9 results on '"Katy M. Christiansen"'
Search Results
2. Identification of a Sphingolipid α-Glucuronosyltransferase That Is Essential for Pollen Function inArabidopsis
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Christopher J. Petzold, Solomon Stonebloom, Katy M. Christiansen, Rebecca E. Cahoon, Godfrey P. Miles, Paul D. Adams, Edgar B. Cahoon, Joshua L. Heazlewood, Emilie A. Rennie, Paul Dupree, Berit Ebert, Hoda Khatab, Henrik Vibe Scheller, and David Twell
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Mannosyltransferase ,Mutant ,Arabidopsis ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Plant Science ,Biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Glucuronic Acid ,Tobacco ,Humans ,Arabidopsis thaliana ,Inositol ,Gene Silencing ,Glucuronosyltransferase ,Research Articles ,Sphingolipids ,Arabidopsis Proteins ,fungi ,Serine C-palmitoyltransferase ,food and beverages ,Cell Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Sphingolipid ,carbohydrates (lipids) ,Glucuronosyltransferase activity ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Pollen ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) - Abstract
Glycosyl inositol phosphorylceramide (GIPC) sphingolipids are a major class of lipids in fungi, protozoans, and plants. GIPCs are abundant in the plasma membrane in plants, comprising around a quarter of the total lipids in these membranes. Plant GIPCs contain unique glycan decorations that include a conserved glucuronic acid (GlcA) residue and various additional sugars; however, no proteins responsible for glycosylating GIPCs have been identified to date. Here, we show that the Arabidopsis thaliana protein INOSITOL PHOSPHORYLCERAMIDE GLUCURONOSYLTRANSFERASE1 (IPUT1) transfers GlcA from UDP-GlcA to GIPCs. To demonstrate IPUT1 activity, we introduced the IPUT1 gene together with genes for a UDP-glucose dehydrogenase from Arabidopsis and a human UDP-GlcA transporter into a yeast mutant deficient in the endogenous inositol phosphorylceramide (IPC) mannosyltransferase. In this engineered yeast strain, IPUT1 transferred GlcA to IPC. Overexpression or silencing of IPUT1 in Nicotiana benthamiana resulted in an increase or a decrease, respectively, in IPC glucuronosyltransferase activity in vitro. Plants in which IPUT1 was silenced accumulated IPC, the immediate precursor, as well as ceramides and glucosylceramides. Plants overexpressing IPUT1 showed an increased content of GIPCs. Mutations in IPUT1 are not transmitted through pollen, indicating that these sphingolipids are essential in plants.
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- 2014
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3. AtAPY1 and AtAPY2 Function as Golgi-Localized Nucleoside Diphosphatases in Arabidopsis thaliana
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Ariel Orellana, Jeemeng Lao, Joshua L. Heazlewood, Stanley J. Roux, Tsan-Yu Chiu, Katy M. Christiansen, Ignacio Moreno, Greg Clark, and Dominique Loqué
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Glycosylation ,Physiology ,Green Fluorescent Proteins ,Arabidopsis ,Golgi Apparatus ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Plant Science ,Guanosine Diphosphate ,Uridine Diphosphate ,symbols.namesake ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Cell Wall ,Microsomes ,Arabidopsis thaliana ,Nucleotide ,Pyrophosphatases ,Promoter Regions, Genetic ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,Arabidopsis Proteins ,Apyrase ,Genetic Complementation Test ,Wild type ,Galactose ,Biological Transport ,Intracellular Membranes ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Golgi apparatus ,biology.organism_classification ,Enzyme Activation ,Uridine diphosphate ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,symbols ,Nucleoside triphosphate ,RNA Interference - Abstract
Nucleoside triphosphate diphosphohydrolases (NTPDases; apyrases) (EC 3.6.1.5) hydrolyze di- and triphosphate nucleotides, but not monophosphate nucleotides. They are categorized as E-type ATPases, have a broad divalent cation (Mg(2+), Ca(2+)) requirement for activation and are insensitive to inhibitors of F-type, P-type and V-type ATPases. Among the seven NTPDases identified in Arabidopsis, only APYRASE 1 (AtAPY1) and APYRASE 2 (AtAPY2) have been previously characterized. In this work, either AtAPY1 or AtAPY2 tagged with C-terminal green fluorescent protein (GFP) driven by their respective native promoter can rescue the apy1 apy2 double knockout (apy1 apy2 dKO) successfully, and confocal microscopy reveals that these two Arabidopsis apyrases reside in the Golgi apparatus. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, both AtAPY1 and AtAPY2 can complement the Golgi-localized GDA1 mutant, rescuing its aberrant protein glycosylation phenotype. In Arabidopsis, microsomes of the wild type show higher substrate preferences toward UDP compared with other NDP substrates. Loss-of-function Arabidopsis AtAPY1 mutants exhibit reduced microsomal UDPase activity, and this activity is even more significantly reduced in the loss-of-function AtAPY2 mutant and in the AtAPY1/AtAPY2 RNA interference (RNAi) technology repressor lines. Microsomes from wild-type plants also have detectable GDPase activity, which is significantly reduced in apy2 but not apy1 mutants. The GFP-tagged AtAPY1 or AtAPY2 constructs in the apy1 apy2 dKO plants can restore microsomal UDP/GDPase activity, confirming that they both also have functional competency. The cell walls of apy1, apy2 and the RNAi-silenced lines all have an increased composition of galactose, but the transport efficiency of UDP-galactose across microsomal membranes was not altered. Taken together, these results reveal that AtAPY1 and AtAPY2 are Golgi-localized nucleotide diphosphatases and are likely to have roles in regulating UDP/GDP concentrations in the Golgi lumen.
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- 2012
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4. Isolation and Proteomic Characterization of the Arabidopsis Golgi Defines Functional and Novel Components Involved in Plant Cell Wall Biosynthesis
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Andrew Carroll, Jun Ito, Aindrila Mukhopadhyay, Bernhard Knierim, Andreia M. Smith-Moritz, Joshua L. Heazlewood, Tanveer S. Batth, Dominique Loqué, Harriet T. Parsons, Masood Z. Hadi, Henrik Vibe Scheller, Peter McInerney, Stephanie Morrison, Manfred Auer, Christopher J. Petzold, and Katy M. Christiansen
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Proteomics ,Glycosylation ,Proteome ,Physiology ,Immunoblotting ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Arabidopsis ,Golgi Apparatus ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Plant Science ,Genes, Plant ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,symbols.namesake ,Microscopy, Electron, Transmission ,Cell Wall ,Protein-fragment complementation assay ,Plant Cells ,Centrifugation, Density Gradient ,Genetics ,Pyrophosphatases ,Secretory pathway ,Enzyme Assays ,Base Sequence ,biology ,Arabidopsis Proteins ,Endoplasmic reticulum ,Apyrase ,Genetic Complementation Test ,Intracellular Membranes ,Breakthrough Technologies ,Golgi apparatus ,biology.organism_classification ,Cell biology ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,symbols ,Chromatography, Liquid - Abstract
The plant Golgi plays a pivotal role in the biosynthesis of cell wall matrix polysaccharides, protein glycosylation, and vesicle trafficking. Golgi-localized proteins have become prospective targets for reengineering cell wall biosynthetic pathways for the efficient production of biofuels from plant cell walls. However, proteomic characterization of the Golgi has so far been limited, owing to the technical challenges inherent in Golgi purification. In this study, a combination of density centrifugation and surface charge separation techniques have allowed the reproducible isolation of Golgi membranes from Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) at sufficiently high purity levels for in-depth proteomic analysis. Quantitative proteomic analysis, immunoblotting, enzyme activity assays, and electron microscopy all confirm high purity levels. A composition analysis indicated that approximately 19% of proteins were likely derived from contaminating compartments and ribosomes. The localization of 13 newly assigned proteins to the Golgi using transient fluorescent markers further validated the proteome. A collection of 371 proteins consistently identified in all replicates has been proposed to represent the Golgi proteome, marking an appreciable advancement in numbers of Golgi-localized proteins. A significant proportion of proteins likely involved in matrix polysaccharide biosynthesis were identified. The potential within this proteome for advances in understanding Golgi processes has been demonstrated by the identification and functional characterization of the first plant Golgi-resident nucleoside diphosphatase, using a yeast complementation assay. Overall, these data show key proteins involved in primary cell wall synthesis and include a mixture of well-characterized and unknown proteins whose biological roles and importance as targets for future research can now be realized.
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- 2012
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5. Negative regulation of defence signalling pathways by the EDR1 protein kinase
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Katy M. Christiansen, Natalie Rodibaugh, Roger W. Innes, and Yangnan Gu
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Genetics ,Soil Science ,Promoter ,Plant Science ,Plant disease resistance ,Biology ,WRKY protein domain ,Cell biology ,Transcriptome ,Endomembrane system ,Protein kinase A ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Molecular Biology ,Transcription factor ,Gene - Abstract
SUMMARY The enhanced disease resistance 1 (edr1) mutant of Arabidopsis confers enhanced resistance to bacterial and fungal pathogens. To better understand how edr1-mediated resistance occurs, we performed transcriptome analyses on wild-type and edr1 plants inoculated with the fungal pathogen Golovinomyces cichoracearum (powdery mildew). The expression of many known and putative defence-associated genes was more rapidly induced, and to higher levels, in edr1 plants relative to the wild-type. Many of the genes with elevated expression encoded WRKY transcription factors and there was enrichment for their binding sites in promoters of the genes upregulated in edr1. Confocal microscopy of transiently expressed EDR1 protein showed that a significant fraction of EDR1 was localized to the nucleus, suggesting that EDR1 could potentially interact with transcription factors in the nucleus. Analysis of gene ontology annotations revealed that genes associated with the endomembrane system, defence, reactive oxygen species (ROS) production and protein kinases were induced early in the edr1 mutant, and that elevated expression of the endomembrane system, defence and ROS-related genes was maintained for at least 4 days after infection.
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- 2011
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6. Regulation of Plant Disease Resistance, Stress Responses, Cell Death, and Ethylene Signaling in Arabidopsis by the EDR1 Protein Kinase
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Dingzhong Tang, Katy M. Christiansen, and Roger W. Innes
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Genetics ,Hypersensitive response ,Senescence ,Physiology ,Kinase ,Plant Science ,Biology ,Protein degradation ,Cell biology ,Stress Response Signaling ,Protein kinase domain ,Signal transduction ,Protein kinase A - Abstract
ENHANCED DISEASE RESISTANCE 1 (EDR1) encodes a CTR1-like kinase and was previously reported to function as a negative regulator of disease resistance and ethylene-induced senescence. Here, we report that the edr1 mutant displays enhanced stress responses and spontaneous necrotic lesions under drought conditions in the absence of pathogen, suggesting that EDR1 is also involved in stress response signaling and cell death regulation. Double mutant analysis revealed that these drought-induced phenotypes require salicylic acid but not ethylene signaling pathways. In addition, the edr1-mediated ethylene-induced senescence phenotype was suppressed by mutations in EIN2, but not by mutations in SID2, PAD4, EDS1, or NPR1, suggesting that EDR1 functions at a point of cross talk between ethylene and salicylic acid signaling that impinges on senescence and cell death. Two edr1-associated phenotypes, drought-induced growth inhibition and ethylene-induced senescence, were suppressed by mutations in ORE9, implicating ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation in the regulation of these phenotypes. However, the ore9 mutation did not suppress edr1-mediated enhanced disease resistance to powdery mildew or spontaneous lesions, indicating that these phenotypes are controlled by separate signaling pathways. To investigate the function of the EDR1 kinase domain, we expressed the C-terminal third of EDR1 in wild-type Columbia and edr1 backgrounds under the control of a dexamethasone-inducible promoter. Overexpression of the EDR1 kinase domain in an edr1 background had no obvious effect on edr1-associated phenotypes. However, overexpression of the EDR1 kinase domain in a wild-type Columbia background caused dominant negative phenotypes, including enhanced disease resistance to powdery mildew and enhanced ethylene-induced senescence; thus, the overexpressed EDR1 kinase domain alone does not exert EDR1 function, but rather negatively affects the function of native EDR1 protein.
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- 2005
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7. The plant glycosyltransferase clone collection for functional genomics
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Sara Fasmer Hansen, Masood Z. Hadi, Solomon Stonebloom, Anongpat Suttangkakul, Peter McInerney, Nathan J. Hillson, Fan Yang, Andreia M. Smith-Moritz, Jennifer R. Bromley, Pamela C. Ronald, Tsan-Yu Chiu, Joshua L. Heazlewood, Henrik Vibe Scheller, Jeemeng Lao, Hector Plahar, Berit Ebert, Dominique Loqué, Miguel E. Vega-Sánchez, Ai Oikawa, Katy M. Christiansen, Susana M. González Fernández-Niño, and Paul D. Adams
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Genetics ,CAZy ,biology ,Arabidopsis ,food and beverages ,Glycosyltransferases ,Genomics ,Cell Biology ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Genome ,Cell Wall ,Arabidopsis thaliana ,Human genome ,Functional genomics ,Gene - Abstract
The glycosyltransferases (GTs) are an important and functionally diverse family of enzymes involved in glycan and glycoside biosynthesis. Plants have evolved large families of GTs which undertake the array of glycosylation reactions that occur during plant development and growth. Based on the Carbohydrate-Active enZymes (CAZy) database, the genome of the reference plant Arabidopsis thaliana codes for over 450 GTs, while the rice genome (Oryza sativa) contains over 600 members. Collectively, GTs from these reference plants can be classified into over 40 distinct GT families. Although these enzymes are involved in many important plant specific processes such as cell-wall and secondary metabolite biosynthesis, few have been functionally characterized. We have sought to develop a plant GTs clone resource that will enable functional genomic approaches to be undertaken by the plant research community. In total, 403 (88%) of CAZy defined Arabidopsis GTs have been cloned, while 96 (15%) of the GTs coded by rice have been cloned. The collection resulted in the update of a number of Arabidopsis GT gene models. The clones represent full-length coding sequences without termination codons and are Gateway® compatible. To demonstrate the utility of this JBEI GT Collection, a set of efficient particle bombardment plasmids (pBullet) was also constructed with markers for the endomembrane. The utility of the pBullet collection was demonstrated by localizing all members of the Arabidopsis GT14 family to the Golgi apparatus or the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Updates to these resources are available at the JBEI GT Collection website http://www.addgene.org/.
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- 2014
8. 1001 Proteomes: a functional proteomics portal for the analysis of Arabidopsis thaliana accessions
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Joffrey Fitz, Jun Cao, Anna Lipzen, Wendy Schackwitz, A. Michelle Smith-Moritz, Hiren J. Joshi, Detlef Weigel, Len A. Pennacchio, Joshua L. Heazlewood, Katy M. Christiansen, and Joel Martin
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Statistics and Probability ,Proteomics ,DNA, Plant ,Proteome ,Sequence analysis ,Arabidopsis ,Computational biology ,Biochemistry ,Genome ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Arabidopsis thaliana ,Protein phosphorylation ,Phosphorylation ,Databases, Protein ,Molecular Biology ,biology ,business.industry ,Arabidopsis Proteins ,fungi ,food and beverages ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,biology.organism_classification ,Computer Science Applications ,Biotechnology ,Computational Mathematics ,Computational Theory and Mathematics ,Amino Acid Substitution ,business ,Protein Processing, Post-Translational ,Reference genome - Abstract
Motivation: The sequencing of over a thousand natural strains of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana is producing unparalleled information at the genetic level for plant researchers. To enable the rapid exploitation of these data for functional proteomics studies, we have created a resource for the visualization of protein information and proteomic datasets for sequenced natural strains of A. thaliana. Results: The 1001 Proteomes portal can be used to visualize amino acid substitutions or non-synonymous single-nucleotide polymorphisms in individual proteins of A. thaliana based on the reference genome Col-0. We have used the available processed sequence information to analyze the conservation of known residues subject to protein phosphorylation among these natural strains. The substitution of amino acids in A. thaliana natural strains is heavily constrained and is likely a result of the conservation of functional attributes within proteins. At a practical level, we demonstrate that this information can be used to clarify ambiguously defined phosphorylation sites from phosphoproteomic studies. Protein sets of available natural variants are available for download to enable proteomic studies on these accessions. Together this information can be used to uncover the possible roles of specific amino acids in determining the structure and function of proteins in the model plant A. thaliana. An online portal to enable the community to exploit these data can be accessed at http://1001proteomes.masc-proteomics.org/ Contact: jlheazlewood@lbl.gov Supplementary information: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.
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- 2012
9. Powdery mildew resistance conferred by loss of the ENHANCED DISEASE RESISTANCE1 protein kinase is suppressed by a missense mutation in KEEP ON GOING, a regulator of abscisic acid signaling
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Natalie Rodibaugh, Yinan Lan, Katy M. Christiansen, Anna Wawrzynska, and Roger W. Innes
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Physiology ,Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases ,Mutant ,Arabidopsis ,Mutation, Missense ,Plant Science ,medicine.disease_cause ,Genes, Plant ,Ascomycota ,Genetics ,medicine ,Missense mutation ,Arabidopsis thaliana ,RNA, Messenger ,Protein kinase A ,Mutation ,biology ,Arabidopsis Proteins ,Wild type ,food and beverages ,biology.organism_classification ,Ubiquitin ligase ,Cell biology ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,biology.protein ,Genetic screen ,Abscisic Acid ,Signal Transduction ,Research Article - Abstract
Loss-of-function mutations in the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) ENHANCED DISEASE RESISTANCE1 (EDR1) gene confer enhanced resistance to infection by powdery mildew (Golovinomyces cichoracearum). EDR1 encodes a protein kinase, but its substrates and the pathways regulated by EDR1 are unknown. To identify components of the EDR1 signal transduction pathway(s), we conducted a forward genetic screen for mutations that suppressed edr1-mediated disease resistance. Genetic mapping and cloning of one of these suppressor mutations revealed a recessive missense mutation in the KEEP ON GOING gene (KEG; At5g13530), which we designated keg-4. KEG encodes a multidomain protein that includes a RING E3 ligase domain, a kinase domain, ankyrin repeats, and HERC2-like repeats. The KEG protein has previously been shown to have ubiquitin ligase activity and to negatively regulate protein levels of the transcription factor ABCISIC ACID INSENSITIVE5. KEG mRNA levels were found to be 3-fold higher in edr1 mutant plants compared to wild type. Loss-of-function mutations in KEG are seedling lethal and are hypersensitive to glucose and abscisic acid (ABA). The keg-4 mutation, in contrast, conferred resistance to 6% glucose and suppressed edr1-mediated hypersensitivity to ABA, suggesting that the keg-4 mutation suppresses ABA signaling by altering KEG function. Several ABA-responsive genes were found to be further up-regulated in the edr1 mutant following ABA treatment, and this up-regulation was suppressed by the keg-4 mutation. We conclude that edr1-mediated resistance to powdery mildew is mediated, in part, by enhanced ABA signaling.
- Published
- 2008
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