Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Mika Kotilainen is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Mika Kotilainen.


Nature | 1998

New pathway to polyketides in plants

Stefan Eckermann; Gudrun Schröder; Jürgen Schmidt; Dieter Strack; Ru Angelie Edrada; Yrjö Helariutta; Paula Elomaa; Mika Kotilainen; Ilkka Kilpeläinen; Peter Proksch; Teemu H. Teeri; Joachim Schröder

The repertoire of secondary metabolism (involving the production of compounds not essential for growth) in the plant kingdom is enormous, but the genetic and functional basis for this diversity is hard to analyse as many of the biosynthetic enzymes are unknown. We have now identified a key enzyme in the ornamental plant Gerbera hybrida (Asteraceae) that participates in the biosynthesis of compounds that contribute to insect and pathogen resistance. Plants transformed with an antisense construct of gchs2, a complementary DNA encoding a previously unknown function,, completely lack the pyrone derivatives gerberin and parasorboside. The recombinant plant protein catalyses the principal reaction in the biosynthesis of these derivatives: GCHS2 is a polyketide synthase that uses acetyl-CoA and two condensation reactions with malonyl-CoA to form the pyrone backbone of thenatural products. The enzyme also accepts benzoyl-CoA to synthesize the backbone of substances that have become of interest as inhibitors of the HIV-1 protease. GCHS2 is related to chalcone synthase (CHS) and its properties define a new class of function in the protein superfamily. It appears that CHS-related enzymes are involved in the biosynthesis of a much larger range of plant products than was previously realized.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1993

Cloning of cDNA coding for dihydroflavonol-4-reductase (DFR) and characterization of dfr expression in the corollas of Gerbera hybrida var. Regina (Compositae)

Yrjö Helariutta; Paula Elomaa; Mika Kotilainen; Pauli Seppänen; Teemu H. Teeri

We are approaching corolla differentiation in Compositae by studying the regulation of flavonoid pathway genes during inflorescence development in gerbera. We have cloned a dfr cDNA from a ray floret corolla cDNA library of Gerbera hybrida var. Regina by a PCR technique based on homologies found in genes isolated from other plant species. The functionality of the clone was tested in vivo by complementing the dihydrokaempferol accumulating petunia mutant line RL01. By Southern blot analysis, G. hybrida var. Regina was shown to harbour a small family of dfr genes, one member of which was deduced to be mainly responsible for the DFR activity in corolla. Dfr expression in corolla correlates with the anthocyanin accumulation pattern: it is basipetally induced, epidermally specific and restricted to the ligular part of corolla. By comparing the dfr expression in different floret types during inflorescence development, we could see that dfr expression reflects developmental schemes of the outermost ray and trans florets, contrasted with that of the disc florets.


The Plant Cell | 1999

GEG Participates in the Regulation of Cell and Organ Shape during Corolla and Carpel Development in Gerbera hybrida

Mika Kotilainen; Yrjö Helariutta; Merja Mehto; Eija Pöllänen; Victor A. Albert; Paula Elomaa; Teemu H. Teeri

The molecular mechanisms that control organ shape during flower development are largely unknown. By using differential hybridization techniques, a cDNA designated GEG (for Gerbera hybrida homolog of the gibberellin [GA]–stimulated transcript 1 [GAST1] from tomato) was isolated from a library representing late stages of corolla development in Gerbera. GEG expression was detected in corollas and carpels, with expression spatiotemporally coinciding with flower opening. In corollas and styles, GEG expression is temporally correlated with the cessation of longitudinal cell expansion. In plants constitutively expressing GEG, reduced corolla lengths and carpels with shortened and radially expanded stylar parts were found, with concomitant reduction of longitudinal cell expansion in these organs. In addition, in styles, an increase in radial cell expansion was detected. Taken together, these observations indicate a regulatory role for the GEG gene product in determining the shape of the corolla and carpel. The deduced amino acid sequence of the GEG gene product shares high similarity with previously characterized putative cell wall proteins encoded by GA-inducible genes, namely, GAST1, GIP (for GA-induced gene of petunia), and the GASA (for GA-stimulated in Arabidopsis) gene family. Our studies suggest that GEG, the expression of which can also be induced by application of GA3, plays a role in phytohormone-mediated cell expansion.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1995

Chalcone synthase-like genes active during corolla development are differentially expressed and encode enzymes with different catalytic properties in Gerbera hybrida (Asteraceae)

Yrjö Helariutta; Paula Elomaa; Mika Kotilainen; Robert J. Griesbach; Joachim Schröder; Teemu H. Teeri

Recent studies on chalcone synthase (CHS) and the related stilbene synthase (STS) suggest that the structure of chs-like genes in plants has evolved into different forms, whose members have both different regulation and capacity to code for different but related enzymatic activities. We have studied the diversity of chs-like genes by analysing the structure, expression patterns and catalytic properties of the corresponding enzymes of three genes that are active during corolla development in Gerbera hybrida. The expression patterns demonstrate that chs-like genes are representatives of three distinct genetic programmes that are active during organ differentiation in gerbera. Gchs1 and gchs3 code for typical CHS enzymes, and their gene expression pattern temporally correlates with flavonol (gchs1, gchs3) and anthocyanin (gchs1) synthesis during corolla development. Gchs2 is different. The expression pattern does not correlate with the pigmentation pattern, the amino acid sequence deviates considerably from the consensus of typical CHSs, and the catalytic properties are different. The data indicate that it represents a new member in the large superfamily of chs and chs-related genes.


The Plant Cell | 2000

GRCD1, an AGL2-like MADS Box Gene, Participates in the C Function during Stamen Development in Gerbera hybrida

Mika Kotilainen; Paula Elomaa; Anne Uimari; Victor A. Albert; Deyue Yu; Teemu H. Teeri

Despite the differences in flower form, the underlying mechanism in determining the identity of floral organs is largely conserved among different angiosperms, but the details of how the functions of A, B, and C are specified varies greatly among plant species. Here, we report functional analysis of a Gerbera MADS box gene, GRCD1, which is orthologous to AGL2-like MADS box genes. Members of this group of genes are being reported in various species in growing numbers, but their functions remained largely unsettled. GRCD1 expression is detected in all four whorls, but the strongest signal is seen in the developing stamen and carpel. Downregulating GRCD1 expression by antisense transformation revealed that lack of GRCD1 caused homeotic changes in one whorl only: sterile staminodes, which normally develop in whorl 3 of marginal female florets, were changed into petals. This indicates that the GRCD1 gene product is active in determining stamen identity. Transgenic downregulation of GRCD1 causes a homeotic change similar to that in the downregulation of the Gerbera C function genes GAGA1 and GAGA2, but one that is limited to whorl 3. Downregulation of GRCD1 expression does not reduce expression of GAGA1 or GAGA2, or vice versa; and in yeast two-hybrid analysis, GRCD1 is able to interact with GAGA1 and GAGA2. We propose that a heterodimer between the GRCD1 and GAGA1/2 gene products is needed to fulfill the C function in whorl 3 in Gerbera.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1995

TRANSGENE INACTIVATION IN PETUNIA HYBRIDA IS INFLUENCED BY THE PROPERTIES OF THE FOREIGN GENE

Paula Elomaa; Ykä Helariutta; Robert J. Griesbach; Mika Kotilainen; Pauli Seppänen; Teemu H. Teeri

Petunia mutant RL01 was transformed with maizeA1 and gerberagdfr cDNAs, which both encode dihydroflavonol-4-reductase (DFR) activity. The sameAgrobacterium vector and the same version of the CaMV 35S promoter were used in both experiments. Transformation with the cDNAs resulted in production of pelargonidin pigments in the transformants. However, theA1 andgdfr transformants showed clearly different phenotypes. The flowers of the primaryA1 transformants were pale and showed variability in pigmentation during their growth, while the flowers of thegdfr transformants showed intense and highly stable coloration. The color difference in the primary transformants was reflected in the expression levels of the transgenes as well as in the levels of anthocyanin pigment. As previously reported by others, the instability in pigmentation in theA1 transformants was more often detected in clones with multiple copies of the transgene and was associated with methylation of the 35S promoter and of the transgene cDNA itself. In thegdfr transformants, the most intense pigmentation was observed in plants with multiple transgenes in their genome. Only rarely was partial methylation of the 35S promoter detected, while thegdfr cDNA always remained in an unmethylated state. We conclude that the properties of the transgene itself strongly influence the inactivation process. The dicotyledonousgdfr cDNA with a lower GC content and fewer possible methylation sites is more ‘compatible’ the genomic organization of petunia and this prevents it being recognized as a foreign gene and hence silenced by methylation.


Molecular Breeding | 1996

Transformation of antisense constructs of the chalcone synthase gene superfamily into Gerbera hybrida: differential effect on the expression of family members

Paula Elomaa; Yrjö Helariutta; Mika Kotilainen; Teemu H. Teeri

Suppression of gene expression using antisense technology has been successful in various applications. In this paper we report differential inhibition of gene expression of the chalcone synthase (chs) gene superfamily members in transgenic Gerbera hybrida (Asteraceae) plants. We have transformed two different cDNAs of the chs gene family, gchs 1 [4] and gchs2, in antisense orientation under control of the CaMV 35S promoter into gerbera. Gchs1 codes for an enzyme with chalcone synthase activity while gchs2 is a more diverged member of the gene family having distinct structure and expression pattern. Furthermore, gchs2 is evidently not involved in anthocyanin synthesis and encodes an enzyme with novel catalytic properties. In both cases effective blocking of the resident sense gene expression was detected. In addition, the transformation affected differentially the expression of other members of the chs gene family. The degree of inhibition appeared to depend on the sequence homology between the antisense and the target genes. In the unevenly coloured inflorescences detected among anti-gchs1 transformants during their growth, relaxation of the antisense effect was here shown to start from the most distant member of the gene family, further demonstrating the influence of sequence homology in the stability of antisense inhibition.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2010

Functional characterization of B class MADS-box transcription factors in Gerbera hybrida

Suvi K. Broholm; Eija Pöllänen; Satu Ruokolainen; Sari Tähtiharju; Mika Kotilainen; Victor A. Albert; Paula Elomaa; Teemu H. Teeri

According to the classical ABC model, B-function genes are involved in determining petal and stamen development. Most core eudicot species have B class genes belonging to three different lineages: the PI, euAP3, and TM6 lineages, although both Arabidopsis and Antirrhinum appear to have lost their TM6-like gene. Functional studies were performed for three gerbera (Gerbera hybrida) B class MADS-box genes—PI/GLO-like GGLO1, euAP3 class GDEF2, and TM6-like GDEF1—and data are shown for a second euAP3-like gene, GDEF3. In phylogenetic analysis, GDEF3 is a closely related paralogue of GDEF2, and apparently stems from a duplication common to all Asteraceae. Expression analysis and transgenic phenotypes confirm that GGLO1 and GDEF2 mediate the classical B-function since they determine petal and stamen identities. However, based on assays in yeast, three B class heterodimer combinations are possible in gerbera. In addition to the interaction of GGLO1 and GDEF2 proteins, GGLO1 also pairs with GDEF1 and GDEF3. This analysis of GDEF1 represents the first functional characterization of a TM6-like gene in a core eudicot species outside Solanaceae. Similarly to its relatives in petunia and tomato, the expression pattern and transgenic phenotypes indicate that GDEF1 is not involved in determination of petal identity, but has a redundant role in regulating stamen development.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1994

A corolla-and carpel-abundant, non-specific lipid transfer protein gene is expressed in the epidermis and parenchyma of Gerbera hybrida var. Regina (Compositae)

Mika Kotilainen; Yrjö Helariutta; Paula Elomaa; Lars Paulin; Teemu H. Teeri

We are examining the floral organ differentiation in Compositae by isolating and characterizing corolla abundant genes. Differential screening of a cDNa library made from the ray floret corolla of Gerbera hybrida var. Regina revealed an abundant cDNA clone which is expressed in the corolla but not in leaves. This cDNA (gltp1) codes for a polypeptide similar to non-specific lipid transfer proteins of the plants. The gltp1 gene is expressed only in the corolla and carpels and is developmentally regulated during corolla development. The gltp1 mRNA accumulates both in epidermal cell layers and in the mesophyll of the corolla. In the stylar part of the carpel, the gltp1 mRNA can be detected in the epidermal and in parenchymal cells but not in the transmitting tissue. Analogous patterns of gltp1 expression in the corolla and carpel may indicate that similar genetic programmes operate during the development of these two tissues.


Advances in Botanical Research | 2006

Floral developmental genetics of Gerbera (Asteraceae)

Teemu H. Teeri; Mika Kotilainen; Anne Uimari; Satu Ruokolainen; Yan Peng Ng; Ursula Malm; Eija Pöllänen; Suvi K. Broholm; Roosa A. E. Laitinen; Paula Elomaa; Victor A. Albert

Abstract Inflorescence development in the angiosperm family Asteraceae has distinct features not found in the traditional model systems (e.g., Arabidopsis, Petunia , and Zea ). In Gerbera hybrida , inflorescences are composed of morphologically different types of flowers tightly packed into a flower head (capitulum) that overtly resembles a single flower. Individual floral organs, such as pappus bristles (sepals), are developmentally specialized, petals and anthers form fused structures, stamens are aborted in marginal flowers, and ovaries are located inferior to other floral organs. These specific features have made Gerbera a rewarding target for comparative studies. We have shown that Gerbera MADS‐box genes that group phylogenetically with B‐ and C‐function genes from Arabidopsis and Antirrhinum function in organ determination in a very similar manner to their respective homologs from these model plants. However, MADS‐box genes encoding proteins that interact with those of the ABC‐genes behave differently. In Arabidopsis , three SEPALLATA ( SEP ) genes have redundant functions and are needed for development of petals, stamens, and carpels. Homologs of these SEP genes are found in Gerbera ( GRCD1, GRCD2 ), but they show functional specialization. GRCD1 is necessary for stamen development, but not for petal or carpel development. Similarly, GRCD2 has a homeotic function restricted to carpel development. Remarkably, downregulation of the latter also results in floral reversion (which occurs in ovaries) and alters inflorescence architecture by switching off terminal, determinate growth. This integrated SEP‐like control over reproductive meristem fate has not been detected in the well‐known model systems, which have a different carpel design and normally bear indeterminate inflorescences. Moreover, the organization of flowers on the Gerbera capitulum reveals the presence of a radial morphogenetic gradient that appears to regulate ABC and other MADS‐box genes differentially in a cell‐nonautonomous manner. As such, there is some commonality in gene regulatory features between Gerbera flowers and inflorescences, which suggests that Gerbera capitula are more than simple analogs of the flowers they bear.

Collaboration


Dive into the Mika Kotilainen's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Victor A. Albert

American Museum of Natural History

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Anne Uimari

University of Helsinki

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Merja Mehto

University of Helsinki

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Deyue Yu

University of Helsinki

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge