Publications by authors named "P U De La Motte"

Article Synopsis
  • The Arabidopsis splicing factor SR45 plays a critical role in various biological processes, and its loss results in several developmental abnormalities, including delayed root growth and altered flower structures.
  • The study investigates the functions of the different domains in SR45, focusing on its expression patterns, nuclear localization, and interaction with other proteins and RNA.
  • Results reveal that SR45 localizes in the nucleus, has a specific RNA binding capacity, and connects vital mRNA splicing and surveillance systems, highlighting the importance of its domains in forming spliceosomal and exon-exon junction complex assemblies.
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The plant serine/arginine-rich (SR) splicing factor SR45 plays important roles in several biological processes, such as splicing, DNA methylation, innate immunity, glucose regulation, and abscisic acid signaling. A homozygous Arabidopsis sr45-1 null mutant is viable, but exhibits diverse phenotypic alterations, including delayed root development, late flowering, shorter siliques with fewer seeds, narrower leaves and petals, and unusual numbers of floral organs. Here, we report that the sr45-1 mutant presents an unexpected constitutive iron deficiency phenotype characterized by altered metal distribution in the plant.

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Metallic micronutrients are essential throughout the plant life cycle. Maintaining metal homeostasis in plant tissues requires a highly complex and finely tuned network controlling metal uptake, transport, distribution and storage. Zinc and cadmium hyperaccumulation, such as observed in the model plant Arabidopsis halleri, represents an extreme evolution of this network.

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Increasing industrial and anthropogenic activities are producing and releasing more and more pollutants in the environment. Among them, toxic metals are one of the major threats for human health and natural ecosystems. Because photosynthetic organisms play a critical role in primary productivity and pollution management, investigating their response to metal toxicity is of major interest.

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The biological processes underlying zinc homeostasis are targets for genetic improvement of crops to counter human malnutrition. Detailed phenotyping, ionomic, RNA-Seq analyses and flux measurements with Zn isotope revealed whole-plant molecular events underlying zinc homeostasis upon varying zinc supply and during zinc resupply to starved Brachypodium distachyon (Brachypodium) plants. Although both zinc deficiency and excess hindered Brachypodium growth, accumulation of biomass and micronutrients into roots and shoots differed depending on zinc supply.

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