Publications by authors named "Yuri V Gogolev"

Article Synopsis
  • Achromobacter insolitus LCu2, isolated from alfalfa roots, can degrade 50% of glyphosate and tolerate high levels of copper and glyphosate-copper complexes.
  • Inoculating alfalfa and potato plants with this strain enhanced their growth by 30-50% and reduced glyphosate toxicity compared to non-inoculated plants.
  • The strain's genome indicates it has genes for promoting plant growth, degrading organophosphonates like glyphosate, and tolerating heavy metals, making it a promising candidate for improving crop yields and soil remediation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We report the discovery of a new abscisic acid (ABA) metabolite, found in the course of a mass spectrometric study of ABA metabolism by the rhizosphere bacterium sp. P1Y. Analogue of (+)-ABA, enriched in tritium in the cyclohexene moiety, was fed in bacterial cells, and extracts containing radioactive metabolites were purified and analyzed to determine their structure.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The bacterial pathogen , which causes enteritis, has a broad host range and extensive environmental longevity. In water and soil, Salmonella interacts with protozoa and multiplies inside their phagosomes. Although this relationship resembles that between and mammalian phagocytes, the interaction mechanisms and bacterial genes involved are unclear.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background And Aims: Plant diseases caused by Pectobacterium atrosepticum are often accompanied by extensive rot symptoms. In addition, these bacteria are able to interact with host plants without causing disease for long periods, even throughout several host plant generations. There is, to date, no information on the comparative physiology/biochemistry of symptomatic and asymptomatic plant-P.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The incredible success of crop breeding and agricultural innovation in the last century greatly contributed to the Green Revolution, which significantly increased yields and ensures food security, despite the population explosion. However, new challenges such as rapid climate change, deteriorating soil, and the accumulation of pollutants require much faster responses and more effective solutions that cannot be achieved through traditional breeding. Further prospects for increasing the efficiency of agriculture are undoubtedly associated with the inclusion in the breeding strategy of new knowledge obtained using high-throughput technologies and new tools in the future to ensure the design of new plant genomes and predict the desired phenotype.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Abscisic acid (ABA) is crucial for plant growth and stress response, but its buildup in soil can harm seed germination and root growth.
  • A newly identified strain, sp. P1Y, can use ABA as its sole carbon source and lowers ABA levels in plant roots.
  • Researchers isolated and identified an intermediate product of ABA degradation by this bacterium, determining its chemical structure and concluding the degradation process gradually shortens the acyl part of the ABA molecule.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

is an ubiquitous pathogen throughout the world causing gastroenteritis in humans and animals. Survival of pathogenic bacteria in the external environment may be associated with the ability to overcome the stress caused by starvation. The bacterial response to starvation is well understood in laboratory cultures with a sufficiently high cell density.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • A collection of rhizobial strains was isolated from root nodules of specific legume species in Kamchatka Peninsula, revealing significant genetic diversity among the strains.
  • Only the strains from one genus were able to form nitrogen-fixing nodules on plants, with two notable strains exhibiting specific secretion system genes that may affect their ability to interact with different host plants.
  • The study suggests that variations in nodule types observed could be due to different nodulation strategies, highlighting the potential for these rhizobial strains to improve plant-microbe interactions and broaden host range through further research.*
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In enteric bacteria, DNA supercoiling is highly responsive to environmental conditions. Host specific features of environment serve as cues for the expression of genes required for colonization of host niches via changing supercoiling [1]. It has been shown that substitution at position 87 of GyrA of str.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) improve plant productivity and stress resistance. The mechanisms involved in plant-microbe interactions include the modulation of plant hormone status. The sp.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In our study, the rare earth element ytterbium (Yb) was demonstrated to affect water exchange in roots of Zea mays seedlings. Herewith, the overall membrane permeability (P) increased. The P increase was determined by aquaporin activity but not the membrane lipid component since the closure of aquaporin channels due to low intracellular pH abolished the positive effect of Yb on P.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Herein, for the first time the complexation ability of a homological series of triphenylphosphonium surfactants (TPPB-n) toward DNA decamers has been explored. Formation of lipoplexes was confirmed by alternative techniques, including dynamic light scattering, indicating the occurrence of nanosized complexes (ca. 100-150 nm), and monitoring the charge neutralization of nucleotide phosphate groups and the fluorescence quenching of dye-intercalator ethidium bromide.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Mechanisms of microbial catabolism of phytohormone abscisic acid (ABA) are still unknown. Here, we report the complete genome sequence of ABA-utilizing sp. strain P1Y, isolated from the rice ( L.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Enzymes of CYP74 family play the central role in the biosynthesis of physiologically important oxylipins in land plants. Although a broad diversity of oxylipins is known in the algae, no CYP74s or related enzymes have been detected in brown algae yet. Cloning of the first CYP74-related gene CYP5164B1 of brown alga Ectocarpus siliculosus is reported in present work.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Nonclassical P450s of CYP74 family control the secondary conversions of fatty acid hydroperoxides to bioactive oxylipins in plants. At least ten genes attributed to four novel CYP74 subfamilies have been revealed by the recent sequencing of the spikemoss Selaginella moellendorffii Hieron genome. Two of these genes CYP74M1 and CYP74M3 have been cloned in the present study.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Defensins are part of the innate immune system in plants with activity against a broad range of pathogens, including bacteria, fungi and viruses. Several defensins from conifers, including Scots pine defensin 1 (Pinus sylvestris defensin 1, (PsDef1)) have shown a strong antifungal activity, however structural and physico-chemical properties of the family, needed for establishing the structure-dynamics-function relationships, remain poorly characterized. We use several spectroscopic and computational methods to characterize the structure, dynamics, and oligomeric state of PsDef1.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Enzymes of the CYP74 family, including the divinyl ether synthase (DES), play important roles in plant cell signalling and defence. The potent DES activities have been detected before in the leaves of the meadow buttercup (Ranunculus acris L.) and few other Ranunculaceae species.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Non-classical P450s of CYP74 family control several enzymatic conversions of fatty acid hydroperoxides to bioactive oxylipins in plants, some invertebrates and bacteria. The family includes two dehydrases, namely allene oxide synthase (AOS) and divinyl ether synthase (DES), and two isomerases, hydroperoxide lyase (HPL) and epoxyalcohol synthase. To study the interconversion of different CYP74 enzymes, we prepared the mutant forms V379F and E292G of tobacco (CYP74D3) and flax (CYP74B16) divinyl ether synthases (DESs), respectively.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Plant-growth-promoting rhizobacteria exert beneficial effects on plants through their capacity for nitrogen fixation, phytohormone production, phosphate solubilization, and improvement of the water and mineral status of plants. We suggested that these bacteria may also have the potential to express degradative activity toward glyphosate, a commonly used organophosphorus herbicide. In this study, 10 strains resistant to a 10 mM concentration of glyphosate were isolated from the rhizoplane of various plants.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Enzymes of the CYP74 family (P450 superfamily) play a key role in the plant lipoxygenase signalling cascade. Recently we detected a pathogen inducible divinyl ether synthase (DES) in flax leaves [Chechetkin, Blufard, Hamberg, Grechkin, 2008]. This prompted us to examine the CYP74 genes in the flax leaf transcriptome.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The profiles of non-volatile oxylipins of pea (Pisum sativum) seedlings were examined by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry after invitro incubation with α-linolenic acid. The 13-lipoxygenase/hydroperoxide lyase (HPL) products were predominant in the leaves, while the roots possess both 13- and 9-HPL products. Allene oxide synthase (AOS) and divinyl ether synthase (DES) products were not detected in the leaves or in the roots of any age.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Bioinformatics analyses enabled us to identify the hypothetical determinants of catalysis by CYP74 family enzymes. To examine their recognition, two mutant forms F295I and S297A of tomato allene oxide synthase LeAOS3 (CYP74C3) were prepared by site-directed mutagenesis. Both mutations dramatically altered the enzyme catalysis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The conversion of linoleic acid 9-hydroperoxide (9-HPOD) by recombinant melon (Cucumis melo L.) hydroperoxide lyase (HPL, CYP74C subfamily) was studied. Short (5 s-1 min) incubations at 0 degrees C followed by rapid extraction and trimethylsilylation made it possible to trap a new unstable (t(1/2) <30 s) product, i.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF