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Featured researches published by Klaus Adler.


Planta | 1998

Calreticulin expression in plant cells: developmental regulation, tissue specificity and intracellular distribution.

Nikolai Borisjuk; Leonid Sitailo; Klaus Adler; Ludmilla Malysheva; Annegret Tewes; Ludmilla Borisjuk; Renate Manteuffel

Abstract. The tissue-specific expression pattern and the intracellular distribution of the Ca2+-binding protein calreticulin at the mRNA and protein levels have been studied during somatic and zygotic embryogenesis of Nicotiana plumbaginifolia Viv. A full-length cDNA sequence encoding calreticulin was isolated from a λ Zap cDNA library from early developmental stages of somatic embryogenesis. The deduced amino acid sequence of the calreticulin from N. plumbaginifolia shows high homology to the corresponding proteins of tobacco (98.2% identity), maize (80%) and barley (76.5%), and more than 55% homology to animal calreticulins, and the sequence motifs with established functions found in calreticulins of other species were quite conserved. Northern experiments revealed a developmental regulation of the calreticulin transcript with a maximum during the early stages of somatic embryogenesis and an auxin dependence during in-vitro cell culture. α-Naphthaleneacetic acid stimulated calreticulin expression whereas 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid reduced it. Immunohistological analysis of calreticulin distribution in the ovaries during zygotic embryogenesis showed that calreticulin biosynthesis started tissue specifically, with a high abundance in the endothelium of the integument in the ovules, followed by calreticulin accumulation in the embryo proper and in the associated endosperm at the late globular stage of embryogenesis. Using immunogold labeling, calreticulin was intracellularly localized with a high abundance to the Golgi compartment and to patches on the surface of dividing protoplasts. Smaller amounts were found in the endoplasmic reticulum and plasma membranes. The functional role of calreticulin in posttranslational processing and translocation processes, apart from its postulated function in cellular Ca2+ homeostasis, is discussed.


The Plant Cell | 1991

Different legumin protein domains act as vacuolar targeting signals.

Gerhard Saalbach; Rudolf Jung; Gotthard Kunze; Isolde Saalbach; Klaus Adler; Klaus Müntz

Legumin subunits are synthesized as precursor polypeptides and are transported into protein storage vacuoles in field bean cotyledons. We expressed a legumin subunit in yeast and found that in these cells it is also transported into the vacuoles. To elucidate vacuolar targeting information, we constructed gene fusions of different legumin propolypeptide segments with either yeast invertase or chloramphenicol acetyltransferase as reporters for analysis in yeast or plant cells, respectively. In yeast, increasing the length of the amino-terminal segment increased the portion of invertase directed to the vacuole. Only the complete legumin alpha chain (281 amino acids) directed over 90% to the vacuole. A short carboxy-terminal legumin segment (76 amino acids) fused to the carboxy terminus of invertase also efficiently targeted this fusion product to yeast vacuoles. With amino-terminal legumin-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase fusions expressed in tobacco seeds, efficient vacuolar targeting was obtained only with the complete alpha chain. We conclude that legumin contains multiple targeting information, probably formed by higher structures of relatively long peptide sequences.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2000

Amperometric measurement of copper ions with a deputy substrate using a novel Saccharomyces cerevisiae sensor.

Matthias Lehmann; Klaus Riedel; Klaus Adler; Gotthard Kunze

The first microbial biosensor to detect Cu2+ by an amperometric method has been developed. For this purpose, recombinant Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains are suitable as the microbial component. These strains contain plasmids with the Cu2+-inducible promoter of the CUP1-gene from Saccharomyces cerevisiae fused to the lacZ-gene from E. coli. On this sensor the CUP1 promoter is first induced by the Cu2+-containing probe and subsequently lactose is used as a deputy substrate to make the measurement. If Cu2+ is present in the sample, these recombinant strains are able to utilize lactose as a carbon source, which leads to alterations in the oxygen consumption of the cells. The sensor measured Cu2+ in a concentration range between 0.5 and 2 mM CuSO4. In addition, an indirect amperometric measurement principle was developed which allows the detection of samples containing Cu2+ and fast biodegradable substances.


Plant Physiology | 1995

In Situ Association of Calvin Cycle Enzymes, Ribulose-1,5-Bisphosphate Carboxylase/Oxygenase Activase, Ferredoxin-NADP+ Reductase, and Nitrite Reductase with Thylakoid and Pyrenoid Membranes of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Chloroplasts as Revealed by Immunoelectron Microscopy

Karl-Heinz Süss; Izabella Prokhorenko; Klaus Adler

The in situ localization of the chloroplast enzymes ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (Rubisco), Rubisco activase, ribose-5-phosphate isomerase, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, aldolase, nitrite reductase, ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase, and H+-ATP synthase was studied by immunoelectron microscopy in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Immunogold labeling revealed that, despite Rubisco in the pyrenoid matrix, Calvin cycle enzymes, Rubisco activase, nitrite reductase, ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase, and H+-ATP synthase are associated predominantly with chloroplast thylakoid membranes and the inner surface of the pyrenoid membrane. This is in accord with previous enzyme localization studies in higher plants (K.H. Suss, C. Arkona, R. Manteuffel, K. Adler [1993] Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 90: 5514–5518). Pyrenoid tubules do not contain these enzymes. The pyrenoid matrix consists of Rubisco but is devoid of the other photosynthetic enzymes investigated. Evidence for the occurrence of two Rubisco forms differing in their spatial localization has also been obtained: Rubisco form I appears to be membrane associated like other Calvin cycle components, whereas Rubisco form II is confined to the pyrenoid matrix. It is proposed that enzyme form I represents an active Rubisco when assembled into Calvin cycle enzyme complexes, whereas Rubisco form II may be part of a CO2-concentrating mechanism. Pyrenoidal Calvin cycle complexes are thought to be highly active in CO2 fixation and important for the synthesis of starch around the pyrenoid.


Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek International Journal of General and Molecular Microbiology | 1995

Temperature-dependent dimorphism of the yeastArxula adeninivorans Ls3

Thomas Wartmann; Annette Krüger; Klaus Adler; Bui Minh Duc; Irene Kunze; Gotthard Kunze

Arxula adeninivorans Ls3 is described as an ascomycetous, arthroconidial, anamorphic, xerotolerant yeast, which was selected from wood hydrolysates in Siberia. By using minimal salt medium or yeast-extract-peptone-medium with glucose or maltose as carbon source it was shown that this yeast is able to grow at up to 48° C. Increasing temperatures induce changes in morphology from the yeast phase to mycelia depending on an altered programme of gene expression. This dimorphism is an environmentally conditioned (reversible) event and the mycelia can be induced at a cultivation temperature of 45° C. Depending on the morphology of strain Ls3 (yeast phase or mycelia) the secretion behaviour as well as the spectrum of polypeptides accumulated in the culture medium changed. The activities of the accumulated extracellular enzymes glucoamylase and invertase were 2 to 3 times higher in cultures grown at 45° C than in those grown at 30° C. While the level of the glucoamylase protein secreted from mycelia between 45 and 70 hours did not change, biochemical activity decreased after a cultivation time of 43 hours. It was shown that this effect depended on both the catabolic repression of the glucoamylase by glucose and the thermal inactivation of this enzyme in media without or with low concentrations of starch or maltose.


The Plant Cell | 2002

The Arabidopsis TUBULIN-FOLDING COFACTOR A Gene Is Involved in the Control of the α/β-Tubulin Monomer Balance

Victor Kirik; Paul E. Grini; Jaideep Mathur; Irene Klinkhammer; Klaus Adler; Nicole Bechtold; Michel Herzog; Jean-Marc Bonneville; Martin Hülskamp

The control of the stoichiometric balance of α- and β-tubulin is important during microtubule biogenesis. This process involves several tubulin-folding cofactors (TFCs), of which only TFC A is not essential in mammalian in vitro systems or in vivo in yeast. Here, we show that the TFC A gene is important in vivo in plants. The Arabidopsis gene KIESEL (KIS) shows sequence similarity to the TFC A gene. Expression of the mouse TFC A gene under the control of the 35S promoter rescues the kis mutation, indicating that KIS is the Arabidopsis ortholog of TFC A. kis plants exhibit a range of defects similar to the phenotypes associated with impaired microtubule function: plants are reduced in size and show meiotic defects, cell division is impaired, and trichomes are bulged and less branched. Microtubule density was indistinguishable from that of the wild type, but microtubule organization was affected in trichomes and hypocotyl cells of dark-grown kis plants. The kis phenotype was rescued by overexpression of an α-tubulin, indicating that KIS is involved in the control of the correct balance of α- and β-tubulin monomers.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1999

The green fluorescent protein targets secretory proteins to the yeast vacuole

Irene Kunze; Goetz Hensel; Klaus Adler; J. Bernard; B. Neubohn; C. Nilsson; Regina Stoltenburg; Sepp D. Kohlwein; Gotthard Kunze

The green fluorescent protein (GFP) was used as a marker to study the intracellular transport of vacuolar and secretory proteins in yeast. Therefore, the following gene constructs were expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae under control of the GAL1 promoter: GFP N-terminally fused to the yeast secretory invertase (INV-GFP), the plant vacuolar chitinase (CHN-GFP) and its secretory derivative (CHNDeltaVTP-GFP), which did not contain the vacuolar targeting peptide (VTP), both chitinase forms (CHN and CHNDeltaVTP), GFP without any targeting information and two secretory GFP variants with and without the VTP of chitinase (N-GFP-V and N-GFP). Whereas chitinase without VTP is accumulated in the culture medium the other gene products are retained inside the cell up to 48 h of induction. Independently of a known VTP they are transported to the vacuole, so far as they contain a signal peptide for entering the endoplasmic reticulum. This was demonstrated by confocal laser scanning microscopy, immunocytochemical analysis and subcellular fractionation experiments as well. The transport of the GFP fusion proteins is temporary delayed by a transient accumulation in electron-dense structures very likely derived from the ER, because they also contain the ER chaperone Kar2p/Bip. Our results demonstrate that GFP directs secretory proteins without VTP to the yeast vacuole, possibly by the recognition of an unknown vacuolar signal and demonstrates, therefore, a first limitation for the application of GFP as a marker for the secretory pathway in yeast.


Journal of Plant Physiology | 1999

Gene Farming in Plants: Expression of a Heatstable Bacillus Amylase in Transgenic Legume Seeds

Andreas Czihal; Birgit Conrad; Peter Buchner; Roland Brevis; Abdel Azim Farouk; Renate Manteuffel; Klaus Adler; Ulrich Wobus; Jügen Hofemeister; Helmut Bäumlein

Summary Seeds of crop plants are promising expression and storage systems for gene farming purposes. We report the generation of transgenic narbon beans (Vicia narbonensis L.) containing the Bacillus licheniformis (α-amylase gene. The transgene is controlled by the seed specific USP gene promoter and encodes a heatstable enzyme. The transgene product accumulates in the storage vacuoles of cotyledon cells and retains its thermostability and starch degradation specificity. The enzyme is able to liquefy the endogenous seed starch reserves of this grain legume.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1998

CORRECT TARGETING OF A VACUOLAR TOBACCO CHITINASE IN SACCHAROMYCES CEREVISIAE - POST-TRANSLATIONAL MODIFICATIONS ARE DEPENDENT ON THE HOST STRAIN

Irene Kunze; Cecilia Nilsson; Klaus Adler; Renate Manteuffel; Christian Horstmann; Michael Bröker; Gotthard Kunze

The chitinase gene FB7-1 of Nicotiana tabacum cv. samsun line 5 was expressed in the two Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains, INVSC2 and H4, under the control of the GAL1 promoter from S. cerevisiae and a multicopy plasmid vector. Both yeast strains express the plant gene as enzymatic active proteins. In transformants of the strain INVSC2, 94% of the total plant chitinase is contained inside the cells, probably within the vacuole which has been confirmed by subcellular fractionation as well as immunohistochemical experiments. This retention inside the cells is due to the C-terminally located 7 amino acids long vacuolar targeting peptide of the prochitinase. When this sequence was removed, chitinase was transported into the culture medium. Pulse-chase experiments revealed that during translation in transformants of both yeast strains one chitinase polypeptide can be immunoadsorbed with specific antibodies. In the case of INVSC2-transformants, newly formed chitinase is modified in a 60 min chase to slightly increase its molecular mass, whereas in H4-transformants the molecular mass constantly remained 32 kDa. By Western blot analysis two chitinase corresponding polypeptides of 32 and 37 kDa were accumulated in the culture medium of both transformants carrying the chitinase gene without the vacuolar targeting sequence. The larger one was very likely O-glycosylated. Whereas, both polypepitdes were also detected in cell extracts of the H4-transformant, only the smaller one was found in the INVSC2-transformant. The plant chitinase passed through the endoplasmic reticulum on its way to the vacuole. The N-terminal signal peptide responsible for the uptake into the endoplasmic reticulum is cleaved correctly. However, cleavage of the vacuolar targeting peptide located at the C-terminus, to give the mature chitinase is obviously influenced by the genetic background of the host strain. In INVSC2-transformants chitinase accumulates in its mature form whereas both the polypeptides of H4-transformants retain their vacuolar targeting peptide. Our results demonstrate that in the case of plant class I chitinase, the plant sorting signal is recognized in yeast cells but post-translational modifications are influenced by the host strain.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2000

Molecular characterization of cDNAs encoding G protein α and β subunits and study of their temporal and spatial expression patterns in Nicotiana plumbaginifolia Viv.

Catrin Kaydamov; Annegret Tewes; Klaus Adler; Renate Manteuffel

We have isolated cDNA sequences encoding α and β subunits of potential G proteins from a cDNA library prepared from somatic embryos of Nicotiana plumbaginifolia Viv. at early developmental stages. The predicted NPGPA1 and NPGPB1 gene products are 75–98% identical to the known respective plant α and β subunits. Southern hybridizations indicate that NPGPA1 is probably a single-copy gene, whereas at least two copies of NPGPB1 exist in the N. plumbaginifolia genome. Northern analyses reveal that both NPGPA1 and NPGPB1 mRNA are expressed in all embryogenic stages and plant tissues examined and their expression is obviously regulated by the plant hormone auxin. Immunohistological localization of NPGPα1 and NPGPβ1 preferentially on plasma and endoplasmic reticulum membranes and their immunochemical detection exclusively in microsomal cell fractions implicate membrane association of both proteins. The temporal and spatial expression patterns of NPGPA1 and NPGPB1 show conformity as well as differences. This could account for not only cooperative, but also individual activities of both subunits during embryogenesis and plant development.

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Klaus Riedel

University of Stuttgart

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Matthias Lehmann

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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