PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Plant physiology: A tale of three proteins

2021-06-28
(Press-News.org) LMU biologists have shown that 'supervisor' and 'motivator' proteins are required to enable a third factor to perform its function in photosynthesis.

Plants, algae and cyanobacteria need only three ingredients for the synthesis of sugars via the process of photosynthesis - carbon dioxide, water and sunlight. However, the operation is far more complicated than this simple list of ingredients might suggest. Prof. Dr. Dario Leister and research group in the Department of Biology I at LMU are analyzing the complex regulation of photosynthesis. Their latest findings shed light on the roles of three proteins, named PGRL1, PGRL2 and PGR5, which participate in the control of one of the two subsystems of the photosynthetic apparatus. PGRL2 itself was first discovered in the course of the new study.

Photosynthesis involves several coordinated sequences of reactions. In the first step, a specific portion of the electromagnetic radiation emitted by the Sun is absorbed by membrane-bound pigment-protein complexes, which are organized into two 'photosystems' called PSI and PSII. The photosystems operate in two basic modes - linear and cyclic. In the former, PSII and PSI act in series. Light energy detaches electrons from water molecules, generating hydrogen ions (protons) and molecular oxygen. The protons are pumped to the opposite side of the membrane, while the electrons are transferred sequentially from one complex to the next, gaining in energy in the process. Ultimately, this energy is stored in the form of ATP, which drives most of the biochemical transactions in cells. Linear electron flow (LEF) through PSI also supplies the 'reducing equivalents' required for the conversion of carbon dioxide into sugars. The second mode of photosynthesis involves only photosystem I. Here, the electrons energized by solar radiation are diverted by other proteins, such that they follow a cyclic route. Notably, this cyclic electron flow (CEF) through PSI generates ATP only. "Plants need both subsystems," Leister points out. The cyclic pathway is particularly significant when plants are under stress, and need more ATP. Indeed, without this mechanism plants could not survive under natural conditions.

One worker, one motivator, one supervisor

How is the cyclic pathway regulated? About 20 years ago, Japanese researchers set out to characterize a collection of mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana (thale cress), a popular model system used by plant geneticists. In one of these strains, a gene they called PGR5 was mutated. 'PGR' stands for 'proton gradient', and refers to the proton concentration gradient created by the transfer of protons across the membrane during the course of photosynthesis. In the mutant, formation of the gradient was perturbed. "To our surprise, the PGR5 protein had none of the sequences that one would expect to find in a typical electron transporter," says Leister. This soon gave rise to the idea that other factors must also be involved in the maintenance of the proton gradient.

Experiments carried out by Leister in 2008 confirmed this suspicion. He discovered a second protein, which he called "pgr5-like 1" (PGRL1). Arabidopsis has two different genes that code for this factor, which explains why it did not turn up in the original mutant screen in which the PGR5 gene was identified. "At the time, we thought we had now had our hands on the really important protein," he recalls. Inactivation of either PGRL1 or PGR5 reduces cyclic electron flow around photosystem. Furthermore, loss of PGRL1 destabilizes PGR5, but not vice versa. So it looked as if PGRL1 was a central component of the cyclic mode of photosynthesis. Moreover, this notion was supported by the fact that it contains the structural elements one would expect to find in an electron transporter.

But the regulation of cyclic electron flow later turned out to be more complex than that. Leister and his colleagues went on to identify PGRL2 as a third protein involved - and its discovery complicated matters significantly. The team showed that when PGRL2 was knocked out, photosynthesis was not affected. Conversely, overproduction of PGRL2 destabilized PGR5, even in the presence of PGRL1. The big surprise came when PGRL1 and PGRL2 were simultaneously inactivated: PGR5 reappeared and was able on its own to restore cyclic electron transport. Interestingly, these plants grew more slowly than those in which PGR5 (and cyclic electron transport) were missing. Leister offers an instructive interpretation of these findings. "PGR5 actually does the job, PGRL1 acts as a motivator of PGR5, and PGRL2 is PGR5's supervisor. In the absence of its motivator, PGR5 is inactive. In the absence of its supervisor, it works quite well. But when motivator and supervisor are both missing, PGR5 becomes hyperactive, and ultimately destructive.

Leister's team now plans to elucidate the biochemical mechanisms that underlie these behaviors - using cyanobacteria, which are genetically much simpler than Arabidopsis, as a model system.

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

US presidents' narcissism linked to international conflict

2021-06-28
COLUMBUS, Ohio - The most narcissistic U.S. presidents since 1897 preferred to instigate conflicts with other great power countries without seeking support from allies, a new study suggests. Results showed that of the presidents measured, those highest in narcissism - including Lyndon B. Johnson, Teddy Roosevelt and Richard Nixon - were about six times more likely to initiate a dispute with another great power in any given year than a president with average levels of narcissism. The inclination to "go it alone" in international disputes fits with the desire ...

Public opinion surveys on vaccine hesitancy can help predict where vaccine uptake is likely to be lower

2021-06-28
Public opinion surveys could be used more widely to understand regional variation in vaccine hesitancy, experts have recommended. The research shows vaccine uptake rates for childhood vaccines are significantly lower in regions where hesitancy observed in mass public opinion surveys is more pronounced. This data is often not widely available, which makes it challenging for experts to analyse the links between attitudes and real-world behaviour. The study says this data should be used by public health officials to understand where vaccines are more likely to be rejected, and who should be the target of information campaigns. The research published in the journal ...

Unique exoplanet photobombs Cheops study of nearby star system

Unique exoplanet photobombs Cheops study of nearby star system
2021-06-28
While exploring two exoplanets in a bright nearby star system, ESA's exoplanet-hunting Cheops satellite has unexpectedly spotted the system's third known planet crossing the face of the star. This transit reveals exciting details about a rare planet "with no known equivalent", say the researchers. The discovery is one of the first results from ESA's Cheops (CHaracterising ExOPlanet Satellite), and the first time an exoplanet with a period of over 100 days has been spotted transiting a star that is bright enough to be visible to the naked eye. Named Nu2 Lupi, this bright, ...

Pediatricians ID cause of muscle breakdown in rare disease found on newborn screening

2021-06-28
PITTSBURGH, June 28, 2021 - It was a nagging mystery: A rare-disease expert at UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh had found a successful treatment for two of the deadliest symptoms of one of the more common classes of rare diseases diagnosed by newborn screenings, but one symptom--painful episodes of muscle breakdown that land victims in intensive care--persisted. Today, the scientists announce in the journal Clinical & Translational Immunology that they've gotten to the bottom of the self-destructive syndrome and have a good lead on a treatment. "These episodes looked a lot like inflammatory ...

Weird warbler reveals genetics of its mismatched colors

2021-06-28
An incredibly rare hybrid warbler with mismatched color patterns has allowed researchers to disentangle the genetic drivers of two traits that usually come as a package deal--the black face mask and the black throat patch in blue-winged and golden-winged warblers. A new study describing the peculiar bird and pinpointing the location in the genome that controls the face mask and throat patch appears online in the journal Ecology. "Golden-winged warblers have both a black face mask and a black throat patch, while blue-winged warblers have neither," said Marcella Baiz, postdoctoral researcher at Penn State and first ...

Are we missing other earths?

2021-06-28
Some exoplanet searches could be missing nearly half of the Earth-sized planets around other stars. New findings from a team using the international Gemini Observatory and the WIYN 3.5-meter Telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory suggest that Earth-sized worlds could be lurking undiscovered in binary star systems, hidden in the glare of their parent stars. As roughly half of all stars are in binary systems, this means that astronomers could be missing many Earth-sized worlds. Earth-sized planets may be much more common than previously realized. Astronomers working at NASA Ames Research Center have used the twin telescopes of the international Gemini Observatory, a Program of NSF's NOIRLab, to determine that many planet-hosting ...

Emergency physician residents and health care workers at high risk of physical or verbal assault, new analysis shows

2021-06-28
WASHINGTON, D.C.--A new study in Annals of Emergency Medicine highlights the importance of protecting physician residents--early-career doctors still in training--and emergency care teams from incidents of physical or verbal abuse. The survey of 123 physicians, residents, and staff in one emergency department found that 78 percent of all health care workers experienced a violent assault in the prior 12 months, including more than one in five (22 percent) emergency physician residents. Eighty-nine percent of residents experienced verbal assault by a patient in the prior 12 months, compared to 80 percent of other health care workers. "Violent ...

CHOP researchers discover unique immune response by cells critical to lung health

2021-06-28
Philadelphia, June 28, 2021--Researchers at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) have discovered that a specific type of lung cell exhibits unconventional immune properties and may contribute to the outcome of respiratory viral infections. The researchers focused on type II alveolar (AT2) cells, which are non-immune cells of the lung that are critical for basic lung health and tissue repair after lung injury. They found that AT2 cells express high levels of major histocompatibility complex II (MHC-II), an important immune system trigger, and that AT2 MHC-II expression appears to confer an appreciable ...

Mouse brain imaged from the microscopic to the macroscopic level

Mouse brain imaged from the microscopic to the macroscopic level
2021-06-28
Researchers at the University of Chicago and the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory have leveraged existing advanced X-ray microscopy techniques to bridge the gap between MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) and electron microscopy imaging, providing a viable pipeline for multiscale whole brain imaging within the same brain. The proof-of-concept demonstration involved imaging an entire mouse brain across five orders of magnitude of resolution, a step which researchers say will better connect existing imaging approaches and uncover new details about the structure of the brain. The advance, which was published on June 9 in NeuroImage, will allow ...

Traits of a troll: Research reveals motives of internet trolling

2021-06-28
As social media and other online networking sites have grown in usage, so too has trolling - an internet practice in which users intentionally seek to draw others into pointless and, at times, uncivil conversations. New research from Brigham Young University recently published in the journal of Social Media and Society sheds light on the motives and personality characteristics of internet trolls. Through an online survey completed by over 400 Reddit users, the study found that individuals with dark triad personality traits (narcissism, Machiavellianism, psychopathy) combined with schadenfreude - a German word meaning that one derives pleasure from another's misfortune - were more likely to demonstrate trolling behaviors. "People who exhibit ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Earliest reptile footprints rewrite the timeline of tetrapod evolution

How the brain allows us to infer emotions

Chinese researchers reveal lipid-based communication between body and gut microbes

Scientists discover new way the brain learns

A downside of taurine: it drives leukemia growth

NIH researchers discover a new tissue biomarker for aggressive breast cancer risk and poorer survival

Glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists and mental health

Cannabis use among older adults

New global model shows how to bring environmental pressures back to 2015 levels by 2050

New catalyst boosts efficiency of CO2 conversion

New study shows how ancient climates may inform monsoon prediction

New gel could boost coral reef restoration

UPF and the Royal Veterinary College make the first 3D reconstructions of cat hearts to compare them with humans’

Special report highlights LLM cybersecurity threats in radiology

Australia’s oldest prehistoric tree frog hops 22 million years back in time

Sorek awarded $500,000 Gruber Genetics Prize for pioneering discoveries in bacterial immune systems

Ryan Cooke and Max Pettini receive $500,000 Gruber Cosmology Prize for Measuring a Key Value at the Dawn of the Universe

$500,000 Gruber Neuroscience Prize awarded to Edward Chang for groundbreaking discoveries on the neural coding of speech comprehension and production

IU, Regenstrief researchers develop an app to enable the efficient integration of patient medical information into dental practices

Postpartum depression and bonding: Long-term effects on school-age children

Evaluation of in-vitro activity of ceftazidime-avibactam against carbapenem-resistant gram-negative bacteria: A cross-sectional study from Pakistan

Molecular testing of FLT3 mutations in hematolymphoid malignancies in the era of next-generation sequencing

Sugar-coated nanotherapy dramatically improves neuron survival in Alzheimer’s model

Uncovering compounds that tame the heat of chili peppers

Astronomers take a second look at twin star systems

Updated version of the "How Equitable Is It?" tool for assessing equity in scholarly communication models

McGill researchers lead project to reform youth mental health care in Canada

ESMT Berlin research shows private ownership boosts hospital performance

The risk of death or complications from broken heart syndrome was high from 2016 to 2020

Does adapting to a warmer climate have drawbacks?

[Press-News.org] Plant physiology: A tale of three proteins