traditional Chinese herbal medicine. To better understand the biological features of this plant and to gain genetic insight into the biosynthesis of its natural products, we assembled a draft genome of P. cuspidatum using Illumina sequencing technology. The draft genome is ca. 2.56 Gb long, with 71.54% of the genome annotated as transposable elements. Integrated gene prediction suggested that the P. cuspidatum genome encodes 55,075 functional genes, including 6,776 gene families that are conserved in the five eudicot species examined and 2,386 that are unique to P. cuspidatum. Among the functional genes identified, 4,753 are predicted to encode transcription factors. We traced the gene duplication history of P. cuspidatum and determined that it has undergone two whole-genome duplication events about 65 and 6.6 million years ago. Roots are considered the primary medicinal tissue, and transcriptome analysis identified 2,173 genes that were expressed at higher levels in roots compared to aboveground tissues. Detailed phylogenetic analysis demonstrated expansion of the gene family encoding stilbene synthase and chalcone synthase enzymes in the phenylpropanoid metabolic pathway, which is associated with the biosynthesis of resveratrol, a pharmacologically important stilbene. Analysis of the draft genome identified 7 abscisic acid and water deficit stress-induced protein-coding genes and 14 cysteine-rich transmembrane module genes predicted to be involved in stress responses. The draft de novo genome assembly produced in this study represents a valuable resource for the molecular characterization of medicinal compounds in P. cuspidatum, the improvement of this important medicinal plant, and the exploration of its abiotic stress resistance.
Technical features of a novel multi-color pulse amplitude modulation (PAM) chlorophyll fluorometer as well as the applied methodology and some typical examples of its practical application with suspensions of Chlorella vulgaris and Synechocystis PCC 6803 are presented. The multi-color PAM provides six colors of pulse-modulated measuring light (peak-wavelengths at 400, 440, 480, 540, 590, and 625 nm) and six colors of actinic light (AL), peaking at 440, 480, 540, 590, 625 and 420–640 nm (white). The AL can be used for continuous illumination, maximal intensity single-turnover pulses, high intensity multiple-turnover pulses, and saturation pulses. In addition, far-red light (peaking at 725 nm) is provided for preferential excitation of PS I. Analysis of the fast fluorescence rise kinetics in saturating light allows determination of the wavelength- and sample-specific functional absorption cross section of PS II, Sigma(II)λ, with which the PS II turnover rate at a given incident photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) can be calculated. Sigma(II)λ is defined for a quasi-dark reference state, thus differing from σPSII used in limnology and oceanography. Vastly different light response curves for Chlorella are obtained with light of different colors, when the usual PAR-scale is used. Based on Sigma(II)λ the PAR, in units of μmol quanta/(m2 s), can be converted into PAR(II) (in units of PS II effective quanta/s) and a fluorescence-based electron transport rate ETR(II) = PAR(II) · Y(II)/Y(II)max can be defined. ETR(II) in contrast to rel.ETR qualifies for quantifying the absolute rate of electron transport in optically thin suspensions of unicellular algae and cyanobacteria. Plots of ETR(II) versus PAR(II) for Chlorella are almost identical using either 440 or 625 nm light. Photoinhibition data are presented suggesting that a lower value of ETR(II)max with 440 nm possibly reflects photodamage via absorption by the Mn-cluster of the oxygen-evolving complex.
Jasmonsäure und verwandte Oxylipine wurden bisher als Substanzen, die an der Regulation von Initialisierung und Progression der Blattseneszenz beteiligt sein sollen, kontrovers diskutiert. Bisherige Studien haben sich dabei auf die exogene Applikation von Jasmonaten oder die Messung endogener Spiegel beschränkt. Um die Funktion von Jasmonaten in der Seneszenz-Regulation zu klären, wurden in dieser Arbeit die Profile freier und membranveresterter Oxylipine sowie die Auswirkungen verminderter Oxylipinbildung während der natürlichen Seneszenz und Seneszenz-ähnlicher Prozesse induziert durch Dunkel- und Sorbitol-Inkubation in Blättern von Arabidopsis thaliana untersucht. Jasmonsäure sowie freie 12-Oxo-Phytodiensäure steigen während dieser drei Prozesse an, mit dem stärksten Anstieg von Jasmonsäure nach Dunkelinkubation. Eine deutliche Akkumulation membranveresterter Oxylipine (Arabidopside) konnte lediglich nach Flottierung auf Sorbitol festgestellt werden. Die Mengen an plastidären Mono- und Digalaktosyl-Diacylglycerolen verringerten sich jedoch während der Behandlungen bzw. im Verlauf der Alterung. Zur Untersuchung möglicher Funktionen ansteigender Jasmonat-Konzentrationen wurden Lipoxygenase 2 RNAi-Pflanzen konstruiert, welche basal Jasmonsäure und 12-Oxo-Phytodiensäure produzieren können, jedoch keinen Anstieg während Seneszenz- bzw. Stress-Prozessen zeigen. Die Gehalte an Chlorophyll und Membranlipiden sowie die Genexpression entwicklungsspezifischer Seneszenzmarker waren während der natürlichen und der dunkelinduzierten Seneszenz in diesen Pflanzen nicht verändert. Dies legt nahe, dass diese Oxylipine im Verhältnis zu anderen endogenen Faktoren keine bzw. nur geringe Wirkungen auf die Seneszenz-Progression haben. Aus den gemachten Beobachtungen kann vielmehr geschlossen werden, dass bei diesen Prozessen die Akkumulation von Jasmonaten eher die Folge eines veränderten Lipid-Metabolismus als ein Auslöser der Seneszenz ist. Im Gegensatz dazu zeigen die Lipoxygenase 2 RNAi-Linien eine verlangsamte Seneszenz nach Sorbitol-Behandlung. Ähnlich verhält sich die Allenoxid-Synthase Mutante dde2-2, die zwar 13-Lipoxygenase-Produkte aber keine Jasmonate bilden kann. Dies bedeutet, dass die Jasmonate und nicht andere 13-Lipoxygenase-Produkte für die Seneszenz-ähnlichen Symptome unter diesen Bedingungen verantwortlich sind. Dabei stellt die Sorbitol-induzierte Seneszenz einen Stress-Prozess dar, der sich in vielen Punkten von der natürlichen Seneszenz unterscheidet aber große Ähnlichkeiten zur Seneszenz-Induktion nach exogener Jasmonat-Applikation aufweist. Lipoxygenase 2 ist also durch die Bereitstellung von Oxylipinen weniger in Entwicklungs- als vielmehr in Stress-Prozesse involviert.
In dieser Arbeit sollte zunächst die Frage geklärt werden, ob es sich bei SLAC1 um den S-typ Anionenkanal handelt, oder ob SLAC1 nur ein essentieller Bestandteil des Anionenkanals ist. Zur funktionellen Charakterisierung des per se inaktiven SLAC1 Proteins, wurde mit der Suche nach SLAC1-aktivierenden Interaktionspartnern begonnen. Zu diesem Zweck bediente man sich der Methode der bimolekularen Fluoreszenz Komplementation (BiFC) im heterologen Expressionssystem der Xenopus Oozyten. Da bereits die Abhängigkeit der Anionenströme in Schließzellen von De- und Phosphorylierungsereignissen bekannt war, galt Ca2+-abhängigen Kinasen der CPK Familie, ABA-aktivierten Kinasen der SnRK Familie und Phosphatasen des PP2C Typs eine besondere Aufmerksamkeit. Mitglieder dieser Familien wurden bereits mit der Regulation des Stomaschlusses in Verbindung gebracht. Bei diesen Experimenten zeigte sich, dass SnRK2.6 (OST1) und mehrere CPKs deutlich mit SLAC1 physikalisch interagierten. Als Folge dieser Interaktion in Oozyten konnten schließlich nach Koexpression von SLAC1 zusammen mit den interagierenden Kinasen typische S-Typ Anionenströme detektiert werden, wie man sie aus Patch-Clamp Experimenten an isolierten Schließzellprotoplasten kannte. Hierbei bewirkten die Kinasen OST1 und CPK23 die größte Anionenkanalaktivierung. Dieses Ergebnis wird durch die BIFC-Experimente gestützt, da OST1 und CPK23 die stärkste Interaktion zu SLAC1 zeigten. Die elektrophysiologische Charakterisierung der SLAC1-Ströme im heterologen Expressionssystem der Xenopus Oozyten in Kombination mit in vivo Patch-Clamp Untersuchungen wies SLAC1 eindeutig als den lange gesuchten S-Typ Anionenkanal in Arabidopsis Schließzellen aus. Somit ist die direkte S-Typ Anionenkanalaktivierung durch OST1 auf dem Kalzium- unabhängigen und durch CPKs auf dem Ca2+-abhängigen ABA-Signaltransduktionsweg gelungen. Bei der Spezifizierung der einzelnen Kalzium-Abhängigkeiten dieser Kinasen in Oozyten und in in vitro Kinase Assays konnten weiterhin unterschiedliche Affinitäten der CPKs zu Kalzium festgestellt werden. So vermittelten die schwach Kalzium-abhängigen CPK6 und CPK23 bereits ohne einen Anstieg der zytosolischen Kalziumkonzentratiom über das Ruheniveau hinaus schon die Anionenkanalaktivierung. Die stark Kalzium-abhängigen CPK3 und CPK21 hingegen, werden erst aktiv wenn die ABA vermittelte Signaltransduktion zu einem Anstieg der Kalziumkonzentration führt. Da somit die Kinasen OST1, CPK6 und CPK23 ohne dieses Kalziumsignal aktiv sind, benötigen diese einen übergeordneten Regulationsmechanismus. In den BIFC-Experimenten konnte eine deutliche Interaktion der Phosphatasen ABI1 und 2 zu den SLAC1 aktivierenden Kinasen beobachtet werden. Dass diese Interaktion zu einem Ausbleiben der Anionenkanalaktivierung führt, wurde in TEVC-Messungen gezeigt. Mit diesen Erkenntnissen um die ABA-Signaltransduktionskette in Schließzellen konnten in in vitro Kinase Experimenten ihre einzelnen Glieder zusammengesetzt und der ABA-vermittelte Stomaschluss nachvollzogen werden. In dieser Arbeit zeigte sich, dass, das unter Wasserstress-Bedingungen synthetisierte Phytohormon, ABA von Rezeptoren der RCAR/PYR/PYL-Familie percepiert wird. Anschließend bindet die Phosphatase ABI1 an den ABA-RCAR1 Komplex. In ihrer freien Form inhibiert die Phosphatase ABI1 die Kinasen OST1, CPK3, 6, 21 und CPK23 durch Dephosphorylierung. Nach Bindung von ABI1 an RCAR1 sind diese Kinasen von dem inhibierenden ABI1 entlassen. Die Kinasen OST1, CPK6 und CPK23 stellen ihre Aktivität durch Autophosphorylierung wieder her. Die stark Ca2+-abhängigen Kinasen CPK3 und 21 benötigt hierzu noch einen ABA induzierten Ca2+-Anstieg im Zytoplasma. Diese Kinasen phosphorylieren anschließend SLAC1 am N-Terminus. Diese Phosphorylierung bewirkt die Aktivierung von SLAC1 woraufhin Anionen aus der Schließzelle entlassen werden. Das Fehlen dieser negativen Ladungen führt zur Depolarisation der Membran woraufhin der auswärtsgleichrichtende Kaliumkanal GORK aktiviert und K+ aus der Schließzelle entlässt. Der Verlust an Osmolyten bewirkt einen osmotisch getriebenen Wasserausstrom und das Stoma schließt sich.