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Featured researches published by Chien-Chih Yang.


Plant Physiology | 2004

Molecular Analyses of the Arabidopsis TUBBY-Like Protein Gene Family

Chia-Ping Lai; Chang-Lung Lee; Po-Hsuan Chen; Shu-Hsing Wu; Chien-Chih Yang; Jei-Fu Shaw

In mammals, TUBBY-like proteins play an important role in maintenance and function of neuronal cells during postdifferentiation and development. We have identified a TUBBY-like protein gene family with 11 members in Arabidopsis, named AtTLP1-11. Although seven of the AtTLP genes are located on chromosome I, no local tandem repeats or gene clusters are identified. Except for AtTLP4, reverse transcription-PCR analysis indicates that all these genes are expressed in various organs in 6-week-old Arabidopsis. AtTLP1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 9, 10, and 11 are expressed ubiquitously in all the organs tested, but the expression of AtTLP5 and 8 shows dramatic organ specificity. These 11 family members share 30% to 80% amino acid similarities across their conserved C-terminal tubby domains. Unlike the highly diverse N-terminal region of animal TUBBY-like proteins, all AtTLP members except AtTLP8 contain a conserved F-box domain (51–57 residues). The interaction between AtTLP9 and ASK1 (Arabidopsis Skp1-like 1) is confirmed via yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) two-hybrid assays. Abscisic acid (ABA)-insensitive phenotypes are observed for two independent AtTLP9 mutant lines, whereas transgenic plants overexpressing AtTLP9 are hypersensitive to ABA. These results suggest that AtTLP9 may participate in the ABA signaling pathway.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2009

Phytochelatin synthase is regulated by protein phosphorylation at a threonine residue near its catalytic site.

Hsin-Chieh Wang; Jiann-Shing Wu; Ju-Chen Chia; Chien-Chih Yang; Yu-Jen Wu; Rong-Huay Juang

Heavy metals are toxic to most living organisms and cause health problems by contaminating agricultural products. In plants, phytochelatin synthase (PCS, EC 2.3.2.15) uses glutathione (GSH) as its substrate to catalyze the synthesis of heavy metal-binding peptides, known as phytochelatins (PC). PCS has been described as a constitutive enzyme that may be controlled by post-translational modifications. However, the detailed mechanism of its catalytic activity is not clear. In this study, in vitro experiments demonstrate that PCS activity increased following phosphorylation by casein kinase 2 (CK2) and decreased following treatment with alkaline phosphatase. Site-directed mutagenesis experiments at amino acids on AtPCS1 indicate that Thr 49 is the site for phosphorylation. This is further supported by fact that the mutant AtPCS1(T49A) cannot be phosphorylated, and its activity is significantly lower than that of the wild-type enzyme. In the modeled three-dimensional structure of AtPCS1, Arg 183 is within close proximity to Thr 49. The mutant AtPCS1(R183A) can be phosphorylated, but it shows much lower catalytic activity than the wild-type protein. This result suggested that Arg 183 may play an important role in the catalytic mechanism of AtPCS1. The possibility of the presence of a second substrate-binding site as a result of the interaction of these two amino acids is discussed. In addition, the activity of AtPCS1 was also found to be modulated by the C-terminal domain. The N-terminal catalytic domain of AtPCS1 was expressed (AtPCS1-N), and its catalytic activity was found to be even more sensitive to Cd or phosphorylation status than was the full-length enzyme.


Protein Expression and Purification | 2010

Cloning and expression of a phenylalanine ammonia-lyase gene (BoPAL2) from Bambusa oldhamii in Escherichia coli and Pichia pastoris

Lu-Sheng Hsieh; Chuan-Shan Yeh; Hung-Chi Pan; Chieh-Yang Cheng; Chien-Chih Yang; Ping-Du Lee

Phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (PAL, EC 4.3.1.5) is the first committed enzyme of phenylpropanoid pathway. A PAL gene, designated as BoPAL2, was cloned from a Bambusa oldhamii cDNA library. The open reading frame of BoPAL2 was 2142bp in size encoding a 713-amino acid polypeptide. BoPAL2 was heterologous expressed in Escherichia coli and Pichia pastoris. The recombinant proteins were exhibited PAL and tyrosine ammonia-lyase activities. The recombinant BoPAL2 had a subunit mass of 80kDa and existed as a homotetramer. The optimum temperature and pH of BoPAL2 were 50-60 degrees C and 8.5-9.0, respectively. The K(m) and k(cat) values of BoPAL2 expressed in E. coli were 250microM and 10.12s(-1). The K(m) and k(cat) values of BoPAL2 expressed in P. pastoris were 331microM and 16.04s(-1). The recombinant proteins had similar biochemical properties and kinetic parameters with PALs reported in other plants.


Phytochemistry | 2009

Insights into the catalytic properties of bamboo vacuolar invertase through mutational analysis of active site residues

Tai-Hung Chen; Yu-Chiao Huang; Chii-Shen Yang; Chien-Chih Yang; Ai-Yu Wang; Hsien-Yi Sung

Plant acid invertases, which are either associated with the cell wall or present in vacuoles, belong to family 32 of glycoside hydrolases (GH32). Homology modeling of bamboo vacuolar invertase Bobetafruct3 using Arabidopsis cell-wall invertase AtcwINV1 as a template showed that its overall structure is similar to GH32 enzymes, and that the three highly conserved motifs, NDPNG, RDP and EC, are located in the active site. This study also used site-directed mutagenesis to examine the roles of the conserved amino acid residues in these three motifs, which include Asp135, Arg259, Asp260, Glu316 and Cys317, and a conserved Trp residue (Trp159) that resides between the NDPNG and RDP motifs. The mutants W159F, W159L, E316Q and C317A retained acid invertase activity, but no invertase activity was observed for the mutant E316A or mutants with changes at Asp135, Arg259, or Asp260. The apparent K(m) values of the four mutants with invertase activity were all higher than that of the wild-type enzyme. The mutants W159L and E316Q exhibited lower k(cat) values than the wild-type enzyme, but an increase in the k(cat) value was observed for the mutants W159F and C317A. The results of this study demonstrate that these residues have individual functions in catalyzing sucrose hydrolysis.


Protein Science | 2001

The role of a β-bulge in the folding of the β-hairpin structure in ubiquitin

Pei-Yeh Chen; B.G. Gopalacushina; Chien-Chih Yang; Sunney I. Chan; Philip A. Evans

It is known that the peptide corresponding to the N‐terminal β‐hairpin of ubiquitin, U(1–17), can populate the monomeric β‐hairpin conformation in aqueous solution. In this study, we show that the Gly‐10 that forms the bulge of the β‐turn in this hairpin is very important to the stability of the hairpin. The deletion of this residue to desG10(1–16) unfolds the structure of the peptide in water. Even under denaturing conditions, this bulge appears to be important in maintaining the residual structure of ubiquitin, which involves tertiary interactions within the sequence 1 to 34 in the denatured state. We surmise that this residual structure functions as one of the nucleation centers in the folding process and is important in stabilizing the transition state. In accordance with this idea, deleting Gly‐10 slows down the refolding and unfolding rate by about one half.


Phytochemistry | 2010

Analysis of the cellulose synthase genes associated with primary cell wall synthesis in Bambusa oldhamii.

Chih-Yu Chen; Meng-Hsun Hsieh; Chien-Chih Yang; Choun-Sea Lin; Ai-Yu Wang

The synthesis of cell wall polysaccharides is highly active in rapidly growing bamboo shoots. We cloned a set of BoCesA cDNAs that encode cellulose synthase from bamboo (Bambusa oldhamii) and investigated the expression patterns of the BoCesA2, BoCesA5, BoCesA6 and BoCesA7 genes. The four BoCesA genes were differentially expressed in the different parts of growing bamboo shoots, in various organs, and in multiple shoots that were cultured in vitro. They were down-regulated by alpha-naphthaleneacetic acid and differentially affected by thidiazuron in the multiple shoots. In situ RT-PCR analyses demonstrated that BoCesA2, BoCesA5, BoCesA6, and BoCesA7 mRNAs were present throughout the base and the internode regions of the etiolated shoots that emerged from pseudorhizomes, and in the internode regions of the juvenile branch shoots that emerged from nodes of mature bamboo culms; however, the expression of the four genes in the lignified internode of the branch shoot was predominantly detected in the center of the vascular bundles. Our results for cDNA cloning, expression analyses, and phylogenetic analysis suggest that the 10 BoCesA genes cloned from the etiolated bamboo shoots participate in cellulose synthesis in the primary cell walls of the growing bamboo, and that at least three additional BoCesA genes involved in cellulose synthesis in the secondary walls may be present in the bamboo genome. The expressions of BoCesA genes may be under fine control in response to the various developmental stages and physiological conditions of bamboo.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2010

HHP1, a novel signalling component in the cross-talk between the cold and osmotic signalling pathways in Arabidopsis

Chin-chung Chen; Ching-shin Liang; Ai-Ling Kao; Chien-Chih Yang

Heptahelical protein 1 (HHP1) is a negative regulator in abscisic acid (ABA) and osmotic signalling in Arabidopsis. The physiological role of HHP1 was further investigated in this study using transgenic and knock-out plants. In HHP1::GUS transgenic mutants, GUS activity was found to be mainly expressed in the roots, vasculature, stomata, hydathodes, adhesion zones, and connection sites between septa and seeds, regions in which the regulation of turgor pressure is crucial. By measuring transpiration rate and stomatal closure, it was shown that the guard cells in the hhp1-1 mutant had a decreased sensitivity to drought and ABA stress compared with the WT or the c-hhp1-1 mutant, a complementation mutant of HHP1 expressing the HHP1 gene. The N-terminal fragment (amino acids 1–96) of HHP1 was found to interact with the transcription factor inducer of CBF expression-1 (ICE1) in yeast two-hybrid and bimolecular fluorescence complementation (BiFC) studies. The hhp1-1 mutant grown in soil showed hypersensitivity to cold stress with limited watering. The expression of two ICE1-regulated genes (CBF3 and MYB15) and several other cold stress-responsive genes (RD29A, KIN1, COR15A, and COR47) was less sensitive to cold stress in the hhp1-1 mutant than in the WT. These data suggest that HHP1 may function in the cross-talk between cold and osmotic signalling.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2009

HHP1 is involved in osmotic stress sensitivity in Arabidopsis

Chin-chung Chen; Ching-shin Liang; Ai-Ling Kao; Chien-Chih Yang

HHP1 (heptahelical protein 1), a protein with a predicted seven transmembrane domain structure homologous to adiponectin receptors (AdipoRs) and membrane progestin receptors (mPRs), has been characterized. Expression of HHP1 was increased in response to abscisic acid (ABA) and salt/osmotic stress as shown by quantitative real-time PCR and HHP1 promoter-controlled GUS activity. The HHP1 T-DNA insertion mutant (hhp1-1) showed a higher sensitivity to ABA and osmotic stress than the wild-type (WT), as revealed by the germination rate and post-germination growth rate. The induced expression of stress-responsive genes (RD29A, RD29B, ADH1, KIN1, COR15A, and COR47) was more sensitive to exogenous ABA and osmotic stress in hhp1-1 than in the WT. The hypersensitivity in the hhp1-1 mutant was reversed in the complementation mutant of HHP1 expressing the HHP1 gene. The data suggest that the mutation of HHP1 renders plants hypersensitive to ABA and osmotic stress and HHP1 might be a negative regulator in ABA and osmotic signalling.


Proteins | 2009

Tuning the conformational properties of the prion peptide

Chai-Chi Ho; Lily Y.-L. Lee; Kuo-Ting Huang; Chun-Cheng Lin; Mei-yun Ku; Chien-Chih Yang; Sunney I. Chan; Ruei-Lin Hsu; Rita P.-Y. Chen

Previously, we disclosed that O‐linked glycosylation of Ser‐132 or Ser‐135 could dramatically change the amyloidogenic property of the hamster prion peptide (sequence 108–144). This peptide, which corresponds to the flexible loop and the first β‐strand in the structure of the prion protein, is a random coil when it is initially dissolved in buffer, but amyloid fibrils are formed with time. Thus, it offers a convenient model system to observe and compare how different chemical modifications and sequence mutations alter the amyloidogenic property of the peptide within a reasonable experimental time frame. In our earlier study, aside from uncovering a site‐specificity of the glycosylation on the fibrillogenesis, different effects of α‐GalNAc and β‐GlcNAc were observed. In this work, we explore further how different sugar configurations affect the conformational property of the polypeptide chain. We compare the effects of O‐linked glycosylation by the common sugars α‐GalNAc, β‐GlcNAc with their non‐native analogs β‐GalNAc, α‐GlcNAc in an effort to uncover the origin of the sugar‐specificity on the fibril formation. We find that the anomeric configuration of the sugar is the most important factor affecting the fibrillogenesis. Sugars with the glycosidic bond in the α‐configuration at Ser‐135 have a dramatic inhibitory effect on the structural conversion of the glycosylated peptide. Because O‐glycosylation of Ser‐135 with α‐linked sugars also promote the formation of three slowly converting conformations at the site of glycosylation, we surmise that the amyloidogenic property of the peptide is related to its conformational flexibility, and the proclivity of this region of the peptide to undergo the structural conversion from the random coil to form the β‐structure. Upon O‐glycosylation with an α‐linked sugar, this conversion is inhibited and the nucleation of fibril formation is largely retarded. Consistent with this scenario, Arg‐136 is the residue most affected in the TOCSY NMR spectra of the glycosylated peptides, other than the serine site modified. In addition, when Arg‐136 is substituted by Gly, a mutation that should provide higher structural flexibility in this part of the peptide, the amyloidogenic property of the peptide is greatly enhanced, and the inhibition effect of glycosylation is largely diminished. These results are consistent with Ser‐135 and Arg‐136 being part of the kink region involved in the structural conversion. Proteins 2009.


Physiologia Plantarum | 2011

The purine-rich DNA-binding protein OsPurα participates in the regulation of the rice sucrose synthase 1 gene expression.

Jui‐Che Chang; Yi-Chun Liao; Chien-Chih Yang; Ai-Yu Wang

The rice sucrose synthase 1 (RSus1) gene is transcriptionally induced by sucrose, and a region within its promoter, at -1117 to -958 upstream of the transcription initiation site, was found to be essential for enhancing the sucrose-induced expression. Further dissection of this region revealed that a group of nuclear proteins interact with a 39-bp fragment named A-3-2 (-1045 to -1007). A protein that specifically and directly interacted with A-3-2 was isolated from the suspension-cultured cells of rice and was subsequently identified as a purine-rich DNA-binding protein. The amino acid sequence of this protein, OsPurα, exhibited 73% identity with the Arabidopsis Purα-1 protein, and its modeled structure resembled the structure of Pur-α in Drosophila. Recombinant OsPurα expressed and purified from Escherichia coli was demonstrated to have DNA-binding activity and to interact with A-3-2 specifically. Moreover, OsPurα was able to enhance sucrose-induced expression of the β-glucuronidase (GUS) reporter gene, which was transcriptionally fused to two copies of a DNA fragment containing A-3-2 and the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S minimal promoter, in vivo. The level of OsPurα bound to A-3-2 was higher in cells cultured in the presence of sucrose; however, the level of OsPurα mRNA in cells was not affected by sucrose. The results of this study demonstrate that OsPurα participates in the regulation of RSus1 expression in response to sucrose; nevertheless, it may require other partner proteins for full function.

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Ai-Yu Wang

National Taiwan University

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Ai-Ling Kao

National Taiwan University

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Chieh-Yang Cheng

National Taiwan University

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Chin-chung Chen

National Taiwan University

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Ching-shin Liang

National Taiwan University

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Chuan-Shan Yeh

National Taiwan University

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Ju-Chen Chia

National Taiwan University

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