Amith R. Devireddy
University of North Texas
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Featured researches published by Amith R. Devireddy.
Trends in Plant Science | 2014
Simon Gilroy; Nobuhiro Suzuki; Gad Miller; Won-Gyu Choi; Masatsugu Toyota; Amith R. Devireddy; Ron Mittler
Systemic signaling pathways enable multicellular organisms to prepare all of their tissues and cells to an upcoming challenge that may initially only be sensed by a few local cells. They are activated in plants in response to different stimuli including mechanical injury, pathogen infection, and abiotic stresses. Key to the mobilization of systemic signals in higher plants are cell-to-cell communication events that have thus far been mostly unstudied. The recent identification of systemically propagating calcium (Ca(2+)) and reactive oxygen species (ROS) waves in plants has unraveled a new and exciting cell-to-cell communication pathway that, together with electric signals, could provide a working model demonstrating how plant cells transmit long-distance signals via cell-to-cell communication mechanisms. Here, we summarize recent findings on the ROS and Ca(2+) waves and outline a possible model for their integration.
Plant Physiology | 2016
Simon Gilroy; Maciej Białasek; Nobuhiro Suzuki; Magdalena Górecka; Amith R. Devireddy; Stanislaw Karpinski; Ron Mittler
ROS, calcium, and electric signals mediate rapid systemic signaling in plants.
Plant Journal | 2015
Nobuhiro Suzuki; Amith R. Devireddy; Madhuri A. Inupakutika; Aaron Baxter; Gad Miller; Luhua Song; Elena Shulaev; Rajeev K. Azad; Vladimir Shulaev; Ron Mittler
Summary The acclimation of plants to changes in light intensity requires rapid responses at several different levels. These include biochemical and biophysical responses as well as alterations in the steady‐state level of different transcripts and proteins. Recent studies utilizing promoter::reporter constructs suggested that transcriptional responses to changes in light intensity could occur within seconds, rates for which changes in mRNA expression are not routinely measured or functionally studied. To identify and characterize rapid changes in the steady‐state level of different transcripts in response to light stress we performed RNA sequencing analysis of Arabidopsis thaliana plants subjected to light stress. Here we report that mRNA accumulation of 731 transcripts occurs as early as 20–60 sec following light stress application, and that at least five of these early response transcripts play an important biological role in the acclimation of plants to light stress. More than 20% of transcripts accumulating in plants within 20–60 sec of initiation of light stress are H2O2‐ and ABA‐response transcripts, and the accumulation of several of these transcripts is inhibited by transcriptional inhibitors. In accordance with the association of rapid response transcripts with H2O2 and ABA signaling, a mutant impaired in ABA sensing (abi‐1) was found to be more tolerant to light stress, and the response of several of the rapid response transcripts was altered in mutants impaired in reactive oxygen metabolism. Our findings reveal that transcriptome reprogramming in plants could occur within seconds of initiation of abiotic stress and that this response could invoke known as well as unknown proteins and pathways.
Science Signaling | 2018
Amith R. Devireddy; Sara I. Zandalinas; Aurelio Gómez-Cadenas; Eduardo Blumwald; Ron Mittler
Light stress in one part of a plant is communicated to other leaves to coordinate stomatal responses. Sending a canopy-wide message A stress experienced by one part of a plant can be transmitted to other parts of the plant not directly exposed to the stress. Although not all leaves in the canopy of a plant may be exposed to light at the same time, it is beneficial to coordinate the closure of pores in leaves called stomata to prevent desiccation. Devireddy et al. showed that a wave of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and Ca2+ enabled leaves experiencing light stress in Arabidopsis thaliana plants to trigger stomatal closure in leaves not exposed to light. Stomatal closure required abscisic acid in light-stressed leaves and jasmonic acid in nonexposed leaves, hormones previously implicated in stomatal closure. This coordinated and dynamic response may enable plants to acclimate to light stress. The plant canopy functions as an aerial array of light-harvesting antennas. To achieve maximal yield, each leaf within this array and the array as a whole need to rapidly adjust to naturally occurring fluctuations in light intensity and quality. Excessive light stress triggers the closing of pores in leaves called stomata to minimize moisture loss. We found that different leaves within the canopy of an Arabidopsis thaliana plant, including leaves not directly exposed to light, coordinated stomatal closure in response to light stress by sending and receiving rapid systemic signals. This response required the plant hormones abscisic acid and jasmonic acid and was mediated by a rapid autopropagating wave of reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. Furthermore, this response depended on the function of genes encoding the ROS-generating NADPH oxidase RBOHD and various stomatal regulators, such as the anion channel SLAC1, GHR1 (guard cell hydrogen peroxide resistant 1), and lipoxygenase 1 (LOX1). Our findings reveal that plants function as highly dynamic and coordinated organisms, optimizing the overall response of their canopies to fluctuating light intensities.
Genomics Discovery | 2014
Munmun Mukherjee; Prathusha Kakarla; Sanath Kumar; Esmeralda Gonzalez; Jared T. Floyd; Madhuri A. Inupakutika; Amith R. Devireddy; Selena R. Tirrell; Merissa Bruns; Gui-Xin He; Ingrid E. Lindquist; Anitha Sundararajan; Faye D. Schilkey; Joann Mudge; Manuel F. Varela
Pathogenic strains of Vibrio cholerae are responsible for endemic and pandemic outbreaks of the disease cholera. The complete toxigenic mechanisms underlying virulence in Vibrio strains are poorly understood. The hypothesis of this work was that virulent versus non-virulent strains of V. cholerae harbor distinctive genomic elements that encode virulence. The purpose of this study was to elucidate genomic differences between the O1 serotypes and non-O1 V. cholerae PS15, a non-toxigenic strain, in order to identify novel genes potentially responsible for virulence. In this study, we compared the whole genome of the non-O1 PS15 strain to the whole genomes of toxigenic serotypes at the phylogenetic level, and found that the PS15 genome was distantly related to those of toxigenic V. cholerae. Thus we focused on a detailed gene comparison between PS15 and the distantly related O1 V. cholerae N16961. Based on sequence alignment we tentatively assigned chromosome numbers 1 and 2 to elements within the genome of non-O1 V. cholerae PS15. Further, we found that PS15 and O1 V. cholerae N16961 shared 98% identity and 766 genes, but of the genes present in N16961 that were missing in the non-O1 V. cholerae PS15 genome, 56 were predicted to encode not only for virulence–related genes (colonization, antimicrobial resistance, and regulation of persister cells) but also genes involved in the metabolic biosynthesis of lipids, nucleosides and sulfur compounds. Additionally, we found 113 genes unique to PS15 that were predicted to encode other properties related to virulence, disease, defense, membrane transport, and DNA metabolism. Here, we identified distinctive and novel genomic elements between O1 and non-O1 V. cholerae genomes as potential virulence factors and, thus, targets for future therapeutics. Modulation of such novel targets may eventually enhance eradication efforts of endemic and pandemic disease cholera in afflicted nations.
International Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences and Research | 2016
Prathusha Kakarla; Madhuri A. Inupakutika; Amith R. Devireddy; Shravan Kumar Gunda; Thomas Mark Willmon; Ranjana Kc; Ugina Shrestha; Indrika Ranaweera; Alberto J. Hernandez; Sharla R. Barr; Manuel F. Varela
One of the major obstacles to the successful chemotherapy towards several cancers is multidrug resistance of human cancer cells to anti-cancer drugs. An important contributor to multidrug resistance is the human multidrug resistance protein-1 transporter (MRP1), which is an efflux pump of the ABC (ATP binding cassette) superfamily. Thus, highly efficacious, third generation MRP1 inhibitors, like tariquidar analogues, are promising inhibitors of multidrug resistance and are under clinical trials. To maximize the efficacy of MRP1 inhibitors and to reduce systemic toxicity, it is important to limit the exposure of MRP1 inhibitors and anticancer drugs to normal tissues and to increase their co-localization with tumor cells. Comparative Molecular Field Analysis (CoMFA) and Comparative Molecular Similarity Indices Analysis (CoMSIA) associated with 3D-Quantitiative structure-activity relationship (3D-QSAR) studies were performed on a series of tariquidar analogues, as selective MDR modulators. Best predictability was obtained with CoMFA model r2 (non-cross-validated square of correlation coefficient) = 0.968, F value = 151.768 with five components, standard error of estimate = 0.107 while the CoMSIA yielded r2 = 0.982, F value = 60.628 with six components, and standard error of estimate = 0.154. These results indicate that steric, electrostatic, hydrophobic (lipophilic), and hydrogen bond donor substituents play significant roles in multidrug resistance modulation of tariquidar analogues upon MRP1. The tariquidar analogue and MRP1 binding and stability data generated from CoMFA and CoMSIA based 3D-contour maps may further aid in study and design of tariquidar analogues as novel, potent and selective MDR modulator drug candidates.
Plant and Cell Physiology | 2018
Feroza Kaneez Choudhury; Amith R. Devireddy; Rajeev K. Azad; Vladimir Shulaev; Ron Mittler
Environmental stress conditions can drastically affect plant growth and productivity. In contrast to soil moisture or salinity that can gradually change over a period of days or weeks, changes in light intensity or temperature can occur very rapidly, sometimes over the course of minutes or seconds. We previously reported that in response to rapid changes in light intensity (0-60 sec), Arabidopsis thaliana plants mount a large-scale transcriptomic response that includes several different transcripts essential for light stress acclimation. Here, we expand our analysis of the rapid response of Arabidopsis to light stress using a metabolomics approach and identify 111 metabolites that significantly alter in their level during the first 90 sec of light stress exposure. We further show that the levels of free and total glutathione accumulate rapidly during light stress in Arabidopsis and that the accumulation of total glutathione during light stress is associated with an increase in nitric oxide (NO) levels. We further suggest that the increase in precursors for glutathione biosynthesis could be linked to alterations in photorespiration, and that phosphoenolpyruvate could represent a major energy and carbon source for rapid metabolic responses. Taken together, our analysis could be used as an initial road map for the identification of different pathways that could be used to augment the rapid response of plants to abiotic stress. In addition, it highlights the important role of glutathione in these responses.
Plant Physiology | 2018
Feroza Kaneez Choudhury; Amith R. Devireddy; Rajeev K. Azad; Vladimir Shulaev; Ron Mittler
Rapid systemic signaling is accompanied by coordinated metabolic changes in local, transport, and systemic tissues. Plants evolved multiple signaling pathways that transduce light-related signals between leaves. These are thought to improve light stress acclimation in a process termed systemic acquired acclimation. Although responses to light stress have been studied extensively in local leaves, and to a lesser degree in systemic leaves, little is known about the responses that occur in the different tissues that connect the local to the systemic leaves. These could be important in defining the specificity of the systemic response as well as in supporting the generation of different systemic signals. Here, we report that local application of light stress to one rosette leaf of bolting Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) plants resulted in a metabolic response that encompassed local, systemic and transport tissues (stem tissues that connect the local to the systemic tissues), demonstrating a high degree of physical and metabolic continuity between different tissues throughout the plant. Our results further indicate that the response of many of the systemically altered metabolites is associated with the function of the reactive oxygen species wave and that the levels of eight different metabolites are altered in a similar manner in all tissues tested (local, systemic, and transport). These compounds could define a core metabolic signature for light stress that propagates from the local to the systemic leaves. Our findings suggest that metabolic changes occurring in cells that connect the local and systemic tissues play an important role in systemic acquired acclimation and could convey specificity to the rapid systemic response of plants to light stress.
Journal of Experimental Botany | 2016
Madhuri A. Inupakutika; Soham Sengupta; Amith R. Devireddy; Rajeev K. Azad; Ron Mittler
Archives of Microbiology | 2017
Prathusha Kakarla; Jared T. Floyd; Munmun Mukherjee; Amith R. Devireddy; Madhuri A. Inupakutika; Indrika Ranweera; Ranjana Kc; Ugina Shrestha; Upender Rao Cheeti; Thomas Mark Willmon; Jaclyn Adams; Merissa Bruns; Shravan Kumar Gunda; Manuel F. Varela