| Literature DB >> 18419821 |
Dietmar Funck1, Bettina Stadelhofer, Wolfgang Koch.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Like many other plant species,Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18419821 PMCID: PMC2377265 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2229-8-40
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Plant Biol ISSN: 1471-2229 Impact factor: 4.215
Figure 1δOAT is localised in mitochondria. Leaf protoplasts from Arabidopsis plants stably transformed with a δOAT-GFP fusion construct under control of the CaMV 35S promoter. A: Fluorescence signal of MitoTracker orange; B: GFP signal; C: Autofluorescence of chlorophyll; D: Merge of A and B; E: Merge of B and C; F: Merge of C and a brightfield image. Scale bar = 20 μm.
Figure 2Molecular and biochemical characterisation of . A: Schematic representation of the exon-intron structure of δOAT (At5g46180) with the T-DNA insertion points in oat1 and oat3. Thick green bars indicate exons, thin green bars indicate introns. The thick red bars indicate the part of the mRNA used as probe for northern blotting. B: PCR with two gene-specific primers and one primer complementary to the T-DNA left border identified homozygous plants. Appearance of two T-DNA specific bands (indicated by arrowheads) indicated an inverted tandem repeat of the T-DNA. C: Northern blot with the δOAT-specific probe on wildtype, oat mutants and δOAT-GFP transgenic plants. D: The same membrane re-probed with a P5CS1-specific probe. E: EtBr staining of the corresponding RNA-gel to demonstrate equal loading. F: OAT activity in whole plant extracts. OAT activity is expressed in arbitrary units of P5C produced per mg total protein during 20 min. Error bars indicate SD of triplicate assays, the whole experiment was repeated with similar results from independent samples.
Figure 3. A: Col-0 wildtype, oat1 and oat3 were grown for three weeks in sterile culture on MS medium supplemented with 60 mM sucrose and increasing amounts of NaCl. B: Free Pro levels in 3-week-old plants. C: Fw/Dw ratios of plants cultivated under the same conditions. Columns represent the average of 3 (C) or at least 4 (B) independent biological replicates, error bars indicate SD.
Figure 4. Col-0 wildtype, oat1 and oat3 were cultivated on MS medium lacking mineral nitrogen but supplemented with 30 mM sucrose and the indicated concentrations of organic nitrogen sources. Plates without nitrogen, with 5 mM Arg or 10 mM urea were photographed after 4 weeks, the picture of the plate with 10 mM Orn was taken after 6 weeks of growth.
Figure 5Metabolism of Arg and Orn is impaired in . Col-0 wildtype, oat1 and oat3 were cultivated for 3 weeks on MS medium lacking mineral nitrogen but supplemented with 30 mM sucrose, 0.5 mM Gln and an additional organic nitrogen source corresponding to 20 mM nitrogen. A: Addition of 0.5 mM Gln to 5 mM Arg allowed establishment and limited growth of oat mutant seedlings. B-D: Profiles of the major free amino acids in excised rosettes of plantlets cultivated on the indicated nitrogen sources. Values are the average of 3 to 4 independent biological replicates, error bars indicate SD. Asterisks indicate significant differences from the wildtype Col-0 (p ≤ 0.05). For the full amino acid profiles see Fig. 6.
Figure 6Amino acids profiles of . Contents of free amino acids were determined by HPLC. For cultivation conditions see legend to Fig. 5 and the methods section. Amino acid contents are given in μmol/10 mg FW. Values are the mean ± SD of 3 to 4 independent replicates. n.d. = not detected, also not or not consistently detected were cysteine, methionine, tryptophan and tyrosine. Green and red boxes indicate values significantly higher or lower than the wildtype, respectively (p ≤ 0.05 by students t-test).
Figure 7Complementation of the . A: Genotyping of the F2-progeny of a cross between oat3 and a δOAT-GFP transgenic line. B: The capability to utilise Arg as the only nitrogen source is segregating in the progeny of two plants homozygous for the oat3 T-DNA insertion but heterozygous for the δOAT-GFP construct.
Figure 8Compartmentation of Arg and Pro metabolic pathways. δOAT links the degradation pathways for Arg and Pro, which converge at the level of P5C in mitochondria. Pro biosynthesis occurs in the cytosol or, during stress, in plastids, whereas Arg biosynthesis is constitutively localised in plastids. For details on Arg biosynthesis up to Orn see [3]. ASL: argininosuccinate lyase; ASSY: argininosuccinate synthetase; OTC: ornithine transcarbamylase, P5C: pyrroline-5-carboxylate, P5CDH: P5C dehydrogenase; P5CR: P5C reductase; P5CS: P5C synthetase, ProDH: Pro dehydrogenase.