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Dive into the research topics where Lada Filonova is active.

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Featured researches published by Lada Filonova.


Plant Cell Tissue and Organ Culture | 2002

Developmental pathways of somatic embryogenesis

Sara von Arnold; Izabela Sabala; Peter V. Bozhkov; Julia Dyachok; Lada Filonova

Somatic embryogenesis is defined as a process in which a bipolar structure, resembling a zygotic embryo, develops from a non-zygotic cell without vascular connection with the original tissue. Somatic embryos are used for studying regulation of embryo development, but also as a tool for large scale vegetative propagation. Somatic embryogenesis is a multi-step regeneration process starting with formation of proembryogenic masses, followed by somatic embryo formation, maturation, desiccation and plant regeneration. Although great progress has been made in improving the protocols used, it has been revealed that some treatments, coinciding with increased yield of somatic embryos, can cause adverse effects on the embryo quality, thereby impairing germination and ex vitro growth of somatic embryo plants. Accordingly, ex vitro growth of somatic embryo plants is under a cumulative influence of the treatments provided during the in vitro phase. In order to efficiently regulate the formation of plants via somatic embryogenesis it is important to understand how somatic embryos develop and how the development is influenced by different physical and chemical treatments. Such knowledge can be gained through the construction of fate maps representing an adequate number of morphological and molecular markers, specifying critical developmental stages. Based on this fate map, it is possible to make a model of the process. The mechanisms that control cell differentiation during somatic embryogenesis are far from clear. However, secreted, soluble signal molecules play an important role. It has long been observed that conditioned medium from embryogenic cultures can promote embryogenesis. Active components in the conditioned medium include endochitinases, arabinogalactan proteins and lipochitooligosaccharides.


Current Biology | 2004

Metacaspase-dependent programmed cell death is essential for plant embryogenesis

Maria F. Suarez; Lada Filonova; Andrei P. Smertenko; Eugene I. Savenkov; David H. Clapham; Sara von Arnold; Boris Zhivotovsky; Peter V. Bozhkov

In plants, as in animals, programmed cell death (PCD) is a key process responsible for the elimination of unneeded structures and for overall shape remodeling during development [1]; however, the molecular mechanisms remain poorly understood. Despite the absence of canonical caspases in plants, dying plant cells show an increased proteolytic caspase-like activity [2]. Moreover, the cell death can be suppressed using synthetic [2] or natural [3] caspase inhibitors. This raises the question of whether plants have specific cysteine proteases with a role similar to metazoan caspases in the execution of PCD. Metacaspases are the best candidates to perform this role, because they contain a caspase-specific catalytic diad of histidine and cysteine as well as conserved caspase-like secondary structure [4,5]. Here we show the first experimental evidence for metacaspase function in the activation and/or execution of PCD in plants, and also demonstrate the fundamental requirement of plant metacaspase for embryogenesis. We explored the role of plant metacaspases in PCD using a model system of somatic embryogenesis of Norway spruce (Picea abies), where the pathway of embryo development (Figure 1A) resembles zygotic embryogeny, even though the embryo origin is different in each case (i.e., somatic cells in proembryogenic mass (PEM) versus zygote) [6]. In this developmental pathway autophagic PCD ablates PEMs at the time of their differentiation to embryos and then eliminates terminally differentiated embryo suspensor as the embryos enter late embryogeny [6,7] (Figure 1A). We have isolated a 1687 bp cDNA sequence from the embryogenic cell cultures (EMBL database accession number AJ534970). The encoded protein shows a significant degree of conservation with metacaspases and falls into the type II plant metacaspase subfamily (Figure S1A). The protein was named mcII-Pa. The predicted secondary structure of mcII-Pa contains conserved domains and motifs present in all members of the caspase/metacaspase/paracaspase superfamily [5] (Figure S1B). The putative mcII-Pa catalytic diad of cysteine and histidine is placed in the α α/β β fold characteristic for the caspase-hemoglobinase fold (CHF)-containing proteins [5]. The predicted mcII-Pa protein lacks both the death-effector domain and the caspase-activating recruitment domain found in classical initiator caspases, but has a p20-like domain including the active-site pentapeptide DXCHS (where X is A or S) shared by all metacaspases [5] (Figure S1B). This domain is fused to the 268 amino acid carboxy-terminal region consisting of a large insert of approximately 180 amino acids and a p10-like domain. In situ hybridization analysis has revealed restricted accumulation …


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2004

VEIDase is a principal caspase-like activity involved in plant programmed cell death and essential for embryonic pattern formation

Peter V. Bozhkov; Lada Filonova; Maria F. Suarez; Andreas Helmersson; Andrei P. Smertenko; Boris Zhivotovsky; S. von Arnold

AbstractPlant embryogenesis is intimately associated with programmed cell death. The mechanisms of initiation and control of programmed cell death during plant embryo development are not known. Proteolytic activity associated with caspase-like proteins is paramount for control of programmed cell death in animals and yeasts. Caspase family of proteases has unique strong preference for cleavage of the target proteins next to asparagine residue. In this work, we have used synthetic peptide substrates containing caspase recognition sites and corresponding specific inhibitors to analyse the role of caspase-like activity in the regulation of programmed cell death during plant embryogenesis. We demonstrate that VEIDase is a principal caspase-like activity implicated in plant embryogenesis. This activity increases at the early stages of embryo development that coincide with massive cell death during shape remodeling. The VEIDase activity exhibits high sensitivity to pH, ionic strength and Zn2+ concentration. Altogether, biochemical assays show that VEIDase plant caspase-like activity resembles that of both mammalian caspase-6 and yeast metacaspase, YCA1. In vivo, VEIDase activity is localised specifically in the embryonic cells during both the commitment and in the beginning of the execution phase of programmed cell death. Inhibition of VEIDase prevents normal embryo development via blocking the embryo-suspensor differentiation. Our data indicate that the VEIDase activity is an integral part in the control of plant developmental cell death programme, and that this activity is essential for the embryo pattern formation.


Current Topics in Developmental Biology | 2005

4 – Programmed Cell Death in Plant Embryogenesis

Peter V. Bozhkov; Lada Filonova; Maria F. Suarez

Successful embryonic development in plants, as in animals, requires a strict coordination of cell proliferation, cell differentiation, and cell-death programs. The role of cell death is especially critical for the establishment of polarity at early stages of plant embryogenesis, when the differentiation of the temporary structure, the suspensor, is followed by its programmed elimination. Here, we review the emerging knowledge of this and other functions of programmed cell death during plant embryogenesis, as revealed by developmental analyses of Arabidopsis embryo-specific mutants and gymnosperm (spruce and pine) model embryonic systems. Cell biological studies in these model systems have helped to identify and order the cellular processes occurring during self-destruction of the embryonic cells. While metazoan embryos can recruit both apoptotic and autophagic cell deaths, the ultimate choice depending on the developmental task and conditions, plant embryos use autophagic cell disassembly as a single universal cell-death pathway. Dysregulation of this pathway leads to aberrant or arrested embryo development. We address the role of distinct cellular components in the execution of the autophagic cell death, and outline an overall mechanistic view of how cells are eliminated during plant embryonic pattern formation. Finally, we discuss the possible roles of some of the candidate plant cell-death proteins in the regulation of developmental cell death.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2002

Programmed cell death eliminates all but one embryo in a polyembryonic plant seed

Lada Filonova; S. von Arnold; Geoffrey Daniel; Peter V. Bozhkov

Development of multiple embryos from a single zygote, the phenomenon called monozygotic polyembryony, is a widespread reproductive strategy found in higher plants and especially in gymnosperms. The enigma of plant monozygotic polyembryony is that only one embryo in a polyembryonic seed usually survives while the others are eliminated at an early stage. Here we report that programmed cell death (PCD) is the major mechanism responsible for elimination of subordinate embryos in a polyembryonic seed. Using post-fertilized pine (Pinus sylvestris) ovules, we show that once the dominant embryo is selected and, subsequently, the entire female gametophyte is affected by PCD, the cells of subordinate embryos initiate an autolytic self-destruction program. The progression of embryonic PCD follows a rigid basal-apical pattern, first killing the most basally situated cells, adjacent to the suspensor, and then proceeding towards the apical region until all cells in the embryonal mass are doomed. Our data demonstrate that during polyembryony, PCD serves to halt competition among monozygotic embryos in order to ensure survival of one embryo.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2007

Characteristics of Gloeophyllum trabeum Alcohol Oxidase, an Extracellular Source of H2O2 in Brown Rot Decay of Wood

Geoffrey Daniel; Jindřich Volc; Lada Filonova; Ondřej Plíhal; Elena Kubátová; Petr Halada

ABSTRACT A novel alcohol oxidase (AOX) has been purified from mycelial pellets of the wood-degrading basidiomycete Gloeophyllum trabeum and characterized as a homooctameric nonglycosylated protein with native and subunit molecular masses of 628 and 72.4 kDa, containing noncovalently bonded flavin adenine dinucleotide. The isolated AOX cDNA contained an open reading frame of 1,953 bp translating into a polypeptide of 651 amino acids displaying 51 to 53% identity with other published fungal AOX amino acid sequences. The enzyme catalyzed the oxidation of short-chain primary aliphatic alcohols with a preference for methanol (Km = 2.3 mM, kcat = 15.6 s−1). Using polyclonal antibodies and immunofluorescence staining, AOX was localized on liquid culture hyphae and extracellular slime in sections from degraded wood and on cotton fibers. Transmission electron microscopy immunogold labeling localized the enzyme in the hyphal periplasmic space and wall and on extracellular tripartite membranes and slime, while there was no labeling of hyphal peroxisomes. AOX was further shown to be associated with membranous or slime structures secreted by hyphae in wood fiber lumina and within the secondary cell walls of degraded wood fibers. The differences in AOX targeting compared to the known yeast peroxisomal localization were traced to a unique C-terminal sequence of the G. trabeum oxidase, which is apparently responsible for the proteins different translocation. The extracellular distribution and the enzymes abundance and preference for methanol, potentially available from the demethylation of lignin, all point to a possible role for AOX as a major source of H2O2, a component of Fentons reagent implicated in the generally accepted mechanisms for brown rot through the production of highly destructive hydroxyl radicals.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2013

Autophagy and metacaspase determine the mode of cell death in plants.

Elena A. Minina; Lada Filonova; Kazutake Fukada; Eugene I. Savenkov; Vladimir Gogvadze; David E. Clapham; Victoria Sanchez-Vera; Maria F. Suarez; Boris Zhivotovsky; Geoffrey Daniel; Andrei P. Smertenko; Peter V. Bozhkov

Metacaspase-dependent autophagy in plants promotes cell disassembly during vacuolar cell death and inhibits necrosis.


Holzforschung | 2006

Morphological and chemical characterisation of the G-layer in tension wood fibres of Populus tremula and Betula verrucosa : Labelling with cellulose-binding module CBM1(HjCel7A) and fluorescence and FE-SEM microscopy

Geoffrey Daniel; Lada Filonova; Åsa M. Kallas; Tuula T. Teeri

Abstract The gelatinous layer (G-layer) formed on the lumen wall in early- and latewood fibres of poplar and birch tension wood was characterised using a novel molecular marker specific for crystalline cellulose in conjunction with fluorescence and FE-SEM microscopy. Crystalline cellulose was localised using a cloned Cel7A cellulose-binding module (CBM1 Hj Cel7A) from the fungus Hypocrea jecorina conjugated directly to FITC/TRITC or indirectly via a secondary antibody conjugated to FITC for fluorescence microscopy or to gold/silver for FE-SEM. With the CBM1 Hj Cel7A conjugate, the G-layer was clearly distinguished from other secondary cell-wall layers as a bright green layer visible in fibres of tension wood in fluorescence microscopy. FEM-SEM images revealed the supramolecular architecture of the G-layer of poplar wood, which consists of well-defined, often concentrically orientated, cellulose aggregates of the order of 30–40 nm. The cellulose aggregates typically have a microfibril angle of almost 0°. Studies on cellulose marked with CBM1 Hj Cel7A followed by Au labelling and Ag enhancement complemented the fluorescence observations. The studies demonstrate the usefulness of this novel molecular marker for crystalline cellulose in situ, which was previously difficult to localise. Further proof of distinct cellulose aggregates was observed.


BMC Plant Biology | 2007

Synthetic xylan-binding modules for mapping of pulp fibres and wood sections.

Lada Filonova; Lavinia Cicortas Gunnarsson; Geoffrey Daniel; Mats Ohlin

BackgroundThe complex carbohydrate composition of natural and refined plant material is not known in detail but a matter that is of both basic and applied importance. Qualitative assessment of complex samples like plant and wood tissues requires the availability of a range of specific probes. Monoclonal antibodies and naturally existing carbohydrate binding modules (CBMs) have been used in the past to assess the presence of certain carbohydrates in plant tissues. However, the number of natural CBMs is limited and development of carbohydrate-specific antibodies is not always straightforward. We envisage the use of sets of very similar proteins specific for defined targets, like those developed by molecular evolution of a single CBM scaffold, as a suitable strategy to assess carbohydrate composition. An advantage of using synthetic CBMs lies in the possibility to study fine details of carbohydrate composition within non-uniform substrates like plant cell walls as made possible through minor differences in CBM specificity of the variety of binders that can be developed by genetic engineering.ResultsA panel of synthetic xylan-binding CBMs, previously selected from a molecular library based on the scaffold of CBM4-2 from xylanase Xyn10A of Rhodothermus marinus, was used in this study. The wild type CBM4-2 and evolved modules both showed binding to wood sections. However, differences were observed in the staining patterns suggesting that these modules have different xylan-binding properties. Also the staining stability varied between the CBMs, the most stable staining being obtained with one (X-2) of the synthetic modules. Treatment of wood materials resulted in altered signal intensities, thereby also demonstrating the potential application of engineered CBMs as analytical tools for quality assessment of diverse plant material processes.ConclusionIn this study we have demonstrated the usefulness of synthetic xylan-binding modules as specific probes in analysis of hemicelluloses (xylan) in wood and fibre materials.


BMC Biotechnology | 2009

Affinity maturation generates greatly improved xyloglucan-specific carbohydrate binding modules

Laura von Schantz; Fredrika Gullfot; Sebastian Scheer; Lada Filonova; Lavinia Cicortas Gunnarsson; James E. Flint; Geoffrey Daniel; Eva Nordberg-Karlsson; Harry Brumer; Mats Ohlin

BackgroundMolecular evolution of carbohydrate binding modules (CBM) is a new approach for the generation of glycan-specific molecular probes. To date, the possibility of performing affinity maturation on CBM has not been investigated. In this study we show that binding characteristics such as affinity can be improved for CBM generated from the CBM4-2 scaffold by using random mutagenesis in combination with phage display technology.ResultsTwo modified proteins with greatly improved affinity for xyloglucan, a key polysaccharide abundant in the plant kingdom crucial for providing plant support, were generated. Both improved modules differ from other existing xyloglucan probes by binding to galactose-decorated subunits of xyloglucan. The usefulness of the evolved binders was verified by staining of plant sections, where they performed better than the xyloglucan-binding module from which they had been derived. They discriminated non-fucosylated from fucosylated xyloglucan as shown by their ability to stain only the endosperm, rich in non-fucosylated xyloglucan, but not the integument rich in fucosylated xyloglucan, on tamarind seed sections.ConclusionWe conclude that affinity maturation of CBM selected from molecular libraries based on the CBM4-2 scaffold is possible and has the potential to generate new analytical tools for detection of plant carbohydrates.

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Peter V. Bozhkov

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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Geoffrey Daniel

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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Sara von Arnold

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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Paul Ander

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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S. von Arnold

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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Elena A. Minina

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

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