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Browsing by Author "Sauer, Norbert"

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    Erratum to: Two novel disaccharides, rutinose and methylrutinose, are involved in carbon metabolism in Datisca glomerata (vol 231, pg 507, 2010)
    (Springer, 2010)
    Schubert, Maria
    ;
    Melnikova, Anna N.
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    Mesecke, Nikola
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    Zubkova, Elena K.
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    Fortte, Rocco
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    Batashev, Denis R.
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    Barth, Inga
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    Sauer, Norbert
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    Gamalei, Yuri V.
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    Mamushina, Natalia S.
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    Tietze, Lutz Friedjan  
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    Voitsekhovskaja, Olga V.
    ;
    Pawlowski, Katharina
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    Phloem-Specific Expression of Yang Cycle Genes and Identification of Novel Yang Cycle Enzymes in Plantago and Arabidopsis
    (Amer Soc Plant Biologists, 2011)
    Pommerrenig, Benjamin
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    Feussner, Kirstin
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    Zierer, Wolfgang
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    Rabinovych, Valentyna
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    Klebl, Franz
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    Feussner, Ivo  
    ;
    Sauer, Norbert
    The 5-methylthioadenosine (MTA) or Yang cycle is a set of reactions that recycle MTA to Met. In plants, MTA is a byproduct of polyamine, ethylene, and nicotianamine biosynthesis. Vascular transcriptome analyses revealed phloem-specific expression of the Yang cycle gene 5-METHYLTHIORIBOSE KINASE1 (MTK1) in Plantago major and Arabidopsis thaliana. As Arabidopsis has only a single MTK gene, we hypothesized that the expression of other Yang cycle genes might also be vascular specific. Reporter gene studies and quantitative analyses of mRNA levels for all Yang cycle genes confirmed this hypothesis for Arabidopsis and Plantago. This includes the Yang cycle genes 5-METHYLTHIORIBOSE-1-PHOSPHATE ISOMERASE1 and DEHYDRATASE-ENOLASE-PHOSPHATASE-COMPLEX1. We show that these two enzymes are sufficient for the conversion of methylthioribose-1-phosphate to 1,2-dihydroxy-3-keto-5-methylthiopentene. In bacteria, fungi, and animals, the same conversion is catalyzed in three to four separate enzymatic steps. Furthermore, comparative analyses of vascular and nonvascular metabolites identified Met, S-adenosyl Met, and MTA preferentially or almost exclusively in the vascular tissue. Our data represent a comprehensive characterization of the Yang cycle in higher plants and demonstrate that the Yang cycle works primarily in the vasculature. Finally, expression analyses of polyamine biosynthetic genes suggest that the Yang cycle in leaves recycles MTA derived primarily from polyamine biosynthesis.
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    Plasmodesmata distribution and sugar partitioning in nitrogen-fixing root nodules of Datisca glomerata
    (Springer, 2011)
    Schubert, Maria
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    Koteyeva, Nouria K.
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    Wabnitz, Philipp W.
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    Santos, Patricia
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    Buettner, Michael
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    Sauer, Norbert
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    Demchenko, Kirill N.
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    Pawlowski, Katharina
    To understand carbon partitioning in roots and nodules of Datisca glomerata, activities of sucrose-degrading enzymes and sugar transporter expression patterns were analyzed in both organs, and plasmodesmal connections between nodule cortical cells were examined by transmission electron microscopy. The results indicate that in nodules, the contribution of symplastic transport processes is increased in comparison to roots, specifically in infected cells which develop many secondary plasmodesmata. Invertase activities are dramatically reduced in nodules as compared to roots, indicating that here the main enzyme responsible for the cleavage of sucrose is sucrose synthase. A high-affinity, low-specificity monosaccharide transporter whose expression is induced in infected cells prior to the onset of bacterial nitrogen fixation, and which has an unusually low pH optimum and may be involved in turgor control or hexose retrieval during infection thread growth.
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    SUCROSE TRANSPORTER 5 supplies Arabidopsis embryos with biotin and affects triacylglycerol accumulation
    (Wiley-blackwell, 2013)
    Pommerrenig, Benjamin
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    Popko, Jennifer  
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    Heilmann, Mareike
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    Schulmeister, Sylwia
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    Dietel, Katharina
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    Schmitt, Bianca
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    Stadler, Ruth
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    Feussner, Ivo  
    ;
    Sauer, Norbert
    The Arabidopsis SUC5 protein represents a classical sucrose/H+ symporter. Functional analyses previously revealed that SUC5 also transports biotin, an essential co-factor for fatty acid synthesis. However, evidence for a dual role in transport of the structurally unrelated compounds sucrose and biotin in plants was lacking. Here we show that SUC5 localizes to the plasma membrane, and that the SUC5 gene is expressed in developing embryos, confirming the role of the SUC5 protein as substrate carrier across apoplastic barriers in seeds. We show that transport of biotin but not of sucrose across these barriers is impaired in suc5 mutant embryos. In addition, we show that SUC5 is essential for the delivery of biotin into the embryo of biotin biosynthesis-defective mutants (bio1 and bio2). We compared embryo and seedling development as well as triacylglycerol accumulation and fatty acid composition in seeds of single mutants (suc5, bio1 or bio2), double mutants (suc5bio1 and suc5bio2) and wild-type plants. Although suc5 mutants were like the wild-type, bio1 and bio2 mutants showed developmental defects and reduced triacylglycerol contents. In suc5bio1 and suc5bio2 double mutants, developmental defects were severely increased and the triacylglycerol content was reduced to a greater extent in comparison to the single mutants. Supplementation with externally applied biotin helped to reduce symptoms in both single and double mutants, but the efficacy of supplementation was significantly lower in double than in single mutants, showing that transport of biotin into the embryo is lower in the absence of SUC5.
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    Two novel disaccharides, rutinose and methylrutinose, are involved in carbon metabolism in Datisca glomerata
    (Springer, 2010)
    Schubert, Maria
    ;
    Melnikova, Anna N.
    ;
    Mesecke, Nikola
    ;
    Zubkova, Elena K.
    ;
    Fortte, Rocco
    ;
    Batashev, Denis R.
    ;
    Barth, Inga
    ;
    Sauer, Norbert
    ;
    Gamalei, Yuri V.
    ;
    Mamushina, Natalia S.
    ;
    Tietze, Lutz Friedjan  
    ;
    Voitsekhovskaja, Olga V.
    ;
    Pawlowski, Katharina
    Datisca glomerata forms nitrogen-fixing root nodules in symbiosis with soil actinomycetes from the genus Frankia. Analysis of sugars in roots, nodules and leaves of D. glomerata revealed the presence of two novel compounds that were identified as alpha-l-rhamnopyranoside-(1 -> 6)-d-glucose (rutinose) and alpha-l-rhamnopyranoside-(1 -> 6)-1-O-beta-d-methylglucose (methylrutinose). Rutinose has been found previously as a/the glycoside part of several flavonoid glycosides, e.g. rutin, also of datiscin, the main flavonoid of Datisca cannabina, but had not been reported as free sugar. Time course analyses suggest that both rutinose and methylrutinose might play a role in transient carbon storage in sink organs and, to a lesser extent, in source leaves. Their concentrations show that they can accumulate in the vacuole. Rutinose, but not methylrutinose, was accepted as a substrate by the tonoplast disaccharide transporter SUT4 from Arabidopsis. In vivo C-14-labeling and the study of uptake of exogenous sucrose and rutinose from the leaf apoplast showed that neither rutinose nor methylrutinose appreciably participate in phloem translocation of carbon from source to sink organs, despite rutinose being found in the apoplast at significant levels. A model for sugar metabolism in D. glomerata is presented.

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