One of the mechanisms plants have developed for chloroplast protection against oxidative damage involves a 2-Cys peroxiredoxin, which has been proposed to be reduced by ferredoxin and plastid thioredoxins, Trx x and CDSP32, the FTR/ Trx pathway. We show that rice (Oryza sativa) chloroplast NADPH THIOREDOXIN REDUCTASE (NTRC), with a thioredoxin domain, uses NADPH to reduce the chloroplast 2-Cys peroxiredoxin BAS1, which then reduces hydrogen peroxide. The presence of both NTR and Trx-like domains in a single polypeptide is absolutely required for the high catalytic efficiency of NTRC. An Arabidopsis thaliana knockout mutant for NTRC shows irregular mesophyll cell shape, abnormal chloroplast structure, and unbalanced BAS1 redox state, resulting in impaired photosynthesis rate under low light. Constitutive expression of wild-type NTRC in mutant transgenic lines rescued this phenotype. Moreover, prolonged darkness followed by light/dark incubation produced an increase in hydrogen peroxide and lipid peroxidation in leaves and accelerated senescence of NTRC-deficient plants. We propose that NTRC constitutes an alternative system for chloroplast protection against oxidative damage, using NADPH as the source of reducing power. Since no light-driven reduced ferredoxin is produced at night, the NTRC-BAS1 pathway may be a key detoxification system during darkness, with NADPH produced by the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway as the source of reducing power.
Quantum sum rules impose limits on the hyperpolarizability, beta. A survey of the largest second-order molecular susceptibilities finds what appears to be a universal gap between the experimental results and the fundamental limits. In this work, we use theory, linear spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy, and measured values of beta (using hyper-Rayleigh scattering and Stark Spectroscopy) to show that this gap is due to an unfavorable arrangement of excited state energies. The question of whether this result is a universal property of a quantum system or a matter of present paradigms for making molecules is discussed.
The nucellus, which is the maternal tissue of the wheat grain, degenerates during the early stages of development. We have investigated whether or not this degenerative process may be considered as programmed cell death (PCD). The analysis of DNA of tissues dissected from developing wheat (Triticum aestivum L. cv Chinese Spring) grains at 5-20 days post anthesis (dpa) showed the presence of DNA laddering, which is indicative of internucleosomal fragmentation of nuclear DNA, in maternal tissues but not in the endosperm. The TUNEL assay showed in-situ internucleosomal fragmentation of DNA in nuclei of parenchymal and epidermal cells of the nucellus, as well as in the pericarp, during the early stages of grain development (5 dpa). Furthermore, internucleosomal fragmentation of nuclear DNA was observed in nucellar projection cells in the middle stages of grain development (13-18 dpa), thus showing a process of PCD in these maternal tissues. Electron-transmission microscopy analysis allowed the morphology of PCD to be characterized in this plant tissue. Initially, fragmentation of the cytoplasm was observed, the nuclear envelope appeared dilated and to be forming vacuoles, and the content of heterochromatin increased. A progressive degradation of the cytosolic contents and organelles was observed, and the plasma membrane was disrupted. However, the Golgi apparatus remained intact and apparently functional even in the final stages of cell death.
The Sinorhizobium fredii HH103 rkp-1 region, which is involved in capsular polysaccharides (KPS) production, was isolated and sequenced. The organization of the S. fredii genes identified, rkpUAGHIJ and kpsF3, was identical to that described for S. meliloti 1021 but different from that of S. meliloti AK631. The long rkpA gene (7.5 kb) of S. fredii HH103 and S. meliloti 1021 appears as a fusion of six clustered AK631 genes, rkpABCDEF. S. fredii HH103-Rif(r) mutants affected in rkpH or rkpG were constructed. An exoA mutant unable to produce exopolysaccharide (EPS) and a double mutant exoA rkpH also were obtained. Glycine max (soybean) and Cajanus cajan (pigeon pea) plants inoculated with the rkpH, rkpG, and rkpH exoA derivatives of S. fredii HH103 showed reduced nodulation and severe symptoms of nitrogen starvation. The symbiotic capacity of the exoA mutant was not significantly altered. All these results indicate that KPS, but not EPS, is of crucial importance for the symbiotic capacity of S. fredii HH103-Rif(r). S. meliloti strains that produce only EPS or KPS are still effective with alfalfa. In S. fredii HH103, however, EPS and KPS are not equivalent, because mutants in rkp genes are symbiotically impaired regardless of whether or not EPS is produced.
The aleurone layer of cereal grains undergoes a gibberellin-regulated process of programmed cell death (PCD) following germination. We have applied a combination of ultrastructural and biochemical approaches to analyze aleurone PCD in intact wheat grains. The terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end labeling assay revealed that PCD was initiated in aleurone cells proximal to the embryo and then extended to distal cells. DNA fragmentation and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end labeling analysis revealed PCD of aleurone cells in maize grains, although the process was delayed as compared with wheat. Aleurone cells undergoing PCD showed a rapid vacuolation with high lytic activity in the cytoplasm, whereas the nucleus, which adopted an irregular shape, appeared essentially intact and showed symptoms of degradation at the end of the process. A nuclease activity was identified localized in the nucleus of aleurone cells undergoing PCD, just prior to the appearance of DNA laddering. This nuclease was induced by gibberellic acid treatment and was not detected when gibberellin synthesis was inhibited or in gibberellic acid-insensitive mutants. This nuclease was activated by Ca 2؉ and Mg 2؉ , strongly inhibited by Zn 2؉ , and showed optimum activity at neutral pH, resembling nucleases involved in apoptosis of animal cells. Programmed cell death (PCD)1 is a selective and ordered elimination of unwanted cells, thus playing a critical role in the control of development (1, 2). Death in animal cells occurs by a process termed apoptosis, which is characterized by a dramatic reorganization of the nucleus (3-5). The signaling pathway of apoptosis is initiated either at the mitochondria or at death receptors, activating a cascade of caspases, which execute cell death (6).In plants, PCD is both an important process of development (7-10) and a mechanism of defense against pathogens (11,12).However, plant PCD shows important differences from the process of apoptosis of animal cells at the morphological and biochemical levels (13,14). At the morphological level, apoptotic bodies that are phagocytosed by other cells (15) are not formed during plant PCD because of the presence of the cell wall. At the biochemical level, despite the description of caspase-like activity in cells undergoing hypersensitive response (16) and a caspase 3-like protease in Chara cells (17), no evidence for the participation of a cascade of caspases in cells undergoing PCD during plant development has been reported (18). Finally, the vacuole, a multifunctional plant cell organelle (19), seems to play an important role in PCD in different plant systems such as the formation of tracheary elements (20) or the cereal aleurone layer (21-23).Cereal grains have become one of the model systems for the study of plant PCD. At initial stages of grain development, maternal tissues such as the nucellus (24, 25) and the nucellar projection cells (26) degenerate by a process of PCD (27). During endosperm development, the cells diff...
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