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Dive into the research topics where Jenny C. Mortimer is active.

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Featured researches published by Jenny C. Mortimer.


Science | 2017

Eudicot plant-specific sphingolipids determine host selectivity of microbial NLP cytolysins

Tea Lenarčič; Isabell Albert; Hannah Böhm; Vesna Hodnik; Katja Pirc; Apolonija Bedina Zavec; Marjetka Podobnik; David Pahovnik; Ema Žagar; Rory Pruitt; Peter Greimel; Akiko Yamaji-Hasegawa; Toshihide Kobayashi; Agnieszka Zienkiewicz; Jasmin Gömann; Jenny C. Mortimer; Lin Fang; Adiilah Mamode-Cassim; Magali Deleu; Laurence Lins; Claudia Oecking; Ivo Feussner; Sébastien Mongrand; Gregor Anderluh; Thorsten Nürnberger

An extra sugar protects Many microbial pathogens produce proteins that are toxic to the cells that they are targeting. Broad-leaved plants are susceptible to NLP (necrosis and ethylene-inducing peptide 1–like protein) toxins. Lenarčič et al. identified the receptors for NLP toxins to be GIPC (glycosylinositol phosphorylceramide) sphingolipids (see the Perspective by Van den Ackerveken). Their findings reveal why these toxins only attack broad-leaved plants (so-called eudicots): If the sphingolipid carries just two hexoses, as is the case for eudicots, the toxin binds and causes cell lysis. But in monocots with sphingolipids that have three hexoses, the toxin is ineffective. Science, this issue p. 1431; see also p. 1383 Plant sensitivity to a microbial cytotoxin is mediated through sugar head groups of an abundant plant sphingolipid. Necrosis and ethylene-inducing peptide 1–like (NLP) proteins constitute a superfamily of proteins produced by plant pathogenic bacteria, fungi, and oomycetes. Many NLPs are cytotoxins that facilitate microbial infection of eudicot, but not of monocot plants. Here, we report glycosylinositol phosphorylceramide (GIPC) sphingolipids as NLP toxin receptors. Plant mutants with altered GIPC composition were more resistant to NLP toxins. Binding studies and x-ray crystallography showed that NLPs form complexes with terminal monomeric hexose moieties of GIPCs that result in conformational changes within the toxin. Insensitivity to NLP cytolysins of monocot plants may be explained by the length of the GIPC head group and the architecture of the NLP sugar-binding site. We unveil early steps in NLP cytolysin action that determine plant clade-specific toxin selectivity.


ACS Synthetic Biology | 2017

Endoribonuclease-Based Two-Component Repressor Systems for Tight Gene Expression Control in Plants

Yan Liang; Sarah M. Richardson; Jingwei Yan; Veronica T. Benites; Clarabelle Cheng-Yue; Thu Tran; Jenny C. Mortimer; Aindrila Mukhopadhyay; Jay D. Keasling; Henrik Vibe Scheller; Dominique Loqué

Tight control and multifactorial regulation of gene expression are important challenges in genetic engineering and are critical for the development of regulatory circuits. Meeting these challenges will facilitate transgene expression regulation and support the fine-tuning of metabolic pathways to avoid the accumulation of undesired intermediates. By employing the endoribonuclease Csy4 and its recognition sequence from Pseudomonas aeruginosa and manipulating 5UTR of mRNA, we developed a two-component expression-repression system to tightly control synthesis of transgene products. We demonstrated that this regulatory device was functional in monocotyledonous and dicotyledonous plant species, and showed that it can be used to repress transgene expression by >400-fold and to synchronize transgene repression. In addition to tissue-specific transgene repression, this system offers stimuli-dependent expression control. Using a bioinformatics approach, we identified 54 orthologous systems from various bacteria, and then validated in planta the activity for a few of those systems, demonstrating the potential diversity of such a two-component repressor system.


Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology | 2016

Expression of S-adenosylmethionine Hydrolase in Tissues Synthesizing Secondary Cell Walls Alters Specific Methylated Cell Wall Fractions and Improves Biomass Digestibility.

Aymerick Eudes; Nanxia Zhao; Noppadon Sathitsuksanoh; Edward E. K. Baidoo; Jeemeng Lao; George Wang; Sasha Yogiswara; Taek Soon Lee; Seema Singh; Jenny C. Mortimer; Jay D. Keasling; Blake A. Simmons; Dominique Loqué

Plant biomass is a large source of fermentable sugars for the synthesis of bioproducts using engineered microbes. These sugars are stored as cell wall polymers, mainly cellulose and hemicellulose, and are embedded with lignin, which makes their enzymatic hydrolysis challenging. One of the strategies to reduce cell wall recalcitrance is the modification of lignin content and composition. Lignin is a phenolic polymer of methylated aromatic alcohols and its synthesis in tissues developing secondary cell walls is a significant sink for the consumption of the methyl donor S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet). In this study, we demonstrate in Arabidopsis stems that targeted expression of AdoMet hydrolase (AdoMetase, E.C. 3.3.1.2) in secondary cell wall synthesizing tissues reduces the AdoMet pool and impacts lignin content and composition. In particular, both NMR analysis and pyrolysis gas chromatography mass spectrometry of lignin in engineered biomass showed relative enrichment of non-methylated p-hydroxycinnamyl (H) units and a reduction of dimethylated syringyl (S) units. This indicates a lower degree of methylation compared to that in wild-type lignin. Quantification of cell wall-bound hydroxycinnamates revealed a reduction of ferulate in AdoMetase transgenic lines. Biomass from transgenic lines, in contrast to that in control plants, exhibits an enrichment of glucose content and a reduction in the degree of hemicellulose glucuronoxylan methylation. We also show that these modifications resulted in a reduction of cell wall recalcitrance, because sugar yield generated by enzymatic biomass saccharification was greater than that of wild-type plants. Considering that transgenic plants show no important diminution of biomass yields, and that heterologous expression of AdoMetase protein can be spatiotemporally optimized, this novel approach provides a valuable option for the improvement of lignocellulosic biomass feedstock.


Plant Journal | 2018

Bifunctional glycosyltransferases catalyze both extension and termination of pectic galactan oligosaccharides

Tomas Laursen; Solomon Stonebloom; Venkataramana R. Pidatala; Devon Birdseye; Mads Hartvig Clausen; Jenny C. Mortimer; Henrik Vibe Scheller

Pectins are the most complex polysaccharides of the plant cell wall. Based on the number of methylations, acetylations and glycosidic linkages present in their structures, it is estimated that up to 67 transferase activities are involved in pectin biosynthesis. Pectic galactans constitute a major part of pectin in the form of side-chains of rhamnogalacturonan-I. In Arabidopsis, galactan synthase 1 (GALS1) catalyzes the addition of galactose units from UDP-Gal to growing β-1,4-galactan chains. However, the mechanisms for obtaining varying degrees of polymerization remain poorly understood. In this study, we show that AtGALS1 is bifunctional, catalyzing both the transfer of galactose from UDP-α-d-Gal and the transfer of an arabinopyranose from UDP-β-l-Arap to galactan chains. The two substrates share a similar structure, but UDP-α-d-Gal is the preferred substrate, with a 10-fold higher affinity. Transfer of Arap to galactan prevents further addition of galactose residues, resulting in a lower degree of polymerization. We show that this dual activity occurs both inxa0vitro and inxa0vivo. The herein described bifunctionality of AtGALS1 may suggest that plants can produce the incredible structural diversity of polysaccharides without a dedicated glycosyltransferase for each glycosidic linkage.


bioRxiv | 2018

GONST2 transports GDP-Mannose for sphingolipid glycosylation in the Golgi apparatus of Arabidopsis

Beibei Jing; Toshiki Ishikawa; Nicole E. Soltis; Noriko Inada; Yan Liang; Gosia Murawska; Fekadu Andeberhan; Venkataramana R. Pidatala; Xiaolan Yu; Edward E. K. Baidoo; Maki Kawai-Yamada; Dominique Loqué; Daniel J. Kliebenstein; Paul Dupree; Jenny C. Mortimer

The Golgi lumen is the site of many different glycosylation events, including cell wall polysaccharide biosynthesis and lipid glycosylation. Transporters are necessary for the import of the substrates required for glycosylation (nucleotide sugars) from the cytosol where they are synthesized. Plants use four GDP-linked sugars to glycosylate macromolecules: GDP-L-Fucose, GDP-D-Mannose, GDP-L-Galactose and GDP-D-Glucose. Of the predicted fifty-one members of the nucleotide sugar transporter/triose phosphate transporter family in Arabidopsis, only four appear to contain the conserved motif needed for the transport of GDP-linked sugars, GOLGI LOCALIZED NUCLEOTIDE SUGAR TRANSPORTER (GONST) 1-4. Previously, we have demonstrated that GONST1 provides GDP-D-Mannose for glycosylation of a class of sphingolipids, the glycosylinositolphosphorylceramides (GIPCs). Here, we characterize its closest homologue, GONST2, and conclude that it also specifically provides substrate for GIPC glycosylation. Expression of GONST2 driven by the GONST1 promoter is able to rescue the severe growth phenotype of gonst1. Loss of GONST2 exacerbates the gonst1 constitutive hypersensitive response, as well as the reduced cell wall cellulose content. The gonst2 mutant grows normally under standard conditions, but has enhanced resistance to the powdery mildew-causing fungus Golovinomyces orontii.


Plant and Cell Physiology | 2018

The Three Members of the Arabidopsis Glycosyltransferase Family 92 are Functional β-1,4-Galactan Synthases

Berit Ebert; Devon Birdseye; April Jennifer Madrid Liwanag; Tomas Laursen; Emilie A. Rennie; Xiaoyuan Guo; Michela Catena; Carsten Rautengarten; Solomon Stonebloom; Pawel Gluza; Venkataramana R. Pidatala; Mathias Christian Franch Andersen; Roshan Cheetamun; Jenny C. Mortimer; Joshua L. Heazlewood; Antony Bacic; Mads Hartvig Clausen; William G. T. Willats; Henrik Vibe Scheller

Pectin is a major component of primary cell walls and performs a plethora of functions crucial for plant growth, development and plant-defense responses. Despite the importance of pectic polysaccharides their biosynthesis is poorly understood. Several genes have been implicated in pectin biosynthesis by mutant analysis, but biochemical activity has been shown for very few. We used reverse genetics and biochemical analysis to study members of Glycosyltransferase Family 92 (GT92) in Arabidopsis thaliana. Biochemical analysis gave detailed insight into the properties of GALS1 (Galactan synthase 1) and showed galactan synthase activity of GALS2 and GALS3. All proteins are responsible for adding galactose onto existing galactose residues attached to the rhamnogalacturonan-I (RG-I) backbone. Significant GALS activity was observed with galactopentaose as acceptor but longer acceptors are favored. Overexpression of the GALS proteins in Arabidopsis resulted in accumulation of unbranched β-1, 4-galactan. Plants in which all three genes were inactivated had no detectable β-1, 4-galactan, and surprisingly these plants exhibited no obvious developmental phenotypes under standard growth conditions. RG-I in the triple mutants retained branching indicating that the initial Gal substitutions on the RG-I backbone are added by enzymes different from GALS.


Plant Journal | 2018

Suppression of Arabidopsis GGLT1 affects growth by reducing the L-galactose content and borate cross-linking of rhamnogalacturonan-II

Julien Sechet; Soe Htwe; Breeanna R. Urbanowicz; Abigail Agyeman; Wei Feng; Toshiki Ishikawa; Marianne Colomes; Kavitha Satish Kumar; Maki Kawai-Yamada; José R. Dinneny; Malcolm A. O'Neill; Jenny C. Mortimer

Summary Boron is a micronutrient that is required for the normal growth and development of vascular plants, but its precise functions remain a subject of debate. One established role for boron is in the cell wall where it forms a diester cross‐link between two monomers of the low‐abundance pectic polysaccharide rhamnogalacturonan‐II (RG‐II). The inability of RG‐II to properly assemble into a dimer results in the formation of cell walls with abnormal biochemical and biomechanical properties and has a severe impact on plant productivity. Here we describe the effects on RG‐II structure and cross‐linking and on the growth of plants in which the expression of a GDP‐sugar transporter (GONST3/GGLT1) has been reduced. In the GGLT1‐silenced plants the amount of L‐galactose in side‐chain A of RG‐II is reduced by up to 50%. This leads to a reduction in the extent of RG‐II cross‐linking in the cell walls as well as a reduction in the stability of the dimer in the presence of calcium chelators. The silenced plants have a dwarf phenotype, which is rescued by growth in the presence of increased amounts of boric acid. Similar to the mur1 mutant, which also disrupts RG‐II cross‐linking, GGLT1‐silenced plants display a loss of cell wall integrity under salt stress. We conclude that GGLT1 is probably the primary Golgi GDP‐L‐galactose transporter, and provides GDP‐L‐galactose for RG‐II biosynthesis. We propose that the L‐galactose residue is critical for RG‐II dimerization and for the stability of the borate cross‐link.


Experimental Biology and Medicine | 2018

Plant synthetic biology could drive a revolution in biofuels and medicine

Jenny C. Mortimer

Population growth, climate change, and dwindling finite resources are amongst the major challenges which are facing the planet. Requirements for food, materials, water, and energy will soon exceed capacity. Green biotechnology, fueled by recent plant synthetic biology breakthroughs, may offer solutions. This review summarizes current progress towards robust and predictable engineering of plants. I then discuss applications from the lab and field, with a focus on bioenergy, biomaterials, and medicine. Impact statement The plant synthetic biology field has exploded in the last five years, in part driven by techniques such as CRISPR and cheap DNA synthesis. This review summarizes the current state of research in plant synthetic biology, and how it is being applied to two topics: renewable fuels and chemicals, and medicine.


BMC Biotechnology | 2018

Overexpression of a rice BAHD acyltransferase gene in switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.) enhances saccharification

Guotian Li; Kyle C. Jones; Aymerick Eudes; Venkataramana R. Pidatala; Jian Sun; Feng Xu; Chengcheng Zhang; Tong Wei; Rashmi Jain; Devon Birdseye; Patrick E. Canlas; Edward E. K. Baidoo; Phat Q. Duong; Manoj K. Sharma; Seema Singh; Jay D. Keasling; Jenny C. Mortimer; Dominique Loqué; Laura E. Bartley; Henrik Vibe Scheller; Pamela C. Ronald

BackgroundSwitchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.) is a promising bioenergy feedstock because it can be grown on marginal land and produces abundant biomass. Recalcitrance of the lignocellulosic components of the switchgrass cell wall to enzymatic degradation into simple sugars impedes efficient biofuel production. We previously demonstrated that overexpression of OsAT10, a BAHD acyltransferase gene, enhances saccharification efficiency in rice.ResultsHere we show that overexpression of the rice OsAT10 gene in switchgrass decreased the levels of cell wall-bound ferulic acid (FA) in green leaf tissues and to a lesser extent in senesced tissues, and significantly increased levels of cell wall-bound p-coumaric acid (p-CA) in green leaves but decreased its level in senesced tissues of the T0 plants under greenhouse conditions. The engineered switchgrass lines exhibit an approximate 40% increase in saccharification efficiency in green tissues and a 30% increase in senesced tissues.ConclusionOur study demonstrates that overexpression of OsAT10, a rice BAHD acyltransferase gene, enhances saccharification of lignocellulosic biomass in switchgrass.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2017

Structural characterization of mannan cell wall polysaccharides in plants using PACE

Venkataramana R. Pidatala; Amir Mahboubi; Jenny C. Mortimer

Plant cell wall polysaccharides are notoriously difficult to analyze, and most methods require expensive equipment, skilled operators, and large amounts of purified material. Here, we describe a simple method for gaining detailed polysaccharide structural information, including resolution of structural isomers. For polysaccharide analysis by gel electrophoresis (PACE), plant cell wall material is hydrolyzed with glycosyl hydrolases specific to the polysaccharide of interest (e.g., mannanases for mannan). Large format polyacrylamide gels are then used to separate the released oligosaccharides, which have been fluorescently labeled. Gels can be visualized with a modified gel imaging system (see Table of Materials). The resulting oligosaccharide fingerprint can either be compared qualitatively or, with replication, quantitatively. Linkage and branching information can be established using additional glycosyl hydrolases (e.g., mannosidases and galactosidases). Whilst this protocol describes a method for analyzing glucomannan structure, it can be applied to any polysaccharide for which characterized glycosyl hydrolases exist. Alternatively, it can be used to characterize novel glycosyl hydrolases using defined polysaccharide substrates.

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Henrik Vibe Scheller

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Venkataramana R. Pidatala

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Dominique Loqué

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Devon Birdseye

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Edward E. K. Baidoo

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Mads Hartvig Clausen

Technical University of Denmark

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Tomas Laursen

University of Copenhagen

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