Adriana Szmidt-Jaworska
Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń
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Featured researches published by Adriana Szmidt-Jaworska.
Journal of Plant Physiology | 2004
Adriana Szmidt-Jaworska; Krzysztof Jaworski; Andrzej Tretyn; Jan Kopcewicz
The involvement of cGMP in the regulation of the flowering of Pharbitis nil was investigated through exogenous applications of cGMP and chemicals that are able to change the cGMP level and analyses of endogenous cGMP level. Exogenous applications of cGMP and 8-pCPT-cGMP (a cyclic GMP non hydrolyzed analog) to P. nil plants, which were exposed to a 12-h-long subinductive night, significantly increased flowering response. NS-2028 (guanylyl cyclase inhibitor) inhibited flowering when that compound was applied during a 16-h-long inductive night, whereas SNP (guanylyl cyclase activator) increased the flowering when plants were subjected to a 12-h-long subinductive night. The inhibitors of cyclic nucleotides phosphodiesterase (isobutyl-methylxanthine and dipyridamole), which increase the cytosolic cGMP level, promoted the flowering and allowed the length of the dark period necessary for induction of flowering to be reduced. The endogenous cGMP level was also measured after the treatment of P. nil seedlings with those chemicals. Results have clearly shown that compounds that were used in physiological experiments modulated endogenous cGMP level. There was a significant difference in the cyclic GMP level between 16-h-long night conditions and a long night with a night-break. During a long inductive night the oscillation of cGMP was observed with four main peaks in 4, 7, 11, 14 h, whereas a 10 min flash of red light in the middle of the night was able to modify these rhythmical changes in the second half of the long night. These results have shown that there are oscillations in the concentration of cGMP in the night and the biosynthesis and/or deactivation of cGMP is affected by light treatment and therefore it may be involved in the regulation of photoinduction processes in cotyledons. From these combined results, we propose a hypothesis that cGMP is involved in the control of photoperiodic flower induction in Pharbitis nil.
Phytochemistry | 2003
Krzysztof Jaworski; Adriana Szmidt-Jaworska; Andrzej Tretyn; Jan Kopcewicz
A soluble Ca(2+)-dependent protein kinase (CDPK) was isolated from seedlings of the short-day plant Pharbitis nil and purified to homogeneity. Activity of Pharbitis nil CDPK (PnCDPK) was strictly dependent on the presence of Ca(2+) (K(0,5)=4,9 microM). The enzyme was autophosphorylated on serine and threonine residues and phosphorylated a wide diversity of substrates only on serine residues. Histone III-S and syntide-2 were the best phosphate acceptors (K(m) for histone III-S=0,178 mg ml(-1)). Polyclonal antibodies directed to a regulatory region of the soybean CDPK recognized 54 and 62 kDa polypeptides from Pharbitis nil. However, only 54 kDa protein was able to catalyse autophosphorylation and phosphorylation of substrates in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner. CDPK autophosphorylation was high in 5-day-old Pharbitis nil seedlings grown under non-inductive continuous white light and was reduced to one-half of its original when plants were grown in the long inductive night. Also, the pattern of proteins phosphorylation has changed. After 16-h-long inductive night phosphorylation of endogenous target (specific band of 82 kDa) increased in the presence of calcium ions. It may suggest that Ca(2+)-dependent protein kinase is involved in this process and it is dependent on light/dark conditions.
Phytochemistry | 2003
Adriana Szmidt-Jaworska; Krzysztof Jaworski; Andrzej Tretyn; Jan Kopcewicz
It is known that the level of cGMP is modulated in response to a number of stimuli in plant cells but intracellular events distal to cGMP metabolism are not clear. Cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinase (Pk-G) is a major effector of cGMP action in animals and yeasts. We wanted to determine whether such kinase is present in plant cells. A soluble protein kinase was isolated from seedlings of Pharbitis nil and purified following purification methods including anion-exchange and affinity-chromatography. The enzyme consists of a single polypeptide of M(r) 70 kDa as determined by SDS-PAGE. From conventional modulators only cyclic GMP, when applied in low concentration, was able to accelerate the enzyme activity in the presence of histones. The enzyme autophosphorylated on serine and threonine residues and phosphorylated some substrates only on serine residues. Mixture of histones and histones H2B, H3 were the best phosphate acceptors. The process of autophosphorylation was accelerated by a low concentration of cGMP and reduced by high concentration of this second messenger. Antibodies raised against catalytic domain of animals Pk-G I alpha and beta cross-reacted with protein kinase from Pharbitis nil tissue. These data, taken together, demonstrate the presence of functional enzyme, which activity is regulated by cGMP and allow to classify this protein kinase as a member of the second messenger regulated group of enzymes.
Journal of Plant Physiology | 2012
Krzysztof Jaworski; Agnieszka Pawełek; Jan Kopcewicz; Adriana Szmidt-Jaworska
Signaling pathways, and specifically the signaling pathway of calcium, have been widely implicated in the regulation of a variety of signals in plants. Calcium-dependent protein kinases (CDPKs) are essential sensor-transducers of calcium signaling pathways, the functional characterization of which is of great interest because they play important roles during growth and in response to a wide range of environmental and developmental stimuli. Here, we report the first evidence of transient and specific elevation of PnCDPK1 transcript level and enzyme activity following conversion of a leaf bud to a flower bud, as well as participation of PnCDPK1 in evocation and flower morphogenesis in Pharbitis nil. Fluorescence microscopy immunolocalization and biochemical analysis confirmed the presence of CDPK in shoot apexes. The protein level was low in leaves, vegetative apexes and increased significantly in apexes after a flowering long-induction night. In the vegetative apex, a very weak PnCDPK1 protein signal was accumulated prominently in the zone of the ground meristem and in external layers of tissues of the cortex. After the dark treatment, the signal in cells of the ground meristem was still present, but a significantly stronger signal appeared in epidermal cells, cortex tissue, and leaf primordium. At the onset of flower meristem development, the PnCDPK1 level diverged significantly. PnCDPK1 mRNA, protein level and enzyme activity were very low at the beginning of flower bud development and gradually increased in later stages, reaching the highest level in a fully open flower. Analysis of flower organs revealed that PnCDPK1 was accumulated mainly in petals and sepals rather than in pistils and stamens. Our results clearly indicate that PnCDPK1 is developmentally regulated and may be an important component in the signal transduction pathways for flower morphogenesis. Findings from this research are important for further dissecting mechanisms of flowering and functions of CDPKs in flowering plants.
Journal of Plant Growth Regulation | 2006
Adriana Szmidt-Jaworska; Krzysztof Jaworski; Jan Kopcewicz
Cyclic adenosine diphosphate ribose (cADPR) is a potent endogenous calcium-mobilizing agent synthesized from NAD+ by ADP-ribosyl cyclases described for several animal cells. Pharmacological studies suggest that cADPR is an endogenous modulator of Ca2+-induced Ca2+ release channels. There is also information about the sub-micromolar concentration of cADPR in plant cells. Whether cADPR can act as a Ca2+-mobilizing intracellular messenger in plant tissue is an unresolved question. Despite the obvious importance of monitoring cADPR cellular levels under various physiological conditions in plants, its measurement has been technically difficult and requires specialized reagents. In the present study a widely applicable sensitivity assay for cADPR is described. We show that Pharbitis nil tissue from cotyledons contains a certain cADPR level. To explain the possible roles of this second messenger in photoperiodic flower induction, some physiological experiments were also performed. The exogenous applications of cADPR to Pharbitis nil plants, which were exposed to a 12-h-long subinductive night, significantly increased flowering response. Nevertheless 8-Br-cADPR inhibited flowering when these compounds were applied during a 16-h-long inductive night. The effect of ruthenium red, a calcium channel blocker and ryanodine, a calcium channel stimulator, on the photoperiodic induction of flowering was also studied. Ruthenium red, when applied before and during an inductive 16-h dark period, slightly inhibited flowering, whereas ryanodine, when applied before and during a 12-h long subinductive night, stimulated flower bud formation. We also confirmed evidence that Ca2+ ions are involved in the photoperiodic induction of flowering. Thus, the obtained results may suggest the involvement of cyclic ADPR-activated Ca2+ mobilization in the photoperiodic flower induction process in Pharbitis nil.
Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B-biology | 2008
Adriana Szmidt-Jaworska; Krzysztof Jaworski; Jan Kopcewicz
Cyclic GMP acts as a chemical switch in plant cells to modulate cellular reactions. However, its metabolism has not been extensively explored and is still poorly understood. Previous experiments suggest that an endogenous cGMP system could participate in the mechanism of phytochrome controlled photoperiodic flower induction in Pharbitis nil. In order to gain further information on the role of cGMP, we have begun to study the enzyme of cGMP synthesis. In this article, the presence of the enzyme with guanylyl cyclase (GC) activity in soluble protein fractions of P. nil is reported. A large portion of the enzymatic activity is present in the cotyledons, where enzyme activity amounted to 0.45 pmol cGMP/min/mg protein. The enzyme exhibited a K(m) 0.5mM for GTP. A plot of 1/v versus 1/[GTP] was linear and V(max) was 0.74 pmol cGMP/min/mg protein. It was shown that the anti-sGC antibody recognise a 40 kDa protein. Moreover, the NO-donor, sodium nitroprusside (SNP) and YC-1, as a NO-independent stimulator, enhanced enzyme activity. The NS 2028 (a potent GC inhibitor) treatments provoked a 3-fold reduction of the enzyme activity in comparison to the untreated fractions. Furthermore, the influence of light on GC activity was analysed. It was noted that cGMP level increased in cool white light, and darkness inhibited enzyme activity. Exposure to blue light acts to stimulate cGMP formation, whereas in red light a rapid decrease in GC activity was observed that returned to the high level when far-red light was applied after the red light treatment. The results presented in this work strongly argue that an enzyme with guanylyl cyclase activity is present in P. nil organs and its activity is controlled by light via the photoreceptors-dependent pathways.
Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 2014
Brygida Świeżawska; Krzysztof Jaworski; Agnieszka Pawełek; Weronika Grzegorzewska; Piotr Szewczuk; Adriana Szmidt-Jaworska
Adenylyl cyclases (ACs) are enzymes that generate cyclic AMP, which is involved in different physiological and developmental processes in a number of organisms. Here, we report the cloning and characterization of a new plant adenylyl cyclases (AC) gene, designated HpAC1, from Hippeastrum x hybridum. This gene encodes a protein of 206 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 23 kD and an isoelectric point of 5.07. The predicted amino acid sequence contains all the typical features of and shows high identity with putative plant ACs. The purified, recombinant HpAC1 is able to convert ATP to cAMP. The complementation test that was performed to analyze the ability of HpAC1 to compensate for the AC deficiency in the Escherichia coli SP850 strain revealed that HpAC1 functions as an adenylyl cyclase and produces cyclic AMP. Moreover, it was shown that the transcript level of HpAC1 and cyclic AMP concentration changed during certain stress conditions. Both mechanical damage and Phoma narcissi infection lead to two sharp increases in HpAC1 mRNA levels during a 72-h test cycle. Changes in intracellular cAMP level were also observed. These results may indicate the participation of a cAMP-dependent pathway both in rapid and systemic reactions induced after disruption of symplast and apoplast continuity.
European Journal of Plant Pathology | 2016
Katarzyna Hrynkiewicz; Paweł Deka; Małgorzata Ruszkiewicz-Michalska; Dominika Thiem; Adriana Szmidt-Jaworska
Phytopathogenic fungi use a variety of strategies to infect hosts and have a diverse sensitivity to the natural defence mechanisms of the host plant, e.g. synthesis of phytoalexins. Many important pathogens of crops belong to the problematic genus Phoma, including species recently reallocated to Peyronellaea. The work presents: (1) molecular identification of five pathogenic strains of Peyronellaea (syn. Phoma) based on two loci, actin (ACT) and β-tubulin (TUB), and morphological observations; (2) differentiation of these strains based on their enzymatic activity; and (3) their effect on biosynthesis of phytoalexin in Hippeastrum scales. Phylogenetic analysis showed a close relationship between our strains and Peyronellaea curtisii (syn. Phoma narcissi) species. This was also supported by morpho-anatomical analysis although its results were less conclusive. Some phenotypic traits of the strains overlapped with characteristics of other Phoma s.l. species, allowing for misidentification based on morphology alone. Tested cellulolytic, pectolytic and amylolytic activities were strain specific. A high level of amylase activity was positively correlated with cellulase activity but negatively correlated with pectolytic activity. Moreover, some strains suppressed phytoalexin production in Hippeastrum scales and were resistant to various concentrations of phytoalexin added to the culture medium. Based on these results, we suggest that pathogenicity in P. curtisii strains is complex and that it may be associated with their interactive physiological potential for enzymatic attack and defence capabilities against phytoalexin.
Planta | 2012
Janusz Niedojadło; Zbigniew Mikulski; Konrad Dełeńko; Adriana Szmidt-Jaworska; Dariusz Jan Smoliński; Alan L. Epstein
The spatial organisation of the splicing system in plant cells containing either reticular (Allium cepa) or chromocentric (Lupinus luteus) nuclei was studied by immunolabelling of SR proteins, snRNA, and the PANA antigen, known markers for interchromatin granule clusters in mammalian cells. Electron microscope results allowed us to determine the distribution of these molecules within the structural domains of the nucleus. Similar to animal cells, in both plant species SR proteins were localised in interchromatin granules, but contrary to animal cells contained very small amounts of snRNA. The area with the strongest snRNA and SR protein co-localisation was the perichromatin region, which may be the location of pre-mRNA splicing in the plant cell nuclei. The only observable differences in the organisation of reticular and chromocentric nuclei were the size of the speckles and the number of snRNA pools in the condensed chromatin. We conclude that, despite remarkable changes in the nuclear architecture, the organisation of the splicing system is remarkably similar in both types of plant cell nuclei.
Acta Physiologiae Plantarum | 2000
Adriana Szmidt-Jaworska; Krzysztof Jaworski; Jacek Kęsy; Jan Kopcewicz
Little work was done so far with phytochrome from Pharbitis nil. Purification of phyA from this plant has been exceptionally difficult. Labile phytochrome was presented in too small amount to obtain either absorption spectra or enough protein to produce antibodies. Monoclonal antibodies mAP5, MAC 50, 52, 198 recognized Pharbitis nil labile phytochrome poorly, so it was necessary to develop independently an antiserum against labile phytochrome. The antiserum was prepared against proteolytically undegraded phytochrome obtained from etiolated Avena and Pisum seedlings using conventional methods. The antiserum to phytochrome from each of the above mentioned plants was prepared by injecting purified phytochrome into rabbits. The newly produced polyclonal antibodies to phyA from Avena and Pisum were used to characterize phytochrome from etiolated seedlings of Pharbitis nil. The cross reaction was tested by immunobloting. Both kinds of PAbs recognised phyA from Pharbitis nil, however IgG against the labile phytochrome from Pisum gave stronger reaction. The recognized peptide had the molecular weight of about 120-kDa.