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Browsing by Author "Goebel, Cornelia"

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    {2}-Metallocryptands of Iron and Gallium: Synthesis, Structure, and Properties [1]
    (Verlag Z Naturforsch, 2009)
    Saalfrank, Rolf W.
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    Reimann, Uwe
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    Scheurer, Andreas
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    Hampel, Frank
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    Goebel, Cornelia
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    Herbst-Irmer, Regine  
    Starting from CH-acidic tetradentate ligands H2L (1) and triethylamine, the synthesis and characterisation of four,dinuclear iron(III) and gallium(III) cryptands [M-2(L)(3)] (3, 4) are reported. The structures of the ligand H2L (1a) and the triple helicate 3b were determined by X-ray diffraction analysis. The ferric complexes 3 were further characterised by Mossbauer spectroscopy and cyclic voltammetry. NMR spectroscopy proved the diamagnetic gallium(III) cryptands 4 to remain stable in solution for several days.
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    A Bisallylic Mini-lipoxygenase from Cyanobacterium Cyanothece sp That Has an Iron as Cofactor
    (Amer Soc Biochemistry Molecular Biology Inc, 2010)
    Andreou, Alexandra
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    Goebel, Cornelia
    ;
    Hamberg, Mats
    ;
    Feussner, Ivo  
    Lipoxygenases are enzymes that are found ubiquitously in higher animals and plants, but have only recently been identified in a number of bacteria. The genome of the diazotrophic unicellular cyanobacterium Cyanothece sp. harbors two genes with homology to lipoxygenases. Here we describe the isolation of one gene, formerly named csplox2. It was cloned, and the protein was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified. The purified enzyme belongs to the group of prokaryotic mini lipoxygenases, because it had a molecular mass of 65 kDa. Interestingly, it catalyzed the conversion of linoleic acid, the only endogenously found polyunsaturated fatty acid, primarily to the bisallylic hydroperoxide 11R-hydroperoxyoctadecadienoic acid. This product had previously only been described for the manganese lipoxygenase from the take all fungus, Gaeumannomyces graminis. By contrast, CspLOX2 was shown to be an iron lipoxygenase. In addition, CspLOX2 formed a mixture of typical conjugated lipoxygenase products, e. g. 9R- and 13S-hydroperoxide. The conversion of linoleic acid took place with a maximum reaction rate of 31 s(-1). Incubation of the enzyme with [(11S)-(2)H] linoleic acid led to the formation of hydroperoxides that had lost the deuterium label, thus suggesting that CspLOX2 catalyzes antarafacial oxygenation as opposed to the mechanism of manganese lipoxygenase. CspLOX2 could also oxidize diarachidonylglycerophosphatidylcholine with similar specificity as the free fatty acid, indicating that binding of the substrate takes place with a "tail-first" orientation. We conclude that CspLOX2 is a novel iron mini-lipoxygenase that catalyzes the formation of bisallylic hydroperoxide as the major product.
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    A lipoxygenase with linoleate diol synthase activity from Nostoc sp PCC 7120
    (Portland Press Ltd, 2008)
    Lang, Imke
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    Goebel, Cornelia
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    Porzel, Andrea
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    Heilmann, Ingo  
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    Feussner, Ivo  
    The dioxygenation of PUFAs (poly unsaturated fatty acids) in plants is mainly catalysed by members of the LOX (lipoxygenase) enzyme family. LOX products may be further metabolized, and are known as signalling substances in plant development and in responses to wounding and pathogen attack. In contrast with the situation in eukaryotes, information on the relevance of lipid peroxide metabolism in prokaryotic organisms is scarce. Therefore, we aimed to analyse LOXs and oxylipin patterns of cyanobacterial origin. A search of the genomic sequence of the cyanobacterium Nostoc sp. PCC 7120 suggested an open reading frame encoding a putative LOX named NspLOX that harboured an N-terminal extension. Individual analysis of recombinant C-terminal domain revealed enzymatic activity as a linoleate (9R)LOX. Analysis of the full-length NspLOX protein, however, revealed linoleate diol synthase activity, generating (10E,12E)9,14-dihydroxy-10,12-octadecadienoic acid as the main product from LA (linoleic acid) and (10E,12E,14E)-9,16-dihydroxy- 10, 12,14-octadecatrienoic acid as the main product from ALA (alpha-LA) substrates respectively, with ALA as preferred substrate. The enzyme exhibited a broad pH optimum between pH 7 and pH 10. Soluble extracts of Nostoc sp. contain more 9-LOX-derived hydroperoxides in sonified than in non-sonified cells, but products of full-length NspLOX were not detectable under the conditions used. As no other LOX-like sequence was identified in the genome of Nostoc sp. PCC 7120, the results presented suggest that (9R)LOX-derived oxylipins may represent the endogenous products of NspLOX. Based on the biochemical results of NspLOX, we suggest that this bifunctional enzyme may represent a more ancient way to control the intracellular amount of oxylipins in this cyanobacterium.
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    A Size Barrier Limits Protein Diffusion at the Cell Surface to Generate Lipid-Rich Myelin-Membrane Sheets
    (Cell Press, 2011)
    Aggarwal, Shweta
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    Yurlova, Larisa
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    Snaidero, Nicolas
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    Reetz, Christina
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    Frey, Steffen
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    Zimmermann, Johannes
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    Paehler, Gesa
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    Janshoff, Andreas  
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    Friedrichs, Jens
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    Mueller, Daniel J.
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    Goebel, Cornelia
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    Simons, Mikael  
    The insulating layers of myelin membrane wrapped around axons by oligodendrocytes are essential for the rapid conduction of nerve impulses in the central nervous system. To fulfill this function as an electrical insulator, myelin requires a unique lipid and protein composition. Here we show that oligodendrocytes employ a barrier that functions as a physical filter to generate the lipid-rich myelin-membrane sheets. Myelin basic protein (MBP) forms this molecular sieve and restricts the diffusion of proteins with large cytoplasmic domains into myelin. The barrier is generated from MBP molecules that line the entire sheet and is, thus, intimately intertwined with the biogenesis of the polarized cell surface. This system might have evolved in oligodendrocytes in order to generate an anisotropic membrane organization that facilitates the assembly of highly insulating lipid-rich membranes.
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    Allene oxide synthase from Arabidopsis thaliana (CYP74A1) exhibits dual specificity that is regulated by monomer-micelle association
    (Elsevier Science Bv, 2006)
    Hughes, Richard K.
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    Belfield, Eric J.
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    Ashton, Ruth
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    Fairhurst, Shirley A.
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    Goebel, Cornelia
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    Stumpe, Michael
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    Feussner, Ivo  
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    Casey, Rod
    We investigate the effects of detergent on the kinetics and oligomeric state of allene oxide synthase (AOS) from Arabidopsis thaliana (CYP74A1). We show that detergent-free CYP74A1 is monomeric and highly water soluble with dual specificity, but has relatively low activity. Detergent micelles promote a 48-fold increase in k(cat)/K-m (to 5.9 x 10(7) M-1 s(-1)) with concomitant changes in the spin state equilibrium of the haem-iron due to the binding of a single detergent micelle to the protein monomer, which is atypical of P450 enzymes. This mechanism is shown to be an important determinant of the substrate specificity of CYP74A1. CYP74A1 may be suited for structural resolution of the first plant cytochrome P450 and its 9-AOS activity and behaviour in vitro has implications for its role in planta. (c) 2006 Federation of European Biochemical Societies. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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    Antisense inhibition of the plastidial glucose-6-phosphate/phosphate translocator in Vicia seeds shifts cellular differentiation and promotes protein storage
    (Blackwell Publishing, 2007)
    Rolletschek, Hardy
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    Nguyen, Thuy H.
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    Haeusler, Rainer E.
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    Rutten, Twan
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    Goebel, Cornelia
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    Feussner, Ivo  
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    Radchuk, Ruslana
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    Tewes, Annegret
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    Claus, Bernhard
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    Klukas, Christian
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    Linemann, Ute
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    Weber, Hans
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    Wobus, Ulrich
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    Borisjuk, Ljudmilla
    The glucose-6-phosphate/phosphate translocator (GPT) acts as an importer of carbon into the plastid. Despite the potential importance of GPT for storage in crop seeds, its regulatory role in biosynthetic pathways that are active during seed development is poorly understood. We have isolated GPT1 from Vicia narbonensis and studied its role in seed development using a transgenic approach based on the seed-specific legumin promoter LeB4. GPT1 is highly expressed in vegetative sink tissues, flowers and young seeds. In the embryo, localized upregulation of GPT1 at the onset of storage coincides with the onset of starch accumulation. Embryos of transgenic plants expressing antisense GPT1 showed a significant reduction (up to 55%) in the specific transport rate of glucose-6-phosphate as determined using proteoliposomes prepared from embryos. Furthermore, amyloplasts developed later and were smaller in size, while the expression of genes encoding plastid-specific translocators and proteins involved in starch biosynthesis was decreased. Metabolite analysis and stable isotope labelling demonstrated that starch biosynthesis was also reduced, although storage protein biosynthesis increased. This metabolic shift was characterized by upregulation of genes related to nitrogen uptake and protein storage, morphological variation of the protein-storing vacuoles, and a crude protein content of mature seeds of transgenics that was up to 30% higher than in wild-type. These findings provide evidence that (1) the prevailing level of GPT1 abundance/activity is rate-limiting for the synthesis of starch in developing seeds, (2) GPT1 exerts a controlling function on assimilate partitioning into storage protein, and (3) GPT1 is essential for the differentiation of embryonic plastids and seed maturation.
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    Attacks by a piercing-sucking insect (Myzus persicae Sultzer) or a chewing insect (Leptinotarsa decemlineata Say) on potato plants (Solanum tuberosum L.) induce differential changes in volatile compound release and oxylipin synthesis
    (Oxford Univ Press, 2009)
    Gosset, Virginie
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    Harmel, Nicolas
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    Goebel, Cornelia
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    Francis, Frederic
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    Haubruge, Eric
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    Wathelet, Jean-Paul
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    du Jardin, Patrick
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    Feussner, Ivo  
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    Fauconnier, Marie-Laure
    Plant defensive strategies bring into play blends of compounds dependent on the type of attacker and coming from different synthesis pathways. Interest in the field is mainly focused on volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and jasmonic acid (JA). By contrast, little is known about the oxidized polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), such as PUFA-hydroperoxides, PUFA-hydroxides, or PUFA-ketones. PUFA-hydroperoxides and their derivatives might be involved in stress response and show antimicrobial activities. Hydroperoxides are also precursors of JA and some volatile compounds. In this paper, the differential biochemical response of a plant against insects with distinct feeding behaviours is characterized not only in terms of VOC signature and JA profile but also in terms of their precursors synthesized through the lipoxygenase (LOX)-pathway at the early stage of the plant response. For this purpose, two leading pests of potato with distinct feeding behaviours were used: the Colorado Potato Beetle (Leptinotarsa decemlineata Say), a chewing herbivore, and the Green Peach Aphid (Myzus persicae Sulzer), a piercing-sucking insect. The volatile signatures identified clearly differ in function with the feeding behaviour of the attacker and the aphid, which causes the smaller damages, triggers the emission of a higher number of volatiles. In addition, 9-LOX products, which are usually associated with defence against pathogens, were exclusively activated by aphid attack. Furthermore, a correlation between volatiles and JA accumulation and the evolution of their precursors was determined. Finally, the role of the insect itself on the plant response after insect infestation was highlighted.
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    Characterization of a divinyl ether biosynthetic pathway specifically associated with pathogenesis in tobacco
    (Amer Soc Plant Biologists, 2007)
    Fammartino, Alessandro
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    Cardinale, Francesca
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    Goebel, Cornelia
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    Mene-Saffrane, Laurent
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    Fournier, Joelle
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    Feussner, Ivo  
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    Esquerre-Tugaye, Marie-Therese
    In tobacco ( Nicotiana tabacum), an elicitor- and pathogen-induced 9-lipoxygenase ( LOX) gene, NtLOX1, is essential for full resistance to pathogens, notably to an incompatible race of Phytophthora parasitica var. nicotianae ( Ppn race 0). In this work, we aimed to identify those oxylipins induced during attempted infection by Ppn race 0 and down-regulated in NtLOX1 antisense plants. Here we show that colneleic and colnelenic acids, which significantly inhibit germination of Ppn zoospores, are produced in roots of wild-type plants inoculated with Ppn, but are down-regulated in NtLOX1 antisense plants. A search for a tobacco gene encoding the enzyme involved in the formation of these divinyl ether ( DVE) fatty acids resulted in the cloning and characterization of a DVE synthase ( DES) clone ( NtDES1). NtDES1 is a 9-DES, specifically converting fatty acid 9-hydroperoxides into DVE fatty acids. NtDES1 has the potential to act in combination with NtLOX1 because, in the presence of the two enzymes, linoleic and linolenic acids were converted in vitro into colneleic and colnelenic acids, respectively. In addition, the pattern of NtDES1 gene expression was quite similar to that of NtLOX1. Their transcripts were undetected in healthy tissues from different plant organs, and accumulated locally and transiently after elicitation and fungal infection, but not after wounding. Visualization of NtDES1-yellow fluorescent protein and NtLOX1-cyan fluorescent protein fusion proteins in tobacco leaves indicated that both localize in the cytosol and are excluded from plastids, consistent with the presumed location of the 9-LOX pathway in plants and the lack of transit peptides for NtLOX1 and NtDES1, respectively. Our data suggest that, in tobacco, NtDES1 and NtLOX1 act together and form DVEs in response to pathogen attack and that this class of oxylipins modulates in vivo the outcome of the tobacco-Ppn race 0 interaction.
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    ChemInform Abstract: Efficient Synthesis of γ-Alkylidenetetronic Esters by Sequential Lewis Acid Catalyzed [3 + 2] Cyclizations and Palladium-Catalyzed Cross-Coupling Reactions.
    (2010)
    Langer, Peter
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    Eckardt, Tobias
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    Schneider, Toni
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    Goebel, Cornelia
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    Herbst-Irmer, Regine  
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    ChemInform Abstract: Methods for the Analysis of Oxylipins in Plants
    (2010)
    Goebel, Cornelia
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    Feussner, Ivo  
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    Disruption of a maize 9-lipoxygenase results in increased resistance to fungal pathogens and reduced levels of contamination with mycotoxin fumonisin
    (Amer Phytopathological Soc, 2007)
    Gao, Xiquan
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    Shim, Won-Bo
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    Goebel, Cornelia
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    Kunze, Susan
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    Feussner, Ivo  
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    Meeley, Robert
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    Balint-Kurti, Peter
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    Kolomiets, Michael V.
    Plant oxylipins, produced via the lipoxygenase (LOX) pathway, function as signals in defense and development. In fungi, oxylipins are potent regulators of mycotoxin biosynthesis and sporogenesis. Previous studies showed that plant 9-LOX-derived fatty acid hydroperoxides induce conidiation and mycotoxin production. Here, we tested the hypothesis that oxylipins produced by the maize 9-LOX pathway are required by pathogens to produce spores and mycotoxins and to successfully colonize the host. Maize mutants were generated in which the function of a 9-LOX gene, ZmLOX3, was abolished by an insertion of a Mutator transposon in its coding sequence, which resulted in reduced levels of several 9-LOX-derived hydroperoxides. Supporting our hypothesis, conidiation and production of the mycotoxin fumonisin Ill by Fusarium verticillioides were drastically reduced in kernels of the lox3 mutants compared with near-isogenic wild types. Similarly, conidia production and disease severity of anthracnose leaf blight caused by Colletotrichum graminicola were significantly reduced in the lox3 mutants. Moreover, lox3 mutants displayed increased resistance to southern leaf blight caused by Cochliobolus heterostrophus and stalk rots caused by both E verticillioides and C graminicola. These data strongly suggest that oxylipin metabolism mediated by a specific plant 9-LOX isoform is required for fungal pathogenesis, including disease development and production of spores and mycotoxins.
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    Effect of nitrate supply and mycorrhizal inoculation on characteristics of tobacco root plasma membrane vesicles
    (Springer, 2010)
    Moche, Martin
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    Stremlau, Stefanie
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    Hecht, Lars
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    Goebel, Cornelia
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    Feussner, Ivo  
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    Stoehr, Christine
    Plant plasma membrane (pm) vesicles from mycorrhizal tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum cv. Samsun) roots were isolated with negligible fungal contamination by the aqueous two-phase partitioning technique as proven by fatty acid analysis. Palmitvaccenic acid became apparent as an appropriate indicator for fungal membranes in root pm preparations. The pm vesicles had a low specific activity of the vanadate-sensitive ATPase and probably originated from non-infected root cells. In a phosphate-limited tobacco culture system, root colonisation by the vesicular arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus, Glomus mosseae, is inhibited by external nitrate in a dose-dependent way. However, detrimental high concentrations of 25 mM nitrate lead to the highest colonisation rate observed, indicating that the defence system of the plant is impaired. Nitric oxide formation by the pm-bound nitrite:NO reductase increased in parallel with external nitrate supply in mycorrhizal roots in comparison to the control plants, but decreased under excess nitrate. Mycorrhizal pm vesicles had roughly a twofold higher specific activity as the non-infected control plants when supplied with 10-15 mM nitrate.
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    Enzymatic, but not non-enzymatic, O-1(2)-mediated peroxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acids forms part of the EXECUTER1-dependent stress response program in the flu mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana
    (Blackwell Publishing, 2008)
    Przybyla, Dominika
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    Goebel, Cornelia
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    Imboden, Andre
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    Hamberg, Mats
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    Feussner, Ivo  
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    Apel, Klaus
    The conditional flu mutant of Arabidopsis accumulates excess amounts of protochlorophyllide within plastid membranes in the dark and generates singlet oxygen upon light exposure. By varying the length of the dark period, the level of the photosensitizer protochlorophyllide may be modulated, and conditions have been established that either endorse the cytotoxicity of O-1(2) or reveal its signaling role. Two criteria have been used to distinguish between these two modes of activity of O-1(2): the impact of the EXECUTER1 mutation and the prevalence of either non-enzymatic or enzymatic lipid peroxidation. During illumination of etiolated flu seedlings, toxic effects of O-1(2) prevail and non-enzymatic lipid peroxidation proceeds rapidly. In contrast, in light-grown flu plants that were subjected to an 8 h dark/light shift, lipid peroxidation occurred almost exclusively enzymatically. The resulting oxidation product, 13-hydroperoxy octadecatrienoic acid (13-HPOT), serves as a substrate for synthesis of 12-oxo phytodienoic acid (OPDA) and jasmonic acid (JA), both of which are known to control various metabolic and developmental processes in plants. Inactivation of the EXECUTER1 protein abrogates not only O-1(2)-mediated cell death and growth inhibition of flu plants, but also enzymatic lipid peroxidation. However, inactivation of jasmonate biosynthesis in the aos/flu double mutant does not affect O-1(2)-mediated growth inhibition and cell death. Hence, JA and OPDA do not act as second messengers during O-1(2) signaling, but form an integral part of a stress-related signaling cascade activated by O-1(2) that encompasses several signaling pathways known to be activated by abiotic and biotic stressors.
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    Exosome Secretion Ameliorates Lysosomal Storage of Cholesterol in Niemann-Pick Type C Disease
    (Amer Soc Biochemistry Molecular Biology Inc, 2010)
    Strauss, Katrin
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    Goebel, Cornelia
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    Runz, Heiko
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    Möbius, Wiebke  
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    Weiss, Sievert
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    Feussner, Ivo  
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    Simons, Mikael  
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    Schneider, Anja  
    Niemann-Pick type C1 disease is an autosomal-recessive lysosomal storage disorder. Loss of function of the npc1 gene leads to abnormal accumulation of free cholesterol and sphingolipids within the late endosomal and lysosomal compartments resulting in progressive neurodegeneration and dysmyelination. Here, we show that oligodendroglial cells secrete cholesterol by exosomes when challenged with cholesterol or U18666A, which induces late endosomal cholesterol accumulation. Up-regulation of exosomal cholesterol release was also observed after siRNA-mediated knockdown of NPC1 and in fibroblasts derived from NPC1 patients and could be reversed by expression of wild-type NPC1. We provide evidence that exosomal cholesterol secretion depends on the presence of flotillin. Our findings indicate that exosomal release of cholesterol may serve as a cellular mechanism to partially bypass the traffic block that results in the toxic lysosomal cholesterol accumulation in Niemann-Pick type C1 disease. Furthermore, we suggest that secretion of cholesterol by exosomes contributes to maintain cellular cholesterol homeostasis.
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    GH3 :: GUS reflects cell-specific developmental patterns and stress-induced changes in wood anatomy in the poplar stem
    (Oxford Univ Press, 2008)
    Teichmann, Thomas  
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    Bolu-Arianto, Waode Hamsinah
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    Olbrich, Andrea
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    Langenfeld-Heyser, Rosemarie
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    Goebel, Cornelia
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    Grzeganek, Peter
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    Feussner, Ivo  
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    Haensch, Robert
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    Polle, Andrea  
    GH3 genes related tot he auxin-inducible glycine max (L.) Merr. GrnGH3 gene encode enzymes that conjugate amino acids to auxin. To investigate the role of GH3 enzymes in stress responses and normal wood development. Populus x canescens (Ait.) was transformed with the promoter-reporter construct GH3::GUS containing a GH3 promoter and the 5' UTR from soybean. beta-Glucuronidase (GUS) activity was present in the vascular tissues of leaves and in developing lateral roots and was inducible in silent tissues by external auxin application. A decrease in GUS activity front the stern apex to the bottom corresponded to decreases ill auxin concentrations in these tissues. High auxin concentration and high GH3::GUS activity were present ill the pith tissue, which may provide storage for auxin compounds. GH3 reporter was active in ray cells, paratracheal parenchyma cells, maturing vessels and ill cells Surrounding maturing phloem fibers but not ill the cambium and immature phloem, despite high auxin concentrations in the latter tissues. However, the GH3 promoter in these tissues became active when the plants were exposed to abiotic stresses, like bending or salinity, causing changes in wood anatomy. We suggest that adjustment of the internal auxin balance in wood in response to environmental cues involves GH3 auxin conjugate synthases.
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    Identification of an allene oxide synthase (CYP74C) that leads to formation of alpha-ketols from 9-hydroperoxides of linoleic and linolenic acid in below-ground organs of potato
    (Blackwell Publishing, 2006)
    Stumpe, Michael
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    Goebel, Cornelia
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    Demchenko, Kirill N.
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    Hoffmann, Manuela
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    Kloesgen, Ralf B.
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    Pawlowski, Katharina
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    Feussner, Ivo  
    Allene oxide synthase (AOS) enzymes are members of the cytochrome P450 enzyme family, sub-family CYP74. Here we describe the isolation of three cDNAs encoding AOS from potato (StAOS1-3). Based on sequence comparisons, they represent members of either the CYP74A (StAOS1 and 2) or the CYP74C (StAOS3) sub-families. StAOS3 is distinguished from the other two AOS isoforms in potato by its high substrate specificity for 9-hydroperoxides of linoleic and linolenic acid, compared with 13-hydroperoxides, which are only poor substrates. The highest activity was shown with (9S,10E,12Z)-9-hydroperoxy-10,12-octadecadienoic acid (9-HPODE) as a substrate. This hydroperoxide was metabolized in vitro to alpha- and gamma-ketols as well as to the cyclopentenone compound 10-oxo-11-phytoenoic acid. They represent hydrolysis products of the initial StAOS3 product 9,10-epoxyoctadecadienoic acid, an unstable allene oxide. By RNA gel hybridization blot analysis, StAOS3 was shown to be expressed in sprouting eyes, stolons, tubers and roots, but not in leaves. StAOS3 protein was found in all organs tested, but mainly in stems, stolons, sprouting eyes and tubers. As in vivo reaction products, the alpha-ketols derived from 9-hydroperoxides of linoleic and linolenic acid were only found in roots, tubers and sprouting eyes. Immunolocalization showed that StAOS3 was associated with amyloplasts and leucoplasts.
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    Identification of PpoA from Aspergillus nidulans as a Fusion Protein of a Fatty Acid Heme Dioxygenase/Peroxidase and a Cytochrome P450
    (Amer Soc Biochemistry Molecular Biology Inc, 2009)
    Brodhun, Florian  
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    Goebel, Cornelia
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    Hornung, Ellen
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    Feussner, Ivo  
    The homothallic ascomycete Aspergillus nidulans serves as model organism for filamentous fungi because of its ability to propagate with both asexual and sexual life cycles, and fatty acid-derived substances regulate the balance between both cycles. These so-called psi (precocious sexual inducer) factors are produced by psi factor-producing oxygenases (Ppo enzymes). Bioinformatic analysis predicted the presence of two different heme domains in Ppo proteins: in the N-terminal region, a fatty acid heme dioxygenase/peroxidase domain is predicted, whereas in the C-terminal region, a P450 heme thiolate domain is predicted. To analyze the reaction catalyzed by Ppo enzymes, PpoA was expressed in Escherichia coli as an active enzyme. The protein was purified by 62-fold and identified as a homotetrameric ferric heme protein that metabolizes mono-as well as polyunsaturated C-16 and C-18 fatty acids at pH similar to 7.25. The presence of thiolate-ligated heme was confirmed on the basis of sequence alignments and the appearance of a characteristic 450 nm CO-binding spectrum. Studies on its reaction mechanism revealed that PpoA uses different heme domains to catalyze two separate reactions. Within the heme peroxidase domain, linoleic acid is oxidized to (8R)-hydroperoxyoctadecadienoic acid by abstracting a H-atom from C-8 of the fatty acid, yielding a carbon-centered radical that reacts with molecular dioxygen. In the second reaction step, 8-hydroperoxyoctadecadienoic acid is isomerized within the P450 heme thiolate domain to 5,8-dihydroxyoctadecadienoic acid. We identify PpoA as a bifunctional P450 fusion protein that uses a previously unknown reaction mechanism for forming psi factors.
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    Inactivation of the Lipoxygenase ZmLOX3 Increases Susceptibility of Maize to Aspergillus spp.
    (Amer Phytopathological Soc, 2009)
    Gao, Xiquan
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    Brodhagen, Marion
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    Isakeit, Tom
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    Brown, Sigal Horowitz
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    Goebel, Cornelia
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    Betran, Javier
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    Feussner, Ivo  
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    Keller, Nancy P.
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    Kolomiets, Michael V.
    Plant and fungal lipoxygenases (LOX) catalyze the oxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acids, creating fatty-acid hydroperoxides (oxylipins). Fungal oxylipins are required for normal fungal development and secondary metabolism, and plant host-derived oxylipins interfere with these processes in fungi, presumably by signal mimicry. The maize LOX gene ZmLOX3 has been implicated previously in seed-Aspergillus interactions, so we tested the interactions of a mutant maize line (lox3-4, in which ZmLOX3 is disrupted) with the mycotoxigenic seed-infecting fungi Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus nidulans. The lox3-4 mutant was more susceptible than wild-type maize to both Aspergillus species. All strains of A. flavus and A. nidulans produced more conidia and aflatoxin (or the precursor sterigmatocystin) on lox3-4 kernels than on wild-type kernels, in vitro and under field conditions. Although oxylipins did not differ detectably between A. flavus-infected kernels of the lox3-4 and wild-type (WT) maize, oxylipin precursors (free fatty acids) and a downstream metabolite (jasmonic acid) accumulated to greater levels in lox3-4 than in WT kernels. The increased resistance of the lox3-4 mutant to other fungal pathogens (Fusarium, Colletotrichum, Cochliobolus, and Exserohilum spp.) is in sharp contrast to results described herein for Aspergillus spp., suggesting that outcomes of LOX-governed host-pathogen interactions are pathogen-specific.
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    Jasmonate biosynthesis in legume and actinorhizal nodules
    (Wiley-blackwell, 2011)
    Zdyb, Anna
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    Demchenko, Kirill N.
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    Heumann, Jan
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    Mrosk, Cornelia
    ;
    Grzeganek, Peter
    ;
    Goebel, Cornelia
    ;
    Feussner, Ivo  
    ;
    Pawlowski, Katharina
    ;
    Hause, Bettina
    P>Jasmonic acid (JA) is a plant signalling compound that has been implicated in the regulation of mutualistic symbioses. In order to understand the spatial distribution of JA biosynthetic capacity in nodules of two actinorhizal species, Casaurina glauca and Datisca glomerata, and one legume, Medicago truncatula, we determined the localization of allene oxide cyclase (AOC) which catalyses a committed step in JA biosynthesis. In all nodule types analysed, AOC was detected exclusively in uninfected cells. The levels of JA were compared in the roots and nodules of the three plant species. The nodules and noninoculated roots of the two actinorhizal species, and the root systems of M. truncatula, noninoculated or nodulated with wild-type Sinorhizobium meliloti or with mutants unable to fix nitrogen, did not show significant differences in JA levels. However, JA levels in all plant organs examined increased significantly on mechanical disturbance. To study whether JA played a regulatory role in the nodules of M. truncatula, composite plants containing roots expressing an MtAOC1-sense or MtAOC1-RNAi construct were inoculated with S. meliloti. Neither an increase nor reduction in AOC levels resulted in altered nodule formation. These data suggest that jasmonates are not involved in the development and function of root nodules.
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    Lipoxygenases during Brassica napus seed germination
    (Pergamon-elsevier Science Ltd, 2006)
    Terp, Nina
    ;
    Goebel, Cornelia
    ;
    Brandt, Anders
    ;
    Feussner, Ivo  
    The peroxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acids is mostly catalyzed by members of the lipoxygenase enzyme family. Lipoxygenase products can be metabolized further in the oxylipin pathway and are known as signalling substances that play a role in plant development as well as in plant responses to wounding and pathogen attack. Apart from accumulating data in model plants like Arabidopsis, information on the relevance of lipid peroxide metabolism in the crop plant oilseed rape is scarce. Thus we aimed to analyze lipoxygenases and oxylipin patterns in seedlings of oilseed rape. RNA isolated from 3 day etiolated seedlings contains mRNAs for at least two different lipoxygenases. These have been cloned as cDNAs and named Bn-Lox-1fl and Bn-Lox-2fl. The protein encoded by Bn-Lox2fl was identified as a 13-lipoxygenase by expression in Eseherichia coli. The Bn-Lox-1fl yielded an inactive protein when expressed in E coli. Based on Bn-Lox-1fl active site determinants and on sequence homology the Bn-Lox-1fl is most likely a 9-lipoxygenase. Both genes are expressed in light-grown and etiolated cotyledons as well as in leaves. Bn-Lox-2fl protein is more abundant in cotyledons of etiolated seedlings than in cotyledons of green seedlings. Both 13- and 9-lipoxygenase-derived hydroperoxides can be detected during germination. Etiolated seedlings contain more lipoxygenase-derived hydroperoxides in non esterified fatty acids than green seedlings. The 13-lipoxygenase derivatives are 6-8-fold more abundant than the 9-derivatives. Lipoxygenase-derived hydroperoxides in esterified lipids are almost not present during germination. These results suggest that 13-lipoxygenases acting on free fatty acids dominate during B. napus seed germination. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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