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Dive into the research topics where Frederick Meins is active.

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Featured researches published by Frederick Meins.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1990

Structure of a tobacco endochitinase gene: evidence that different chitinase genes can arise by transposition of sequences encoding a cysteine-rich domain

Hideaki Shinshi; Jean-Marc Neuhaus; John Ryals; Frederick Meins

The endochitinases (E.C. 3.2.1.14, chitinase) are a structurally diverse group of enzymes believed to be important in the biochemical defense of plants against potential pathogens. The gene for a chitinase of Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. Havana 425 has been cloned and sequenced. The major transcription start is 11 bp upstream of the ATG codon and 28 bp downstream of the TATA box. The gene contains two introns and encodes a basic chitinase of 329 amino acids with a 23 amino acid N-terminal signal peptide followed by a 43 amino acid, cysteine-rich domain, which is linked by a hinge region to the main structure of the enzyme. This gene appears to be expressed because the exons are identical to the coding sequence of a cDNA which was isolated. Comparison of chitinase amino acid sequences from different plants indicates there are at least three classes of these enzymes: class I, basic chitinases with an N-terminal cysteine-rich domain and a highly conserved main structure; class II, chitinases similar to the main structure of class I chitinases but lacking the cysteine-rich domain; and, class III, chitinases with conserved sequences different from those of the class I and II enzymes. The sequences encoding the cysteine-rich domain in class I chitinases are flanked by 9–10 bp imperfect direct repeats suggesting that these domains arose from a common ancestral gene and were introduced into genes for class I enzymes by transposition events.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

High molecular weight RNAs and small interfering RNAs induce systemic posttranscriptional gene silencing in plants

Ulrich Gerhard Klahre; Patrice Crété; Sabrina Leuenberger; Victor Alejandro Iglesias; Frederick Meins

Posttranscriptional gene silencing (PTGS) in transgenic plants is an epigenetic form of RNA degradation related to PTGS and RNA interference (RNAi) in fungi and animals. Evidence suggests that transgene loci and RNA viruses can generate double-stranded RNAs similar in sequence to the transcribed region of target genes, which then undergo endonucleolytic cleavage to generate small interfering RNAs (siRNA) that promote degradation of cognate RNAs. The silent state in transgenic plants and in Caenorhabditis elegans can spread systemically, implying that mobile silencing signals exist. Neither the chemical nature of these signals nor their exact source in the PTGS pathway is known. Here, we use a positive marker system and real-time monitoring of green fluorescent protein expression to show that large sense, antisense, and double-stranded RNAs as well as double-stranded siRNAs delivered biolistically into plant cells trigger silencing capable of spreading locally and systemically. Systemically silenced leaves show greatly reduced levels of target RNA and accumulate siRNAs, confirming that RNA can induce systemic PTGS. The induced siRNAs represent parts of the target RNA that are outside of the region of homology with the triggering siRNA. Our results imply that siRNAs themselves or intermediates induced by siRNAs could comprise silencing signals and that these signals induce self-amplifying production of siRNAs.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2006

Molecular characterization of geminivirus-derived small RNAs in different plant species

Rashid Akbergenov; Azeddine Si-Ammour; Todd Blevins; Imran Amin; Claudia Kutter; Hervé Vanderschuren; Peng Zhang; Wilhelm Gruissem; Frederick Meins; Thomas Hohn; Mikhail M. Pooggin

DNA geminiviruses are thought to be targets of RNA silencing. Here, we characterize small interfering (si) RNAs—the hallmarks of silencing—associated with Cabbage leaf curl begomovirus in Arabidopsis and African cassava mosaic begomovirus in Nicotiana benthamiana and cassava. We detected 21, 22 and 24 nt siRNAs of both polarities, derived from both the coding and the intergenic regions of these geminiviruses. Genetic evidence showed that all the 24 nt and a substantial fraction of the 22 nt viral siRNAs are generated by the dicer-like proteins DCL3 and DCL2, respectively. The viral siRNAs were 5′ end phosphorylated, as shown by phosphatase treatments, and methylated at the 3′-nucleotide, as shown by HEN1 miRNA methylase-dependent resistance to β-elimination. Similar modifications were found in all types of endogenous and transgene-derived siRNAs tested, but not in a major fraction of siRNAs from a cytoplasmic RNA tobamovirus. We conclude that several distinct silencing pathways are involved in DNA virus-plant interactions.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1991

High-level expression of a tobacco chitinase gene in Nicotiana sylvestris. Susceptibility of transgenic plants to Cercospora nicotianae infection.

Jean-Marc Neuhaus; Patricia Ahl-Goy; Ursula Hinz; Susan Flores; Frederick Meins

Endochitinases (E.C. 3.2.14, chitinase) are believed to be important in the biochemical defense of plants against chitin-containing fungal pathogens. We introduced a gene for class I (basic) tobacco chitinase regulated by Cauliflower Mosaic Virus 35S-RNA expression signals into Nicotiana sylvestris. The gene was expressed to give mature, enzymatically active chitinase targeted to the intracellular compartment of leaves. Most transformants accumulated extremely high levels of chitinase-up to 120-fold that of non-transformed plants in comparable tissues. Unexpectedly, some transformants exhibited chitinase levels lower than in non-transformed plants suggesting that the transgene inhibited expression of the homologous host gene. Progeny tests indicate this effect is not permanent. High levels of chitinase in transformants did not substantially increase resistance to the chitin-containing fungus Cercospora nicotiana, which causes Frog Eye disease. Therefore class I chitinase does not appear to be the limiting factor in the defense reaction to this pathogen.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1992

Regulated inactivation of homologous gene expression in transgenic Nicotiana sylvestris plants containing a defense-related tobacco chitinase gene

Craig M. Hart; Bernt Fischer; Jean-Marc Neuhaus; Frederick Meins

SummaryThe class I chitinases are vacuolar proteins implicated in the defense of plants against pathogens. Leaves of transgenic Nicotiana sylvestris plants homozygous for a chimeric tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) chitinase gene with Cauliflower Mosaic Virus (CaMV) 35S RNA expression signals usually accumulate high levels of chitinase relative to comparable leaves of non-transformed plants. Unexpectedly, some transgenic plants accumulated lower levels of chitinase than nontransformed plants. We call this phenomenon silencing. The incidence of silencing depends on the early rearing conditions of the plants. When grown to maturity in a greenhouse, ≈25% of plants raised as seedlings in closed culture vessels were of the silent type; none of the plants raised from seed in a greenhouse showed this phenotype. Silencing is also developmentally regulated. Plants showed three patterns of chitinase expression: uniformly high levels of expression in different leaves, uniformly low levels of expression in different leaves, and position-dependent silencing in which expression was uniform within individual leaves but varied in different leaves on the same plant. Heritability of the silent phenotype was examined in plants homozygous for the transgene. Some direct descendants exhibited a high-silent-high sequence of activity phenotypes in successive sexual generations, which cannot be explained by simple Mendelian inheritance. Taken together, the results indicate that silencing results from stable but potentially reversible states of gene expression that are not meiotically transmitted. Gene-specific measurements of chitinase and chitinase mRNA showed that silencing results from co-suppression, i.e. the inactivation of both host and transgene expression in trans. The silent state was not correlated with cytosine methylation of the transgene at the five restriction sites investigated.


Plant Molecular Biology Reporter | 1996

A revised nomenclature for chitinase genes

Jean-Marc Neuhaus; Bernard Fritig; Huub J. M. Linthorst; Frederick Meins; J. D. Mikkelsen; John Ryals

The nomenclature for chitinase genes has been revised to correspond to the nomenclature of PR-proteins and to distinguish classes from families. Accordingly, there are now four families of chitinases, two of which are further divided in classes.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2008

Evolution of Arabidopsis MIR genes generates novel microRNA classes

Franck Vazquez; Todd Blevins; Jérôme Ailhas; Thomas Boller; Frederick Meins

In Arabidopsis, canonical 21-nt miRNAs are generated by Dicer-like (DCL) 1 from hairpin precursors. We have identified a novel class of functional 23- to 25-nt long-miRNAs that is generated independently from the same miRNA precursors by DCL3. Long-miRNAs are developmentally regulated and in some cases have been conserved during evolution implying that they have biological functions. Plant microRNA genes (MIR) have been proposed to evolve by inverted duplication of the target gene. We found that recently evolved MIR genes consistently give rise to long-miRNAs, while ancient MIR genes give rise predominantly to canonical miRNAs. Transcripts from inverted repeats representing evolving proto-MIR genes were processed by DCL3 into long-miRNAs and also by DCL1, DCL2 or DCL4 depending on hairpin stem length to produce different sizes of miRNAs. Our results suggest that evolution of MIR genes is associated with gradual, overlapping changes in DCL usage resulting in specific size classes of miRNAs.


Archive | 1992

The Primary Structure of Plant Pathogenesis-related Glucanohydrolases and Their Genes

Frederick Meins; Christoph Sperisen; Jean-Marc Neuhaus; John Ryals

The endo-type glucanohydrolases s-1,3-glucanase (E.C. 3.2.1.39) and chitinase (E.C. 3.2.1.14) are abundant proteins widely distributed in seedplant species (Clarke and Stone, 1962; Ballance and Manners, 1978; Powning and Irzykiewicz, 1965). The physiological functions of s-1,3- glucanase and chitinase are not known. Based on the distribution of the enzyme and its putative substrates such as callose, it has been proposed that s-1,3-glucanases may have a role in fruit ripening (Hinton and Pressey, 1980), pollen tube growth (Roggen and Stanley, 1969; Ori et al., 1990), coleoptile growth (Masuda and Wada, 1967), regulation of transport through vascular tissues (Clarke and Stone, 1962), cellulose biosynthesis (Meier et al., 1981) and cell division (Waterkeyn, 1967; Fulcher et al., 1976). Although the existence of other substrates has not been ruled out, chitin, the known substrate of chitinase, is not found in higher plants.


The Plant Cell | 1996

Decreased Susceptibility to Viral Disease of [beta]-1,3-Glucanase-Deficient Plants Generated by Antisense Transformation.

Roland Beffa; R. M. Hofer; Monique Thomas; Frederick Meins

Antifungal class I [beta]-1,3-glucanases are believed to be part of the constitutive and induced defenses of plants against fungal infection. Unexpectedly, mutants deficient in these enzymes generated by antisense transformation showed markedly reduced lesion size, lesion number, and virus yield in the local-lesion response of Havana 425 tobacco to tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) and of Nicotiana sylvestris to tobacco necrosis virus. These mutants also showed decreased severity of mosaic disease symptoms, delayed spread of symptoms, and reduced yield of virus in the susceptible response of N. sylvestris to TMV. The symptoms of disease in the responses of both plant species were positively correlated with [beta]-1,3-glucanase content in a series of independent transformants. Taken together, these results provide direct evidence that [beta]-1,3-glucanases function in viral pathogenesis. Callose, a substrate for [beta]-1,3-glucanase, acts as a physical barrier to the spread of virus. Callose deposition in and surrounding TMV-induced lesions was increased in the [beta]-1,3-glucanase-deficient, local-lesion Havana 425 host, suggesting as a working hypothesis that decreased susceptibility to virus resulted from increased deposition of callose in response to infection. Our results suggest novel means, based on antisense transformation with host genes, for protecting plants against viral infection. These observations also raise the intriguing possibility that viruses can use a defense response of the host against fungal infection[mdash]production of [beta]-1,3-glucanases[mdash]to promote their own replication and spread.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1997

Silencing of transgenes introduced into leaves by agroinfiltration: a simple, rapid method for investigating sequence requirements for gene silencing

H. Schöb; C. Kunz; Frederick Meins

Abstract Agroinfiltration – the infiltration of Agrobacterium tumefaciens into intact plant leaves – provides a rapid and simple way of screening large numbers of transgene constructs for silencing in response to a resident transgene. Transgenic Nicotiana sylvestris plants homozygous for the tobacco class I chitinase A gene CHN48 under the control of the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S RNA promoter (P35S) show a high incidence of postranscriptional gene silencing. We forced suspensions of A. tumefaciens, carrying P35S-CHN48 in a binary Ti-plasmid vector, into wild-type and transgenic N. sylvestris leaves with a blunt-tipped plastic syringe. The infiltrated CHN48 transgene was expressed in leaves transformed with the vector alone, but not in CHN48-transformed leaves showing the silent phenotype. In contrast, expression of a chimeric P35S-E. coliβ-glucuronidase gene (uidA) infiltrated into leaves was not affected by the presence of the CHN48 transgene stably integrated in the host genome. These results show that extra copies of CHN48 are silenced by resident, silent copies of the same gene and confirm that CHN48 silencing is not the result of promoter interactions. The results also suggest that silencing of the additional CHN48 copies does not require their integration into chromosomes.

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Hanspeter Schöb

Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research

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Todd Blevins

Indiana University Bloomington

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Azeddine Si-Ammour

Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research

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Mikhail M. Pooggin

Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research

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