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1.
Environ Geochem Health ; 45(11): 8317-8336, 2023 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37597084

ABSTRACT

The selection of appropriate plants and growth strategies is a key factor in improving the efficiency and universal applicability of phytoremediation. Sedum lineare grows rapidly and tolerates multiple adversities. The effects of inoculation of Acinetobacter sp. phosphate solubilizing bacteria P-1 and application of phosphate rock (PR) as additives on the remediation efficiency of As-contaminated soil by S. lineare were investigated. Compared with the control, both the single treatment and the combination of inoculation with strain P-1 and application of PR improved the biomass by 30.7-395.5%, chlorophyll content by 48.1-134.8%, total protein content by 12.5-92.4% and total As accumulation by 45.1-177.5%, and reduced the As-induced oxidative damage. Inoculation with strain P-1 increased the activities of superoxide dismutases and catalases of S. lineare under As stress, decreased the accumulation of reactive oxygen species in plant tissues and promoted the accumulation of As in roots. In contrast, simultaneous application of PR decreased As concentration in S. lineare tissues, attenuated As-induced lipid peroxidation and improved As transport to shoots. In addition, the combined application showed the best performance in improving resistance and biomass, which significantly increased root length by 149.1%, shoot length by 33%, fresh weight by 395.5% and total arsenic accumulation by 159.2%, but decreased the malondialdehyde content by 89.1%. Our results indicate that the combined application of strain P-1 and PR with S. lineare is a promising bioremediation strategy to accelerate phytoremediation of As-contaminated soils.


Subject(s)
Arsenic , Crassulaceae , Sedum , Soil Pollutants , Arsenic/toxicity , Sedum/metabolism , Sedum/microbiology , Crassulaceae/metabolism , Phosphates , Biodegradation, Environmental , Soil , Soil Pollutants/analysis , Plant Roots/metabolism , Cadmium
2.
Carbohydr Polym ; 246: 116559, 2020 Oct 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32747239

ABSTRACT

Water-soluble chitosan (WSC) was used to enhance cadmium (Cd) phytoextraction by Hylotelephium spectabile, a promising accumulator. The effect of WSC on Cd forms and functional groups in contaminated soils was determined to clarify the internal mechanism of WSC affecting phytoremediation. Results showed that WSC significantly increased the water-soluble and acid-extractable Cd in contaminated soils by 20.3 %-143.5 % and 2.4 %-39.5 %, respectively. Fourier transform infrared spectra analysis showed that amino and hydroxyl groups in soils were significantly increased in the presence of WSC. The coordination of Cd with increased amino and hydroxyl groups may play important roles in formation of Cd complexes and mobilizing Cd in soils. WSC significantly increased the Cd phytoextraction of H. spectabile by 56.1 %-115.7 % without obvious growth inhibition, which was further confirmed under field trial conditions. Therefore, it is feasible to apply WSC as a soil amendment to Cd-contaminated soils during remediation with H. spectabile.


Subject(s)
Cadmium/metabolism , Chitosan/chemistry , Chitosan/pharmacology , Crassulaceae/metabolism , Soil Pollutants/metabolism , Soil/chemistry , Water/chemistry , Biodegradation, Environmental/drug effects , Chitosan/metabolism , Hydroxyl Radical/metabolism , Solubility , Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared , Temperature
3.
Sci Rep ; 9(1): 18317, 2019 12 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31797954

ABSTRACT

Soil salinization is one of the main stress factors that affect both growth and development of plants. Hylotelephium erythrostictum exhibits strong resistance to salt, but the underlying genetic mechanisms remain unclear. In this study, hydroponically cultured seedlings of H. erythrostictum were exposed to 200 mM NaCl. RNA-Seq was used to determine root transcriptomes at 0, 5, and 10 days, and potential candidate genes with differential expression were analyzed. Transcriptome sequencing generated 89.413 Gb of raw data, which were assembled into 111,341 unigenes, 82,081 of which were annotated. Differentially expressed genes associated to Na+ and K+ transport, Ca2+ channel, calcium binding protein, and nitric oxide (NO) biosynthesis had high expression levels in response to salt stress. An increased fluorescence intensity of NO indicated that it played an important role in the regulation of the cytosolic K+/Na+ balance in response to salt stress. Exogenous NO donor and NO biosynthesis inhibitors significantly increased and decreased the Na+ efflux, respectively, thus causing the opposite effect for K+ efflux. Moreover, under salt stress, exogenous NO donors and NO biosynthesis inhibitors enhanced and reduced Ca2+ influx, respectively. Combined with Ca2+ reagent regulation of Na+ and K+ fluxes, this study identifies how NaCl-induced NO may function as a signaling messenger that modulates the K+/Na+ balance in the cytoplasm via the Ca2+ signaling pathway. This enhances the salt resistance in H. erythrostictum roots.


Subject(s)
Crassulaceae , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Nitric Oxide/metabolism , Salt Tolerance/genetics , Transcriptome , Calcium/metabolism , Crassulaceae/genetics , Crassulaceae/metabolism , Plant Roots/genetics , Plant Roots/metabolism , Potassium/metabolism , Sodium/metabolism
4.
Photosynth Res ; 134(1): 17-25, 2017 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28871459

ABSTRACT

Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) was demonstrated in four small endemic Australian terrestrial succulents from the genus Calandrinia (Montiaceae) viz. C. creethiae, C. pentavalvis, C. quadrivalvis and C. reticulata. CAM was substantiated by measurements of CO2 gas-exchange and nocturnal acidification. In all species, the expression of CAM was overwhelmingly facultative in that nocturnal H+ accumulation was greatest in droughted plants and zero, or close to zero, in plants that were well-watered, including plants that had been droughted and were subsequently rewatered, i.e. the inducible component was proven to be reversible. Gas-exchange measurements complemented the determinations of acidity. In all species, net CO2 uptake was restricted to the light in well-watered plants, and cessation of watering was followed by a progressive reduction of CO2 uptake in the light and a reduction in nocturnal CO2 efflux. In C. creethiae, C. pentavalvis and C. reticulata net CO2 assimilation was eventually observed in the dark, whereas in C. quadrivalvis nocturnal CO2 exchange approached the compensation point but did not transition to net CO2 gain. Following rewatering, all species returned to their original well-watered CO2 exchange pattern of net CO2 uptake restricted solely to the light. In addition to facultative CAM, C. quadrivalvis and C. reticulata exhibited an extremely small constitutive CAM component as demonstrated by the nocturnal accumulation in well-watered plants of small amounts of acidity and by the curved pattern of the nocturnal course of CO2 efflux. It is suggested that low-level CAM and facultative CAM are more common within the Australian succulent flora, and perhaps the world succulent flora, than has been previously assumed.


Subject(s)
Photosynthesis/physiology , Australia , Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Circadian Rhythm , Crassulaceae/metabolism , Crassulaceae/physiology , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Plant Proteins/metabolism
5.
PLoS One ; 12(7): e0181280, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28704842

ABSTRACT

Microbial cell performance in food biotechnological processes has become an important concern for improving human health worldwide. Lactobacillus plantarum, which is widely distributed in nature, is a lactic acid bacterium with many industrial applications for fermented foods or functional foods (e.g., probiotics). In the present study, using capillary electrophoresis time of flight mass spectrometry, the metabolomic profile of dried Orostachys japonicus A. Berger, a perennial medicinal herb with L. plantarum was compared with that of O. japonicus fermented with L. plantarum to elucidate the metabolomic changes induced by the fermentation process. The levels of several metabolites were changed by the fermentation process, indicating their involvement in microbial performance. For example, glycolysis, the pentose phosphate pathway, the TCA cycle, the urea cycle-related metabolism, nucleotide metabolism, and lipid and amino acid metabolism were altered significantly by the fermentation process. Although the fermented metabolites were not tested using in vivo studies to increase human health benefits, our findings provide an insight into the alteration of metabolites induced by fermentation, and indicated that the metabolomic analysis for the process should be accompanied by fermenting strains and conditions.


Subject(s)
Crassulaceae/chemistry , Food Microbiology/methods , Mass Spectrometry/methods , Metabolome , Plants, Medicinal/chemistry , Crassulaceae/metabolism , Crassulaceae/microbiology , Electrophoresis, Capillary , Fermentation , Humans , Lactic Acid/metabolism , Lactobacillus plantarum/physiology , Metabolomics/methods , Plants, Medicinal/metabolism , Plants, Medicinal/microbiology , Probiotics/chemistry , Probiotics/metabolism
6.
J Microbiol Methods ; 120: 65-7, 2016 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26658852

ABSTRACT

When expressing plant cell wall degrading enzymes in the widely used tobacco (Nicotiana benthamiana) after Agrobacterium infiltration, difficulties arise due to the thin leaf structure. Thick leaved succulents, Kalanchoe blossfeldiana and Hylotelephium telephium, were tested as alternatives. A xyloglucanase, as well as a xyloglucanase inhibitor protein was successfully produced.


Subject(s)
Agrobacterium/physiology , Kalanchoe/microbiology , Plant Leaves/microbiology , Agrobacterium/enzymology , Agrobacterium/genetics , Agrobacterium/growth & development , Bacterial Proteins/biosynthesis , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Crassulaceae/metabolism , Genes, Plant , Glycoside Hydrolases/antagonists & inhibitors , Glycoside Hydrolases/biosynthesis , Glycoside Hydrolases/genetics , Plants, Genetically Modified , Plasmids/genetics , Sedum/microbiology , Nicotiana/microbiology
7.
Sci Rep ; 5: 17783, 2015 Dec 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26634994

ABSTRACT

Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) is widespread in terrestrial and aquatic species, plastic in response to environmental changes. Isoetes L. is one of the earliest basal vascular plants and CAM is popular in this genus. Isoetes sinensis Palmer is an amphibious species, alternating frequently between terrestrial and aquatic environments. Given this, we investigated and compared photosynthetic characteristics over a diurnal cycle under submerged condition (SC) and terrestrial condition (TC). The results suggest that I. sinensis possesses a stronger CAM capacity under SC. Compared with under TC, titratable acidity levels and organic acid concentrations were more enriched under SC, whereas soluble sugar or starch and protein levels were lower under SC. Transcript analyses for nine photosynthetic genes revealed that CAM-associated genes possessed high transcripts under SC, but C3-related transcripts were highly expressed under TC. In addition, the enzyme activity measurements demonstrated that PEPC activity over a diurnal cycle was slightly higher under SC, whereas Rubisco activity during the daytime was greater under TC. This comprehensive study probably facilitates general understandings about the CAM photosynthetic characteristics of Isoetes in response to the environmental changes.


Subject(s)
Crassulaceae/metabolism , Photosynthesis , Plant Leaves/metabolism , Ribulose-Bisphosphate Carboxylase/metabolism , Carbon Dioxide/chemistry , Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Crassulaceae/chemistry , Light , Ribulose-Bisphosphate Carboxylase/genetics , Starch/chemistry , Starch/metabolism , Water/chemistry
8.
Nat Prod Commun ; 10(6): 941-4, 2015 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26197522

ABSTRACT

The present study is engaged in the chemical composition of methanol extracts of Sedum taxa from the central part of the Balkan Peninsula, and representatives from other genera of Crassulaceae (Crassula, Echeveria and Kalanchoe) considered as out-groups. The chemical composition of extracts was determined by HPLC analysis, according to retention time of standards and characteristic absorption spectra of components. Identified components were considered as original variables with possible chemotaxonomic significance. Relationships of examined plant samples were investigated by agglomerative hierarchical cluster analysis (AHC). The obtained results showed how the distribution of methanol extract components (mostly phenolics) affected grouping of the examined samples. The obtained clustering showed satisfactory grouping of the examined samples, among which some representatives of the Sedum series, Rupestria and Magellensia, are the most remote. The out-group samples were not clearly singled out with regard to Sedum samples as expected; this especially applies to samples of Crassula ovata and Echeveria lilacina, while Kalanchoe daigremontiana was more separated from most of the Sedum samples.


Subject(s)
Crassulaceae/chemistry , Crassulaceae/classification , Plant Extracts/analysis , Balkan Peninsula , Crassulaceae/metabolism , Phylogeny , Plant Extracts/isolation & purification , Plant Extracts/metabolism , Secondary Metabolism
9.
J Theor Biol ; 368: 83-94, 2015 Mar 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25542971

ABSTRACT

Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) photosynthesis functions as an endogenous circadian rhythm coupled to external environmental forcings of energy and water availability. This paper explores the nonlinear dynamics of a new CAM photosynthesis model (Bartlett et al., 2014) and investigates the responses of CAM plant carbon assimilation to different combinations of environmental conditions. The CAM model (Bartlett et al., 2014) consists of a Calvin cycle typical of C3 plants coupled to an oscillator of the type employed in the Van der Pol and FitzHugh-Nagumo systems. This coupled system is a function of environmental variables including leaf temperature, leaf moisture potential, and irradiance. Here, we explore the qualitative response of the system and the expected carbon assimilation under constant and periodically forced environmental conditions. The model results show how the diurnal evolution of these variables entrains the CAM cycle with prevailing environmental conditions. While constant environmental conditions generate either steady-state or periodically oscillating responses in malic acid uptake and release, forcing the CAM system with periodic daily fluctuations in light exposure and leaf temperature results in quasi-periodicity and possible chaos for certain ranges of these variables. This analysis is a first step in quantifying changes in CAM plant productivity with variables such as the mean temperature, daily temperature range, irradiance, and leaf moisture potential. Results may also be used to inform model parametrization based on the observed fluctuating regime.


Subject(s)
Circadian Rhythm/physiology , Crassulaceae/metabolism , Models, Biological , Biological Clocks/physiology , Carbon/metabolism , Environment , Nonlinear Dynamics , Photic Stimulation , Photosynthesis/physiology , Plant Leaves/metabolism , Temperature
10.
BMB Rep ; 47(2): 98-103, 2014 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24219867

ABSTRACT

Orostachys japonicus shows various biological activities. However, the molecular mechanisms remain unknown in LPS-stimulated macrophages. Here, we investigated the anti-oxidizing effect of the dichloromethane (DCM) and hexane fractions from O. japonicus (OJD and OJH) against oxidative stress in RAW 264.7 cells stimulated by LPS. OJD and OJH significantly increased the expression of heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Additionally, it was found that the expression of HO-1 was stimulated by Nrf2 activated via degradation of Keap1. ERK and p38 inhibitors repressed HO-1 induced by OJD and OJH in LPS-stimulated cells, respectively. In conclusion, these results suggest that OJD and OJH may block oxidative damage stimulated by LPS, via increasing the expression of HO-1 and Nrf2, and MAPK signaling pathway.


Subject(s)
Antioxidants/chemistry , Crassulaceae/chemistry , Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Kinases/metabolism , NF-E2-Related Factor 2/metabolism , Plant Extracts/chemistry , Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing/metabolism , Animals , Antioxidants/isolation & purification , Antioxidants/pharmacology , Cell Line , Cell Survival/drug effects , Crassulaceae/metabolism , Cytoskeletal Proteins/metabolism , Heme Oxygenase-1/metabolism , Hexanes/chemistry , Kelch-Like ECH-Associated Protein 1 , Lipopolysaccharides/toxicity , Methylene Chloride/chemistry , Mice , Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Kinases/antagonists & inhibitors , Plant Extracts/pharmacology , Signal Transduction/drug effects , Up-Regulation/drug effects , p38 Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases/antagonists & inhibitors , p38 Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases/metabolism
11.
Zhongguo Zhong Yao Za Zhi ; 38(21): 3656-60, 2013 Nov.
Article in Chinese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24494549

ABSTRACT

Salidroside, one of the active components of Rhodiola plants, is a phenolic glycoside with significant biological activities. The investigation and development of alternative production approaches of salidroside is of high academic and application values due to the limited resource of Rhodiola plants, and from which the low yield of salidroside. This review summarized the research progress and perspective of the alternative production approaches of salidroside including both chemosynthetic and biosynthetic methods and pathways.


Subject(s)
Crassulaceae/metabolism , Glucosides/biosynthesis , Glucosides/chemical synthesis , Phenols/chemical synthesis , Plant Extracts/biosynthesis , Plant Extracts/chemical synthesis , Biosynthetic Pathways , Cell Culture Techniques , Glucosides/chemistry , Humans , Molecular Structure , Phenols/chemistry , Plant Extracts/chemistry
12.
J Chem Ecol ; 38(5): 525-37, 2012 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22527055

ABSTRACT

Sequestration of plant secondary metabolites is a widespread phenomenon among aposematic insects. Sarmentosin is an unsaturated γ-hydroxynitrile glucoside known from plants and some Lepidoptera. It is structurally and biosynthetically closely related to cyanogenic glucosides, which are commonly sequestered from food plants and/or de novo synthesized by lepidopteran species. Sarmentosin was found previously in Parnassius (Papilionidae) butterflies, but it was not known how the occurrence was related to food plants or whether Parnassius species could biosynthesize the compound. Here, we report on the occurrence of sarmentosin and related compounds in four different Parnassius species belonging to two different clades, as well as their known and suspected food plants. There were dramatic differences between the two clades, with P. apollo and P. smintheus from the Apollo group containing high amounts of sarmentosin, and P. clodius and P. mnemosyne from the Mnemosyne group containing low or no detectable amounts. This was reflected in the larval food plants; P. apollo and P. smintheus larvae feed on Sedum species (Crassulaceae), which all contained considerable amounts of sarmentosin, while the known food plants of the two other species, Dicentra and Corydalis (Fumariaceae), had no detectable levels of sarmentosin. All insects and plants containing sarmentosin also contained other biosynthetically related hydroxynitrile glucosides in patterns previously reported for plants, but not for insects. Not all findings could be explained by sequestration alone and we therefore hypothesize that Parnassius species are able to de novo synthesize sarmentosin.


Subject(s)
Butterflies/physiology , Crassulaceae/metabolism , Fumariaceae/metabolism , Glucose/analogs & derivatives , Glucosides/metabolism , Herbivory , Nitriles/metabolism , Animals , Glucose/isolation & purification , Glucose/metabolism , Glucosides/isolation & purification , Nitriles/isolation & purification
13.
Plant Cell Environ ; 34(7): 1104-12, 2011 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21410708

ABSTRACT

Efforts to understand the cause of ¹²C versus ¹³C isotope fractionation in plants during photosynthesis and post-photosynthetic metabolism are frustrated by the lack of data on the intramolecular ¹³C-distribution in metabolites and its variation with environmental conditions. We have exploited isotopic carbon-13 nuclear magnetic resonance (¹³C NMR) spectrometry to measure the positional isotope composition (δ¹³C(i) , ‰) in ethanol samples from different origins: European wines, liquors and sugars from C3, C4 and crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) plants. In C3-ethanol samples, the methylene group was always ¹³C-enriched (∼2‰) relative to the methyl group. In wines, this pattern was correlated with both air temperature and δ(18)O of wine water, indicating that water vapour deficit may be a critical defining factor. Furthermore, in C4-ethanol, the reverse relationship was observed (methylene-C relatively ¹³C-depleted), supporting the concept that photorespiration is the key metabolic process leading to the ¹³C distribution in C3-ethanol. By contrast, in CAM-ethanol, the isotopic pattern was similar to but stronger than C3-ethanol, with a relative ¹³C-enrichment in the methylene-C of up to 13‰. Plausible causes of this ¹³C-pattern are briefly discussed. As the intramolecular δ¹³C(i) -values in ethanol reflect that in source glucose, our data point out the crucial impact on the ratio of metabolic pathways sustaining glucose synthesis.


Subject(s)
Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Ethanol/chemistry , Glucose/chemistry , Vitis/chemistry , Air , Carbon/chemistry , Carbon/metabolism , Carbon Isotopes/analysis , Carbon Isotopes/metabolism , Cell Respiration , Crassulaceae/metabolism , Crassulaceae/physiology , Fermentation , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Photosynthesis , Rain , Sunlight , Temperature , Vitis/metabolism , Water , Wine/analysis
14.
Photosynth Res ; 109(1-3): 269-79, 2011 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21308411

ABSTRACT

Inorganic carbon can be in short supply in freshwater relative to that needed by freshwater plants for photosynthesis because of a large external transport limitation coupled with frequent depleted concentrations of CO(2) and elevated concentrations of O(2). Freshwater plants have evolved a host of avoidance, exploitation and amelioration strategies to cope with the low and variable supply of inorganic carbon in water. Avoidance strategies rely on the spatial variation in CO(2) concentrations within and among lakes. Exploitation strategies involve anatomical and morphological features that take advantage of sources of CO(2) outside of the water column such as the atmosphere or sediment. Amelioration strategies involve carbon-concentrating mechanisms based on uptake of bicarbonate, which is widespread, C(4)-fixation, which is infrequent, and crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM), which is of intermediate frequency. CAM enables aquatic plants to take up inorganic carbon in the night. Furthermore, daytime inorganic carbon uptake is generally not inhibited and therefore CAM is considered to be a carbon-conserving mechanism. CAM in aquatic plants is a plastic mechanism regulated by environmental variables and is generally downregulated when inorganic carbon does not limit photosynthesis. CAM is regulated in the long term (acclimation during growth), but is also affected by environmental conditions in the short term (response on a daily basis). In aquatic plants, CAM appears to be an ecologically important mechanism for increasing inorganic carbon uptake, because the in situ contribution from CAM to the C-budget generally is high (18-55%).


Subject(s)
Aquatic Organisms/physiology , Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Crassulaceae/metabolism , Oxygen/metabolism , Photosynthesis/physiology , Plants/metabolism , Acclimatization , Aquatic Organisms/metabolism , Bicarbonates/metabolism , Biological Transport , Carbon/metabolism , Carbon Cycle/physiology , Crassulaceae/chemistry , Decarboxylation , Fresh Water , Light , Plant Physiological Phenomena , Temperature
15.
Oecologia ; 164(4): 871-80, 2010 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20652592

ABSTRACT

Expression of crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) is characterized by extreme variability within and between taxa and its sensitivity to environmental variation. In this study, we determined seasonal fluctuations in CAM photosynthesis with measurements of nocturnal tissue acidification and carbon isotopic composition (δ(13)C) of bulk tissue and extracted sugars in three plant communities along a precipitation gradient (500, 700, and 1,000 mm year(-1)) on the Yucatan Peninsula. We also related the degree of CAM to light habitat and relative abundance of species in the three sites. For all species, the greatest tissue acid accumulation occurred during the rainy season. In the 500 mm site, tissue acidification was greater for the species growing at 30% of daily total photon flux density (PFD) than species growing at 80% PFD. Whereas in the two wetter sites, the species growing at 80% total PFD had greater tissue acidification. All species had values of bulk tissue δ(13)C less negative than -20‰, indicating strong CAM activity. The bulk tissue δ(13)C values in plants from the 500 mm site were 2‰ less negative than in plants from the wetter sites, and the only species growing in the three communities, Acanthocereus tetragonus (Cactaceae), showed a significant negative relationship between both bulk tissue and sugar δ(13)C values and annual rainfall, consistent with greater CO(2) assimilation through the CAM pathway with decreasing water availability. Overall, variation in the use of CAM photosynthesis was related to water and light availability and CAM appeared to be more ecologically important in the tropical dry forests than in the coastal dune.


Subject(s)
Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Crassulaceae/metabolism , Crassulaceae/radiation effects , Ecosystem , Light , Acids/metabolism , Acids/radiation effects , Cactaceae/chemistry , Cactaceae/metabolism , Cactaceae/radiation effects , Carbon Isotopes/metabolism , Crassulaceae/chemistry , Mexico , Rain , Seasons
16.
Plant Physiol ; 151(2): 702-14, 2009 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19641032

ABSTRACT

The amphibious water plant Crassula helmsii is an invasive copper (Cu)-tolerant neophyte in Europe. It now turned out to accumulate Cu up to more than 9,000 ppm in its shoots at 10 microm (=0.6 ppm) Cu(2+) in the nutrient solution, indicating that it is a Cu hyperaccumulator. We investigated uptake, binding environment, and toxicity of Cu in this plant under emerged and submerged conditions. Extended x-ray absorption fine structure measurements on frozen-hydrated samples revealed that Cu was bound almost exclusively by oxygen ligands, likely organic acids, and not any sulfur ligands. Despite significant differences in photosynthesis biochemistry and biophysics between emerged and submerged plants, no differences in Cu ligands were found. While measurements of tissue pH confirmed the diurnal acid cycle typical for Crassulacean acid metabolism, Delta(13)C measurements showed values typical for regular C3 photosynthesis. Cu-induced inhibition of photosynthesis mainly affected the photosystem II (PSII) reaction center, but with some unusual features. Most obviously, the degree of light saturation of electron transport increased during Cu stress, while maximal dark-adapted PSII quantum yield did not change and light-adapted quantum yield of PSII photochemistry decreased particularly in the first 50 s after onset of actinic irradiance. This combination of changes, which were strongest in submerged cultures, shows a decreasing number of functional reaction centers relative to the antenna in a system with high antenna connectivity. Nonphotochemical quenching, in contrast, was modified by Cu mainly in emerged cultures. Pigment concentrations in stressed plants strongly decreased, but no changes in their ratios occurred, indicating that cells either survived intact or died and bleached quickly.


Subject(s)
Copper/metabolism , Copper/toxicity , Crassulaceae/drug effects , Crassulaceae/metabolism , Biophysical Phenomena/drug effects , Crassulaceae/growth & development , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration/drug effects , Photosynthesis/drug effects , Pigments, Biological/metabolism , Plant Leaves/drug effects , Plant Leaves/metabolism , Spectrum Analysis , Stress, Physiological/drug effects
17.
Cold Spring Harb Protoc ; 2009(10): pdb.emo133, 2009 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20147034

ABSTRACT

The genus Kalanchoë plays an important role in the investigation of biochemical, physiological and phylogenetic aspects of Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) in plants, which is an important evolutionary adaptation of the photosynthetic carbon assimilation pathway to arid environments. In addition, natural compounds extracted from tissues of Kalanchoë have potential applicability in treating tumors and inflammatory and allergic diseases, and have been shown to have insecticidal properties. Kalanchoë daigremontiana (Hamet & Perrier) originated in Madagascar and reproduces asexually by spontaneously forming whole plantlets on leaves. Plantlets develop symmetrically along the leaf margins on leaf notches, closely resembling zygotic embryos in development, and once the root system is formed, they detach from the mother-leaf, fall to the ground, and grow into new plants. This phenomenon is also found in other species from this same genus; however, the formation of leaf-plantlets is variable among species. Nevertheless, all species illustrate the remarkable ability of plant somatic cells to regenerate an entire organism, which has fascinated the scientific community for many years. It was only recently that the morphogenic process involved in the origin of K. daigremontiana plantlets was determined using molecular and genetic tools: K. daigremontiana forms plantlets by co-opting both organogenesis and embryogenesis programs into leaves. The ability of K. daigremontiana species to form somatic embryos outside of a seed environment provides an attractive model system to study somatic embryogenesis in nature, particularly the molecular mechanism involved in the acquisition of competence by vegetative cells to make embryos without fertilization.


Subject(s)
Kalanchoe/genetics , Kalanchoe/physiology , Reproduction, Asexual , Acids/metabolism , Botany/methods , Crassulaceae/metabolism , Flowers/metabolism , Genes, Plant , Models, Biological , Photosynthesis/physiology , Plant Leaves/metabolism , Plant Physiological Phenomena , Plant Proteins/genetics , Seeds , Species Specificity
18.
J Exp Bot ; 57(15): 4089-98, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17077184

ABSTRACT

When leaves of Bryophyllum marnierianum are detached from the plant, plantlets develop from primordia located at their margins. Leaves excised with a piece of stem attached do not produce plantlets. Severing the major leaf veins overcomes the inhibitory effect of the attached stem, indicating that the control agent is transmitted through the vascular system. A possible mechanism is that an inhibitory substance, possibly a known plant hormone, transported from the stem to the leaf, suppresses plantlet development. A number of hormones were tested for their ability to inhibit plantlet primordium development in whole isolated leaves. Auxins had no effect, indicating that apical dominance is not involved. The cytokinins zeatin, kinetin, and benzylaminopurine (BAP) strongly inhibited plantlet development, suggesting that they may be the or a factor involved in maintenance of plantlet primordium dormancy when the leaf is attached to the plant. This hypothesis was strongly supported by the finding that treatment of leaves attached to stems with a cytokinin antagonist (purine riboside) released the primordia from inhibition. In contrast to whole leaves, plantlet primordium development on leaf explants incubated on Murashige Skoog medium containing 3% sucrose was strongly stimulated by cytokinins. A possible explanation of these observations is that in whole leaves the cytokinin signal is transduced into an inhibitory signal whereas in the isolated primordium cytokinin has a direct stimulatory effect. The inhibitory cytokinin pathway must be dominant as long as the leaf is attached to the plant. A model is proposed which could explain these findings. This study points to a novel role of cytokinins in the maintenance of foliar plantlet primordium dormancy.


Subject(s)
Crassulaceae/metabolism , Cytokinins/physiology , Plant Growth Regulators/physiology , Crassulaceae/drug effects , Crassulaceae/growth & development , Cytokinins/antagonists & inhibitors , Cytokinins/pharmacology , Models, Biological , Plant Growth Regulators/antagonists & inhibitors , Plant Growth Regulators/pharmacology , Plant Leaves/drug effects , Plant Leaves/growth & development , Plant Leaves/metabolism , Plant Stems/growth & development , Plant Stems/metabolism , Purine Nucleosides/pharmacology , Ribonucleosides/pharmacology
19.
J Hum Evol ; 48(3): 219-36, 2005 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15737391

ABSTRACT

A small minority of Africa's wild plant foods are C4. These are primarily the seeds of some of the C4 grasses, the rootstocks and stem/leaf bases of some of the C4 sedges (especially papyrus), and the leaves of some of the C4 herbaceous dicots (forbs). These wild food plants are commonly found in disturbed ground and wetlands (particularly the grasses and sedges). Multiple lines of evidence indicate that C4 grasses were present in Africa by at least the late Miocene. It is a reasonable hypothesis that the prehistory of the C4 sedges parallels that of the C4 grasses, but the C4 forbs may not have become common until the late Pleistocene. CAM plants may have a more ancient history, but offer few opportunities for an additional C4-like dietary signal. The environmental reconstructions available for the early South African hominid sites do not indicate the presence of large wetlands, and therefore probably the absence of a strong potential for a C4 plant food diet. However, carbon isotope analyses of tooth enamel from three species of early South African hominids have shown that there was a significant but not dominant contribution of C4 biomass in their diets. Since it appears unlikely that this C4 component could have come predominantly from C4 plant foods, a broad range of potential animal contributors is briefly considered, namely invertebrates, reptiles, birds, and small mammals. It is concluded that the similar average C4 dietary intake seen in the three South African hominid species could have been acquired by differing contributions from the various sources, without the need to assume scavenging or hunting of medium to large grazing ungulates. Effectively similar dominantly dryland paleo-environments may also be part of the explanation. Theoretically, elsewhere in southern and eastern Africa, large wetlands would have offered early hominids greater opportunities for a C4 plant diet.


Subject(s)
Carbon/metabolism , Diet/history , Environment , Feeding Behavior/physiology , Hominidae/physiology , Plants, Edible/metabolism , Africa , Animals , Crassulaceae/metabolism , Cyperaceae/physiology , History, Ancient , Humans , Nutritional Physiological Phenomena/physiology , Paleontology/methods , Photosynthesis/physiology , Plant Transpiration/physiology , Poaceae/physiology
20.
Z Naturforsch C J Biosci ; 59(3-4): 223-8, 2004.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15241931

ABSTRACT

Different organs of Mesembryanthemum crystallinum exhibit differing levels of CAM (Crassulacean acid metabolism), identifiable by quantification of nocturnal malate accumulation. Shoots and also basal parts of young leaves were observed to accumulate high concentrations of malate. It was typically found in mature leaves and especially prominent in plants subjected to salt stress. Small amount of nocturnal malate accumulation was found in roots of M. crystallinum plants following age-dependent or salinity-triggered CAM. This is an indication that malate can be also stored in non-photosynthetic tissue. Measurements of catalase activity did not produce evidence of the correlation between activity of this enzyme and the level of malate accumulation in different organs of M. crystallinum although catalase activity also appeared to be dependent on the photoperiod. In all material collected at dusk catalase activity was greater than it was observed in the organs harvested at dawn.


Subject(s)
Malates/metabolism , Mesembryanthemum/metabolism , Plant Leaves/metabolism , Crassulaceae/metabolism , Mesembryanthemum/drug effects , Plant Shoots/metabolism , Sodium Chloride/pharmacology
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