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result(s) for
"Schönknecht, Gerald"
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Gene Transfer from Bacteria and Archaea Facilitated Evolution of an Extremophilic Eukaryote
by
Baker, Brett J.
,
Carr, Kevin
,
Ternes, Chad M.
in
Adaptation, Physiological - genetics
,
Adenosine triphosphatases
,
Adenosine Triphosphatases - genetics
2013
Some microbial eukaryotes, such as the extremophilic red alga Galdieria sulphuraria, live in hot, toxic metal-rich, acidic environments. To elucidate the underlying molecular mechanisms of adaptation, we sequenced the 13.7-megabase genome of G. sulphuraria. This alga shows an enormous metabolic flexibility, growing either photoautotrophically or heterotrophically on more than 50 carbon sources. Environmental adaptation seems to have been facilitated by horizontal gene transfer from various bacteria and archaea, often followed by gene family expansion. At least 5% of protein-coding genes of G. sulphuraria were probably acquired horizontally. These proteins are involved in ecologically important processes ranging from heavy-metal detoxification to glycerol uptake and metabolism. Thus, our findings show that a pan-domain gene pool has facilitated environmental adaptation in this unicellular eukaryote.
Journal Article
Control of basal jasmonate signalling and defence through modulation of intracellular cation flux capacity
by
Gerald Schönknecht
,
Thomas Müller
,
Dawid Jaślan
in
Arabidopsis
,
Arabidopsis - genetics
,
Arabidopsis - metabolism
2017
Unknown mechanisms tightly regulate the basal activity of the wound-inducible defence mediator jasmonate (JA) in undamaged tissues. However, the Arabidopsis fatty acid oxygenation upregulated2 (fou2) mutant in vacuolar two-pore channel 1 (TPC1D454N) displays high JA pathway activity in undamaged leaves. This mutant was used to explore mechanisms controlling basal JA pathway regulation.
fou2 was re-mutated to generate novel ‘ouf’ suppressor mutants. Patch-clamping was used to examine TPC1 cation channel characteristics in the ouf suppressor mutants and in fou2. Calcium (Ca2+) imaging was used to study the effects fou2 on cytosolic Ca2+ concentrations.
Six intragenic ouf suppressors with near wild-type (WT) JA pathway activity were recovered and one mutant, ouf8, affected the channel pore. At low luminal calcium concentrations, ouf8 had little detectable effect on fou2. However, increased vacuolar Ca2+ concentrations caused channel occlusion, selectively blocking K+ fluxes towards the cytoplasm. Cytosolic Ca2+ concentrations in unwounded fou2 were found to be lower than in the unwounded WT, but they increased in a similar manner in both genotypes following wounding.
Basal JA pathway activity can be controlled solely by manipulating endomembrane cation flux capacities.We suggest that changes in endomembrane potential affect JA pathway activity.
Journal Article
A Novel Calcium Binding Site in the Slow Vacuolar Cation Channel TPC1 Senses Luminal Calcium Levels
by
Schönknecht, Gerald
,
López-Sanjurjo, Enrique J.
,
Kuchitsu, Kazuyuki
in
Amino Acid Sequence
,
Amino acids
,
Animals
2011
Cytosolic calcium homeostasis is pivotal for intracellular signaling and requires sensing of calcium concentrations in the cytosol and accessible stores. Numerous Ca²⁺ binding sites have been characterized in cytosolic proteins. However, little is known about Ca²⁺ binding inside organelles, like the vacuole. The slow vacuolar (SV) channel, encoded by Arabidopsis thaliana TPC1, is regulated by luminal Ca²⁺. However, the D454/fou2 mutation in TPC1 eliminates vacuolar calcium sensitivity and increases store calcium content. In a search for the luminal calcium binding site, structure modeling indicated a possible coordination site formed by residues Glu-450, Asp-454, Glu-456, and Glu-457 on the luminal side of TPC1. Each Glu residue was replaced by Gin, the modified genes were transiently expressed in loss-of-TPC1-function protoplasts, and SV channel responses to luminal calcium were recorded by patch clamp. SV channels lacking any of the four negatively charged residues appeared altered in calcium sensitivity of channel gating. Our results indicate that Glu-450 and Asp-454 are directly involved in Ca²⁺ binding, whereas Glu-456 and Glu-457 are probably involved in connecting the luminal Ca²⁺ binding site to the channel gate. This novel vacuolar calcium binding site represents a potential tool to address calcium storage in plants.
Journal Article
pH Regulation in an Acidophilic Green Alga–A Quantitative Analysis
2009
Short-term cytosolic pH regulation has three components: H⁺ binding by buffering groups; H⁺ transport out of the cytosol; and H⁺ transport into the vacuole. To understand the large differences plants show in their tolerance to acidic environments, these three components were quantified in the acidophilic unicellular green alga Eremosphaera viridis. Intracellular pH was recorded using ion-selective microelectrodes, whereas constant doses of weak acid were applied over different time intervals. A mathematical model was developed that describes the recorded cytosolic pH changes. Recordings of cytosolic K⁻ and Na⁺ activities, and application of anion channel inhibitors, revealed which ion fluxes electrically compensate H⁺ transport. The cytosolic buffer capacity was β = 30 mM. Acidification resulted in a substantial and constant H⁺ efflux that was probably driven by the plasmalemma H⁺-ATPase r and a proportional pH regulation caused by H⁺ pumped into the vacuole. Under severe cytosolic acidification (≥ 1 pH) more than 50% of the ATP synthesized was used for H⁺ pumping. While H⁺ influx into the vacuole was compensated by cation release, H⁺ efflux out of the cell was compensated by anion efflux. The data presented here give a complete and quantitative picture of the ion fluxes during acid loading in an acidophilic green plant cell.
Journal Article
Calcium Signals from the Vacuole
2013
The vacuole is by far the largest intracellular Ca2+ store in most plant cells. Here, the current knowledge about the molecular mechanisms of vacuolar Ca2+ release and Ca2+ uptake is summarized, and how different vacuolar Ca2+ channels and Ca2+ pumps may contribute to Ca2+ signaling in plant cells is discussed. To provide a phylogenetic perspective, the distribution of potential vacuolar Ca2+ transporters is compared for different clades of photosynthetic eukaryotes. There are several candidates for vacuolar Ca2+ channels that could elicit cytosolic [Ca2+] transients. Typical second messengers, such as InsP3 and cADPR, seem to trigger vacuolar Ca2+ release, but the molecular mechanism of this Ca2+ release still awaits elucidation. Some vacuolar Ca2+ channels have been identified on a molecular level, the voltage-dependent SV/TPC1 channel, and recently two cyclic-nucleotide-gated cation channels. However, their function in Ca2+ signaling still has to be demonstrated. Ca2+ pumps in addition to establishing long-term Ca2+ homeostasis can shape cytosolic [Ca2+] transients by limiting their amplitude and duration, and may thus affect Ca2+ signaling.
Journal Article
Strontium-induced repetitive calcium spikes in a unicellular green alga
1998
The divalent cation Sr2+ induced repetitive transient spikes of the cytosolic Ca2+ activity [Ca2+]cy and parallel repetitive transient hyperpolarizations of the plasma membrane in the unicellular green alga Eremosphaera viridis. [Ca2+]cy measurements, membrane potential measurements, and cation analysis of the cells were used to elucidate the mechanism of Sr2+ -induced [Ca2+]cy oscillations. Sr2+ was effectively and rapidly compartmentalized within the cell, probably into the vacuole. The [Ca2+]cy oscillations cause membrane potential oscillations, and not the reverse. The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca2+ -ATPase blockers 2,5-di-tert-butylhydroquinone and cyclopiazonic acid inhibited Sr2+ -induced repetitive [Ca2+]cy spikes, whereas the compartmentalization of Sr2+ was not influenced. A repetitive Ca2+ release and Ca2+ re-uptake by the ER probably generated repetitive [Ca2+]cy spikes in E. viridis in the presence of Sr2+. The inhibitory effect of ruthenium red and ryanodine indicated that the Sr2+ -induced Ca2+ release from the ER was mediated by a ryanodine/cyclic ADP-ribose type of Ca2+ channel. The blockage of Sr2+ -induced repetitive [Ca2+]cy spikes by La3+ or Gd3+ indicated the necessity of a certain influx of divalent cations for sustained [Ca2+]cy oscillations. Based on these data we present a mathematical model that describes the baseline spiking [Ca2+]cy oscillations in E. viridis
Journal Article
Mechanism of luminal Ca2+ and Mg2+ action on the vacuolar slowly activating channels
by
Schonknecht, G
,
Pottosin, I.I
,
Martinez-Estevez, M
in
Beta vulgaris
,
Beta vulgaris - metabolism
,
Beta vulgaris - ultrastructure
2004
The non-selective slow vacuolar (SV) channel can dominate tonoplast conductance, making it necessary to tightly control its activity. Applying the patch-clamp technique to vacuoles from sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.) taproots we studied the effect of divalent cations on the vacuolar side of the SV channel. Our results show that the SV channel has two independent binding sites for vacuolar divalent cations, (i) a less selective one, inside the channel pore, binding to which impedes channel conductance, and (ii) a Ca2+-selective one outside the membrane-spanning part of the channel protein, binding to which stabilizes the channels closed conformations. Vacuolar Ca2+ and Mg2+ almost indiscriminately blocked ion fluxes through the open channel pore, decreasing measured single-channel current amplitudes. This low-affinity block displays marked voltage dependence, characteristic of a permeable blocker. Vacuolar Ca2+--with a much higher affinity than Mg2+--slows down SV channel activation and shifts the voltage dependence to more (cytosol) positive potentials. A quantitative analysis results in a model that exactly describes the Ca2+-specific effects on the SV channel activation kinetics and voltage gating. According to this model, multiple (approximately three) divalent cations bind with a high affinity at the luminal interface of the membrane to the channel protein, favoring the occupancy of one of the SV channels closed states (C2). Transition to another closed state (C1) diminishes the effective number of bound cations, probably due to mutual repulsion, and channel opening is accompanied by a decrease of binding affinity. Hence, the open state (O) is destabilized with respect to the two closed states, C1 and C2, in the presence of Ca2+ at the vacuolar side. The specificity for Ca2+ compared to Mg2+ is explained in terms of different binding affinities for these cations. In this study we demonstrate that vacuolar Ca2+ is a crucial regulator to restrict SV channel activity to a physiologically meaningful range, which is less than 0.1% of maximum SV channel activity.
Journal Article
Relationship between photosynthetic electron transport and pH gradient across the thylakoid membrane in intact leaves
by
Neimanis, S
,
Katona, E
,
Schonknecht, G. (Universitat Wurzburg, Wurzburg, Germany.)
in
Botany
,
Carbon dioxide
,
chlorophyll
1995
Under conditions (0.2% CO2; 1% O2) that allow high rates of photosynthesis, chlorophyll fluorescence was measured simultaneously with carbon assimilation at various light intensities in spinach (Spinacia oleracea) leaves. Using a stoichiometry of 3 ATP/CO2 and the known relationship between ATP synthesis rate and driving force (delta pH), we calculated the light-dependent pH gradient (delta pH) across the thylakoid membrane in intact leaves. These delta pH values were correlated with the photochemical (qP) and nonphotochemical (qN) quenching of chlorophyll fluorescence and with the quantum yield of photosystem II (phi PSII). At delta pH 2.1 all three parameters (qP, qN, and phi PSII) changed very steeply with increasing delta pH (decreasing pH in the thylakoid). The observed pH dependences followed hexacooperative titration curves with slightly different pKa values. The significance of the steep pH dependences with slightly different pKa values is discussed in relation to the regulation of photosynthetic electron transport in intact leaves
Journal Article
Mechanism of luminal Ca 2+ and Mg 2+ action on the vacuolar slowly activating channels
by
Dobrovinskaya, Oxana R.
,
Schönknecht, Gerald
,
Martínez-Estévez, Manuel
in
Binding sites
,
Divalent cations
,
Electric current
2004
The non-selective slow vacuolar (SV) channel can dominate tonoplast conductance, making it necessary to tightly control its activity. Applying the patch-clamp technique to vacuoles from sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L.) taproots we studied the effect of divalent cations on the vacuolar side of the SV channel. Our results show that the SV channel has two independent binding sites for vacuolar divalent cations, (i) a less selective one, inside the channel pore, binding to which impedes channel conductance, and (ii) a Ca2+-selective one outside the membrane-spanning part of the channel protein, binding to which stabilizes the channel's closed conformations. Vacuolar Ca2+ and Mg2+ almost indiscriminately blocked ion fluxes through the open channel pore, decreasing measured single-channel current amplitudes. This low-affinity block displays marked voltage dependence, characteristic of a 'permeable blocker'. Vacuolar Ca2+—with a much higher affinity than Mg2+—slows down SV channel activation and shifts the voltage dependence to more (cytosol) positive potentials. A quantitative analysis results in a model that exactly describes the Ca2+-specific effects on the SV channel activation kinetics and voltage gating. According to this model, multiple (approximately three) divalent cations bind with a high affinity at the luminal interface of the membrane to the channel protein, favoring the occupancy of one of the SV channel's closed states (C2). Transition to another closed state (C1) diminishes the effective number of bound cations, probably due to mutual repulsion, and channel opening is accompanied by a decrease of binding affinity. Hence, the open state (O) is destabilized with respect to the two closed states, C1 and C2, in the presence of Ca2+ at the vacuolar side. The specificity for Ca2+ compared to Mg2+ is explained in terms of different binding affinities for these cations. In this study we demonstrate that vacuolar Ca2+ is a crucial regulator to restrict SV channel activity to a physiologically meaningful range, which is less than 0.1% of maximum SV channel activity.
Journal Article
Selectivity of the fast activating vacuolar cation channel
by
Pottosin, Igor I.
,
Schönknecht, Gerald
,
Brüggemann, Luba I.
in
Absorption. Translocation of ions and substances. Permeability
,
Agronomy. Soil science and plant productions
,
ammonium compounds
1999
The FV channel dominates the ion conductance of the vacuolar membrane at physiological Ca(2+) concentrations. Patch-clamp measurements on whole barley (Hordeum vulgare) mesophyll vacuoles and on excised tonoplast patches showed small differences in a selectivity sequence NH(4)+ > K(+) greater than or equal to Rb(+) greater than or equal to Cs(+) > Na(+) > Li(+). Less permeant cations decreased the open probability. The FV channel allows the uptake of small monovalent cations especially NH(4)+ into the vacuole.
Journal Article