56 results match your criteria: "John Ines Centre[Affiliation]"
Plant Cell
March 2014
Department of Biological Chemistry, John Ines Centre, Norwich NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
Mitogen-activated protein kinase cascades are key players in plant immune signaling pathways, transducing the perception of invading pathogens into effective defense responses. Plant pathogenic oomycetes, such as the Irish potato famine pathogen Phytophthora infestans, deliver RXLR effector proteins to plant cells to modulate host immune signaling and promote colonization. Our understanding of the molecular mechanisms by which these effectors act in plant cells is limited.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
December 2013
John Ines Centre, Norwich NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
Plant Cell
December 2013
John Ines Centre, Norwich NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
The establishment of symbiotic associations in plants requires calcium oscillations that must be decoded to invoke downstream developmental programs. In animal systems, comparable calcium oscillations are decoded by calmodulin (CaM)-dependent protein kinases, but symbiotic signaling involves a calcium/CaM-dependent protein kinase (CCaMK) that is unique to plants. CCaMK differs from the animal CaM kinases by its dual ability to bind free calcium, via calcium binding EF-hand domains on the protein, or to bind calcium complexed with CaM, via a CaM binding domain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
March 2013
John Ines Centre, Norwich NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
Operon-like gene clusters are an emerging phenomenon in the field of plant natural products. The genes encoding some of the best-characterized plant secondary metabolite biosynthetic pathways are scattered across plant genomes. However, an increasing number of gene clusters encoding the synthesis of diverse natural products have recently been reported in plant genomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
October 2012
Department of Crop Genetics, John Ines Centre, Norwich, Norfolk NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
Fruit growth and development depend on highly coordinated hormonal activities. The phytohormone gibberellin (GA) promotes growth by inducing degradation of the growth-repressing DELLA proteins; however, the extent to which DELLA proteins contribute to GA-mediated gynoecium and fruit development remains to be clarified. Here, we provide an in-depth characterization of the role of DELLA proteins in Arabidopsis thaliana fruit growth.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
March 2012
John Ines Centre, Norwich NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
Traditionally, Sicilian blood oranges (Citrus sinensis) have been associated with cardiovascular health, and consumption has been shown to prevent obesity in mice fed a high-fat diet. Despite increasing consumer interest in these health-promoting attributes, production of blood oranges remains unreliable due largely to a dependency on cold for full color formation. We show that Sicilian blood orange arose by insertion of a Copia-like retrotransposon adjacent to a gene encoding Ruby, a MYB transcriptional activator of anthocyanin production.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
January 2012
Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, John Ines Centre, Norwich Research Park, Norwich NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
Light and dark have antagonistic effects on shoot elongation, but little is known about how these effects are translated into changes of shape. Here we provide genetic evidence that the light/gibberellin-signaling pathway affects the properties of microtubules required to reorient growth. To follow microtubule dynamics for hours without triggering photomorphogenic inhibition of growth, we used Arabidopsis thaliana light mutants in the gibberellic acid/DELLA pathway.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
January 2012
John Ines Centre, Norwich Research Park, Norwich NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
Despite possessing multiple sets of related (homoeologous) chromosomes, hexaploid wheat (Triticum aestivum) restricts pairing to just true homologs at meiosis. Deletion of a single major locus, Pairing homoeologous1 (Ph1), allows pairing of homoeologs. How can the same chromosomes be processed as homologs instead of being treated as nonhomologs? Ph1 was recently defined to a cluster of defective cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk)-like genes showing some similarity to mammalian Cdk2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
October 2011
Department of Crop Genetics, John Ines Centre, Norwich Research Park, Norwich, Norfolk NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
Structural organization of organs in multicellular organisms occurs through intricate patterning mechanisms that often involve complex interactions between transcription factors in regulatory networks. For example, INDEHISCENT (IND), a basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) transcription factor, specifies formation of the narrow stripes of valve margin tissue, where Arabidopsis thaliana fruits open on maturity. Another bHLH transcription factor, SPATULA (SPT), is required for reproductive tissue development from carpel margins in the Arabidopsis gynoecium before fertilization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
May 2011
John Ines Centre, Colney, Norwich, United Kingdom.
One of the most pressing challenges for the next 50 years is to reduce the impact of chronic disease. Unhealthy eating is an increasing problem and underlies much of the increase in mortality from chronic diseases that is occurring worldwide. Diets rich in plant-based foods are strongly associated with reduced risks of major chronic diseases, but the constituents in plants that promote health have proved difficult to identify with certainty.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
November 2010
Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, John Ines Centre, Norfolk NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
The RNA binding protein FCA regulates the floral transition and is required for silencing RNAs corresponding to specific noncoding sequences in the Arabidopsis thaliana genome. Through interaction with the canonical RNA 3' processing machinery, FCA affects alternative polyadenylation of many transcripts, including antisense RNAs at the locus encoding the floral repressor FLC. This potential for widespread alteration of gene regulation clearly needs to be tightly regulated, and we have previously shown that FCA expression is autoregulated through poly(A) site choice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
April 2010
Department of Crop Genetics, John Ines Centre, Norwich NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
Grain morphology in wheat (Triticum aestivum) has been selected and manipulated even in very early agrarian societies and remains a major breeding target. We undertook a large-scale quantitative analysis to determine the genetic basis of the phenotypic diversity in wheat grain morphology. A high-throughput method was used to capture grain size and shape variation in multiple mapping populations, elite varieties, and a broad collection of ancestral wheat species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
March 2010
Department of Disease and Stress Biology, John Ines Centre, Norwich NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
Magnaporthe oryzae is the most important fungal pathogen of rice (Oryza sativa). Under laboratory conditions, it is able to colonize both aerial and underground plant organs using different mechanisms. Here, we characterize an infection-related development in M.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
February 2010
Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, John Ines Centre, Norwich, NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
Plant Cell
December 2009
Department of Metabolic Biology, John Ines Centre, Norwich NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
Transcription-related chromatin decondensation has been studied in mammals for clusters of structurally and/or functionally related genes that are coordinately regulated (e.g., the homeobox locus in mice and the major histocompatability complex locus in humans).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
August 2009
Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, John Ines Centre, Colney, Norwich, NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
The principles by which cortical microtubules self-organize into a global template hold important implications for cell wall patterning. Microtubules move along bundles of microtubules, and neighboring bundles tend to form mobile domains that flow in a common direction. The bundles themselves move slowly and for longer than the individual microtubules, with domains describing slow rotary patterns.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
August 2009
John Ines Centre, Norwich NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
Serine carboxypeptidase-like (SCPL) proteins have recently emerged as a new group of plant acyltransferases. These enzymes share homology with peptidases but lack protease activity and instead are able to acylate natural products. Several SCPL acyltransferases have been characterized to date from dicots, including an enzyme required for the synthesis of glucose polyesters that may contribute to insect resistance in wild tomato (Solanum pennellii) and enzymes required for the synthesis of sinapate esters associated with UV protection in Arabidopsis thaliana.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
May 2009
Department of Cell Biology, John Ines Centre, Colney, Norwich NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
Here, we identify the Arabidopsis thaliana ortholog of the mammalian DEAD box helicase, eIF4A-III, the putative anchor protein of exon junction complex (EJC) on mRNA. Arabidopsis eIF4A-III interacts with an ortholog of the core EJC component, ALY/Ref, and colocalizes with other EJC components, such as Mago, Y14, and RNPS1, suggesting a similar function in EJC assembly to animal eIF4A-III. A green fluorescent protein (GFP)-eIF4A-III fusion protein showed localization to several subnuclear domains: to the nucleoplasm during normal growth and to the nucleolus and splicing speckles in response to hypoxia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
March 2009
Department of Metabolic Biology, John Ines Centre, Norwich, Norfolk NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
Plants can metabolize sulfate by two pathways, which branch at the level of adenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (APS). APS can be reduced to sulfide and incorporated into Cys in the primary sulfate assimilation pathway or phosphorylated by APS kinase to 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate, which is the activated sulfate form for sulfation reactions. To assess to what extent APS kinase regulates accumulation of sulfated compounds, we analyzed the corresponding gene family in Arabidopsis thaliana.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
February 2009
Department of Disease and Stress Biology, John Ines Centre, Norwich NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
The symbiotic association of legumes with rhizobia involves bacterially derived Nod factor, which is sufficient to activate the formation of nodules on the roots of the host plant. Perception of Nod factor by root hair cells induces calcium oscillations that are a component of the Nod factor signal transduction pathway. Perception of the calcium oscillations is a function of a calcium- and calmodulin-dependent protein kinase, and this activates nodulation gene expression via two GRAS domain transcriptional regulators, Nodulation Signaling Pathway1 (NSP1) and NSP2, and an ERF transcription factor required for nodulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
February 2009
John Ines Centre, Colney, Norwich NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
In common with a range of environmental and biological stresses, heat shock results in the accumulation of misfolded proteins and a collection of downstream consequences for cellular homeostasis and growth. Within this complex array of responses, the sensing of and responses to misfolded proteins in specific subcellular compartments involves specific chaperones, transcriptional regulators, and expression profiles. Using biological (ectopic protein expression and virus infection) and chemical triggers for misfolded protein accumulation, we have profiled the transcriptional features of the response to misfolded protein accumulation in the cytosol (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
February 2009
John Ines Centre, Norwich Research Park, Colney, Norwich, Norfolk NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
Plasmodesmata (Pds) traverse the cell wall to establish a symplastic continuum through most of the plant. Rapid and reversible deposition of callose in the cell wall surrounding the Pd apertures is proposed to provide a regulatory process through physical constriction of the symplastic channel. We identified members within a larger family of X8 domain-containing proteins that targeted to Pds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
February 2009
Department of Crop Genetics, John Ines Centre, Colney Lane, Norwich NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
Tendrils are contact-sensitive, filamentous organs that permit climbing plants to tether to their taller neighbors. Tendrilled legume species are grown as field crops, where the tendrils contribute to the physical support of the crop prior to harvest. The homeotic tendril-less (tl) mutation in garden pea (Pisum sativum), identified almost a century ago, transforms tendrils into leaflets.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
January 2009
Department of Metabolic Biology, John Ines Centre, Colney, Norwich, NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
Hydroxycinnamic acid amides are a class of secondary metabolites distributed widely in plants. We have identified two sinapoyl spermidine derivatives, N-((4'-O-glycosyl)-sinapoyl),N'-sinapoylspermidine and N,N'-disinapoylspermidine, which comprise the two major polyamine conjugates that accumulate in Arabidopsis thaliana seed. Using metabolic profiling of knockout mutants to elucidate the functions of members of the BAHD acyltransferase family in Arabidopsis, we have also identified two genes encoding spermidine disinapoyl transferase (SDT) and spermidine dicoumaroyl transferase (SCT) activities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell
January 2009
John Ines Centre, Norwich Research Park, Norwich, NR4 7UH, United Kingdom.
Early endosperm development involves a series of rapid nuclear divisions in the absence of cytokinesis; thus, many endosperm mutants reveal genes whose functions are essential for mitosis. This work finds that the endosperm of Arabidopsis thaliana endosperm-defective1 (ede1) mutants never cellularizes, contains a reduced number of enlarged polyploid nuclei, and features an aberrant microtubule cytoskeleton, where the specialized radial microtubule systems and cytokinetic phragmoplasts are absent. Early embryo development is substantially normal, although occasional cytokinesis defects are observed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF