Adel Zarei
University of Guelph
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Featured researches published by Adel Zarei.
Plant Molecular Biology | 2011
Adel Zarei; Ana P. Körbes; Parisa Younessi; Grégory Montiel; Antony Champion; Johan Memelink
Plant defense against microbial pathogens depends on the action of several endogenously produced hormones, including jasmonic acid (JA) and ethylene (ET). In defense against necrotrophic pathogens, the JA and ET signaling pathways synergize to activate a specific set of defense genes including PLANT DEFENSIN1.2 (PDF1.2). The APETALA2/Ethylene Response Factor (AP2/ERF)-domain transcription factor ORA59 acts as the integrator of the JA and ET signaling pathways and is the key regulator of JA- and ET-responsive PDF1.2 expression. The present study was aimed at the identification of elements in the PDF1.2 promoter conferring the synergistic response to JA/ET and interacting with ORA59. We show that the PDF1.2 promoter was activated synergistically by JA and the ET-releasing agent ethephon due to the activity of two GCC boxes. ORA59 bound in vitro to these GCC boxes and trans-activated the PDF1.2 promoter in transient assays via these two boxes. Using the chromatin immunoprecipitation technique we were able to show that ORA59 bound the PDF1.2 promoter in vivo. Finally, we show that a tetramer of a single GCC box conferred JA/ethephon-responsive expression, demonstrating that the JA and ET signaling pathways converge to a single type of GCC box. Therefore ORA59 and two functionally equivalent GCC box binding sites form the module that enables the PDF1.2 gene to respond synergistically to simultaneous activation of the JA and ET signaling pathways.
Plant Science | 2012
Barry J. Shelp; Gale G. Bozzo; Christopher P. Trobacher; Adel Zarei; Kristen L. Deyman; Carolyne J. Brikis
4-Aminobutyrate (GABA) accumulates in various plant parts, including bulky fruits such as apples, in response to abiotic stress. It is generally believed that the GABA is derived from glutamate, although a contribution from polyamines is possible. Putrescine, but not spermidine and spermine, generally accumulates in response to the genetic manipulation of polyamine biosynthetic enzymes and abiotic stress. However, the GABA levels in stressed plants are influenced by processes other than putrescine availability. It is hypothesized that the catabolism of putrescine to GABA is regulated by a combination of gene-dependent and -independent processes. The expression of several putative diamine oxidase genes is weak, but highly stress-inducible in certain tissues of Arabidopsis. In contrast, candidate genes that encode 4-aminobutyraldehyde dehydrogenase are highly constitutive, but not stress inducible. Changes in O(2) availability and cellular redox balance due to stress may directly influence the activities of diamine oxidase and 4-aminobutyraldehyde dehydrogenase, thereby restricting GABA formation. Apple fruit is known to accumulate GABA under controlled atmosphere storage and therefore could serve as a model system for investigating the relative contribution of putrescine and glutamate to GABA production.
BMC Plant Biology | 2013
Christopher P. Trobacher; Adel Zarei; Jingyun Liu; Shawn M. Clark; Gale G. Bozzo; Barry J. Shelp
BackgroundThe ubiquitous, non-proteinaceous amino acid GABA (γ-aminobutyrate) accumulates in plants subjected to abiotic stresses such as chilling, O2 deficiency and elevated CO2. Recent evidence indicates that controlled atmosphere storage causes the accumulation of GABA in apple (Malus x domestica Borkh.) fruit, and now there is increasing interest in the biochemical mechanisms responsible for this phenomenon. Here, we investigated whether this phenomenon could be mediated via Ca2+/calmodulin (CaM) activation of glutamate decarboxylase (GAD) activity.ResultsGAD activity in cell-free extracts of apple fruit was stimulated by Ca2+/CaM at physiological pH, but not at the acidic pH optimum. Based on bioinformatics analysis of the apple genome, three apple GAD genes were identified and their expression determined in various apple organs, including fruit. Like recombinant Arabidopsis GAD1, the activity and spectral properties of recombinant MdGAD1 and MdGAD2 were regulated by Ca2+/CaM at physiological pH and both enzymes possessed a highly conserved CaM-binding domain that was autoinhibitory. In contrast, the activity and spectral properties of recombinant MdGAD3 were not affected by Ca2+/CaM and they were much less sensitive to pH than MdGAD1, MdGAD2 and Arabidopsis GAD1; furthermore, the C-terminal region neither bound CaM nor functioned as an autoinhibitory domain.ConclusionsPlant GADs typically differ from microbial and animal GAD enzymes in possessing a C-terminal 30–50 amino acid residue CaM-binding domain. To date, rice GAD2 is the only exception to this generalization; notably, the C-terminal region of this enzyme still functions as an autoinhibitory domain. In the present study, apple fruit were found to contain two CaM-dependent GADs, as well as a novel CaM-independent GAD that does not possess a C-terminal autoinhibitory domain.
Plant and Cell Physiology | 2011
Grégory Montiel; Adel Zarei; Ana P. Körbes; Johan Memelink
Jasmonates are plant signaling molecules that play key roles in protection against certain pathogens and against insects by switching on the expression of genes encoding defense proteins including enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of toxic secondary metabolites. In Catharanthus roseus, the ethylene response factor (ERF) transcription factor ORCA3 controls the jasmonate-responsive activation of terpenoid indole alkaloid biosynthetic genes. ORCA3 gene expression is itself induced by jasmonate. Its promoter contains an autonomous jasmonate-responsive element (JRE). Here we describe the jasmonate-responsive activity of the JRE from the ORCA3 promoter in Arabidopsis thaliana. We found that it interacts in vitro and in vivo with the basic helix-loop-helix transcription factor AtMYC2. Analysis of JRE-mediated reporter gene expression in an atmyc2-1 mutant background showed that the activity was strictly dependent on AtMYC2.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Adel Zarei; Christopher P. Trobacher; Barry J. Shelp
Polyamines represent a potential source of 4-aminobutyrate (GABA) in plants exposed to abiotic stress. Terminal catabolism of putrescine in Arabidopsis thaliana involves amine oxidase and the production of 4-aminobutanal, which is a substrate for NAD+-dependent aminoaldehyde dehydrogenase (AMADH). Here, two AMADH homologs were chosen (AtALDH10A8 and AtALDH10A9) as candidates for encoding 4-aminobutanal dehydrogenase activity for GABA synthesis. The two genes were cloned and soluble recombinant proteins were produced in Escherichia coli. The pH optima for activity and catalytic efficiency of recombinant AtALDH10A8 with 3-aminopropanal as substrate was 10.5 and 8.5, respectively, whereas the optima for AtALDH10A9 were approximately 9.5. Maximal activity and catalytic efficiency were obtained with NAD+ and 3-aminopropanal, followed by 4-aminobutanal; negligible activity was obtained with betaine aldehyde. NAD+ reduction was accompanied by the production of GABA and β-alanine, respectively, with 4-aminobutanal and 3-aminopropanal as substrates. Transient co-expression systems using Arabidopsis cell suspension protoplasts or onion epidermal cells and several organelle markers revealed that AtALDH10A9 was peroxisomal, but AtALDH10A8 was cytosolic, although the N-terminal 140 amino acid sequence of AtALDH10A8 localized to the plastid. Root growth of single loss-of-function mutants was more sensitive to salinity than wild-type plants, and this was accompanied by reduced GABA accumulation.
Plant and Cell Physiology | 2009
Mary M. Robison; Xingyuan Ling; Matthew P.L.SmidM.P.L. Smid; Adel Zarei; David J. Wolyn
Determination of the role of mitochondrial (mt) ATP synthesis in plant metabolism is complicated by chloroplastic ATP synthesis. To differentiate ATP synthesis from these two organelles, we created transgenic Arabidopsis plants in which two different subunits of the mt ATP synthase, the oligomycin sensitivity-conferring protein (OSCP) (=delta) (ATP5) and the gamma (ATP3) subunit, were expressed individually in antisense orientation under the control of a dexamethasone-inducible promoter. The phenotypic effects of antisense expression were identical for both atp5 and atp3. Seedling lethality resulted from induction during germination in the light, demonstrating the essentiality of both gene products. Reduced expression of either gene resulted in stunting of dark-grown (etiolated) seedlings, downward curling or wavy-edged leaf margins of light-grown plants and ball-shaped unexpanded flowers. Antisense induction reduced total ATP levels in dark-grown (etiolated) seedlings germinated on media lacking sucrose, but increased total ATP levels in induced light-grown plants and in induced dark-grown seedlings germinated on media containing sucrose. Induction reduced transcript levels for two transcription factors (TCP3 and TCP4) whose decreased expression is associated with a similar wavy-edged leaf phenotype in Arabidopsis, and increased transcript levels for dynamin-related proteins whose increased expression is associated with increased mt division. Reduced expression of these subunits of the mt ATP synthase is proposed to disturb cellular redox states, which ultimately manifest downstream as diverse and seemingly unrelated phenotypes.
Plant and Cell Physiology | 2015
Adel Zarei; Christopher P. Trobacher; Alison R. Cooke; Ashley J. Meyers; J. Christopher Hall; Barry J. Shelp
4-Aminobutyrate (GABA) accumulates in apple fruit during controlled atmosphere storage. A potential source of GABA is the polyamine putrescine, which can be oxidized via copper-containing amine oxidase (CuAO), resulting in the production 4-aminobutanal/Δ(1)-pyrroline, with the consumption of O2 and release of H2O2 and ammonia. Five putative CuAO genes (MdAO genes) were cloned from apple (Malus domestica Borkh. cv. Empire) fruit, and the deduced amino acid sequences found to contain the active sites typically conserved in CuAOs. Genes encoding two of these enzymes, MdAO1 and MdAO2, were highly expressed in apple fruit and selected for further analysis. Amino acid sequence analysis predicted the presence of a C-terminal peroxisomal targeting signal 1 tripeptide in MdAO1 and an N-terminal signal peptide and N-glycosylation site in MdAO2. Transient expression of green fluorescent fusion proteins in Arabidopsis protoplasts or onion epidermal cells revealed a peroxisomal localization for MdAO1 and an extracellular localization for MdAO2. The enzymatic activities of purified recombinant MdAO1 and MdAO2 were measured continuously as H2O2 production using a coupled reaction. MdAO1 did not use monoamines or polyamines and displayed high catalytic efficiency for 1,3-diaminopropane, putrescine and cadaverine, whereas MdAO2 exclusively utilized aliphatic and aromatic monoamines, including 2-phenylethylamine and tyramine. Together, these results indicate that MdAO1 may contribute to GABA production via putrescine oxidation in the peroxisome of apple fruit under controlled atmosphere conditions. MdAO2 seems to be involved in deamination of 2-phenylethylamine, which is a step in the biosynthesis of 2-phenylethanol, a contributor to fruit flavor and flower fragrance.
FEBS Letters | 2015
Adel Zarei; Christopher P. Trobacher; Barry J. Shelp
The last step of polyamine catabolism involves the oxidation of 3‐aminopropanal or 4‐aminobutanal via aminoaldehyde dehydrogenase. In this study, two apple (Malus x domestica)AMADH genes were selected (MdAMADH1 andMdAMADH2) as candidates for encoding 4‐aminobutanal dehydrogenase activity. Maximal activity and catalytic efficiency were obtained with NAD+ and 3‐aminopropanal, followed by 4‐aminobutanal, at pH 9.8. NAD+ reduction was accompanied by the production of GABA and β‐alanine, respectively, when 4‐aminobutanal and 3‐aminopropanal were utilized as substrates.MdAMADH2 was peroxisomal andMdAMADH1 cytosolic. These findings shed light on the potential role of apple AMADHs in 4‐aminobutyrate and β‐alanine production.
Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2017
Barry J. Shelp; Adel Zarei
ABSTRACT This addendum discusses the compartmentation of γ-aminobutyrate (GABA) metabolism, highlighting recent progress with Arabidopsis thaliana and raising new questions about the roles of mitochondria, plastids and peroxisomes in abiotic stress tolerance.
Frontiers in Plant Science | 2017
Adel Zarei; Carolyne J. Brikis; Vikramjit S. Bajwa; Greta Z. Chiu; Jeffrey P. Simpson; Jennifer R. DeEll; Gale G. Bozzo; Barry J. Shelp
Plant NADPH-dependent glyoxylate/succinic semialdehyde reductases 1 and 2 (cytosolic GLYR1 and plastidial/mitochondrial GLYR2) are considered to be of particular importance under abiotic stress conditions. Here, the apple (Malus × domestica Borkh.) and rice (Oryza sativa L.) GLYR1s and GLYR2s were characterized and their kinetic properties were compared to those of previously characterized GLYRs from Arabidopsis thaliana [L.] Heynh. The purified recombinant GLYRs had an affinity for glyoxylate and succinic semialdehyde, respectively, in the low micromolar and millimolar ranges, and were inhibited by NADP+. Comparison of the GLYR activity in cell-free extracts from wild-type Arabidopsis and a glyr1 knockout mutant revealed that approximately 85 and 15% of the cellular GLYR activity is cytosolic and plastidial/mitochondrial, respectively. Recovery of GLYR activity in purified mitochondria from the Arabidopsis glyr1 mutant, free from cytosolic GLYR1 or plastidial GLYR2 contamination, provided additional support for the targeting of GLYR2 to mitochondria, as well as plastids. The growth of plantlets or roots of various Arabidopsis lines with altered GLYR activity responded differentially to succinic semialdehyde or glyoxylate under chilling conditions. Taken together, these findings highlight the potential regulation of highly conserved plant GLYRs by NADPH/NADP+ ratios in planta, and their roles in the reduction of toxic aldehydes in plants subjected to chilling stress.