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Dive into the research topics where J. Steen Hoyer is active.

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Featured researches published by J. Steen Hoyer.


PLOS Pathogens | 2015

Roles and Programming of Arabidopsis ARGONAUTE Proteins during Turnip Mosaic Virus Infection

Hernan Garcia-Ruiz; Alberto Carbonell; J. Steen Hoyer; Noah Fahlgren; Kerrigan B. Gilbert; Atsushi Takeda; Annalisa Giampetruzzi; Mayra T. Garcia Ruiz; Michaela G. McGinn; Nicholas Lowery; Maria T. Martinez Baladejo; James C. Carrington

In eukaryotes, ARGONAUTE proteins (AGOs) associate with microRNAs (miRNAs), short interfering RNAs (siRNAs), and other classes of small RNAs to regulate target RNA or target loci. Viral infection in plants induces a potent and highly specific antiviral RNA silencing response characterized by the formation of virus-derived siRNAs. Arabidopsis thaliana has ten AGO genes of which AGO1, AGO2, and AGO7 have been shown to play roles in antiviral defense. A genetic analysis was used to identify and characterize the roles of AGO proteins in antiviral defense against Turnip mosaic virus (TuMV) in Arabidopsis. AGO1, AGO2 and AGO10 promoted anti-TuMV defense in a modular way in various organs, with AGO2 providing a prominent antiviral role in leaves. AGO5, AGO7 and AGO10 had minor effects in leaves. AGO1 and AGO10 had overlapping antiviral functions in inflorescence tissues after systemic movement of the virus, although the roles of AGO1 and AGO10 accounted for only a minor amount of the overall antiviral activity. By combining AGO protein immunoprecipitation with high-throughput sequencing of associated small RNAs, AGO2, AGO10, and to a lesser extent AGO1 were shown to associate with siRNAs derived from silencing suppressor (HC-Pro)-deficient TuMV-AS9, but not with siRNAs derived from wild-type TuMV. Co-immunoprecipitation and small RNA sequencing revealed that viral siRNAs broadly associated with wild-type HC-Pro during TuMV infection. These results support the hypothesis that suppression of antiviral silencing during TuMV infection, at least in part, occurs through sequestration of virus-derived siRNAs away from antiviral AGO proteins by HC-Pro. These findings indicate that distinct AGO proteins function as antiviral modules, and provide a molecular explanation for the silencing suppressor activity of HC-Pro.


Plant Physiology | 2009

BOBBER1 Is a Noncanonical Arabidopsis Small Heat Shock Protein Required for Both Development and Thermotolerance

Dahlia E. Perez; J. Steen Hoyer; Ayanna I. Johnson; Zachary R. Moody; Joseph Lopez; Nicholas J. Kaplinsky

Plants have evolved a range of cellular responses to maintain developmental homeostasis and to survive over a range of temperatures. Here, we describe the in vivo and in vitro functions of BOBBER1 (BOB1), a NudC domain containing Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) small heat shock protein. BOB1 is an essential gene required for the normal partitioning and patterning of the apical domain of the Arabidopsis embryo. Because BOB1 loss-of-function mutants are embryo lethal, we used a partial loss-of-function allele (bob1-3) to demonstrate that BOB1 is required for organismal thermotolerance and postembryonic development. Recombinant BOB1 protein functions as a molecular chaperone and prevents the aggregation of a model protein substrate in vitro. In plants, BOB1 is cytoplasmic at basal temperatures, but forms heat shock granules containing canonical small heat shock proteins at high temperatures. In addition to thermotolerance defects, bob1-3 exhibits pleiotropic development defects during all phases of development. bob1-3 phenotypes include decreased rates of shoot and root growth as well as patterning defects in leaves, flowers, and inflorescence meristems. Most eukaryotic chaperones play important roles in protein folding either during protein synthesis or during cellular responses to denaturing stress. Our results provide, to our knowledge, the first evidence of a plant small heat shock protein that has both developmental and thermotolerance functions and may play a role in both of these folding networks.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Phytophthora Have Distinct Endogenous Small RNA Populations That Include Short Interfering and microRNAs

Noah Fahlgren; Stephanie R. Bollmann; Kristin D. Kasschau; Josh T. Cuperus; Caroline M. Press; Christopher M. Sullivan; Elisabeth J. Chapman; J. Steen Hoyer; Kerrigan B. Gilbert; Niklaus J. Grünwald; James C. Carrington

In eukaryotes, RNA silencing pathways utilize 20-30-nucleotide small RNAs to regulate gene expression, specify and maintain chromatin structure, and repress viruses and mobile genetic elements. RNA silencing was likely present in the common ancestor of modern eukaryotes, but most research has focused on plant and animal RNA silencing systems. Phytophthora species belong to a phylogenetically distinct group of economically important plant pathogens that cause billions of dollars in yield losses annually as well as ecologically devastating outbreaks. We analyzed the small RNA-generating components of the genomes of P. infestans, P. sojae and P. ramorum using bioinformatics, genetic, phylogenetic and high-throughput sequencing-based methods. Each species produces two distinct populations of small RNAs that are predominantly 21- or 25-nucleotides long. The 25-nucleotide small RNAs were primarily derived from loci encoding transposable elements and we propose that these small RNAs define a pathway of short-interfering RNAs that silence repetitive genetic elements. The 21-nucleotide small RNAs were primarily derived from inverted repeats, including a novel microRNA family that is conserved among the three species, and several gene families, including Crinkler effectors and type III fibronectins. The Phytophthora microRNA is predicted to target a family of amino acid/auxin permeases, and we propose that 21-nucleotide small RNAs function at the post-transcriptional level. The functional significance of microRNA-guided regulation of amino acid/auxin permeases and the association of 21-nucleotide small RNAs with Crinkler effectors remains unclear, but this work provides a framework for testing the role of small RNAs in Phytophthora biology and pathogenesis in future work.


PeerJ | 2017

PlantCV v2: Image analysis software for high-throughput plant phenotyping

Malia A. Gehan; Noah Fahlgren; Arash Abbasi; Jeffrey C. Berry; Steven T. Callen; Leonardo Chavez; Andrew N. Doust; Max J. Feldman; Kerrigan B. Gilbert; John G. Hodge; J. Steen Hoyer; Andy Lin; Suxing Liu; César Lizárraga; Argelia Lorence; Michael Miller; Eric Platon; Monica Tessman; Tony Sax

Systems for collecting image data in conjunction with computer vision techniques are a powerful tool for increasing the temporal resolution at which plant phenotypes can be measured non-destructively. Computational tools that are flexible and extendable are needed to address the diversity of plant phenotyping problems. We previously described the Plant Computer Vision (PlantCV) software package, which is an image processing toolkit for plant phenotyping analysis. The goal of the PlantCV project is to develop a set of modular, reusable, and repurposable tools for plant image analysis that are open-source and community-developed. Here we present the details and rationale for major developments in the second major release of PlantCV. In addition to overall improvements in the organization of the PlantCV project, new functionality includes a set of new image processing and normalization tools, support for analyzing images that include multiple plants, leaf segmentation, landmark identification tools for morphometrics, and modules for machine learning.


Applications in Plant Sciences | 2018

Raspberry Pi-powered imaging for plant phenotyping

Jose C. Tovar; J. Steen Hoyer; Andy Lin; Allison Tielking; Steven T. Callen; S. Elizabeth Castillo; Michael Miller; Monica Tessman; Noah Fahlgren; James C. Carrington; Dmitri A. Nusinow; Malia A. Gehan

Premise of the Study Image‐based phenomics is a powerful approach to capture and quantify plant diversity. However, commercial platforms that make consistent image acquisition easy are often cost‐prohibitive. To make high‐throughput phenotyping methods more accessible, low‐cost microcomputers and cameras can be used to acquire plant image data. Methods and Results We used low‐cost Raspberry Pi computers and cameras to manage and capture plant image data. Detailed here are three different applications of Raspberry Pi–controlled imaging platforms for seed and shoot imaging. Images obtained from each platform were suitable for extracting quantifiable plant traits (e.g., shape, area, height, color) en masse using open‐source image processing software such as PlantCV. Conclusions This protocol describes three low‐cost platforms for image acquisition that are useful for quantifying plant diversity. When coupled with open‐source image processing tools, these imaging platforms provide viable low‐cost solutions for incorporating high‐throughput phenomics into a wide range of research programs.


bioRxiv | 2018

Functional dissection of the ARGONAUTE7 promoter

J. Steen Hoyer; Jose L. Pruneda-Paz; Ghislain Breton; Mariah A Hassert; Emily E Holcomb; Halley Fowler; Kaylyn M Bauer; Jacob Mreen; Steve A. Kay; James C. Carrington

ARGONAUTES are the central effector proteins of RNA silencing which bind target transcripts in a small RNA-guided manner. Arabidopsis thaliana has ten ARGONAUTE (AGO) genes, with specialized roles in RNA-directed DNA methylation, post-transcriptional gene silencing, and antiviral defense. To better understand specialization among AGO genes at the level of transcriptional regulation we tested a library of 1497 transcription factors for binding to the promoters of AGO1, AGO10, and AGO7 using yeast 1-hybrid assays. A ranked list of candidate DNA-binding TFs revealed binding of the AGO7 promoter by a number of proteins in two families: the miR156-regulated SPL family and the miR319-regulated TCP family, both of which have roles in developmental timing and leaf morphology. Possible functions for SPL and TCP binding are unclear: we showed that these binding sites are not required for the polar expression pattern of AGO7, nor for the function of AGO7 in leaf shape. Normal AGO7 transcription levels and function appear to depend instead on an adjacent 124-bp region. Progress in understanding the structure of this promoter may aid efforts to understand how the conserved AGO7-triggered TAS3 pathway functions in timing and polarity.


Archive | 2017

Garcia-RuizHernanBotanyPlantPathologyRolesProgramming.pdf

Annalisa Giampetruzzi; Nicholas Lowery; J. Steen Hoyer; Hernan Garcia-Ruiz; Alberto Carbonell; Noah Fahlgren; James C. Carrington; Atsushi Takeda


Archive | 2017

Garcia-RuizHernanBotanyPlantPathologyRolesProgramming_SupportingInformation.zip

Alberto Carbonell; Annalisa Giampetruzzi; Atsushi Takeda; J. Steen Hoyer; Hernan Garcia-Ruiz; James C. Carrington; Noah Fahlgren; Nicholas Lowery


Archive | 2015

Roles and Programming of ArabidopsisARGONAUTE Proteins during Turnip MosaicVirus Infection

Hernan Garcia-Ruiz; Alberto Carbonell; J. Steen Hoyer; Noah Fahlgren; Kerrigan B. Gilbert; Atsushi Takeda; Annalisa Giampetruzzi; Mayra T. Garcia Ruiz; Michaela G. McGinn; Nicholas Lowery; Maria T. Martinez Baladejo; James C. Carrington


PLOS ONE | 2013

Dcl, Rdr, Ago and MIRNA genes in three Phytophthora species.

Noah Fahlgren; Stephanie R. Bollmann; Kristin D. Kasschau; Josh T. Cuperus; Caroline M. Press; Christopher M. Sullivan; Elisabeth J. Chapman; J. Steen Hoyer; Kerrigan B. Gilbert; Niklaus J. Grünwald; James C. Carrington

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James C. Carrington

Donald Danforth Plant Science Center

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Noah Fahlgren

Donald Danforth Plant Science Center

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Kerrigan B. Gilbert

Donald Danforth Plant Science Center

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Alberto Carbonell

Polytechnic University of Valencia

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Caroline M. Press

Agricultural Research Service

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