Search results for "flu"

showing 10 items of 16583 documents

Dehydration rate determines the degree of membrane damage and desiccation tolerance in bryophytes.

2016

Desiccation tolerant (DT) organisms are able to withstand an extended loss of body water and rapidly resume metabolism upon rehydration. This ability, however, is strongly dependent on a slow dehydration rate. Fast dehydration affects membrane integrity leading to intracellular solute leakage upon rehydration and thereby impairs metabolism recovery. We test the hypothesis that the increased cell membrane damage and membrane permeability observed under fast dehydration, compared with slow dehydration, is related to an increase in lipid peroxidation. Our results reject this hypothesis because following rehydration lipid peroxidation remains unaltered, a fact that could be due to the high incr…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineMembrane permeabilityPhysiologyPlant ScienceBryophytamedicine.disease_cause01 natural sciencesFluorescenceLipid peroxidationCell membraneDesiccation tolerance03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundStress PhysiologicalBotanyGeneticsmedicineHydroxybenzoatesDehydrationDesiccationDehydrationCell MembraneWaterCell BiologyGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseOxygenOxidative Stress030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryBiophysicsLipid PeroxidationDesiccationReactive Oxygen SpeciesIntracellularOxidative stressPlant Shoots010606 plant biology & botanyPhysiologia plantarum
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The Nonbilayer Lipid MGDG and the Major Light-Harvesting Complex (LHCII) Promote Membrane Stacking in Supported Lipid Bilayers.

2018

The thylakoid membrane of algae and land plants is characterized by its intricate architecture, comprising tightly appressed membrane stacks termed grana. The contributions of individual components to grana stack formation are not yet fully elucidated. As an in vitro model, we use supported lipid bilayers made of thylakoid lipid mixtures to study the effect of major light-harvesting complex (LHCII), different lipids, and ions on membrane stacking, seen as elevated structures forming on top of the planar membrane surface in the presence of LHCII protein. These structures were examined by confocal laser scanning microscopy, atomic force microscopy, and fluorescence recovery after photobleachi…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineMicroscopy ConfocalChemistryLipid BilayersStackingLight-Harvesting Protein ComplexesPeasfood and beveragesFluorescence recovery after photobleachingMicroscopy Atomic Force01 natural sciencesBiochemistryLight-harvesting complexDiglycerides03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologyGlycolipidMembraneThylakoidConfocal laser scanning microscopyBiophysicslipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)Lipid bilayer010606 plant biology & botanyBiochemistry
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Defense Priming in Nicotiana tabacum Accelerates and Amplifies ‘New’ C/N Fluxes in Key Amino Acid Biosynthetic Pathways

2020

: In the struggle to survive herbivory by leaf-feeding insects, plants employ multiple strategies to defend themselves. One mechanism by which plants increase resistance is by intensifying their responsiveness in the production of certain defense agents to create a rapid response. Known as defense priming, this action can accelerate and amplify responses of metabolic pathways, providing plants with long-lasting resistance, especially when faced with waves of attack. In the work presented, short-lived radiotracers of carbon administered as 11CO2 and nitrogen administered as 13NH3 were applied in Nicotiana tabacum, to examine the temporal changes in &lsquo

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineNicotiana tabacumamino acid metabolismPlant Science01 natural sciencesplant insect herbivorySerine03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundBiosynthesislcsh:Botanynitrogen-13Shikimate pathwaycarbon-11Secondary metabolismEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsX-ray fluorescence imagingchemistry.chemical_classificationEcologybiologydefense primingJasmonic acidfungifood and beveragesbiology.organism_classificationlcsh:QK1-989Amino acidMetabolic pathway030104 developmental biologychemistryBiochemistryisotope ratio analysis010606 plant biology & botanyPlants
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Leaf anatomy does not explain apparent short-term responses of mesophyll conductance to light and CO2 in tobacco

2018

Mesophyll conductance to CO2 (gm ), a key photosynthetic trait, is strongly constrained by leaf anatomy. Leaf anatomical parameters such as cell wall thickness and chloroplast area exposed to the mesophyll intercellular airspace have been demonstrated to determine gm in species with diverging phylogeny, leaf structure and ontogeny. However, the potential implication of leaf anatomy, especially chloroplast movement, on the short-term response of gm to rapid changes (i.e. seconds to minutes) under different environmental conditions (CO2 , light or temperature) has not been examined. The aim of this study was to determine whether the observed rapid variations of gm in response to variations of…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicinePhysiologyChemistryOntogenyfood and beveragesConductanceCell BiologyPlant ScienceGeneral MedicinePlant anatomyAnatomyPhotosynthesis01 natural sciencesChloroplast03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound030104 developmental biologyPlant morphologyChlorophyllGeneticsChlorophyll fluorescence010606 plant biology & botanyPhysiologia Plantarum
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Sorting Motifs Involved in the Trafficking and Localization of the PIN1 Auxin Efflux Carrier

2016

In contrast with the wealth of recent reports about the function of μ-adaptins and clathrin adaptor protein (AP) complexes, there is very little information about the motifs that determine the sorting of membrane proteins within clathrin-coated vesicles in plants. Here, we investigated putative sorting signals in the large cytosolic loop of the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) PIN-FORMED1 (PIN1) auxin transporter, which are involved in binding μ-adaptins and thus in PIN1 trafficking and localization. We found that Phe-165 and Tyr-280, Tyr-328, and Tyr-394 are involved in the binding of different μ-adaptins in vitro. However, only Phe-165, which binds μA(μ2)- and μD(μ3)-adaptin, was found …

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicinePhysiologyPhenylalanineGreen Fluorescent ProteinsMutantArabidopsisPlant ScienceProtein Sorting SignalsEndoplasmic ReticulumEndocytosis01 natural sciencesClathrin03 medical and health sciencesCytosolGeneticsGuanine Nucleotide Exchange FactorsSecretory pathwaybiologyArabidopsis ProteinsEndoplasmic reticulumMembrane Transport ProteinsSignal transducing adaptor proteinArticlesPlants Genetically ModifiedClathrinEndocytosisAdaptor Protein Complex mu SubunitsTransport proteinCell biologyProtein Transport030104 developmental biologyProtein Sorting SignalsMutationbiology.protein010606 plant biology & botanyPlant Physiology
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Photoprotection dynamics observed at leaf level from fast temporal reflectance changes

2018

Vegetation dynamically reacts to the available photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) by adjusting the photosynthetic apparatus to either a light harvesting or a photoprotective modus. When activating the photoprotection mechanism, either minor or major pigment-protein interactions may occur at the leaf level, resulting in different light absorption and consequently reflectance intensities. The reflectance changes were measured during sudden illumination transients designed to provoke fast adaptation to high irradiance. Different spectral reflectance change features were observed during different stages of photoprotection activation, extending over part of the visible spectral range (i.e…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicinePigmentsMaterials sciencePhotochemical Reflectance IndexPhotosynthesis01 natural sciencesFluorescenceReflectivity03 medical and health sciencesWavelength030104 developmental biologyPhotosynthetically active radiationPhotoprotectionVegetaciósense organsAbsorption (electromagnetic radiation)Biological system010606 plant biology & botany
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Molecular signatures of silencing suppression degeneracy from a complex RNA virus

2021

As genomic architectures become more complex, they begin to accumulate degenerate and redundant elements. However, analyses of the molecular mechanisms underlying these genetic architecture features remain scarce, especially in compact but sufficiently complex genomes. In the present study, we followed a proteomic approach together with a computational network analysis to reveal molecular signatures of protein function degeneracy from a plant virus (as virus-host protein-protein interactions). We employed affinity purification coupled to mass spectrometry to detect several host factors interacting with two proteins of Citrus tristeza virus (p20 and p25) that are known to function as RNA sil…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineProteomicsCitrusInteraction NetworksPathogenesisPlant Sciencemedicine.disease_causePathology and Laboratory Medicine01 natural sciencesInteractomeBiochemistryBimolecular fluorescence complementationRNA interferenceRNA silencing supressorsCitrus tristeza virusMedicine and Health SciencesDegeneracy (biology)Protein Interaction MapsBiology (General)H20 Plant diseasesPlant ProteinsEcologybiologyPlant virusesEukaryotaArgonautePlantsSmall interfering RNANucleic acidsRNA silencingComputational Theory and MathematicsGenetic interferenceExperimental Organism SystemsModeling and SimulationProteomeArgonaute ProteinsHost-Pathogen InteractionsRNA ViralEpigeneticsResearch ArticleClosterovirusRNA virusViral proteinQH301-705.5Arabidopsis ThalianaPlant PathogensComputational biologyGenome ViralBrassicaResearch and Analysis MethodsModels BiologicalPlant Viral Pathogens03 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceViral ProteinsModel OrganismsPlant and Algal ModelsTobaccomedicineGeneticsGenomesNon-coding RNAProtein InteractionsMolecular signaturesMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPlant DiseasesHost Microbial InteractionsBiology and life sciencesMass spectrometryOrganismsComputational BiologyProteinsRNA virusPlant Pathologybiology.organism_classificationGene regulationRepressor Proteins030104 developmental biologyU30 Research methodsAnimal StudiesRNAGene expression010606 plant biology & botanyF30 Plant genetics and breeding
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The Pseudomonas fluorescens Siderophore Pyoverdine Weakens Arabidopsis thaliana Defense in Favor of Growth in Iron-Deficient Conditions

2016

SPE EA BIOME IPM UB INRA; International audience; Pyoverdines are siderophores synthesized by fluorescent Pseudomonas spp. Under iron-limiting conditions, these high-affinity ferric iron chelators are excreted by bacteria in the soil to acquire iron. Pyoverdines produced by beneficial Pseudomonas spp. ameliorate plant growth. Here, we investigate the physiological incidence and mode of action of pyoverdine from Pseudomonas fluorescens C7R12 on Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) plants grown under iron-sufficient or iron-deficient conditions. Pyoverdine was provided to the medium in its iron-free structure (apo-pyoverdine), thus mimicking a situation in which it is produced by bacteria. Rema…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineSiderophoreAgronomieFMN ReductasePhysiologyIronArabidopsis[ SDV.SA.SDS ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences/Soil study[SDV.SA.AGRO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences/AgronomySiderophoresPseudomonas fluorescensPlant Science[SDV.SA.SDS]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences/Soil studyPseudomonas fluorescens01 natural sciencesMicrobiology03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundEthylene[ SDV.SA.AGRO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences/AgronomyGene Expression Regulation PlantArabidopsisGeneticsmedicineArabidopsis thalianaHomeostasisCation Transport Proteins2. Zero hungerPyoverdinebiologyIndoleacetic AcidsArabidopsis ProteinsScience des solsGene Expression ProfilingPseudomonasfood and beveragesArticlesEthylenesbiology.organism_classification030104 developmental biologychemistryFerricSalicylic AcidOligopeptidesBacteria010606 plant biology & botanymedicine.drugAbscisic Acid
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Enhancing heterologous protein expression and secretion in HEK293 cells by means of combination of CMV promoter and IFNα2 signal peptide

2016

Efficient production and secretion of recombinant proteins in mammalian cell lines relies in a combination of genetic, metabolic and culture strategy factors. The present work assesses the influence of two key genetic components of expression vectors (promoter and signal peptide) on protein production and secretion effciency in HEK293 cells expressing eGFP as a reporter protein. Firstly, the strength of 3 different promoters was evaluated using transient expression methods. Flow cytometry analysis revealed that the highest level of intracellular protein expression was found when eGFP was under the control of CMV promoter, being 3-times higher in comparison to the rest of the promoters teste…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineSignal peptideGreen Fluorescent ProteinsCytomegalovirusHeterologousBioengineeringProtein Sorting SignalsBiology01 natural sciencesApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyGreen fluorescent protein03 medical and health sciences010608 biotechnologyProtein biosynthesisHumansSecretionPromoter Regions GeneticExpression vectorInterferon-alphaPromoterGeneral MedicineMolecular biologyRecombinant ProteinsHEK293 Cells030104 developmental biologyCell cultureBiotechnologyJournal of Biotechnology
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Experimental approaches for testing if tolerance curves are useful for predicting fitness in fluctuating environments

2017

Most experimental studies on adaptation to stressful environments are performed under conditions that are rather constant and rarely ecologically relevant. Fluctuations in natural environmental conditions are ubiquitous and include for example variation in intensity and duration of temperature, droughts, parasite loads, and availability of nutrients, predators and competitors. The frequency and amplitude of many of these fluctuations are expected to increase with climate change. Tolerance curves are often used to describe fitness components across environmental gradients. Such curves can be obtained by assessing performance in a range of constant environmental conditions. In this perspectiv…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineSpecies distributionlcsh:EvolutionClimate changeEnvironmental stressBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesEnvironmental stress03 medical and health sciencesAbundance (ecology)lcsh:QH540-549.5Tolerance curveslcsh:QH359-425Range (statistics)EconometricsClimate changeConstant and fluctuating environmentsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicssietokykysopeutuminenEcologyEcologyconstant and fluctuating environmentsBiotailmastonmuutoksetenvironmental stressSpecies distributionsconstant and fluctuating environmentstolerance curvesclimate changespecies distributions030104 developmental biologyta1181lcsh:EcologyAdaptationConstant (mathematics)ympäristönmuutokset
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