Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8357790 | Plant Science | 2015 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Gall forming phylloxera may compete for nutrients with meristematic tissues and develop heterotrophic structures that act as carbon sinks. In this work, we studied the underlying starch metabolism, sink-source translocation of soluble sugars towards and within root galls. We demonstrated that nodosities store carbohydrates by starch accumulation and monitored the expression of genes involved in the starch metabolic. Thereby we proved that the nodosity is symplastically connected to the source tissues through its development and that the starch metabolism is significantly affected to synthesize and degrade starch within the gall. Genes required for starch biosynthesis and degradation are up-regulated. Among the carbohydrate transporters the expression of a glucose-6-phosphate translocater, one sucrose transporter and two SWEET proteins were increases, whereas hexose transporters, tonoplast monosaccharide transporter and Erd6-like sugar transporters were decreased. We found general evidence for plant response to osmotic stress in the nodosity as previously suggested for gall induction processes. We conclude that nodosities are heterogenous plant organs that accumulate starch to serve as temporary storage structure that is gradually withdrawn by phylloxera. Phylloxera transcriptionally reprograms gall tissues beyond primary metabolism and included downstream secondary processes, including response to osmotic stress.
Keywords
qPCRDFCITMCsCFDABLAST-like alignment toolBSTFA4-dimethylaminopyridineDMAPPTFEHEPES4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acidGC–MSN,O-bis(trimethylsilyl)trifluoroacetamideATPBasic Local Alignment Search ToolBlastGrapevineTrimethylsilyl chloridefold changeCarboxyfluorescein diacetateBLATgas chromatography–mass spectrometryPrimary metabolismNADHNADnicotinamide adenine dinucleotideGene ontologyquantitative polymerase chain reactionpolytetrafluoroethyleneoptical densityCarbohydrate
Related Topics
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Plant Science
Authors
Michaela Griesser, Nora Caroline Lawo, Sara Crespo-Martinez, Katharina Schoedl-Hummel, Krzysztof Wieczorek, Miroslawa Gorecka, Falk Liebner, Thomas Zweckmair, Nancy Stralis Pavese, David Kreil, Astrid Forneck,