-Action potential (AP) of excitable plant cells is an important signaling event that can differentially alter physicochemical and physiological processes in various parts of the same cell. In giant cells of characean algae, the AP propagation has minor effect on photosynthetic electron transport in areas with high activity of plasmalemmal H-pump but inhibits linear electron flow in regions featuring high passive H/OH conductance of the plasma membrane (PM). Uneven spatial distributions of local periplasmic and cytoplasmic pH facilitate the operation of distinct (CO-dependent and O-mediated) pathways of photoinduced electron flow, which presumably accounts for differential influence of AP on photosynthesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe model of thylakoid membrane system (T-M model) (Belyaeva et al. Photosynth Res 2019, 140:1-19) has been improved in order to analyze the induction data for dark-adapted samples of algal (Scenedesmus obliques) and cyanobacterial (Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803) cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAction potentials of plant cells are engaged in the regulation of many cell processes, including photosynthesis and cytoplasmic streaming. Excitable cells of characean algae submerged in a medium with an elevated K+ content are capable of generating hyperpolarizing electrical responses. These active responses of plasma membrane originate upon the passage of inward electric current comparable in strength to natural currents circulating in illuminated Chara internodes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExcitable cells of higher plants and characean algae respond to stressful stimuli by generating action potentials (AP) whose regulatory influence on chlorophyll (Chl) fluorescence and photosynthesis extends over tens of minutes. Unlike plant leaves where the efficiency of photosystem II reaction (YII) undergoes a separate reversible depression after an individual AP, characean algae exhibit long-lasting oscillations of YII after firing AP, provided that Chl fluorescence is measured on microscopic cell regions. Internodal cells of charophytes feature an extremely fast cytoplasmic streaming that stops immediately during the spike and recovers within ~10 min after AP.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSignaling pathways in plant cells often comprise electrical phenomena developing at the plasma membrane. The action potentials in excitable plants like characean algae have a marked influence on photosynthetic electron transport and CO assimilation. The internodal cells of Characeae can also generate active electrical signals of a different type.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFlavodiiron proteins Flv1/Flv3 accept electrons from photosystem (PS) I. In this work we investigated light adaptation mechanisms of Flv1-deficient mutant of Synechocystis PCC 6803, incapable to form the Flv1/Flv3 heterodimer. First seconds of dark-light transition were studied by parallel measurements of light-induced changes in chlorophyll fluorescence, P700 redox transformations, fluorescence emission at 77 K, and OCP-dependent fluorescence quenching.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntercellular communication and transport is the essential prerequisite for the function of multicellular organisms. Simple diffusion as a transport mechanism is often inefficient in sustaining the effective exchange of metabolites, and other active transport mechanisms become involved. In this paper, we use the giant cells of characean algae as a model system to explore the role of advection and diffusion in intercellular transport.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSingle-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) are among the most exploited carbon allotropes in nanosensing, bioengineering, and photobiological applications, however, the interactions of nanotubes with the photosynthetic process and structures are still poorly understood. We found that SWCNTs are not toxic to the photosynthetic apparatus of the model unicellular alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and demonstrate that this carbon nanomaterial can protect algal photosynthesis against photoinhibition. The results show that the inherent phytotoxicity of the nanotubes may be overcome by an intentional selection of nanomaterial characteristics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA large hexanucleotide (GC) repeat expansion in the first intronic region of is the most common genetic cause of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Several mechanisms have been proposed to explain how the repeat expansion drives disease, and we hypothesize that a variant-selective approach, in which transcripts affected by the repeat expansion are preferentially decreased, has the potential to address most of them. We report a stereopure antisense oligonucleotide, WVE-004, that executes this variant-selective mechanism of action.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Physiol Biochem
July 2022
Adaptation of plants to environmental changes involves the mechanisms of long-distance signaling. In characean algae, these mechanisms comprise the propagation of action potential (AP) and the rotational cytoplasmic streaming acting in cooperation with light-dependent exchange of ions and metabolites across the chloroplast envelope. Both excitability and cyclosis exert conspicuous effects on photosynthetic activity of chloroplasts but possible influence of cyclosis arrest on the coupling of AP stimulus to photosynthetic performance remained unexplored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImpact of membrane excitability on fluidic transport of photometabolites and their cell-to-cell passage via plasmodesmata was examined by pulse-modulated chlorophyll (Chl) microfluorometry in Chara australis internodes exposed to dim background light. The cells were subjected to a series of local light (LL) pulses with a 3-min period and a 30-s pulse width, which induced Chl fluorescence transients propagating in the direction of cytoplasmic streaming along the photostimulated and the neighboring internodes. By comparing Chl fluorescence changes induced in the LL-irradiated and the adjoining internodes, the permeability of the nodal complex for the photometabolites was assessed in the resting state and after the action potential (AP) generation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRapid cytoplasmic streaming in characean algae mediates communications between remote cell regions exposed to uneven irradiance. The metabolites exported from brightly illuminated chloroplasts spread along the internode with the liquid flow and cause transient changes in chlorophyll fluorescence at cell areas that are exposed to dim light or placed shortly in darkness. The largest distance to which the photometabolites can be transported has not yet been determined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe article focuses on the fact that the right to non-interference in privacy is one of the guarantees for the realization of the right to health protection. It is emphasized that the pandemic caused by the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus has actualized in the democratic countries of the world the question of the permissible limits of state intervention in it, as well as the issue of ensuring during muster process involving a doctor. The purpose of the article is to investigate the concept of the right to non-interference in privacy and the problems of ensuring it, development of proposals to improve the legislation of Ukraine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotosynthetic organisms adjust their activity to changes in irradiance by different ways, including the operation of cyclic electron flow around photosystem I (PSI) and state transitions that redistribute amounts of light energy absorbed by PSI and PSII. In dark-acclimated wild type cells of Synechocystis PCC 6803, linear electron transport was activated after the first 500 ms of illumination, while cyclic electron flow around PSI was long predominant in the mutant deficient in flavodiiron protein Flv3. Chlorophyll P700 oxidation associated with activation of linear electron flow extended in the Flv3 mutant to several tens of seconds and included a P700 re-reduction phase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMeasurements of OJIP-SMT patterns of fluorescence induction (FI) in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 (Synechocystis) cells on a time scale up to several minutes were mathematically treated within the framework of thylakoid membrane (T-M) model (Belyaeva et al., Photosynth Res 140:1-19, 2019) that was renewed to account for the state transitions effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The Characeae are multicellular green algae, which are closely related to higher plants. Their internodal cells are a convenient model to study membrane transport and organelle interactions.
Results: In this study, we report on the effect of brefeldin A (BFA), an inhibitor of vesicle trafficking, on internodal cells of Chara australis.
Biochim Biophys Acta Bioenerg
October 2020
Export of reducing power from chloroplasts to cytoplasm serves to balance the NADPH/ATP ratio that is optimal for CO assimilation. Rapid cytoplasmic streaming in characean algae conveys the exported metabolites downstream towards the shaded plastids where envelope transporters may operate for the import of reducing power in accordance with the direction of concentration gradients. Import of reducing equivalents by chloroplasts in the analyzed area transiently enhances the pulse-modulated chlorophyll fluorescence F' controlled by the redox state of photosystem II acceptor Q.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe huge internodal cells of the characean green algae are a convenient model to study long-range interactions between organelles via cytoplasmic streaming. It has been shown previously that photometabolites and reactive oxygen species released by illuminated chloroplasts are transmitted to remote shaded regions where they interfere with photosynthetic electron transport and the differential activity of plasma membrane transporters, and recent findings indicated the involvement of organelle trafficking pathways. In the present study, we applied pulse amplitude-modulated microscopy and pH-sensitive electrodes to study the effect of brefeldin A (BFA), an inhibitor of vesicle trafficking, on long-distance interactions in Chara australis internodal cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrimary physicochemical steps in microwounding of plants were investigated using electrochemical nano- and microprobes, with a focus on the role of oxygen in the wounding responses of individual plant cells. Electrochemical measurements of cell oxygen content were made with carbon-filled quartz micropipettes with platinum-coated tips (oxygen nanosensors). These novel platinum nanoelectrodes are useful for understanding cell oxygen metabolism and can be employed to study the redox biochemistry and biology of cells, tissues and organisms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCharacean internodal cells develop alternating patterns of acid and alkaline zones along their surface in order to facilitate uptake of carbon required for photosynthesis. In this study, we used a pH-indicating membrane dye, 4-heptadecylumbiliferone, to study the kinetics of alkaline band formation and decomposition. The differences in growth/decay kinetics suggested that growth occurred as an active, autocatalytic process, whereas decomposition was due to diffusion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImmobile chloroplasts in Chara internodal cells release photometabolites into the streaming cytoplasm that distributes the exported solutes and provides metabolic connectivity between spatially remote plastids. The metabolite transmission by fluid flow is evident from chlorophyll fluorescence changes in shaded chloroplasts upon local illumination applied upstream of the analyzed area. The connectivity correlates with the pH pattern on cell surface: it is strong in cell regions with high H-pump activity and is low in regions featuring large passive H influx (OH efflux).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe dark-to-light transitions enable energization of the thylakoid membrane (TM), which is reflected in fast and slow (OJIPSMT or OABCDE) stages of fluorescence induction (FI) and P700 oxidoreduction changes (ΔA). A Thylakoid Membrane model (T-M model), in which special emphasis has been placed on ferredoxin-NADP-oxidoreductase (FNR) activation and energy-dependent qE quenching, was applied for quantifying the kinetics of FI and ΔA. Pea leaves were kept in darkness for 15 min and then the FI and ΔA signals were measured upon actinic illumination, applied either directly or after a 10-s light pulse coupled with a subsequent 10-s dark interval.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSymplastic interconnections of plant cells via perforations in adjoining cell walls (plasmodesmata) enable long-distance transport of photoassimilates and signaling substances required for growth and development. The pathways and features of intercellular movement of assimilates are often examined with fluorescent tracers whose molecular dimensions are similar to natural metabolites produced in photosynthesis. Chlorophyll fluorescence was recently found to be a sensitive noninvasive indicator of long-distance intracellular transport of physiologically produced photometabolites in characean internodes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe 2018 12 Workshop on Recent Issues in Bioanalysis (12th WRIB) took place in Philadelphia, PA, USA on April 9-13, 2018 with an attendance of over 900 representatives from pharmaceutical/biopharmaceutical companies, biotechnology companies, contract research organizations and regulatory agencies worldwide. WRIB was once again a 5-day full immersion in bioanalysis, biomarkers and immunogenicity. As usual, it was specifically designed to facilitate sharing, reviewing, discussing and agreeing on approaches to address the most current issues of interest including both small- and large-molecule bioanalysis involving LC-MS, hybrid ligand binding assay (LBA)/LC-MS and LBA/cell-based assays approaches.
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