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583 result(s) for "Testa gene"
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Characterization of the BrTT1 gene responsible for seed coat color formation in Dahuang (Brassica rapa L. landrace)
A preliminary study suggested that BrTT1 , which encodes a WIP zinc finger transcription factor, was responsible for seed coat color formation in Dahuang. In this study, cloning and functional analyses of the BrTT1 gene were performed to verify this, where no difference was detected between the upstream/downstream sequences of the target gene. The full-length genomic sequence of BrTT1 gene (1804 bp), together with the upstream (1796 bp) and downstream sequences of the target gene (986 bp), was transformed into the A. thalianatt1 mutant, tt1-1 , and the seed coat color was completely restored to brown. The CDS from yellow- and brown-seeded plants was also transformed into tt1-1 under control of the 35S promoter. Only the coding sequence from brown-seeded plants could restore the seed coat color of tt1-1 , suggesting that mutations in the coding sequence affected the function of Brtt1 and led to the yellow-seeded trait in Dahuang. In addition, BrTT1 was localized in the nucleus. The aberrant expression of BrTT1 in the yellow-seeded material of Brassica rapa may cause the aberrant or absent expression of several important BrTT genes of the flavonoid biosynthetic pathway, then blocked proanthocyanidin accumulation and resulted in a transparent testa in Dahuang.
Gibberellin requirement for Arabidopsis seed germination is determined both by testa characteristics and embryonic abscisic acid
The mechanisms imposing a gibberellin (GA) requirement to promote the germination of dormant and non-dormant Arabidopsis seeds were analyzed using the GA-deficient mutant ga1, several seed coat pigmentation and structure mutants, and the abscisic acid (ABA)-deficient mutant aba1. Testa mutants, which exhibit reduced seed dormancy, were not resistant to GA biosynthesis inhibitors such as tetcyclacis and paclobutrazol, contrarily to what was found before for other non-dormant mutants in Arabidopsis. However, testa mutants were more sensitive to exogenous GAs than the wild-types in the presence of the inhibitors or when transferred to a GA-deficient background. The germination capacity of the ga1-1 mutant could be integrally restored, without the help of exogenous GAs, by removing the envelopes or by transferring the mutation to a tt background (tt4 and ttg1). The double mutants still required light and chilling for dormancy breaking, which may indicate that both agents can have an effect independently of GA biosynthesis. The ABA biosynthesis inhibitor norflurazon was partially efficient in releasing the dormancy of wild-type and mutant seeds. These results suggest that GAs are required to overcome the germination constraints imposed both by the seed coat and ABA-related embryo dormancy.
Flavonoids Act as Negative Regulators of Auxin Transport in vivo in Arabidopsis
Polar transport of the plant hormone auxin controls many aspects of plant growth and development. A number of synthetic compounds have been shown to block the process of auxin transport by inhibition of the auxin efflux carrier complex. These synthetic auxin transport inhibitors may act by mimicking endogenous molecules. Flavonoids, a class of secondary plant metabolic compounds, have been suggested to be auxin transport inhibitors based on their in vitro activity. The hypothesis that flavonoids regulate auxin transport in vivo was tested in Arabidopsis by comparing wild-type (WT) and transparent testa (tt4) plants with a mutation in the gene encoding the first enzyme in flavonoid biosynthesis, chalcone synthase. In a comparison between tt4 and WT plants, phenotypic differences were observed, including three times as many secondary inflorescence stems, reduced plant height, decreased stem diameter, and increased secondary root development. Growth of WT Arabidopsis plants on naringenin, a biosynthetic precursor to those flavonoids with auxin transport inhibitor activity in vitro, leads to a reduction in root growth and gravitropism, similar to the effects of synthetic auxin transport inhibitors. Analyses of auxin transport in the inflorescence and hypocotyl of independent tt4 alleles indicate that auxin transport is elevated in plants with a tt4 mutation. In hypocotyls of tt4, this elevated transport is reversed when flavonoids are synthesized by growth of plants on the flavonoid precursor, naringenin. These results are consistent with a role for flavonoids as endogenous regulators of auxin transport.
Isolation and Characterization of Mutants Defective in Seed Coat Mucilage Secretory Cell Development in Arabidopsis
In Arabidopsis, fertilization induces the epidermal cells of the outer ovule integument to differentiate into a specialized seed coat cell type producing extracellular pectinaceous mucilage and a volcano-shaped secondary cell wall. Differentiation involves a regulated series of cytological events including growth, cytoplasmic rearrangement, mucilage synthesis, and secondary cell wall production. We have tested the potential of Arabidopsis seed coat epidermal cells as a model system for the genetic analysis of these processes. A screen for mutants defective in seed mucilage identified five novel genes (MUCILAGE-MODIFIED [MUM]1-5). The seed coat development of these mutants, and that of three previously identified ones (TRANSPARENT TESTA GLABRA1, GLABRA2, and APETALA2) were characterized. Our results show that the genes identified define several events in seed coat differentiation. Although APETALA2 is needed for differentiation of both outer layers of the seed coat, TRANSPARENT TESTA GLABRA1, GLABRA2, and MUM4 are required for complete mucilage synthesis and cytoplasmic rearrangement. MUM3 and MUM5 may be involved in the regulation of mucilage composition, whereas MUM1 and MUM2 appear to play novel roles in post-synthesis cell wall modifications necessary for mucilage extrusion.
Efficient virus-induced gene silencing in roots using a modified tobacco rattle virus vector
Due to their capability of eliciting a form of posttranscriptional gene silencing (termed virus-induced gene silencing or VIGS), plant viruses are increasingly used as reverse-genetics tools for functional characterization of plant genes. RNA viruses have been shown to trigger silencing in a variety of host plants, including members of Solanacae and Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). Several factors affect the silencing response, including host range and viral tropism within the plant. The work presented here demonstrates that a modified tobacco rattle virus (TRV) vector retaining the helper protein 2b, required for transmission by a specific vector nematode, not only invades and replicates extensively in whole plants, including meristems, but also triggers a pervasive systemic VIGS response in the roots of Nicotiana benthamiana, Arabidopsis, and tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum). This sustained VIGS response was exemplified by the silencing of genes involved in root development (IRT1, TTG1 [transparent testa glabra], RHL1 [root hairless1], and beta-tubulin), lateral root-meristem function (RML1 [root meristemless1]), and nematode resistance (Mi). Roots of silenced plants exhibit reduced levels of target mRNA and phenocopy previously described mutant alleles. The TRV-2b vector displays increased infectivity and meristem invasion, both key requirements for efficient VIGS-based functional characterization of genes in root tissues. Our data suggest that the TRV helper protein 2b may have an essential role in the host regulatory mechanisms that control TRV invasion.
Flavonoid Accumulation Patterns of Transparent Testa Mutants of Arabidopsis
Flavonoids have been implicated in the regulation of auxin movements in Arabidopsis. To understand when and where flavonoids may be acting to control auxin movement, the flavonoid accumulation pattern was examined in young seedlings and mature tissues of wild-type Arabidopsis. Using a variety of biochemical and visualization techniques, flavonoid accumulation in mature plants was localized in cauline leaves, pollen, stigmata, and floral primordia, and in the stems of young, actively growing inflorescences. In young Landsberg erecta seedlings, aglycone flavonols accumulated developmentally in three regions, the cotyledonary node, the hypocotyl-root transition zone, and the root tip. Aglycone flavonols accumulated at the hypocotyl-root transition zone in a developmental and tissue-specific manner with kaempferol in the epidermis and quercetin in the cortex. Quercetin localized subcellularly in the nuclear region, plasma membrane, and endomembrane system, whereas kaempferol localized in the nuclear region and plasma membrane. The flavonoid accumulation pattern was also examined in transparent testa mutants blocked at different steps in the flavonoid biosynthesis pathway. The transparent testa mutants were shown to have precursor accumulation patterns similar to those of end product flavonoids in wild-type Landsberg erecta, suggesting that synthesis and end product accumulation occur in the same cells.
Comparison of five major trichome regulatory genes in Brassica villosa with orthologues within the Brassicaceae
Coding sequences for major trichome regulatory genes, including the positive regulators GLABRA 1(GL1), GLABRA 2 (GL2), ENHANCER OF GLABRA 3 (EGL3), and TRANSPARENT TESTA GLABRA 1 (TTG1) and the negative regulator TRIPTYCHON (TRY), were cloned from wild Brassica villosa, which is characterized by dense trichome coverage over most of the plant. Transcript (FPKM) levels from RNA sequencing indicated much higher expression of the GL2 and TTG1 regulatory genes in B. villosa leaves compared with expression levels of GL1 and EGL3 genes in either B. villosa or the reference genome species, glabrous B. oleracea; however, cotyledon TTG1 expression was high in both species. RNA sequencing and Q-PCR also revealed an unusual expression pattern for the negative regulators TRY and CPC, which were much more highly expressed in trichomerich B. villosa leaves than in glabrous B. oleracea leaves and in glabrous cotyledons from both species. The B. villosa TRY expression pattern also contrasted with TRY expression patterns in two diploid Brassica species, and with the Arabidopsis model for expression of negative regulators of trichome development. Further unique sequence polymorphisms, protein characteristics, and gene evolution studies highlighted specific amino acids in GL1 and GL2 coding sequences that distinguished glabrous species from hairy species and several variants that were specific for each B. villosa gene. Positive selection was observed for GL1 between hairy and non-hairy plants, and as expected the origin of the four expressed positive trichome regulatory genes in B. villosa was predicted to be from B. oleracea. In particular the unpredicted expression patterns for TRY and CPC in B. villosa suggest additional characterization is needed to determine the function of the expanded families of trichome regulatory genes in more complex polyploid species within the Brassicaceae. © 2014 Nayidu et al.
Functional Conservation of Plant Secondary Metabolic Enzymes Revealed by Complementation of Arabidopsis Flavonoid Mutants with Maize Genes
Mutations in the transparent testa (tt) loci abolish pigment production in Arabidopsis seed coats. The TT4, TT5, and TT3 loci encode chalcone synthase, chalcone isomerase, and dihydroflavonol 4-reductase, respectively, which are essential for anthocyanin accumulation and may form a macromolecular complex. Here, we show that the products of the maize (Zea mays) C2, CHI1, and A1 genes complement Arabidopsis tt4, tt5, and tt3 mutants, restoring the ability of these mutants to accumulate pigments in seed coats and seedlings. Overexpression of the maize genes in wild-type Arabidopsis seedlings does not result in increased anthocyanin accumulation, suggesting that the steps catalyzed by these enzymes are not rate limiting in the conditions assayed. The expression of the maize A1 gene in the flavonoid 3′ hydroxylase Arabidopsis tt7 mutant resulted in an increased accumulation of pelargonidin. We conclude that enzymes involved in secondary metabolism can be functionally exchangeable between plants separated by large evolutionary distances. This is in sharp contrast to the notion that the more relaxed selective constrains to which secondary metabolic pathways are subjected is responsible for the rapid divergence of the corresponding enzymes.
The matrix attachment regions (MARs) associated with the Heat Shock Cognate 80 gene (HSC80) of tomato represent specific regulatory elements
Matrix Attachment Regions (MARs) flank certain plant genes and appear in certain cases to be necessary for their proper regulation. For example, we previously demonstrated that the MARs and introns from the Heat Shock Cognate 80 gene of tomato (HSC80) are necessary for efficient expression of HSC80-based transgenes. MARs may exert their effect by anchoring the ends of a chromatin loop to the nuclear matrix, thereby establishing an independent chromatin domain. Alternatively, MARs may facilitate interactions between activating complexes and DNA. In the first case, MARs should enhance the expression of most genes, while in the latter case, their action might be gene-specific. We addressed this problem by testing whether the HSC80 MARs affected the regulation of an unrelated transgene. We constructed a chimeric transgene composed of the Arabidopsis ADENINE PHOSPHORIBOSYLTRANSFERASE (APT) promoter fused to the maize gene Lc, which encodes a regulator of anthocyanin synthesis, and compared the expression of Lc in Arabidopsis transparent testa glabra (ttg) mutants (which lack anthocyanin pigments) transformed with transgene constructs incorporating the MARs or control DNA fragments that do not bind to the nuclear matrix. Quantitative RT-PCR analysis was used to compare Lc expression in the different transgenic lines. Whether the APT-Lc transgene was flanked by the HSC80 MARs or a control fragment had no effect on expression, while the use of a different MAR, the ARS1 MAR from yeast, significantly decreased expression (P=0.03). Comparison of single-copy and multicopy T-DNA insertions indicated that neither the HSC80 MARs nor the ARS1 MAR could protect the APT-Lc transgene from the negative effect of the integration of multiple copies. In conclusion, this work supports a model in which different regulatory elements within the HSC80 locus interact with the nuclear matrix to induce transcriptional competence.
TUNNEL PROTESTERS TO MEET WITH MAYOR WHITE TODAY
Last week, the tunnel picketers voted to suspend their nightly protests for two days, \"to rest and regroup,\" said Mary DiMarzo, the chief spokesperson for the tunnel demonstrators. Instead of blocking traffic, the demonstrators gathered at the tunnel on Sunday for a barbecue and last night, for coffee. [Gene Testa] said the two-day moratorium on picketing was voted \"to show the mayor our good faith.\" As he spoke, the half-dozen protesters who had attempted to picket despite the moratorium vote, stood behind him. Testa had urged them not to picket in order to present the united front they have repeatedly stressed is the most important element of their protest. \"We want to tell him what we need in East Boston and tell him if we don't feel that he is giving us what we need, we won't stop protesting,\" said Testa in an interview at the tunnel last night. \"Maybe we'll walk on City Hall. Maybe we'll take over the Parkman House. After all, it belongs to the people,\" said Testa.