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1.
Plant Biol (Stuttg) ; 2024 Jul 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38970643

ABSTRACT

The tailings dump of Barraxiutta (Sardinia, Italy) contains considerable concentrations of heavy metals and, consequently, is scarcely colonized by plants. However, wild populations of the liverwort Lunularia cruciata (L.) Dum. form dense and healthy-looking carpets on this tailing dump. L. cruciata colonizing the tailing dump was compared with a control population growing in a pristine environment in terms of: (i) pollutant content, (ii) photochemical efficiency, and (iii) volatile secondary metabolites in thalli extracts. L. cruciata maintained optimal photosynthesis despite containing considerable amounts of soil pollutants in its thalli and had higher sesquiterpene content compared to control plants. Sesquiterpenes have a role in plant stress resistance and adaptation to adverse environments. In the present study, we propose enhanced sesquiterpenes featuring Contaminated L. cruciata as a defence strategy implemented in the post-mining environment.

4.
Plant Biol (Stuttg) ; 21(5): 961-966, 2019 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30945419

ABSTRACT

The lock and key hypothesis assumes that male and female genitalia match in a unique system to prevent interspecific crosses. This hypothesis is largely investigated in animals, while there is a distinct lack of studies on plants. Nevertheless, we expect the lock and key hypothesis could apply to plants with complex floral morphologies, such as orchids. Here we apply a comparative approach to examine the variation of floral functional traits in food- and sex-deceptive orchids. To understand if a specific deception strategy is related to a specific variation in floral traits evaluated the variation in sterile and fertile traits among species and subsequently examined the correlations between male and female reproductive organs of the same species with the aim of investigating the role of the lock and key hypothesis in deceptive orchids. Our results show that the functional morphology of fertile traits plays a pivotal role in limiting gene flow in species that grow in sympatry. In particular, it was observed that the Reproductive Standardisation Index (RSI) is significantly different in the two pollination strategies and that the correlation between pollinarium length and stigmatic cavity length is stronger in food-deceptive species when compared to the sex-deceptive species. These results reveal that the lock and key hypothesis contributes to maintain boundaries in plants with very complex floral morphology.


Subject(s)
Flowers/anatomy & histology , Orchidaceae/anatomy & histology , Pollination , Flowers/physiology , Gene Flow , Orchidaceae/physiology , Pollination/physiology , Sympatry
5.
Conserv Biol ; 30(4): 763-73, 2016 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26864475

ABSTRACT

Frugivores are critical components of restoration programs because they are seed dispersers. Thus, knowledge about bird-plant trophic relationships is essential in the evaluation of the efficacy of restoration processes. Traditionally, the diet of frugivores is characterized by microscopically identifying plant residues in droppings, which is time-consuming, requires botanical knowledge, and cannot be used for fragments lacking detectable morphological characteristics (e.g., fragmented seeds and skins). We examined whether DNA barcoding can be used as a universal tool to rapidly characterize the diet of a frugivorous bird, Eurasian blackcap (Sylvia atricapilla). We used the DNA barcoding results to assess restoration efforts and monitor the diversity of potentially dispersed plants in a protected area in northern Italy. We collected 642 Eurasian Blackcap droppings at the restored site during the autumn migration over 3 years. Intact seeds and fragmented plant material were analyzed at 2 plastidial barcode loci (rbcL and trnH-psbA), and the resulting plant identifications were validated by comparison with a reference molecular data set of local flora. At least 17 plant species, including 7 of the 11 newly transplanted taxa, were found. Our results demonstrate the potential for DNA barcoding to be used to monitor the effectiveness of restoration plantings and to obtain information about fruit consumption and dispersal of invasive or unexpected plant species. Such an approach provides valuable information that could be used to study local plant biodiversity and to survey its evolution over time.


Subject(s)
Birds , Conservation of Natural Resources , DNA Barcoding, Taxonomic , Diet , Animals , Biodiversity , DNA, Plant , Italy , Plants
6.
Ann Bot ; 104(3): 497-506, 2009 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19001428

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: In the sexually deceptive Ophrys genus, species isolation is generally considered ethological and occurs via different, specific pollinators, but there are cases in which Ophrys species can share a common pollinator and differ in pollen placement on the body of the insect. In that condition, species are expected to be reproductively isolated through a pre-mating mechanical barrier. Here, the relative contribution of pre- vs. post-mating barriers to gene flow among two Ophrys species that share a common pollinator and can occur in sympatry is studied. METHODS: A natural hybrid zone on Sardinia between O. iricolor and O. incubacea, sharing Andrena morio as pollinator, was investigated by analysing floral traits involved in pollinator attraction as odour extracts both for non-active and active compounds and for labellum morphology. The genetic architecture of the hybrid zone was also estimated with amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) markers, and pollination fitness and seed set of both parental species and their hybrids in the sympatric zone were estimated by controlled crosses. KEY RESULTS: Although hybrids were intermediate between parental species in labellum morphology and non-active odour compounds, both parental species and hybrids produced a similar odour bouquet for active compounds. However, hybrids produced significantly lower fruit and seed set than parental species, and the genetic architecture of the hybrid zone suggests that they were mostly first-generation hybrids. CONCLUSIONS: The two parental species hybridize in sympatry as a consequence of pollinator overlap and weak mechanical isolation, but post-zygotic barriers reduce hybrid frequency and fitness, and prevent extensive introgression. These results highlight a significant contribution of late post-mating barriers, such as chromosomal divergence, for maintaining reproductive isolation, in an orchid group for which pre-mating barriers are often considered predominant.


Subject(s)
Orchidaceae/parasitology , Pollination/physiology , Animals , Flowers/anatomy & histology , Flowers/ultrastructure , Fruit/growth & development , Hybridization, Genetic , Odorants , Orchidaceae/classification , Orchidaceae/genetics , Orchidaceae/ultrastructure , Seeds/growth & development , Species Specificity
7.
Int J Biochem ; 17(12): 1329-37, 1985.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3005066

ABSTRACT

The enzyme D-glycero D-ido octulose 1,8-bisphosphate:D-altro-heptulose 7-phosphotransferase (abbreviated to phosphotransferase, PT) catalyses the transfer of the phosphate ester group at C-1 between altro-heptulose (sedoheptulose) and octulose phosphate intermediates of the L-type pentose pathway. Using synthetically prepared and 14C-labelled octulose mono- and bisphosphates, two methods are described for the measurement of the catalytic capacity of the PT reaction operating in both the "forward" and "reverse" modes of L-type pentose pathway operation. PT activity was found in normal, regenerating and foetal rat liver, rat heart, rat epididymal fat pad, rat kidney, brain and skeletal muscle, extracts of C. fusca, pea leaf and a variety of tumour tissues. The highest activity of the enzyme was found in the neoplasms. The Michaelian kinetic constants, temperature and pH optima for the reaction of the enzyme from rat liver together with an assortment of its substrate specificities have been determined. Vanadate anion was found to inhibit the enzyme and the pattern of inhibition suggests that the PT may act by a sequential mechanism. Neither arabinose 5-phosphate nor inorganic phosphate showed any effect on the catalytic activity of the PT enzyme in liver.


Subject(s)
Pentose Phosphate Pathway/drug effects , Animals , Chlorella/enzymology , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Kinetics , Liver/enzymology , Mice , Muscles/enzymology , Myocardium/enzymology , Neoplasms/enzymology , Phosphotransferases/metabolism , Plants/enzymology , Rats , Substrate Specificity , Temperature , Vanadates , Vanadium/pharmacology
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