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2.
Circulation ; 103(7): 1034-9, 2001 Feb 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11181482
3.
Mol Plant Microbe Interact ; 13(3): 297-308, 2000 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10707355

ABSTRACT

Transgenic tomato plants expressing wild-type or mutated BV1 or BC1 movement proteins from Bean dwarf mosaic virus (BDMV) were generated and examined for phenotypic effects and resistance to Tomato mottle virus (ToMoV). Fewer transgenic plants were recovered with the wild-type or mutated BC1 genes, compared with the wild-type or mutated BV1 genes. Transgenic tomato plants expressing the wild-type or mutated BV1 proteins appeared normal. Interestingly, although BDMV induces only a symptomless infection in tomato (i.e., BDMV is not well adapted to tomato), transgenic tomato plants expressing the BDMV BC1 protein showed a viral disease-like phenotype (i.e., stunted growth, and leaf mottling, curling, and distortion). This suggests that the symptomless phenotype of BDMV in tomato is not due to a host-specific defect in the BC1 protein. One transgenic line expressing the BC1 gene did not show the viral disease-like phenotype. This was associated with a deletion in the 3' region of the gene, which resulted in expression of a truncated BC1 protein. Several R0 plants, expressing either wild-type or mutated BV1 or BC1 proteins, showed a significant delay in ToMoV infection, compared with non-transformed plants. R1 progeny plants also showed a significant delay in ToMoV infection, but this delay was less than that in the R0 parents. These results also demonstrate that expression of viral movement proteins, in transgenic plants, can have deleterious effects on various aspects of plant development.


Subject(s)
Geminiviridae/genetics , Mosaic Viruses/physiology , Plant Diseases/virology , Solanum lycopersicum/virology , Viral Proteins/genetics , Blotting, Northern , Blotting, Southern , Chromosome Mapping , Geminiviridae/metabolism , Geminiviridae/pathogenicity , Gene Deletion , Solanum lycopersicum/genetics , Solanum lycopersicum/metabolism , Phenotype , Plant Diseases/genetics , Plant Viral Movement Proteins , Plants, Genetically Modified , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Viral Proteins/metabolism
4.
Plant Physiol ; 102(3): 1033-1036, 1993 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12231885

ABSTRACT

Regulation of the mannopine synthase (mas) promoter during senescence in leaves and flowers of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) plants was investigated. In plants transformed with a mas 5[prime]-[beta]-glucuronidase (GUS)-mas 3[prime] transcriptional fusion, we observed that following the onset of senescence in either intact or excised leaves of the transgenic lines, GUS activity increased significantly, whereas in excised leaves in which the senescence process was inhibited, GUS activity increased only marginally. During flower petal senescence in the transgenic tobacco, GUS activity increased approximately 6-fold over preanthesis- and anthesis-stage flowers.

6.
Plant Cell ; 3(6): 583-91, 1991 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1841719

ABSTRACT

The developmental regulation of the translational elongation factor EF-1 alpha has been analyzed in tobacco. A gene fusion was constructed consisting of the 5' and 3' regions of the tomato genomic clone LeEF-A from the EF-1 alpha gene family and the beta-glucuronidase coding region. Analysis of the transgenic plants containing this chimeric gene demonstrated that the tomato LeEF-A flanking sequences were sufficient to confer expression patterns similar to those of the endogenous tobacco EF-1 alpha gene. The patterns of beta-glucuronidase activity in this system indicated that during plant growth and development EF-1 alpha is regulated with increased expression corresponding to regions of high protein synthesis, including meristems, rapidly growing tissues, and developing gametophytes. In addition, EF-1 alpha expression responds rapidly to changes in growth patterns induced by hormone treatment. Our results are in agreement with studies in animals indicating that EF-1 alpha expression may be rate limiting for protein synthesis and demonstrate that the analysis of EF-1 alpha is of value for studying interrelationships between protein synthesis and developmental control.


Subject(s)
Nicotiana/genetics , Peptide Elongation Factors/genetics , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plants, Toxic , 2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic Acid/pharmacology , Base Sequence , Gene Expression , Genes, Plant/genetics , Genetic Vectors , Glucuronidase/genetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Morphogenesis , Peptide Elongation Factor 1 , Peptide Elongation Factors/metabolism , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plants, Genetically Modified , Protein Biosynthesis , Reproduction , Nicotiana/drug effects , Nicotiana/growth & development , Transcription, Genetic
7.
Plant Mol Biol ; 14(1): 17-28, 1990 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1983191

ABSTRACT

A set of cDNAs that are expressed in tomato anthers were isolated. We further characterized two of these cDNAs (LAT56 and LAT59) and their corresponding genomic clones. LAT56 and LAT59 show low levels of steady-state mRNA in immature anthers and maximal levels in mature anthers and pollen. The LAT56 and LAT59 genes are single-copy in the tomato genome, and are linked on chromosome 3, approximately 5 cM apart. Although these cDNAs did not cross-hybridize, their deduced protein sequences (P56 and P59) have 54% amino acid identity. The LAT56 and LAT59 genes each have two introns, but they are located in non-homologous positions. P56 and P59 show significant protein sequence similarity to pectate lyases of plant pathogenic bacteria. The similarity of P56 and P59 to the bacterial pectate lyases is equivalent to the homology described for different pectate lyase sequences of the genus Erwinia. We suggest that the pollen expression of LAT56 and LAT59 might relate to a requirement for pectin degradation during pollen tube growth.


Subject(s)
Erwinia/genetics , Genes, Plant , Plants/genetics , Pollen , Polysaccharide-Lyases/genetics , Amino Acid Sequence , Base Sequence , Blotting, Southern , Cloning, Molecular , DNA/genetics , DNA/isolation & purification , Databases, Bibliographic , Erwinia/enzymology , Erwinia/pathogenicity , Genetic Linkage , Introns , Molecular Sequence Data , Oligonucleotide Probes , Plants/microbiology , Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length , Protein Conformation , RNA, Messenger/genetics , RNA, Messenger/metabolism , Restriction Mapping , Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid
8.
Plant Physiol ; 90(4): 1243-5, 1989 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16666914

ABSTRACT

Tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) plants heterozygous for the diageotropica (dgt) mutation exhibit a unique phenotype, termed ;mottled.' Unlike dgt, mottled individuals grow upright, exhibit normal root branching, and produce normal levels of ethylene in response to applied auxin. Leaves of mottled plants are deformed and reduced in size and are characterized by a mottled appearance on their surfaces with small dark-green islands clustered along the leaf veins. The lack of phenotypic overlap between dgt and mottled may represent interallelic interaction at a locus which influences auxin sensitivity or action in the tomato.

9.
Plant Physiol ; 90(4): 1341-6, 1989 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16666933

ABSTRACT

The epinastic growth responses of petioles to auxin and ethylene were quantified in two developmental mutants of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.). In the wild type parent line, cultivar VFN8, the epinastic response of excised petiole sections was approximately log-linear between 0.1 and 100 micromolar indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) and 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) concentrations, with a greater response to 2,4-D at any concentration. When ethylene synthesis was inhibited by aminoethoxyvinylglycine (AVG), epinasty was no longer induced by auxin, but could be restored by the addition of ethylene gas. In the auxin-insensitive mutant, diageotropica (dgt), no epinastic response to IAA was observed at IAA concentrations that effectively induced epinasty in VFN8. In the absence of added IAA, epinastic growth of dgt petioles in 1.3 microliters per liter exogenous ethylene gas was more than double that of VFN8 petioles. IAA had little additional effect in dgt, but promoted epinasty in VFN8. These results confirm that tomato petiole cells respond directly to ethylene and make it unlikely that the differential growth responsible for epinasty results from lateral auxin redistribution. The second mutant, Epinastic (Epi), exhibits constitutively epinasty, cortical swelling, and root branching symptomatic of possible alternation in auxin or ethylene regulation of growth. Only minor quantitative differences were observed between the epinastic responses to auxin and ethylene of VFN8 and Epi. However, in contrast to VFN8, when ethylene synthesis or action was inhibited in Epi, auxin still induced 40 to 50% of the epinastic response observed in the absence of inhibitors. This indicates that the target cells for epinastic growth in Epi are qualitatively different from those of VFN8, having gained the ability to grow differentially in response to auxin alone. The dgt and Epi mutants provide useful systems in which to study the genetic determination of target cell specificity for hormone action.

10.
Plant Cell ; 1(7): 727-36, 1989 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2535521

ABSTRACT

The tissue localization of transcripts corresponding to five anther-specific cDNA clones isolated from tomato was determined. Transcripts specified by three of the cDNA clones were first detectable in anthers containing mitotic-stage gametophytes and were localized to the gametophyte. Transcripts specified by the two other cDNA clones were not detectable until anthers had reached a later developmental stage; these transcripts were also localized to the (now bicellular) gametophytes. Transcript levels for all of the cDNAs increased during gametogenesis and reached maximal levels in mature pollen grains. These mRNAs persisted in in vitro-grown pollen tubes, concentrating toward the tips of the growing tubes. At flower maturity, transcripts specified by each of the cDNAs were also detected in the epidermal and endothecial cell layers of the anther wall. The spatial distribution of transcripts in the anther wall was confined to that region of the anther that surrounds the locule. Transcripts were not detected in the sterile tip of the anther or in the filament. mRNA levels for these cDNA clones were markedly reduced in the anthers of several independent male-sterile mutants of tomato. Our results provide evidence that these anther-specific cDNAs represent genes expressed in both the gametophytic and sporophytic phases of the plant life cycle. The patterns of mRNA accumulation observed support the hypothesis that the proteins encoded by these genes function during pollen development and pollen tube growth.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression , Plants/genetics , Pollen/genetics , DNA/genetics , Gametogenesis , Nucleic Acid Hybridization , Organ Specificity/genetics , Plant Development , Plants/anatomy & histology , Pollen/cytology , Pollen/metabolism , RNA, Messenger/genetics , Reproduction/genetics , Transcription, Genetic
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