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Featured researches published by Agnieszka Ostrowska.


Journal of Plant Physiology | 2012

An increase in the content of cell wall-bound phenolics correlates with the productivity of triticale under soil drought

Tomasz Hura; Katarzyna Hura; Kinga Dziurka; Agnieszka Ostrowska; Renata Bączek-Kwinta; Maciej T. Grzesiak

The objective of this study was to investigate whether the content of cell wall-bound phenolics can simultaneously influence both the productivity and the water status of triticale under soil drought conditions. Two parallel treatments were carried out. The T1 treatment involved plants being subjected to soil drought twice, during the tillering phase and then during the flowering phase. The T2 treatment included drought only during the flowering phase. After T1 treatment, the majority of cultivars exhibited better PSII functioning at the flowering phase in comparison to T2, which could be related to better adaptation of the photosynthetic apparatus to leaf dehydration. Simultaneously, the higher activity of the photosynthetic apparatus of flag leaves for T1 was significantly correlated with the higher content of cell wall-bound phenolics. The dry mass of plants was markedly lower in the T1 treatment and was correlated with a higher content of cell wall-bound phenolics. Moreover, cultivars subjected to the T1 treatment showed a significantly higher water content in comparison to the T2 treatment. The delay in the leaf rolling and the ageing of plants in the T1 treatment, which induced a higher level of cell wall-bound phenolics, was visual proof of the improvement in the water status of plants. Phenolic compounds that form cross-bridges with carbohydrates of the cell wall can be considered a more effective biochemical protective mechanism than free phenolics during the dehydration of leaves. This potentially higher level of effectiveness is likely the result of the double action of phenolic compounds, both as photoprotectors of the photosynthetic apparatus and hydrophobic stabilizers, preventing water loss from the apoplast.


Acta Physiologiae Plantarum | 2011

The effect of zearalenone on PSII photochemical activity and growth in wheat and soybean under salt (NaCl) stress

Janusz Kościelniak; Agnieszka Ostrowska; Jolanta Biesaga-Kościelniak; W. Filek; Anna Janeczko; Hazem M. Kalaji; Katarzyna Stalmach

The effects of mycotoxin zearalenone (ZEN) on the photochemical activity of photosystem II (PSII) in wheat and soybean leaf discs incubated in ZEN solutions as well as the after-effects of pre-sowing soaking of seeds in solutions containing ZEN on the photochemical activity of PSII and on the seedlings growth under salt stress (NaCl solutions were investigated). The incubation of wheat leaf discs in ZEN solutions strongly inhibited the energy flux per cross section (CS) for absorption (ABS/CS), trapping (TRo/CS) and electron transport (ETo/CS), while the effects of ZEN action on soybean discs were opposite and the values of those parameters significantly increased with the increase in ZEN concentration. Incubation of seeds in a ZEN solution resulted in an increase in photochemical efficiency of PSII in soybean seedlings, but did not induce any response of PSII in those of wheat at medium illuminations. Only at the stronger illumination for both species did ZEN induce an increase in efficiency of excitation energy capture by open PSII reaction centers, photochemical quenching of chlorophyll a fluorescence and quantum yield of PSII electron transport. Pre-sowing soaking of seeds in a ZEN solution decreased the photoinhibitory injuries of PSII in wheat and soybean due to safe scattering of the excess excitation energy through an increase in energy-dependent quenching (qE) and state transition quenching (qT). ZEN when added to NaCl solutions during the period of germination contributed to reduction in the growth inhibition of wheat seedlings. The incubation of wheat leaf discs in ZEN solutions strongly inhibited CS, ABS/CS, TRo/CS and ETo/CS. Possible effects of ZEN on some physiological processes in plants have been discussed especially in the context with photochemical activity of PSII and a salt stress.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 2017

QTLs for cell wall-bound phenolics in relation to the photosynthetic apparatus activity and leaf water status under drought stress at different growth stages of triticale

Tomasz Hura; Mirosław Tyrka; Katarzyna Hura; Agnieszka Ostrowska; Kinga Dziurka

The present study aimed at identifying the regions of triticale genome responsible for cell wall saturation with phenolic compounds under drought stress during vegetative and generative growth. Moreover, the loci determining the activity of the photosynthetic apparatus, leaf water content (LWC) and osmotic potential (Ψo) were identified, as leaf hydration and functioning of the photosynthetic apparatus under drought are associated with the content of cell wall-bound phenolics (CWPh). Compared with LWC and Ψo, CWPh fluctuations were more strongly associated with changes in chlorophyll fluorescence. At the vegetative stage, CWPh fluctuations were due to the activity of three loci, of which only QCWPh.4B was also related to changes in Fv/Fm and ABS/CSm. In the other QTLs (QCWPh.6R.2 and QCWPh.6R.3), the genes of these loci determined also the changes in majority of chlorophyll fluorescence parameters. At the generative stage, the changes in CWPh in loci QCWPh.4B, QCWPh.3R and QCWPh.6R.1 corresponded to those in DIo/CSm. The locus QCWPh.6R.3, active at V stage, controlled majority of chlorophyll fluorescence parameters. This is the first study on mapping quantitative traits in triticale plants exposed to drought at different stages of development, and the first to present the loci for cell wall-bound phenolics.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Free and Cell Wall-Bound Polyamines under Long-Term Water Stress Applied at Different Growth Stages of ×Triticosecale Wittm

Tomasz Hura; Michał Dziurka; Katarzyna Hura; Agnieszka Ostrowska; Kinga Dziurka

Background Long-stemmed and semi-dwarf cultivars of triticale were exposed to water stress at tillering, heading and anthesis stage. Quantitative determination of free and cell wall-bound polyamines, i.e. agmatine, cadaverine, putrescine, spermidine and spermine, was supplemented with an analysis of quantitative relationships between free and cell wall-bound polyamines. Results The content of free and cell wall-bound polyamines varied depending on the development stage, both under optimal and water stress conditions. Drought-induced increase in free agmatine content was observed at all developmental stages in long-stemmed cultivar. A depletion of spermidine and putrescine was also reported in this cultivar, and spermidine was less abundant in semi-dwarf cultivar exposed to drought stress at the three analyzed developmental stages. Changes in the content of the other free polyamines did not follow a steady pattern reflecting the developmental stages. On the contrary, the content of cell wall-bound polyamines gradually increased from tillering, through heading and until anthesis period. Conclusion Water stress seemed to induce a progressive decrease in the content of free polyamines and an accumulation of cell wall-bound polyamines.


Plant and Soil | 2015

Rapid plant rehydration initiates permanent and adverse changes in the photosynthetic apparatus of triticale

Tomasz Hura; Katarzyna Hura; Agnieszka Ostrowska; Kinga Dziurka

Background and aimsThe reasons for partial recovery after a soil drought are not fully understood and have not been studied so far. This study investigated the physiological and biochemical responses of triticale cultivars with differential recovery ability after soil water deficit.MethodsActivity of the photosynthetic apparatus under soil drought followed by rehydration was estimated. Plant antioxidant potential was determined based on the measurement of catalase and peroxidase activity. The levels of hydrogen peroxide and superoxide radical were assessed.ResultsUnder rehydration, the not fully-recovered cultivar experienced further significant increase in the content of H2O2 and inhibited activity of the photosynthetic apparatus, as compared to the drought period. On 42nd day of the rehydration, the not fully-recovered cultivar showed also a reduced photosynthetic activity in the flag leaves, which resulted in a significant decrease in its grain yield. The first week of a rapid rehydration involved a decrease in total peroxidase and catalase activities. The increased content of H2O2 was compensated only when leaf water content was gradually restored in the first week of the rehydration and no further decrease in the activity of the photosynthetic apparatus was noticed.ConclusionsA destructive effect of the rapid rehydration was manifested in an intensification of the physiological processes associated with reactive oxygen species (ROS) overproduction. An important cause of hydrogen peroxide overproduction seems to be the electron leakage due to overloading of the electron transport chain (ETC) in the PSI and PSII.


Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 2017

Wheat and rye genome confer specific phytohormone profile features and interplay under water stress in two phenotypes of triticale

Tomasz Hura; Michał Dziurka; Katarzyna Hura; Agnieszka Ostrowska; Kinga Dziurka; Joanna Gadzinowska

The aim of the experiment was to determine phytohormone profile of triticale and quality-based relationships between the analyzed groups of phytohormones. The study involved two triticale phenotypes, a long-stemmed one and a semi-dwarf one with Dw1 gene, differing in mechanisms of acclimation to drought and controlled by wheat or rye genome. Water deficit in the leaves triggered a specific phytohormone response in both winter triticale phenotypes attributable to the dominance of wheat (semi-dwarf cultivar) or rye (long-stemmed cultivar) genome. Rye genome in long-stemmed triticale was responsible for specific increase (tillering: gibberellic acid; heading: N6-isopentenyladenine, trans-zeatin-9-riboside, cis-zeatin-9-riboside; flowering: N6-isopentenyladenine, indolebutyric acid, salicylic acid) or decrease (heading: trans-zeatin) in the content of some phytohormones. Wheat genome in semi-dwarf triticale controlled a specific increase in trans-zeatin content at heading and anthesis in gibberellin A1 during anthesis. The greatest number of changes in the phytohormone levels was observed in the generative phase. In both triticale types, the pool of investigated phytohormones was dominated by abscisic acid and gibberellins. The semi-dwarf cultivar with Dw1 gene was less sensitive to gibberellins and its mechanisms of acclimation to water stress were mainly ABA-dependent. An increase in ABA and gibberellins during drought and predominance of these hormones in the total pool of analyzed phytohormones indicated their equal share in drought acclimation mechanisms in long-stemmed cultivar.


Acta Physiologiae Plantarum | 2016

Impact of soil compaction stress combined with drought or waterlogging on physiological and biochemical markers in two maize hybrids

Maciej T. Grzesiak; Franciszek Janowiak; Piotr Szczyrek; Katarzyna Kaczanowska; Agnieszka Ostrowska; Grzegorz Rut; Tomasz Hura; Andrzej Rzepka; S. Grzesiak

In field conditions plants undergo combinations of stresses like soil compaction combined with soil drought or flooding. In maize there exists an intraspecific variation in responses to environmental stresses, e.g. drought, flooding and soil compaction. In this study seedlings of two maize hybrids (sensitive and resistant to soil compaction) were grown under low, moderate and high soil compaction levels and drought or flooding. Water potential, electrolyte leakage, chlorophyll a content, gas exchange, ABA and antioxidant activity were measured. In seedlings exposed to different soil compaction levels differences between soil, leaf and root water potentials were observed at noon and later in the day. Significant differences between hybrids grown in low and severe soil compactions and exposed to drought or flooding were noticed in membrane injury, leaf water potential, chlorophyll a content and gas exchange parameters. Statistically significant differences between hybrids were observed in ABA content in the stem under severe and in the root under low soil compaction and exposed to drought and flooding, and in antioxidant activity in leaf under severe soil compaction and under low soil compaction with drought or flooding stresses. Further studies on physiological responses of genotypes contrasting in tolerance to different stresses would help us explore stress tolerance mechanisms.


Photosynthetica | 2017

Photosynthetic apparatus activity in relation to high and low contents of cell wall-bound phenolics in triticale under drought stress

Katarzyna Hura; Agnieszka Ostrowska; Kinga Dziurka; Tomasz Hura

Cell wall-bound phenolics (CWP) play an important role in the mechanisms of plant acclimation to soil drought. The study involved CWP analyses in 50 strains and 50 doubled haploid (DH) lines of winter triticale exposed to drought at their vegetative and generative stages. CWP in the plants experiencing drought at the generative stage positively correlated with their leaf water contents. The strains and DH lines characterized by high content of CWP showed higher leaf water content and higher activity of photosynthetic apparatus when exposed to drought at the generative stage compared to the strains and DH lines with the low CWP content. Furthermore, when drought subsided at the generative stage, the strains and DH lines richer in CWP demonstrated higher regeneration potential and their grain yield loss was smaller.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2018

Prioritization of Candidate Genes in QTL Regions for Physiological and Biochemical Traits Underlying Drought Response in Barley (Hordeum vulgare L.)

Kornelia Gudys; Justyna Guzy-Wróbelska; Agnieszka Janiak; Michał Dziurka; Agnieszka Ostrowska; Katarzyna Hura; Barbara Jurczyk; Katarzyna Żmuda; Daria Grzybkowska; Joanna Śróbka; Wojciech Urban; Jolanta Biesaga-Koscielniak; Maria Filek; Janusz Koscielniak; Krzysztof Mikołajczak; Piotr Ogrodowicz; Karolina Krystkowiak; Anetta Kuczyńska; Paweł Krajewski; Iwona Szarejko

Drought is one of the most adverse abiotic factors limiting growth and productivity of crops. Among them is barley, ranked fourth cereal worldwide in terms of harvested acreage and production. Plants have evolved various mechanisms to cope with water deficit at different biological levels, but there is an enormous challenge to decipher genes responsible for particular complex phenotypic traits, in order to develop drought tolerant crops. This work presents a comprehensive approach for elucidation of molecular mechanisms of drought tolerance in barley at the seedling stage of development. The study includes mapping of QTLs for physiological and biochemical traits associated with drought tolerance on a high-density function map, projection of QTL confidence intervals on barley physical map, and the retrievement of positional candidate genes (CGs), followed by their prioritization based on Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment analysis. A total of 64 QTLs for 25 physiological and biochemical traits that describe plant water status, photosynthetic efficiency, osmoprotectant and hormone content, as well as antioxidant activity, were positioned on a consensus map, constructed using RIL populations developed from the crosses between European and Syrian genotypes. The map contained a total of 875 SNP, SSR and CGs, spanning 941.86 cM with resolution of 1.1 cM. For the first time, QTLs for ethylene, glucose, sucrose, maltose, raffinose, α-tocopherol, γ-tocotrienol content, and catalase activity, have been mapped in barley. Based on overlapping confidence intervals of QTLs, 11 hotspots were identified that enclosed more than 60% of mapped QTLs. Genetic and physical map integration allowed the identification of 1,101 positional CGs within the confidence intervals of drought response-specific QTLs. Prioritization resulted in the designation of 143 CGs, among them were genes encoding antioxidants, carboxylic acid biosynthesis enzymes, heat shock proteins, small auxin up-regulated RNAs, nitric oxide synthase, ATP sulfurylases, and proteins involved in regulation of flowering time. This global approach may be proposed for identification of new CGs that underlies QTLs responsible for complex traits.


Journal of Proteomics | 2017

Changes in protein abundance and activity induced by drought during generative development of winter barley (Hordeum vulgare L.)

Gabriela Gołębiowska-Pikania; Przemysław Kopeć; Ewa Surówka; Franciszek Janowiak; Monika Krzewska; Ewa Dubas; Anna Nowicka; Joanna Kasprzyk; Agnieszka Ostrowska; Sabina Malaga; Tomasz Hura; Iwona Żur

The present study investigated drought-induced changes in proteome profiles of ten DH lines of winter barley, relatively varied in water deficit tolerance level. Additionally, the parameters describing the functioning of the photosynthetic apparatus and the activity of the antioxidative system were analysed. Water deficit (3-week growth in soil with water content reduced to ca. 35%) induced significant changes in leaf water relations and reduced photosynthetic activity, probably due to decreased stomatal conductance. It was associated with changes in protein abundance and altered activity of antioxidative enzymes. From 47 MS-identified proteins discriminating more tolerant from drought-sensitive genotypes, only two revealed distinctly higher while seven revealed lower abundance in drought-treated plants of tolerant DH lines in comparison to sensitive ones. The majority were involved in the dark phase of photosynthesis. Another factor of great importance seems to be the ability to sustain, during drought stress, relatively high activity of enzymes (SOD and CAT) decomposing reactive oxygen species and protecting plant cell from oxidative damages. Low molecular weight antioxidants seem to play less important roles. Our findings also suggest that high tolerance to drought stress in barley is a constitutively controlled trait regulated by the rate of protein synthesis and their activity level. BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE According to our knowledge, this is the first comparative proteomic analysis of drought tolerance performed for the model set of several winter barley doubled haploid (DH) lines. We analysed both the drought impact on the protein pattern of individual winter barley DH lines as well as comparisons between them according to their level of drought tolerance. We have identified 47 proteins discriminating drought-tolerant from drought-sensitive genotypes. The majority was involved in the dark phase of photosynthesis. Another factor of great importance in our opinion seems to be the ability to sustain, during drought stress, relatively high activity of antioxidative enzymes (SOD and CAT) decomposing reactive oxygen species and protecting plant cell from oxidative damages. Our findings also suggest that high tolerance to drought stress in barley is a constitutively-controlled trait regulated by the rate of protein synthesis and their activity level.

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Katarzyna Hura

University of Agriculture

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Tomasz Hura

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Kinga Dziurka

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Michał Dziurka

Polish Academy of Sciences

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