Publications by authors named "Sami Irar"

Drought is considered the more harmful abiotic stress resulting in crops yield loss. Legumes in symbiosis with rhizobia are able to fix atmospheric nitrogen. Biological nitrogen fixation (SNF) is a very sensitive process to drought and limits legumes agricultural productivity.

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The use of analytical biochemical techniques with different separation properties allows us to better understand the proteome. To demonstrate this we have used two different methodologies to analyze embryos from a Tunisian cultivar of durum wheat (Triticum durum Desf.), variety Oum Rabiaa.

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Article Synopsis
  • Plants activate various responses to drought stress to enhance survival, focusing on morphological, physiological, and proteomic changes.
  • Two Eucalyptus globulus types were studied, revealing that drought-tolerant plants had smaller seeds, a more robust root system, and higher levels of stress-related proteins and abscisic acid (ABA) compared to less tolerant varieties.
  • The research highlights that E. globulus uses multiple strategies at different levels to adapt to drought, including structural changes, hormone regulation, and protein accumulation.
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Cinnamyl alcohol dehydrogenase (CAD) is a key enzyme involved in the last step of monolignol biosynthesis. The effect of CAD down-regulation on lignin production was investigated through a transgenic approach in maize. Transgenic CAD-RNAi plants show a different degree of enzymatic reduction depending on the analyzed tissue and show alterations in cell wall composition.

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Protein kinase CK2 is a highly pleiotropic Ser/Thr kinase ubiquituous in eukaryotic organisms. CK2 is organized as a heterotetrameric enzyme composed of two types of subunits: the catalytic (CK2α) and the regulatory (CK2β). The CK2β subunits enhance the stability, activity and specificity of the holoenzyme, but they can also perform functions independently of the CK2 tetramer.

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In all eukaryotes, the typical CK2 holoenzyme is an heterotetramer composed of two catalytic (CK2α and CK2α') and two regulatory (CK2β) subunits. One of the distinctive traits of plant CK2 is that they present a greater number of genes encoding for CK2α/β subunits than animals or yeasts, for instance, in Arabidopsis and maize both CK2α/β subunits belong to multigenic families composed by up to four genes. Here, we conducted a genome-wide survey examining 34 different plant genomes in order to investigate if the multigenic property of CK2β genes is a common feature through the entire plant kingdom.

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Background: Camptothecin is a plant alkaloid that specifically binds topoisomerase I, inhibiting its activity and inducing double stranded breaks in DNA, activating the cell responses to DNA damage and, in response to severe treatments, triggering cell death.

Results: Comparative transcriptomic and proteomic analyses of maize embryos that had been exposed to camptothecin were conducted. Under the conditions used in this study, camptothecin did not induce extensive degradation in the genomic DNA but induced the transcription of genes involved in DNA repair and repressed genes involved in cell division.

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Cereal embryos sustain severe water deficit at the final stage of seed maturation. The molecular mechanisms underlying the acquisition of desiccation tolerance in seed embryos are similar to those displayed during water deficit in vegetative tissues. The genetic variation among six rice genotypes adapted to diverse environmental conditions was analysed at the proteome level to get further clues on the mechanisms leading to water-stress tolerance.

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Few regulators of phenylpropanoids have been identified in monocots having potential as biofuel crops. Here we demonstrate the role of the maize (Zea mays) R2R3-MYB factor ZmMYB31 in the control of the phenylpropanoid pathway. We determined its in vitro consensus DNA-binding sequence as ACC(T)/(A) ACC, and chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) established that it interacts with two lignin gene promoters in vivo.

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Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades have important functions in plant stress responses and development and are key players in reactive oxygen species (ROS) signalling and in innate immunity. In Arabidopsis, the transmission of ROS and pathogen signalling by MAPKs involves the coordinated activation of MPK6 and MPK3; however, the specificity of their negative regulation by phosphatases is not fully known. Here, we present genetic analyses showing that MAPK phosphatase 2 (MKP2) regulates oxidative stress and pathogen defence responses and functionally interacts with MPK3 and MPK6.

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Cereal embryos are a model system to study desiccation tolerance due to their ability to survive extreme water loss during late embryogenesis. To identify proteins accumulating in mature embryos which can be used as potential markers for dehydration tolerance, we compared the embryo proteome from two durum wheat genotypes (Triticum durum Desf.), Mahmoudi (salt and drought sensitive) and Om Rabia3 (salt and drought tolerant).

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Late-embryogenesis-abundant (LEA) proteins accumulate as plant seeds desiccate and also in vegetative organs during periods of stress. They are predicted to play a role in plant stress tolerance. In the present study, we have initiated the characterization of phosphorylated LEA proteins present in the Arabidopsis seed, using a strategy that combines the thermostability (solubility upon heating) of many LEA-type proteins with the use of phosphoaffinity chromatography to obtain an enriched subpopulation of phosphoproteins.

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