Search results for "Reinhardt"

showing 10 items of 40 documents

Energetic coupling between plastids and mitochondria drives CO2 assimilation in diatoms.

2015

International audience; Diatoms are one of the most ecologically successful classes of photosynthetic marine eukaryotes in the contemporary oceans. Over the past 30 million years, they have helped to moderate Earth's climate by absorbing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, sequestering it via the biological carbon pump and ultimately burying organic carbon in the lithosphere. The proportion of planetary primary production by diatoms in the modern oceans is roughly equivalent to that of terrestrial rainforests. In photosynthesis, the efficient conversion of carbon dioxide into organic matter requires a tight control of the ATP/NADPH ratio which, in other photosynthetic organisms, relies prin…

Aquatic Organismschemistry.chemical_compoundAdenosine TriphosphateSettore BIO/04 - Fisiologia VegetaleCYCLIC ELECTRON FLOWPlastidsPhotosynthesisPHAEODACTYLUM-TRICORNUTUMPlant Proteinschemistry.chemical_classificationMultidisciplinarymicroalgaeRespirationCarbon fixationEnergetic interactionsProton-Motive ForceMitochondriametabolic mutantPhenotypeATP/NADPH ratioOXYGEN PHOTOREDUCTIONCarbon dioxideOxidoreductasesOxidation-ReductionOceanOceans and SeasElectron flowMarine eukaryotesBiologyPhotosynthesisCHLAMYDOMONAS-REINHARDTIICarbon cycleCarbon CycleMitochondrial ProteinsEnergetic exchangesBotanyOrganic matterEcosystem[SDV.BBM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular Biology14. Life underwaterPlastidEcosystemDiatomsChemiosmosisfungiECSCarbon Dioxidechemistry13. Climate actionNADP
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The role of size and protein shells in the toxicity to algal photosynthesis induced by ionic silver delivered from silver nanoparticles

2019

Abstract Because of their biocide properties, silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) are present in numerous consumer products. The biocidal properties of AgNPs are due to both the interactions between AgNP and cell membranes and the release of dissolved silver (Ag+). Recent studies emphasized the role of different nanoparticle coatings in complexing and storing Ag+. In this study, the availability of dissolved silver in the presence of algae was assessed for three AgNPs with different silver contents (59%, 34% and 7% of total Ag), silver core sizes and casein shell thicknesses. The impact of ionic silver on the photosynthetic yield of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii was used as a proxy to estimate the amo…

BiocideSilverEnvironmental Engineering010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesBiological AvailabilityMetal NanoparticlesNanoparticleIonic bonding010501 environmental sciencesProtective AgentsPhotosynthesis01 natural sciencesSilver nanoparticleNanomaterialsEnvironmental ChemistryCysteinePhotosynthesisWaste Management and Disposal0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEC50IonsDose-Response Relationship DrugChemistryPollutionMembraneChlamydomonas reinhardtiiNuclear chemistryScience of The Total Environment
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Consecutive binding of chlorophylls a and b during the assembly in vitro of light-harvesting chlorophyll-a/b protein (LHCIIb).

2006

The apoprotein of the major light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b complex (LHCIIb) is post-translationally imported into the chloroplast, where membrane insertion, protein folding, and pigment binding take place. The sequence and molecular mechanism of the latter steps is largely unknown. The complex spontaneously self-organises in vitro to form structurally authentic LHCIIb upon reconstituting the unfolded recombinant protein with the pigments chlorophyll a, b, and carotenoids in detergent micelles. Former measurements of LHCIIb assembly had revealed two apparent kinetic phases, a faster one (tau1) in the range of 10 s to 1 min, and a slower one (tau2) in the range of several min. To unravel th…

Chlorophyll bChlorophyllChlorophyll aTime FactorsPigment bindingLight-Harvesting Protein ComplexesModels BiologicalFluorescencechemistry.chemical_compoundStructural BiologyChlorophyll bindingAnimalsProtein Structure QuaternaryMolecular BiologyChlorophyll ACircular DichroismLight-harvesting complexes of green plantsChloroplastB vitaminsKineticsBiochemistrychemistryEnergy TransferChlorophyllBiophysicsChlamydomonas reinhardtiiProtein BindingJournal of molecular biology
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Chlamydomonas reinhardtii in the landscape of pigments.

2004

▪ Abstract  This review focuses on the biosynthesis of pigments in the unicellular alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and their physiological and regulatory functions in the context of information gathered from studies of other photosynthetic organisms. C. reinhardtii is serving as an important model organism for studies of photosynthesis and the pigments associated with the photosynthetic apparatus. Despite extensive information pertaining to the biosynthetic pathways critical for making chlorophylls and carotenoids, we are just beginning to understand the control of these pathways, the coordination between pigment and apoprotein synthesis, and the interactions between the activities of these…

ChlorophyllRhodopsinNuclear geneChloroplastsved/biology.organism_classification_rank.speciesLight-Harvesting Protein ComplexesProtozoan ProteinsChlamydomonas reinhardtiiPhotosynthesisModels Biologicalchemistry.chemical_compoundHemiterpenesLycopeneBiosynthesisIsomerismPentanesBotanyGeneticsButadienesAnimalsPhotosynthesisModel organismCarotenoidPlant Proteinschemistry.chemical_classificationCell Nucleusbiologyved/biologyPigments Biologicalbiology.organism_classificationCarotenoidsChloroplastOxygenCytochrome b6f ComplexchemistryBiochemistryXanthophyllPhotoreceptor Cells InvertebrateChlamydomonas reinhardtiiAnnual review of genetics
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Endogenous fluctuations of DNA topology in the chloroplast of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii.

1998

DNA supercoiling in the chloroplast of the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii was found to change with a diurnal rhythm in cells growing in alternating 12-h dark-12-h light periods. Highest and lowest DNA superhelicities occurred at the beginning and towards the end of the 12-h light periods, respectively. The fluctuations in DNA supercoiling occurred concurrently and in the same direction in two separate parts of the chloroplast genome, one containing the genes psaB, rbcL, and atpA and the other containing the atpB gene. Fluctuations were not confined to transcribed DNA regions, indicating simultaneous changes in DNA conformation all over the chloroplast genome. Because the d…

ChloroplastsLightTranscription GeneticGenes ProtozoanChlamydomonas reinhardtiiTopologyGenomechemistry.chemical_compoundGenes ReporterAnimalsRNA MessengerMolecular BiologyGenebiologyDNA SuperhelicalChlamydomonasfood and beveragesCell Biologybiology.organism_classificationDNA Dynamics and Chromosome StructureCircadian RhythmChloroplastCross-Linking ReagentschemistryChloroplast DNAGene Expression RegulationDNA supercoilNucleic Acid ConformationDNAChlamydomonas reinhardtiiMolecular and cellular biology
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The redox state regulates RNA degradation in the chloroplast of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii.

1999

Abstract A Chlamydomonas reinhardtii chloroplast transformant, designated MU7, carrying a chimeric (rbcL promoter: β-glucuronidase [GUS]:psaB 3′ end) gene whose transcripts have been found previously to be unstable in light (half-life of 20 min in light as opposed to a half-life of 5 h in the dark), was used to study the role of electron transport and of the redox state in the degradation of chloroplast transcripts in the light. Blocking photosynthetic electron transport with 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethylurea (DCMU) prevented the light-dependent breakdown of the pool of GUS transcripts in MU7 cells. Diamide, an oxidizing agent, caused a measurable delay in the degradation of GUS trans…

ChloroplastsLightTranscription GeneticPhysiologyCell SurvivalRecombinant Fusion ProteinsMolecular Sequence DataChlorophyceaeChlamydomonas reinhardtiiPlant SciencePolymerase Chain ReactionDithiothreitolCell Linechemistry.chemical_compoundTranscription (biology)Gene Expression Regulation PlantGeneticsAnimalsDNA PrimersGlucuronidasebiologyBase SequencefungiRNAfood and beveragesDCMUbiology.organism_classificationElectron transport chainCell biologyChloroplastDithiothreitolBiochemistrychemistryRNA PlantDiuronOxidation-ReductionChlamydomonas reinhardtiiResearch ArticlePlant physiology
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Processing of RNAs of the Family Avsunviroidae in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Chloroplasts

2007

ABSTRACT The family Avsunviroidae comprises four viroid species with the ability to form hammerhead ribozymes that mediate self-cleavage of the multimeric plus and minus strands resulting from replication in the chloroplast through a symmetric rolling-circle mechanism. Research on these RNAs is restricted by their host range, which is limited to the plants wherein they were initially identified and some closely related species. Here we report cleavage and ligation in transplastomic Chlamydomonas reinhardtii expressing plus- and minus-strand dimeric transcripts of representative members of the family Avsunviroidae . Despite the absence of viroid RNA-RNA transcription, the C. reinhardtii -bas…

ChloroplastsbiologyViroidvirusesImmunologyRibozymeChlamydomonas reinhardtiibiology.organism_classificationCleavage (embryo)MicrobiologyMolecular biologyViroidsGenome Replication and Regulation of Viral Gene ExpressionCell biologyChloroplastAvsunviroidaeTranscription (biology)VirologyInsect Sciencebiology.proteinAnimalsRNA ViralRNA Processing Post-TranscriptionalChlamydomonas reinhardtiiTransplastomic plantJournal of Virology
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Novel atrazine-binding biomimetics inspired to the D1 protein from the photosystem II of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii.

2020

Biomimetic design represents an emerging field for improving knowledge of natural molecules, as well as to project novel artificial tools with specific functions for biosensing. Effective strategies have been exploited to design artificial bioreceptors, taking inspiration from complex supramolecular assemblies. Among them, size-minimization strategy sounds promising to provide bioreceptors with tuned sensitivity, stability, and selectivity, through the ad hoc manipulation of chemical species at the molecular scale. Herein, a novel biomimetic peptide enabling herbicide binding was designed bioinspired to the D1 protein of the Photosystem II of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. The D1…

Circular dichroismPhotosystem IIProtein ConformationSupramolecular chemistryPlastoquinoneChlamydomonas reinhardtiiPeptide02 engineering and technologyMolecular Dynamics SimulationBiochemistryFluorescence spectroscopy03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundStructural BiologyBiomimeticsAmino Acid SequencePhotosynthesisMolecular Biology030304 developmental biologychemistry.chemical_classification0303 health sciencesbiologyRational designphotosystem IIPhotosystem II Protein ComplexGeneral Medicine021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologybiology.organism_classificationSpectrometry FluorescencechemistryArtificial peptides Atrazine sensing Rational designBiophysicsThermodynamicsAtrazine0210 nano-technologyPeptidesChlamydomonas reinhardtiiInternational journal of biological macromolecules
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The Physcomitrella genome reveals evolutionary insights into the conquest of land by plants

2008

We report the draft genome sequence of the model moss Physcomitrella patens and compare its features with those of flowering plants, from which it is separated by more than 400 million years, and unicellular aquatic algae. This comparison reveals genomic changes concomitant with the evolutionary movement to land, including a general increase in gene family complexity; loss of genes associated with aquatic environments (e.g., flagellar arms); acquisition of genes for tolerating terrestrial stresses (e.g., variation in temperature and water availability); and the development of the auxin and abscisic acid signaling pathways for coordinating multicellular growth and dehydration response. The …

DNA RepairRetroelementsPhyscomitrellaArabidopsisPhyscomitrella patensGenes PlantGenomeMagnoliopsidaPhylogeneticsGene DuplicationGene familyAnimalsGenePhylogenyPlant ProteinsRepetitive Sequences Nucleic AcidGeneticsWhole genome sequencingMultidisciplinarybiologyDehydrationfood and beveragesComputational BiologyOryzaSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationAdaptation PhysiologicalBiological EvolutionBryopsidaMulticellular organismMultigene FamilyChlamydomonas reinhardtiiGenome PlantMetabolic Networks and PathwaysSignal Transduction
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Detection of primary DNA damage in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii by means of modified microgel electrophoresis.

1997

The assessment of genotoxic potential in surface water requires test methods, among which are those that detect initial DNA damage in organisms of aquatic biocenosis. The microgel electrophoresis (MGE) "comet assay" was applied to a ubiquitous unicellular green alga (Chlamydomonas reinhardtii) to detect DNA damage caused by genotoxins. For this, the test protocol described by Singh NP et al. [Exp Cell Res 175: 184-191, 1988] was modified. Major modifications were the use of alkaline lysis buffer with ionic detergents and the reduction of preincubation and electrophoresis times. Short-time exposure of Chlamydomonas to the well-known genotoxicants 4-nitroquinoline-1-oxide (4-NQO), N-nitrosodi…

ElectrophoresisEpidemiologyDNA damageHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisChlamydomonas reinhardtiiBiologymedicine.disease_causeDimethylnitrosaminechemistry.chemical_compoundBotanymedicineAnimalsGenetics (clinical)Cell NucleusChlamydomonasDNAHydrogen PeroxideDNA Protozoanbiology.organism_classification4-Nitroquinoline-1-oxideComet assaychemistryBiophysicsDNA fragmentationAlkaline lysisGenotoxicityDNAChlamydomonas reinhardtiiWater Pollutants ChemicalDNA DamageEnvironmental and molecular mutagenesis
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