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Dive into the research topics where Colette Matthewman is active.

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Featured researches published by Colette Matthewman.


Plant Journal | 2011

Interplay of SLIM1 and miR395 in the regulation of sulfate assimilation in Arabidopsis

Cintia G. Kawashima; Colette Matthewman; Siqi Huang; Bok Rye Lee; Naoko Yoshimoto; Anna Koprivova; Ignacio Rubio-Somoza; Marco Todesco; Tina Rathjen; Kazuki Saito; Hideki Takahashi; Tamas Dalmay; Stanislav Kopriva

MicroRNAs play a key role in the control of plant development and response to adverse environmental conditions. For example, microRNA395 (miR395), which targets three out of four isoforms of ATP sulfurylase, the first enzyme of sulfate assimilation, as well as a low-affinity sulfate transporter, SULTR2;1, is strongly induced by sulfate deficiency. However, other components of sulfate assimilation are induced by sulfate starvation, so that the role of miR395 is counterintuitive. Here, we describe the regulation of miR395 and its targets by sulfate starvation. We show that miR395 is important for the increased translocation of sulfate to the shoots during sulfate starvation. MiR395 together with the SULFUR LIMITATION 1 transcription factor maintain optimal levels of ATP sulfurylase transcripts to enable increased flux through the sulfate assimilation pathway in sulfate-deficient plants. Reduced expression of ATP sulfurylase (ATPS) alone affects both sulfate translocation and flux, but SULTR2;1 is important for the full rate of sulfate translocation to the shoots. Thus, miR395 is an integral part of the regulatory circuit controlling plant sulfate assimilation with a complex mechanism of action.


Plant Cell Reports | 2009

Plant sulfate assimilation genes: redundancy versus specialization.

Stanislav Kopriva; Sarah G. Mugford; Colette Matthewman; Anna Koprivova

Sulfur is an essential nutrient present in the amino acids cysteine and methionine, co-enzymes and vitamins. Plants and many microorganisms are able to utilize inorganic sulfate and assimilate it into these compounds. Sulfate assimilation in plants has been extensively studied because of the many functions of sulfur in plant metabolism and stress defense. The pathway is highly regulated in a demand-driven manner. A characteristic feature of this pathway is that most of its components are encoded by small multigene families. This may not be surprising, as several steps of sulfate assimilation occur in multiple cellular compartments, but the composition of the gene families is more complex than simply organellar versus cytosolic forms. Recently, several of these gene families have been investigated in a systematic manner utilizing Arabidopsis reverse genetics tools. In this review, we will assess how far the individual isoforms of sulfate assimilation enzymes possess specific functions and what level of genetic redundancy is retained. We will also compare the genomic organization of sulfate assimilation in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana with other plant species to find common and species-specific features of the pathway.


New Phytologist | 2015

Standards for plant synthetic biology: a common syntax for exchange of DNA parts

Nicola J. Patron; Diego Orzaez; Sylvestre Marillonnet; Heribert Warzecha; Colette Matthewman; Mark Youles; Oleg Raitskin; Aymeric Leveau; Gemma Farré; Christian Rogers; Alison G. Smith; Julian M. Hibberd; Alex A. R. Webb; James C. Locke; Sebastian Schornack; Jim Ajioka; David C. Baulcombe; Cyril Zipfel; Sophien Kamoun; Jonathan D. G. Jones; Hannah Kuhn; Silke Robatzek; H. Peter van Esse; Dale Sanders; Giles E.D. Oldroyd; Cathie Martin; Rob Field; Sarah E. O'Connor; Samantha Fox; Brande B. H. Wulff

Inventors in the field of mechanical and electronic engineering can access multitudes of components and, thanks to standardization, parts from different manufacturers can be used in combination with each other. The introduction of BioBrick standards for the assembly of characterized DNA sequences was a landmark in microbial engineering, shaping the field of synthetic biology. Here, we describe a standard for Type IIS restriction endonuclease-mediated assembly, defining a common syntax of 12 fusion sites to enable the facile assembly of eukaryotic transcriptional units. This standard has been developed and agreed by representatives and leaders of the international plant science and synthetic biology communities, including inventors, developers and adopters of Type IIS cloning methods. Our vision is of an extensive catalogue of standardized, characterized DNA parts that will accelerate plant bioengineering.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2012

Control of sulfur partitioning between primary and secondary metabolism in Arabidopsis.

Stanislav Kopriva; Sarah G. Mugford; Patrycja Baraniecka; Bok-Rye Lee; Colette Matthewman; Anna Koprivova

Sulfur is an essential nutrient for all organisms. Plants are able to take up inorganic sulfate and assimilate it into a range of bio-organic molecules either after reduction to sulfide or activation to 3′-phosphoadenosine 5′-phosphosulfate. While the regulation of the reductive part of sulfate assimilation and the synthesis of cysteine has been studied extensively in the past three decades, much less attention has been paid to the control of synthesis of sulfated compounds. Only recently the genes and enzymes activating sulfate and transferring it onto suitable acceptors have been investigated in detail with emphasis on understanding the diversity of the sulfotransferase gene family and the control of partitioning of sulfur between the two branches of sulfate assimilation. Here, the recent progress in our understanding of these processes will be summarized.


FEBS Letters | 2012

miR395 is a general component of the sulfate assimilation regulatory network in Arabidopsis

Colette Matthewman; Cintia G. Kawashima; Dalibor Húska; Tibor Csorba; Tamas Dalmay; Stanislav Kopriva

In plants, microRNAs play an important role in many regulatory circuits, including responses to environmental cues such as nutrient limitations. One such microRNA is miR395, which is strongly up‐regulated by sulfate deficiency and targets two components of the sulfate uptake and assimilation pathway. Here we show that miR395 levels are affected by treatments with metabolites regulating sulfate assimilation. The precursor of cysteine, O‐acetylserine, which accumulates during sulfate deficiency, causes increase in miR395 accumulation. Feeding plants with cysteine, which inhibits sulfate uptake and assimilation, induces miR395 levels while buthionine sulfoximine, an inhibitor of glutathione synthesis, lowers miR395 expression. Thus, miR395 is an integral part of the regulatory network of sulfate assimilation.


FEBS Letters | 2010

Adenosine-5′-phosphosulfate kinase is essential for Arabidopsis viability

Sarah G. Mugford; Colette Matthewman; Lionel Hill; Stanislav Kopriva

In Arabidopsis thaliana, adenosine‐5′‐phosphosulfate kinase (APK) provides activated sulfate for sulfation of secondary metabolites, including the glucosinolates. We have successfully isolated three of the four possible triple homozygous mutant combinations of this family. The APK1 isoform alone was sufficient to maintain WT levels of growth and development. Analysis of apk1 apk2 apk3 and apk1 apk3 apk4 mutants suggests that APK3 and APK4 are functionally redundant, despite being located in cytosol and plastids, respectively. We were, however, unable to isolate apk1 apk3 apk4 mutants, most probably because the apk1 apk3 apk4 triple mutant combination is pollen lethal. Therefore, we conclude that APS kinase is essential for plant reproduction and viability.


Planta | 2010

Regulation of sulfate assimilation in Physcomitrella patens: mosses are different!

Corinna Hermsen; Anna Koprivova; Colette Matthewman; Dirk Wesenberg; Gerd J. Krauss; Stanislav Kopriva

Sulfur is an essential nutrient, taken up as sulfate from soil, reduced and incorporated into bioorganic compounds in plant cells. The pathway of sulfate assimilation is highly regulated in a demand-driven manner in seed plants. To test the evolutionary conservation of the regulatory mechanisms, we analyzed regulation of the pathway in the model for basal plants, the moss Physcomitrella patens. While in Arabidopsis the key enzyme of sulfate assimilation, adenosine 5′-phosphosulfate reductase (APR), is feedback repressed by thiols and induced by reduced levels of glutathione, in P. patens such regulation does not occur. The control of the pathway was not moved to other components as these conditions affected neither mRNA accumulation of other genes of sulfate assimilation nor sulfate uptake. Other treatments known to regulate APR, O-acetylserine, cadmium and sulfur deficiency affected APR transcript levels, but not enzyme activity. It appears that the sulfate assimilation pathway in P. patens is much more robust than in seed plants. Thus, the regulatory networks controlling the pathway have probably evolved only later in the evolution of the seed plants after separation of the bryophytes.


Plant Methods | 2016

Meeting report: GARNet/OpenPlant CRISPR-Cas workshop

Geraint Parry; Nicola J. Patron; Ruth Bastow; Colette Matthewman

Targeted genome engineering has been described as a “game-changing technology” for fields as diverse as human genetics and plant biotechnology. One technique used for precise gene editing utilises the CRISPR-Cas system and is an effective method for genetic engineering in a wide variety of plants. However, many researchers remain unaware of both the technical challenges that emerge when using this technique or of its potential benefits. Therefore in September 2015, GARNet and OpenPlant organized a two-day workshop at the John Innes Centre that provided both background information and hands-on training for this important technology.


eLife | 2017

Point of View: A transatlantic perspective on 20 emerging issues in biological engineering

Bonnie C. Wintle; Christian R. Boehm; Catherine Rhodes; Jennifer Molloy; Piers Millett; Laura Adam; Rainer Breitling; Rob Carlson; Rocco Casagrande; Malcolm Dando; Robert Doubleday; Eric Drexler; Brett Edwards; Tom Ellis; Nicholas G. Evans; Richard Hammond; Jim Haseloff; Linda Kahl; Todd Kuiken; Benjamin R. Lichman; Colette Matthewman; Johnathan A. Napier; Seán S. ÓhÉigeartaigh; Nicola J. Patron; Edward Perello; Philip Shapira; Joyce Tait; Eriko Takano; William J. Sutherland

Advances in biological engineering are likely to have substantial impacts on global society. To explore these potential impacts we ran a horizon scanning exercise to capture a range of perspectives on the opportunities and risks presented by biological engineering. We first identified 70 potential issues, and then used an iterative process to prioritise 20 issues that we considered to be emerging, to have potential global impact, and to be relatively unknown outside the field of biological engineering. The issues identified may be of interest to researchers, businesses and policy makers in sectors such as health, energy, agriculture and the environment.


Nature Biotechnology | 2018

Opening options for material transfer

Linda Kahl; Jennifer Molloy; Nicola J. Patron; Colette Matthewman; Jim Haseloff; David Grewal; Richard Johnson; Drew Endy

The Open Material Transfer Agreement is a material-transfer agreement that enables broader sharing and use of biological materials by biotechnology practitioners working within the practical realities of technology transfer. Supplementary information The online version of this article (doi:10.1038/nbt.4263) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

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Jim Haseloff

University of Cambridge

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Bok-Rye Lee

Chonnam National University

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