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Featured researches published by Hanns Frohnmeyer.


The Plant Cell | 2000

Glutathione and a UV Light–Induced Glutathione S-Transferase Are Involved in Signaling to Chalcone Synthase in Cell Cultures

Linda Loyall; Kenko Uchida; Sigurd Braun; Masaki Furuya; Hanns Frohnmeyer

UV irradiation stimulates expression of the gene encoding the key enzyme chalcone synthase (CHS), which leads to the generation of protective flavonoids in parsley cell cultures. CHS transcripts increase after 3 to 4 hr, and early genes are involved in the signal transduction to the CHS promoter. By using the fluorescent differential display technique in a large-scale screening, several early UV light–induced genes were isolated. Of these, a novel glutathione S-transferase (PcGST1) is induced within 2 hr and precedes CHS expression. Overexpression of PcGST1 in transformed cell lines containing a CHS promoter/luciferase reporter (CHS-LUC) affected the onset of LUC transcription. Supplementing these cell lines with glutathione immediately stimulated CHS-LUC expression within 2 hr in dark-incubated cells and resulted in a biphasic induction profile in UV-irradiated cells. Our data indicate the involvement of glutathione and PcGST1 in early events of a UV light–dependent signal transduction pathway to CHS. In this context, the oxidative status of a cell acts as a central regulating element.


The Plant Cell | 1994

Light-regulated modification and nuclear translocation of cytosolic G-box binding factors in parsley.

Klaus Harter; Stefan Kircher; Hanns Frohnmeyer; Martina Krenz; Ference Nagy; Eberhard Schäfer

Functional cell-free systems may be excellent tools with which to investigate light-dependent signal transduction mechanisms in plants. By evacuolation of parsley protoplasts and subsequent silicon oil gradient centrifugation of lysed evacuolated protoplasts, we obtained a highly pure and concentrated plasma membrane-containing cytosol. Using GT- and G-box DNA elements, we were able to demonstrate a specific localization of a pool of G-box binding activity and factors (GBFs) but not one of GT-box binding activity in this cytosolic fraction. The DNA binding activity of the cytosolic GBFs is modulated in vivo as well as in vitro by light and phosphorylation/dephosphorylation activities. The regulation of cytosolic G-box binding activity by irradiation with continuous white light and phosphorylation correlates with a light-modulated transport of GBFs to the nucleus. This was shown by a GBF-antibody cotranslocation assay in permeabilized, cell-free evacuolated parsley protoplasts. We propose that a light-regulated subcellular displacement of cytosolic GBFs to the nucleus may be an important step in the signal transduction pathway coupling photoreception to light-dependent gene expression.


FEBS Letters | 2000

Identification of a novel gene coding for neoxanthin synthase from Solanum tuberosum

Salim Al-Babili; Philippe Hugueney; Michael Schledz; Ralf Welsch; Hanns Frohnmeyer; Oliver Laule; Peter Beyer

The polymerase chain reaction analysis of potato plants, transformed with capsanthin capsorubin synthase ccs, revealed the presence of a highly related gene. The cloned cDNA showed at the protein level 89.6% identity to CCS. This suggested that the novel enzyme catalyzes a mechanistically similar reaction. Such a reaction is represented by neoxanthin synthase (NXS), forming the xanthophyll neoxanthin, a direct substrate for abscisic acid formation. The function of the novel enzyme could be proven by transient expression in plant protoplasts and high performance liquid chromatography analysis. The cloned NXS was imported in vitro into plastids, the compartment of carotenoid biosynthesis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

Phosphorylation of the parsley bZIP transcription factor CPRF2 is regulated by light.

Frank Wellmer; Stefan Kircher; Alexander Rügner; Hanns Frohnmeyer; Eberhard Schäfer; Klaus Harter

The analysis of the complex network of signal transduction chains has demonstrated the importance of transcription factor activities for the control of gene expression. To understand how transcription factor activities in plants are regulated in response to light, we analyzed the common plant regulatory factor 2 (CPRF2) from parsley (Petroselinum crispum L.) that interacts with promoter elements of light-regulated genes. Here, we demonstrate that CPRF2 is a phosphoprotein in vivo and that its phosphorylation state is rapidly increased in response to light. Phosphorylation in vitro as well as in vivooccurs primarily within the C-terminal half of the factor, and is caused by a cytosolic 40-kDa protein serine kinase. In contrast to other plant basic leucine-zipper motif factors, phosphorylation of CPRF2 does not alter its DNA binding activity. Therefore, we discuss alternative functions of the light-dependent phosphorylation of CPRF2 including the regulation of its nucleocytoplasmic partitioning.


Planta | 1994

Analysis of the parsley chalcone-synthase promoter in response to different light qualities

Thomas Merkle; Hanns Frohnmeyer; Paul Schulze-Lefert; Jeffery L. Dangl; Klaus Hahlbrock; Eberhard Schäfer

We examined the chalcone synthase (chs) promoter from parsley [Petroselinum crispum Miller (A.W. Hill)] for the existence of separate promoter elements responsible for transcriptional activation of the chs gene by UV-B and by blue light. A combination of in-vivo footprinting in parsley cells and light-induced transient expression assays with different chs promoter constructs in parsley protoplasts was used. Dark controls and bluelight-irradiated cells gave identical in-vivo footprints on the chs promoter. Pre-irradiation with blue light prior to a UV-B-light pulse is known to cause a shift in the timing of UV-B-light-induced increase in chs transcription rates. This shift was also manifested on the DNA template, since UV-B-light-induced in-vivo footprints in cells pretreated with blue light were detected earlier than in cells which had been irradiated with a UV-B-light pulse only. Although there was a clear shift in the timing of footprint appearance, the patterns of footprinting did not change. Light-induced transient-expression assays revealed that the shortest tested chs promoter which retained any light responsiveness, was sufficient for mediating both induction by UV light and the blue-light-mediated kinetic shift. These findings argue against a spatial separation of UV-B- and blue-light-responsive elements on the chs promoter. We interpret these data by postulating that the signal transduction pathways originating from the excitation of UV-B- and blue-light receptors merge at the chs promoter, or somewhere between light perception and protein-DNA interaction.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1994

Regulation of phytochrome A mRNA abundance in parsley seedlings and cell-suspension cultures

Christoph Poppe; Bruno Ehmann; Hanns Frohnmeyer; Masaki Furuya; Eberhard Schäfer

A cDNA clone encoding the apoprotein of a parsley phytochrome was isolated and classified as parsley PHYA phytochrome, on the basis of a sequence homology comparison with all available phytochrome sequences. Red light pulses led to a phytochrome-dependent down-regulation of PHYA mRNA abundance in etiolated parsley seedlings to a level of 10–20% compared with the dark control. The PHYA mRNA abundance in a parsley cell suspension culture was also down-regulated by light pulses. Transient expression assays in parsley protoplasts showed light regulation of a chimeric pea PHYA promoter uidA-gene construct.


Acta Physiologiae Plantarum | 1997

Phytochrome and UV signal transduction pathways

Chris Bowler; Hanns Frohnmeyer; Eberhard Schäfer; Gunther Neuhaus; Nam-Hai Chua

The phytochromes are the best studied plant photoreceptors, controlling a wide variety of responses at both whole plant and single cell levels. Three signal transduction pathways, dependent on cGMP and/or calcium, have been found to be utilized by phytochrome to control the expression of genes required for chloroplast development (e.g., CAB and FNR) and anthocyanin biosynthesis (e.g., CHS). In particular, cGMP is a second messenger positively regulating CHS gene expression whilst calcium and calmodulin act as negative regulators. In addition to phytochrome regulation of CHS we have begun to examine the signal transduction pathways utilized by UV photoreceptors. In contrast to phytochrome-mediated responses, results indicate a role for calcium and calmodulin as positive regulators of CHS gene expression in UV light.


Archive | 1990

Phytochrome in Plant Cell Cultures

Eberhard Schäfer; B. Bruns; Hanns Frohnmeyer; K. Hahlbrock; Klaus Harter; Thomas Merkle; S. Ohl

At least three different photoreceptor classes (phytochromes, blue UV-A- and UV-B receptors) control the transition from skotomorphogenesis to photomorphogenesis (1). The control of elongation rate, photoperiodism as well as mRNA accumulation after partial reetiolation by phytochromes and blue UV-A receptors is also documented (2, 3).


Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 1999

Transcriptional activation of the parsley chalcone synthase promoter in heterologous pea and yeast systems.

Georgi Kalbin; Åke Strid; Hanns Frohnmeyer

Introduction by electroporation of different parsley (Petroselinum crispum) CHS-promoter/beta-glucuronidase(GUS)-reporter constructs into pea (Pisum sativum L.) protoplasts leads to a high constitutive GUS-expression and to the loss of the light-inducibility seen in the homologous parsley protoplast system. These results indicate that Unit 1 of the parsley CHS-promoter is only partly responsible for the GUS-expression detected. Instead, additional cis-elements, which are located downstream within 100 bp from the transcriptional start site, mediate the de-repression in pea protoplasts. In contrast, in yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) cells, the GUS expression from the heterologous CHS/GUS construct is controlled by elements between Unit 1 and -100 bp. In both pea and yeast cells, transcription factors different from those regulating UV-responsiveness in parsley, are probably mediating the constitutive expression from the heterologous construct. The results with pea protoplasts imply that protoplastation of pea leaf cells itself induces de-repression as a result of stress to the protoplasts. This notion was strengthened by the finding that mRNA levels of the endogenous chalcone synthase were drastically increased as the result of the protoplastation procedure.


Plant Journal | 1999

Millisecond UV-B irradiation evokes prolonged elevation of cytosolic-free Ca2+ and stimulates gene expression in transgenic parsley cell cultures

Hanns Frohnmeyer; Linda Loyall; Michael R. Blatt; Alexander Grabov

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Klaus Harter

University of Tübingen

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Tim Kunkel

University of Freiburg

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