11 results on '"Hernández-Sebastià C"'
Search Results
2. First Report of Strawberry crinivirus 4 on Strawberry in Canada
- Author
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Ding, X., primary, Li, Y., additional, Hernández-Sebastià, C., additional, Abbasi, P. A., additional, Fisher, P., additional, Celetti, M. J., additional, and Wang, A., additional
- Published
- 2016
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3. Importance of light and CO 2 on the effects of endomycorrhizal colonization on growth and photosynthesis of potato plantlets ( Solanum tuberosum ) in an in vitro tripartite system
- Author
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LOUCHE‐TESSANDIER, D., primary, SAMSON, G., additional, HERNÁNDEZ‐SEBASTIÀ, C., additional, CHAGVARDIEFF, P., additional, and DESJARDINS, Y., additional
- Published
- 1999
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4. Soybean seeds overexpressing asparaginase exhibit reduced nitrogen concentration.
- Author
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Pandurangan S, Pajak A, Rintoul T, Beyaert R, Hernández-Sebastià C, Brown DCW, and Marsolais F
- Abstract
In soybean seed, a correlation has been observed between the concentration of free asparagine at mid-maturation and protein concentration at maturity. In this study, a Phaseolus vulgaris K
+ -dependent asparaginase cDNA, PvAspG2, was expressed in transgenic soybean under the control of the embryo specific promoter of the β-subunit of β-conglycinin. Three lines were isolated having high expression of the transgene at the transcript, protein and enzyme activity levels at mid-maturation, with a 20- to 40-fold higher asparaginase activity in embryo than a control line expressing β-glucuronidase. Increased asparaginase activity was associated with a reduction in free asparagine levels as a percentage of total free amino acids, by 11-18%, and an increase in free aspartic acid levels, by 25-60%. Two of the lines had reduced nitrogen concentration in mature seed as determined by nitrogen analysis, by 9-13%. Their levels of extractible globulins were reduced by 11-30%. This was accompanied by an increase in oil concentration, by 5-8%. The lack of change in nitrogen concentration in the third transgenic line was correlated with an increase in free glutamic acid levels by approximately 40% at mid-maturation., (© 2015 Scandinavian Plant Physiology Society.)- Published
- 2015
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5. Arabidopsis mutants lacking asparaginases develop normally but exhibit enhanced root inhibition by exogenous asparagine.
- Author
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Ivanov A, Kameka A, Pajak A, Bruneau L, Beyaert R, Hernández-Sebastià C, and Marsolais F
- Subjects
- Ammonia metabolism, Arabidopsis drug effects, Arabidopsis enzymology, Arabidopsis Proteins metabolism, Asparaginase metabolism, Asparagine pharmacology, Aspartic Acid metabolism, DNA, Bacterial genetics, Endosperm drug effects, Endosperm enzymology, Endosperm genetics, Gene Deletion, Gene Expression Regulation, Plant, Germination, Glucuronidase genetics, Hypocotyl drug effects, Hypocotyl enzymology, Hypocotyl genetics, Isoenzymes genetics, Isoenzymes metabolism, Light, Mutation, Plant Roots drug effects, Plant Roots enzymology, Plants, Genetically Modified drug effects, Plants, Genetically Modified enzymology, Arabidopsis genetics, Arabidopsis Proteins genetics, Asparaginase genetics, Asparagine metabolism, Plant Roots genetics, Plants, Genetically Modified genetics
- Abstract
Asparaginase catalyzes the degradation of L-asparagine to L-aspartic acid and ammonia, and is implicated in the catabolism of transported asparagine in sink tissues of higher plants. The Arabidopsis genome includes two genes, ASPGA1 and ASPGB1, belonging to distinct asparaginase subfamilies. Conditions of severe nitrogen limitation resulted in a slight decrease in seed size in wild-type Arabidopsis. However, this response was not observed in a homozygous T-DNA insertion mutant where ASPG genes had been inactivated. Under nitrogen-sufficient conditions, the ASPG mutant had elevated levels of free asparagine in mature seed. This phenotype was observed exclusively under conditions of low illumination, when a low ratio of carbon to nitrogen was translocated to the seed. Mutants deficient in one or both asparaginases were more sensitive than wild-type to inhibition of primary root elongation and root hair emergence by L-asparagine as a single nitrogen source. This enhanced inhibition was associated with increased accumulation of asparagine in the root of the double aspga1-1/-b1-1 mutant. This indicates that inhibition of root growth is likely elicited by asparagine itself or an asparagine-derived metabolite, other than the products of asparaginase, aspartic acid or ammonia. During germination, a fusion between the ASPGA1 promoter and beta-glucuronidase was expressed in endosperm cells starting at the micropylar end. Expression was initially high throughout the root and hypocotyl, but became restricted to the root tip after three days, which may indicate a transition to nitrogen-heterotrophic growth.
- Published
- 2012
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6. Relationship between asparagine metabolism and protein concentration in soybean seed.
- Author
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Pandurangan S, Pajak A, Molnar SJ, Cober ER, Dhaubhadel S, Hernández-Sebastià C, Kaiser WM, Nelson RL, Huber SC, and Marsolais F
- Subjects
- Asparaginase genetics, Asparaginase metabolism, Aspartate-Ammonia Ligase genetics, Aspartate-Ammonia Ligase metabolism, Blotting, Western, Gene Expression Regulation, Plant, Inbreeding, Plant Proteins genetics, Quantitative Trait Loci genetics, Quantitative Trait, Heritable, RNA, Messenger genetics, RNA, Messenger metabolism, Recombination, Genetic genetics, Seeds enzymology, Seeds growth & development, Glycine max enzymology, Glycine max genetics, Glycine max growth & development, Asparagine metabolism, Plant Proteins metabolism, Seeds metabolism, Glycine max metabolism
- Abstract
The relationship between asparagine metabolism and protein concentration was investigated in soybean seed. Phenotyping of a population of recombinant inbred lines adapted to Illinois confirmed a positive correlation between free asparagine levels in developing seeds and protein concentration at maturity. Analysis of a second population of recombinant inbred lines adapted to Ontario associated the elevated free asparagine trait with two of four quantitative trait loci determining population variation for protein concentration, including a major one on chromosome 20 (linkage group I) which has been reported in multiple populations. In the seed coat, levels of asparagine synthetase were high at 50 mg and progressively declined until 150 mg seed weight, suggesting that nitrogenous assimilates are pre-conditioned at early developmental stages to enable a high concentration of asparagine in the embryo. The levels of asparaginase B1 showed an opposite pattern, being low at 50 mg and progressively increased until 150 mg, coinciding with an active phase of storage reserve accumulation. In a pair of genetically related cultivars, ∼2-fold higher levels of asparaginase B1 protein and activity in seed coat, were associated with high protein concentration, reflecting enhanced flux of nitrogen. Transcript expression analyses attributed this difference to a specific asparaginase gene, ASPGB1a. These results contribute to our understanding of the processes determining protein concentration in soybean seed.
- Published
- 2012
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7. Proteomic analysis of common bean seed with storage protein deficiency reveals up-regulation of sulfur-rich proteins and starch and raffinose metabolic enzymes, and down-regulation of the secretory pathway.
- Author
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Marsolais F, Pajak A, Yin F, Taylor M, Gabriel M, Merino DM, Ma V, Kameka A, Vijayan P, Pham H, Huang S, Rivoal J, Bett K, Hernández-Sebastià C, Liu Q, Bertrand A, and Chapman R
- Subjects
- 1,4-alpha-Glucan Branching Enzyme genetics, Amino Acids, Sulfur metabolism, Down-Regulation, Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel, Gene Expression Profiling, Gene Expression Regulation, Plant, Phaseolus enzymology, Plant Proteins, Proteomics methods, Raffinose metabolism, Starch Synthase genetics, UDPglucose 4-Epimerase genetics, Up-Regulation, rab1 GTP-Binding Proteins genetics, Phaseolus genetics, Seed Storage Proteins genetics
- Abstract
A deficiency in major seed storage proteins is associated with a nearly two-fold increase in sulfur amino acid content in genetically related lines of common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris). Their mature seed proteome was compared by an approach combining label-free quantification by spectral counting, 2-DE, and analysis of selective extracts. Lack of phaseolin, phytohemagglutinin and arcelin was mainly compensated by increases in legumin, alpha-amylase inhibitors and mannose lectin FRIL. Along with legumin, albumin-2, defensin and albumin-1 were major contributors to the elevated sulfur amino acid content. Coordinate induction of granule-bound starch synthase I, starch synthase II-2 and starch branching enzyme were associated with minor alteration of starch composition, whereas increased levels of UDP-glucose 4-epimerase were correlated with a 30% increase in raffinose content. Induction of cell division cycle protein 48 and ubiquitin suggested enhanced ER-associated degradation. This was not associated with a classical unfolded protein response as the levels of ER HSC70-cognate binding protein were actually reduced in the mutant. Repression of rab1 GTPase was consistent with decreased traffic through the secretory pathway. Collectively, these results have implications for the nutritional quality of common bean, and provide information on the pleiotropic phenotype associated with storage protein deficiency in a dicotyledonous seed., (Crown Copyright 2010. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
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8. Seed storage protein deficiency improves sulfur amino acid content in common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.): redirection of sulfur from gamma-glutamyl-S-methyl-cysteine.
- Author
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Taylor M, Chapman R, Beyaert R, Hernández-Sebastià C, and Marsolais F
- Subjects
- Amino Acids analysis, Cysteine analogs & derivatives, Cysteine chemistry, Nutritive Value, Phaseolus genetics, Amino Acids, Sulfur analysis, Dipeptides chemistry, Phaseolus chemistry, Plant Proteins analysis, Seeds chemistry, Sulfur analysis
- Abstract
The contents of sulfur amino acids in seeds of common bean ( Phaseolus vulgaris L.) are suboptimal for nutrition. They accumulate large amounts of a gamma-glutamyl dipeptide of S-methyl-cysteine, a nonprotein amino acid that cannot substitute for methionine or cysteine in the diet. Protein accumulation and amino acid composition were characterized in three genetically related lines integrating a progressive deficiency in major seed storage proteins, phaseolin, phytohemagglutinin, and arcelin. Nitrogen, carbon, and sulfur contents were comparable among the three lines. The contents of S-methyl-cysteine and gamma-glutamyl-S-methyl-cysteine were progressively reduced in the mutants. Sulfur was shifted predominantly to the protein cysteine pool, while total methionine was only slightly elevated. Methionine and cystine contents (mg per g protein) were increased by up to ca. 40%, to levels slightly above FAO guidelines on amino acid requirements for human nutrition. These findings may be useful to improve the nutritional quality of common bean.
- Published
- 2008
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9. Free amino acid profiles suggest a possible role for asparagine in the control of storage-product accumulation in developing seeds of low- and high-protein soybean lines.
- Author
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Hernández-Sebastià C, Marsolais F, Saravitz C, Israel D, Dewey RE, and Huber SC
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- Cotyledon physiology, Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental, Gene Expression Regulation, Plant, Light, Plant Oils metabolism, Seeds radiation effects, Glycine max embryology, Glycine max radiation effects, Transcription, Genetic, Amino Acids metabolism, Asparagine physiology, Plant Proteins biosynthesis, Seeds physiology, Glycine max metabolism
- Abstract
Several approaches were taken to examine the role of N-assimilate supply in the control of soybean (Glycine max) seed composition. In the first study, developing seeds were grown in vitro with D-[U-14C]sucrose (Suc) and different concentrations of Gln. Light stimulated carbon flux into oil and protein, and was required to sustain Suc uptake and anabolic processes under conditions of elevated nitrogen supply. High Gln supply resulted in higher transcript levels of beta-conglycinin and oleosin. In the second study, analyses of soluble amino acid pools in two genetically related lines, NC103 and NC106 (low- and high-seed protein, respectively) showed that, in the light, NC106 accumulated higher levels of Asn and several other amino acids in developing cotyledons compared with NC103, whereas at the seed coat and apoplast levels both lines were similar. In the dark, NC103 accumulated Gln, Arg, and its precursors, suggesting a reduced availability of organic acids required for amino acid interconversions, while NC106 maintained higher levels of the pyruvate-derived amino acids Val, Leu, and Ile. Comparing NC103 and NC106, differences in seed composition were reflected in steady-state transcript levels of storage proteins and the lipogenic enzyme multi-subunit acetyl CoA carboxylase. In the third study, a positive correlation (P < or = 0.05) between free Asn in developing cotyledons and seed protein content at maturity was confirmed in a comparison of five unrelated field-grown cultivars. The findings support the hypothesis that high seed-protein content in soybean is determined by the capacity of the embryo to take up nitrogen sources and to synthesize storage proteins. Asn levels are probably tightly regulated in the embryo of high-protein lines, and may act as a metabolic signal of seed nitrogen status.
- Published
- 2005
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10. Identification of a new motif for CDPK phosphorylation in vitro that suggests ACC synthase may be a CDPK substrate.
- Author
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Hernández Sebastià C, Hardin SC, Clouse SD, Kieber JJ, and Huber SC
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- Amino Acid Motifs, Amino Acid Sequence, Binding Sites, Enzyme Activation, Molecular Sequence Data, Phosphorylation, Protein Binding, Structure-Activity Relationship, Substrate Specificity, Lyases chemistry, Lyases metabolism, Plant Proteins chemistry, Plant Proteins metabolism, Protein Kinases chemistry, Protein Kinases metabolism, Zea mays enzymology
- Abstract
1-Amino-cyclopropane-1-carboxylate synthase (ACS) catalyzes the rate-determining step in the biosynthesis of the plant hormone ethylene, and there is evidence for regulation of stability of the protein by reversible protein phosphorylation. The site of phosphorylation of the tomato enzyme, LeACS2, was recently reported to be Ser460, but the requisite protein kinase has not been identified. In the present study, a synthetic peptide based on the known regulatory phosphorylation site (KKNNLRLS460FSKRMY) in LeACS2 was found to be readily phosphorylated in vitro by several calcium-dependent protein kinases (CDPKs), but not a plant SNF1-related protein kinase or the kinase domain of the receptor-like kinase, BRI1, involved in brassinosteroid signaling. Studies with variants of the LeACS2-Ser460 peptide establish a fundamentally new phosphorylation motif that is broadly targeted by CDPKs: phi -1-[ST]0- phi +1-X-Basic+3-Basic+4, where phi is a hydrophobic residue. Database analysis using the new motif predicts a number of novel phosphorylation sites in plant proteins. Finally, we also demonstrate that CDPKs and SnRK1s do not recognize motifs presented in the reverse order, indicating that side chain interactions alone are not sufficient for substrate recognition.
- Published
- 2004
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11. Glomus intraradices causes differential changes in amino acid and starch concentrations of in vitro strawberry subjected to water stress.
- Author
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Hernández-Sebastià C, Samson G, Bernier PY, Piché Y, and Desjardins Y
- Abstract
The effect of colonization of tissue-cultured strawberry (Fragaria×ananassa Duch. cv. Kent) plantlets in vitro by the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus (AMF) Glomus intraradices on plantlet response to poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG)-8000-induced water stress was investigated. The plantlets were inoculated axenically and co-cultured with the AMF for 4 wk, then transferred to 15% PEG-8000 solutions for 4, 8 and 12 h. Relative water content, water potential, osmotic potential, leaf conductance for water vapour diffusion and photosynthetic efficiency as estimated by chlorophyll a fluorescence were all affected by the PEG treatment and its duration but not by the presence of the intraradical phase of the AMF. However, distinct differences in PEG-induced changes in amino acid content were observed between nonmycorrhizal and mycorrhizal plantlets. In the latter, the treatment with PEG caused a substantial decrease in asparagine levels in leaves that was accompanied by a marked increase in asparagine concentration in roots. The opposite was observed in nonmycorrhizal plantlets. Furthermore, concentrations of aspartic acid, serine, threonine, amino-N-butyric acid, alanine and starch increased in roots of mycorrhizal and decreased in nonmycorrhizal plantlets. Our results suggest the presence of a mobile pool of asparagine that can be translocated from leaves to roots or vice versa in response to PEG-induced water stress, depending on the mycorrhizal status of the plantlets. These opposite patterns suggest different strategies of mycorrhizal and nonmycorrhizal plantlets to water stress, which seem to involve different adjustments in nitrogen and carbon metabolism.
- Published
- 2000
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