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Journal ArticleDOI

Proteomic analysis of the pulvinus, a heliotropic tissue, in Glycine max

TL;DR: This study used two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and liquid chromatography-tandom mass spectrometry to separate and identify the proteins located in the soybean pulvinus and found that the most significant terms were related to proton transport.
Abstract: Certain plant species respond to light, dark, and other environmental factors by leaf movement. Leguminous plants both track and avoid the sun through turgor changes of the pulvinus tissue at the base of leaves. Mechanisms leading to pulvinar turgor flux, particularly knowledge of the proteins involved, are not well-known. In this study we used two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and liquid chromatography-tandom mass spectrometry to separate and identify the proteins located in the soybean pulvinus. A total of 183 spots were separated and 195 proteins from 165 spots were identified and functionally analyzed using single enrichment analysis for gene ontology terms. The most significant terms were related to proton transport. Comparison with guard cell proteomes revealed similar significant processes but a greater number of pulvinus proteins are required for comparable analysis. To our knowledge, this is a novel report on the analysis of proteins found in soybean pulvinus. These findings provide a better understanding of the proteins required for turgor change in the pulvinus.

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Journal ArticleDOI
Peter V. Minorsky1
TL;DR: Foliar nyctinasty, much like the enhanced illumination of the full moon, may mitigate feeding by nocturnal herbivores by altering their foraging behaviour and may slow certain types of ectothermic herbivore making them more vulnerable to predation.
Abstract: Foliar nyctinasty is a plant behaviour characterised by a pronounced daily oscillation in leaf orientation. During the day, the blades of nyctinastic plant leaves (or leaflets) assume a more or less horizontal position that optimises their ability to capture sunlight for photosynthesis. At night, the positions that the leaf blades assume, regardless of whether they arise by rising, falling or twisting, are essentially vertical. Among the ideas put forth to explain the raison d'etre of foliar nyctinasty are that it: (i) improves the temperature relations of plants; (ii) helps remove surface water from foliage; (iii) prevents the disruption of photoperiodism by moonlight; and (iv) directly discourages insect herbivory. After discussing these previous hypotheses, a novel tritrophic hypothesis is introduced that proposes that foliar nyctinasty constitutes an indirect plant defence against nocturnal herbivores. It is suggested that the reduction in physical clutter that follows from nocturnal leaf closure may increase the foraging success of many types of animals that prey upon or parasitise herbivores. Predators and parasitoids generally use some combination of visual, auditory or olfactory cues to detect prey. In terrestrial environments, it is hypothesised that the vertical orientation of the blades of nyctinastic plants at night would be especially beneficial to flying nocturnal predators (e.g. bats and owls) and parasitoids whose modus operandi is death from above. The movements of prey beneath a plant with vertically oriented foliage would be visually more obvious to gleaning or swooping predators under nocturnal or crepuscular conditions. Such predators could also detect sounds made by prey better without baffling layers of foliage overhead to damp and disperse the signal. Moreover, any volatiles released by the prey would diffuse more directly to the awaiting olfactory apparatus of the predators or parasitoids. In addition to facilitating the demise of herbivores by carnivores and parasitoids, foliar nyctinasty, much like the enhanced illumination of the full moon, may mitigate feeding by nocturnal herbivores by altering their foraging behaviour. Foliar nyctinasty could also provide a competitive advantage by encouraging herbivores, seeking more cover, to forage on or around non-nyctinastic species. As an added advantage, foliar nyctinasty, by decreasing the temperature between plants through its effects on re-radiation, may slow certain types of ectothermic herbivores making them more vulnerable to predation. Foliar nyctinasty also may not solely be a behavioural adaptation against folivores; by discouraging foraging by granivores, the inclusive fitness of nyctinastic plants may be increased.

32 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Compared with the parental BR 16, P58 copes with drought through better compensation between diaheliotropic and paraheliotropy movements, finer tuning of water-use efficiency, a lower transpiration rate, higher leaf area and higher pod abortion to accomplish the maximum possible grain production under continued drought conditions.
Abstract: Drought stress is one of the most severe environmental constraints on plant production. Under environmental pressures, complex daily heliotropic adjustments of leaflet angles in soybean can help to reduce transpiration losses by diminishing light interception (paraheliotropism), increase diurnal carbon gain in sparse canopies and reduce carbon gain in dense canopies by solar tracking (diaheliotropism). The plant materials studied were cultivar BR 16 and its genetically engineered isoline P58, ectopically overexpressing AtDREB1A, which is involved in abiotic stress responses. We aimed to follow the movements of central and lateral leaflets in vegetative stages V7-V10 and reproductive stages R4-R5, integrating the reversible morphogenetic changes into an estimate of daily plant photosynthesis using three-dimensional modeling, and to analyze the production parameters of BR 16 and P58. The patterns of daily movements of central leaflets of BR 16 in V7-V10 and R4-R5 were similar, expressing fewer diaheliotropic movements under drought stress than under non-limiting water conditions. Daily heliotropic patterns of lateral leaflets in V7-V10 and R4-R5 showed more diaheliotropic movements in drought-stressed P58 plants than in those grown under non-limiting water conditions. Leaf area in R4-R5 was generally higher in P58 than in BR 16. Drought significantly affected gas exchange and vegetative and reproductive architectural features. DREB1A could be involved in various responses to drought stress. Compared with the parental BR 16, P58 copes with drought through better compensation between diaheliotropic and paraheliotropic movements, finer tuning of water-use efficiency, a lower transpiration rate, higher leaf area and higher pod abortion to accomplish the maximum possible grain production under continued drought conditions.

7 citations

References
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Samanea pulvinar motor cells are the first described system combining light and circadian regulation of K channels at the level of transcript and membrane transport.
Abstract: In a search for potassium channels involved in light- and clock-regulated leaf movements, we cloned four putative K channel genes from the leaf-moving organs, pulvini, of the legume Samanea saman. The S. saman SPOCK1 is homologous to KCO1, an Arabidopsis two-pore-domain K channel, the S. saman SPORK1 is similar to SKOR and GORK, Arabidopsis outward-rectifying Shaker-like K channels, and the S. saman SPICK1 and SPICK2 are homologous to AKT2, a weakly-inward-rectifying Shaker-like Arabidopsis K channel. All four S. saman sequences possess the universal K-channel-specific pore signature, TXXTXGYG, strongly suggesting a role in transmembrane K(+) transport. The four S. saman genes had different expression patterns within four leaf parts: "extensor" and "flexor" (the motor tissues), the leaf blades (mainly mesophyll), and the vascular bundle ("rachis"). Based on northern blot analysis, their transcript level was correlated with the rhythmic leaf movements: (a) all four genes were regulated diurnally (Spick2, Spork1, and Spock1 in extensor and flexor, Spick1 in extensor and rachis); (b) Spork1 and Spock1 rhythms were inverted upon the inversion of the day-night cycle; and (c) in extensor and/or flexor, the expression of Spork1, Spick1, and Spick2 was also under a circadian control. These findings parallel the circadian rhythm shown to govern the resting membrane K(+) permeability in extensor and flexor protoplasts and the susceptibility of this permeability to light stimulation (Kim et al., 1993). Thus, Samanea pulvinar motor cells are the first described system combining light and circadian regulation of K channels at the level of transcript and membrane transport.

87 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results indicate that 2D-PAGE, combined with MALDI-TOF-MS and LC-MS/MS, is a sensitive and powerful technique for separation and identification of soybean leaf proteins.

60 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Motor cells contain the plasma membrane H+-ATPase required to mediate the ionic fluxes that are involved in circadian leaf movements and that are necessary to recover the turgor potential that is considerably affected by the large K+ and Cl- efflux associated with seismonastic movement.
Abstract: Plasma membrane H+-ATPase was immunolocalized in several cell types of the sensitive plant Mimosa pudica L., and transmembrane potentials were measured on cortical cells. In comparison with the nonspecialized cortical cells of the petiole or stem, the proton pump was highly expressed in motor cells. These immunological data are in close agreement with electrophysiological data, because the active component of the transmembrane potential was low in the nonspecialized cortical cells and high in motor cells. Therefore, motor cells contain the plasma membrane H+-ATPase required to mediate the ionic fluxes that are involved in circadian leaf movements and that are necessary to recover the turgor potential that is considerably affected by the large K+ and Cl- efflux associated with seismonastic movement. With the exception of sieve tubes, the phloem also had a high density of H+-ATPase. This suggests that the recovery of the transmembrane ionic gradients (K+ and Cl-), which is affected by various stimuli, is more energized by the companion and parenchyma cells than by the sieve elements. In addition, at the phloem/cortex interface collocytes displayed the required properties for lateral transduction of the action potential toward the pulvinal motor cells.

52 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proposed that the phosphorylation status of act in at tyrosine residues affects the dynamic reorganization of actin filaments and causes seismonastic movement of Mimosa pudica.
Abstract: The seismonastic movement of Mimosa pudica is triggered by a sudden loss of turgor pressure. In the present study, we compared the cell cytoskeleton by immunofluorescence analysis before and after movement, and the effects of actin- and microtubule-targeted drugs were examined by injecting them into the cut pulvinus. We found that fragmentation of actin filaments and microtubules occurs during bending, although the actin cytoskeleton, but not the microtubules, was involved in regulation of the movement. Transmission electron microscopy revealed that actin cables became loose after the bending. We injected phosphatase inhibitors into the severed pulvinus to examine the effects of such inhibitors on the actin cytoskeleton. We found that changes in actin isoforms, fragmentation of actin filaments and the bending movement were all inhibited after injection of a tyrosine phosphatase inhibitor. We thus propose that the phosphorylation status of actin at tyrosine residues affects the dynamic reorganization of actin filaments and causes seismonastic movement.

45 citations