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Dive into the research topics where John W. Patrick is active.

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Featured researches published by John W. Patrick.


The Plant Cell | 1999

The Dual Function of Sugar Carriers: Transport and Sugar Sensing

Sylvie Lalonde; Eckhard Boles; Hanjo Hellmann; Laurence Barker; John W. Patrick; Wolf B. Frommer; John M. Ward

Sucrose and its derivatives represent the major transport forms of photosynthetically assimilated carbon in plants. Sucrose synthesized in green leaves is exported via the phloem, the long-distance distribution network for assimilates, to supply nonphotosynthetic organs with energy and carbon


Journal of Integrative Plant Biology | 2013

The Plant Vascular System: Evolution, Development and Functions†

William J. Lucas; Andrew Groover; Raffael Lichtenberger; Kaori Furuta; Shri Ram Yadav; Ykä Helariutta; Xin-Qiang He; Hiroo Fukuda; Julie Kang; Siobhan M. Brady; John W. Patrick; John S. Sperry; Akiko Yoshida; Ana-Flor López-Millán; Michael A. Grusak; Pradeep Kachroo

The emergence of the tracheophyte-based vascular system of land plants had major impacts on the evolution of terrestrial biology, in general, through its role in facilitating the development of plants with increased stature, photosynthetic output, and ability to colonize a greatly expanded range of environmental habitats. Recently, considerable progress has been made in terms of our understanding of the developmental and physiological programs involved in the formation and function of the plant vascular system. In this review, we first examine the evolutionary events that gave rise to the tracheophytes, followed by analysis of the genetic and hormonal networks that cooperate to orchestrate vascular development in the gymnosperms and angiosperms. The two essential functions performed by the vascular system, namely the delivery of resources (water, essential mineral nutrients, sugars and amino acids) to the various plant organs and provision of mechanical support are next discussed. Here, we focus on critical questions relating to structural and physiological properties controlling the delivery of material through the xylem and phloem. Recent discoveries into the role of the vascular system as an effective long-distance communication system are next assessed in terms of the coordination of developmental, physiological and defense-related processes, at the whole-plant level. A concerted effort has been made to integrate all these new findings into a comprehensive picture of the state-of-the-art in the area of plant vascular biology. Finally, areas important for future research are highlighted in terms of their likely contribution both to basic knowledge and applications to primary industry.


Trends in Plant Science | 2012

Molecular regulation of seed and fruit set

Yong-Ling Ruan; John W. Patrick; Mondher Bouzayen; Sonia Osorio; Alisdair R. Fernie

Seed and fruit set are established during and soon after fertilization and determine seed and fruit number, their final size and, hence, yield potential. These processes are highly sensitive to biotic and abiotic stresses, which often lead to seed and fruit abortion. Here, we review the regulation of assimilate partitioning, including the potential roles of recently identified sucrose efflux transporters in seed and fruit set and examine the similarities of sucrose import and hydrolysis for both pollen and ovary sinks, and similar causes of abortion. We also discuss the molecular origins of parthenocarpy and the central roles of auxins and gibberellins in fruit set. The recently completed strawberry (Fragaria vesca) and tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) genomes have added to the existing crop databases, and new models are starting to be used in fruit and seed set studies.


Planta | 1995

The cellular pathway of postphloem sugar transport in developing tomato fruit

Yong-Ling Ruan; John W. Patrick

The cellular pathway of postphloem sugar transport was elucidated in the outer pericarp of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill cv. Floradade) fruit at 13–14 and 23–25 days after anthesis (DAA). These developmental stages are characterized by phloem-imported sugars being accumulated as starch and hexose, respectively. The symplasmic tracer, 5(6)-carboxyfluorescein, loaded into the storage parenchyma cells of pericarp discs, moved readily in the younger fruit but was immobile in fruit at 23–25 DAA. Symplasmic mobility of [14C]glucose was found to be identical to 5(6)-carboxyfluorescein. For the older fruit, the pericarp apoplasm was shown to be freely permeable to the apoplasmic tracer, trisodium 3-hydroxy-5,8,10-pyrenetrisulfonate. Indeed, the transport capacity of the pericarp apoplasm was such that the steady-state rate of in-vitro glucose uptake by pericarp discs accounted fully for the estimated rate of in-vivo glucose accumulation. For fruit at 23–25 DAA, the inhibitory effects of the sulfhydryl group modifier, p-chloromer-curibenzenesulfonic acid (PCMBS), on [14C]glucose and [14C]fructose uptake by the pericarp discs depended on the osmolality of the external solution. The inhibition was most pronounced for pericarp discs enriched in storage parenchyma. Consistent with the PCMBS study, strong fluorescent signals were exhibited by the storage parenchyma cells of pericarp discs exposed to the membrane-impermeable thiol-binding fluorochrome, mono-bromotrimethylammoniobimane. The fluorescent weak acid, sulphorhodamine G, was accumulated preferentially by the storage parenchyma cells. Accumulation of sulphorhodamine G was halted by the ATPase inhibitor erythrosin B, suggesting the presence of a plasma-membrane-bound H+-ATPase. A linkage between the putative H+-ATPase activity and hexose transport was demonstrated by an erythrosin-B inhibition of [14C]glucose and [14C]fructose uptake. In contrast, comparable evidence for an energy-coupled hexose porter could not be found in the pericarp of younger fruit at 13–14 DAA. Overall, the data are interpreted to indicate that: (i) The postphloem cellular pathway in the outer fruit pericarp shifts from the symplasm during starch accumulation (13–14 DAA) to the apoplasm for rapid hexose accumulation (23–25 DAA). (ii) An energy-coupled plasma-membrane hexose carrier is expressed specifically in storage parenchyma cells at the latter stage of fruit development.


Functional Plant Biology | 2007

Review: Nutrient loading of developing seeds

Wen-Hao Zhang; Yuchan Zhou; Katherine E. Dibley; Stephen D. Tyerman; Robert T. Furbank; John W. Patrick

Interest in nutrient loading of seeds is fuelled by its central importance to plant reproductive success and human nutrition. Rates of nutrient loading, imported through the phloem, are regulated by transport and transfer processes located in sources (leaves, stems, reproductive structures), phloem pathway and seed sinks. During the early phases of seed development, most control is likely to be imposed by a low conductive pathway of differentiating phloem cells serving developing seeds. Following the onset of storage product accumulation by seeds, and, depending on nutrient species, dominance of path control gives way to regulation by processes located in sources (nitrogen, sulfur, minor minerals), phloem path (transition elements) or seed sinks (sugars and major mineral elements, such as potassium). Nutrients and accompanying water are imported into maternal seed tissues and unloaded from the conducting sieve elements into an extensive post-phloem symplasmic domain. Nutrients are released from this symplasmic domain into the seed apoplasm by poorly understood membrane transport mechanisms. As seed development progresses, increasing volumes of imported phloem water are recycled back to the parent plant by process(es) yet to be discovered. However, aquaporins concentrated in vascular and surrounding parenchyma cells of legume seed coats could provide a gated pathway of water movement in these tissues. Filial cells, abutting the maternal tissues, take up nutrients from the seed apoplasm by membrane proteins that include sucrose and amino acid/H+ symporters functioning in parallel with non-selective cation channels. Filial demand for nutrients, that comprise the major osmotic species, is integrated with their release and phloem import by a turgor-homeostat mechanism located in maternal seed tissues. It is speculated that turgors of maternal unloading cells are sensed by the cytoskeleton and transduced by calcium signalling cascades.


Fuel | 1973

Development of optical anisotropy in vitrains during carbonization

John W. Patrick; Malcolm J. Reynolds; Frederick H. Shaw

Abstract The purpose of this work was to examine the possible significance in the formation of metallurgical coke of the anisotropic spherical mesophase exemplified by that found during the carbonization of pitch-like materials, and to ascertain if the various types of optical anisotropy found in coke could form a basis for the characterization of cokes produced from different coals. Vitrains from a wide range of coals were carbonized at temperatures from 370 to 1000 °C and the types and amounts of optical anisotropy in the resulting semi-cokes and cokes were determined from microscopic examination, the anisotropic components being classified according to grain size of the granular mosaics and appearance. The anisotropy developed directly from the isotropic phase, appearing initially as a fine-grained mosaic. With increasing carbonization temperature, this fine-grained mosaic was transformed into progressively coarser-grained anisotropy, the extent of this transformation depending on the rank of the vitrain. It is therefore concluded that the formation, growth and coalescence of anisotropic spherical bodies, such as occurs during the carbonization of pitch, is not a necessary precursor of the mosaic anisotropy in coke. The type and amount of anisotropy developed provide a quantitative means of characterising different cokes.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 1996

Post-sieve element transport of photoassimilates in sink regions

John W. Patrick; Christina E. Offler

Photoassimilate transport from the sieve elements to the recipient sink cells, principally in the form of sucrose, provides a link between sink metabolism and compartmentation with phloem import. Phloem unloading has focused attention on photoassimilate transport across the sieve element boundary. However, post-sieve element transport can be of equal or greater significance. Three cellular pathways of sieve element unloading and post-sieve element transport are identified. These are apoplastic, symplastic and symplastic interrupted by an apoplastic step. The symplastic path is considered to be the common path, while the remaining pathways serve specialized functions. In particular, the apoplastic step isolates the sieve element transport function from the effects of solute concentration or osmotic changes in the sink cells. Switching between apo- and symplastic routes within a given sink has been found to be linked with such changes. Plasmodesmatal transport undoubtedly involves a diffusive component, but whether bulk flow contributes to the symplastic flux of photoassimilate from the sieve elements to the recipient sink cells is yet to be established unequivocally. Efflux across the plasma membranes of the sieve element-companion cell (se-cc) complexes and other vascular cells occurs by passive diffusion. Along the axial route, retrieval from the phloem apoplast is mediated by sucrose/proton symport. However, this mechanism is absent in terminal sinks. Non-vascular efflux from the maternal tissues of developing seed is passive in cereals and energy-coupled in certain grain legumes. Accumulation of sugars from the apoplast of all sinks with an apoplastic step universally occurs by a plasma membrane-bound sugar/proton symport mechanism. Regulation of symplastic transport could be mediated by a combination of sink metabolism and compartmentation coupled with changes in the transport properties of the interconnecting plasmodesmata.


Nature Genetics | 2015

A recently evolved hexose transporter variant confers resistance to multiple pathogens in wheat

John W Moore; Sybil A. Herrera-Foessel; Caixia Lan; Wendelin Schnippenkoetter; Michael A. Ayliffe; Julio Huerta-Espino; Morten Lillemo; Libby Viccars; Ricky J. Milne; Sambasivam Periyannan; Xiuying Kong; Wolfgang Spielmeyer; Mark J. Talbot; Harbans Bariana; John W. Patrick; Peter N. Dodds; Ravi P. Singh; Evans S. Lagudah

As there are numerous pathogen species that cause disease and limit yields of crops, such as wheat (Triticum aestivum), single genes that provide resistance to multiple pathogens are valuable in crop improvement. The mechanistic basis of multi-pathogen resistance is largely unknown. Here we use comparative genomics, mutagenesis and transformation to isolate the wheat Lr67 gene, which confers partial resistance to all three wheat rust pathogen species and powdery mildew. The Lr67 resistance gene encodes a predicted hexose transporter (LR67res) that differs from the susceptible form of the same protein (LR67sus) by two amino acids that are conserved in orthologous hexose transporters. Sugar uptake assays show that LR67sus, and related proteins encoded by homeoalleles, function as high-affinity glucose transporters. LR67res exerts a dominant-negative effect through heterodimerization with these functional transporters to reduce glucose uptake. Alterations in hexose transport in infected leaves may explain its ability to reduce the growth of multiple biotrophic pathogen species.


Fuel | 2001

The production of ultra clean coal by chemical demineralisation

Karen M. Steel; John W. Patrick

A high-volatile UK coal, with a particle size of < 500 mum, an ash content of approximately 7.9% by weight and a sulphur content of 2.6% by weight, was treated with aqueous HF followed by aqueous HNO3. The reaction residence time and temperature for both treatments were 3 h and 65 degreesC, respectively. HF reduces the ash content to approximately 2.6% by weight. The remaining ash largely consists of fluoride compounds such as AlF3, NaAlF4, CaF2 and MgF2, Which form during leaching, and pyrite (FeS2), which does not react with HF. HNO3 then further reduces the ash content to approximately 0.6% by weight, by dissolving fluoride compounds and the Fe present as FeS2. The remaining ash consists largely of unreacted FeS2, which is encapsulated in the coal structure. This investigation also showed that HNO3 only reacts with FeS2 above a particular HNO3 Concentration, which suggests that it is consumed preferentially, and to a certain extent, with the organic coal structure. The final sulphur content following treatment with HF and HNO3 was 1.4% by weight.


Protoplasma | 1997

Cell specific expression of three genes involved in plasma membrane sucrose transport in developingVicia faba seed

Gregory N. Harrington; Vincent R. Franceschi; Christina E. Offler; John W. Patrick; Mechthild Tegeder; Wolf B. Frommer; J. F. Harper; W. D. Hitz

SummaryIn developing seeds ofVicia faba, transfer cells line the inner surface of the seed coat and the juxtaposed epidermal surface of the cotyledons. Circumstantial evidence, derived from anatomical and physiological studies, indicates that these cells are the likely sites of sucrose efflux to, and influx from, the seed apoplasm, respectively. In this study, expression of an H+/sucrose symporter-gene was found to be localised to the epidermal-transfer cell complexes of the cotyledons. The sucrose binding protein (SBP) gene was expressed in these cells as well as in the thin-walled parenchyma transfer cells of the seed coat. SBP was immunolocalised exclusively to the plasma membranes located in the wall ingrowth regions of the transfer cells. In addition, a plasma membrane H+-ATPase was most abundant in the wall ingrowth regions with decreasing levels of expression at increasing distance from the transfer cell layers. The observed co-localisation of high densities of a plasma membrane H+-ATPase and sucrose transport proteins to the wall ingrowths of the seed coat and cotyledon transfer cells provides strong evidence that these regions are the principal sites of facilitated membrane transport of sucrose to and from the seed apoplasm.

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Alan Walker

Loughborough University

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Karen M. Steel

University of Queensland

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Colin E. Snape

University of Nottingham

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Mechthild Tegeder

Washington State University

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