Richard Moyle
University of Queensland
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Richard Moyle.
The Plant Cell | 2006
Peter D. Gould; James C. Locke; Camille Larue; Megan M. Southern; Seth J. Davis; Shigeru Hanano; Richard Moyle; Raechel Milich; Joanna Putterill; Andrew J. Millar; Anthony Hall
Circadian clocks maintain robust and accurate timing over a broad range of physiological temperatures, a characteristic termed temperature compensation. In Arabidopsis thaliana, ambient temperature affects the rhythmic accumulation of transcripts encoding the clock components TIMING OF CAB EXPRESSION1 (TOC1), GIGANTEA (GI), and the partially redundant genes CIRCADIAN CLOCK ASSOCIATED1 (CCA1) and LATE ELONGATED HYPOCOTYL (LHY). The amplitude and peak levels increase for TOC1 and GI RNA rhythms as the temperature increases (from 17 to 27°C), whereas they decrease for LHY. However, as temperatures decrease (from 17 to 12°C), CCA1 and LHY RNA rhythms increase in amplitude and peak expression level. At 27°C, a dynamic balance between GI and LHY allows temperature compensation in wild-type plants, but circadian function is impaired in lhy and gi mutant plants. However, at 12°C, CCA1 has more effect on the buffering mechanism than LHY, as the cca1 and gi mutations impair circadian rhythms more than lhy at the lower temperature. At 17°C, GI is apparently dispensable for free-running circadian rhythms, although partial GI function can affect circadian period. Numerical simulations using the interlocking-loop model show that balancing LHY/CCA1 function against GI and other evening-expressed genes can largely account for temperature compensation in wild-type plants and the temperature-specific phenotypes of gi mutants.
Genome Biology | 2004
Anders F. Andersson; Johanna Keskitalo; Andreas Sjödin; Rupali Bhalerao; Fredrik Sterky; Kirsten Wissel; Karolina Tandre; Henrik Aspeborg; Richard Moyle; Yasunori Ohmiya; Rishikesh P. Bhalerao; Amy M. Brunner; Petter Gustafsson; Jan Karlsson; Joakim Lundeberg; Ove Nilsson; Göran Sandberg; Steven H. Strauss; Björn Sundberg; Mathias Uhlén; Stefan Jansson; Peter Nilsson
BackgroundWe have developed genomic tools to allow the genus Populus (aspens and cottonwoods) to be exploited as a full-featured model for investigating fundamental aspects of tree biology. We have undertaken large-scale expressed sequence tag (EST) sequencing programs and created Populus microarrays with significant gene coverage. One of the important aspects of plant biology that cannot be studied in annual plants is the gene activity involved in the induction of autumn leaf senescence.ResultsOn the basis of 36,354 Populus ESTs, obtained from seven cDNA libraries, we have created a DNA microarray consisting of 13,490 clones, spotted in duplicate. Of these clones, 12,376 (92%) were confirmed by resequencing and all sequences were annotated and functionally classified. Here we have used the microarray to study transcript abundance in leaves of a free-growing aspen tree (Populus tremula) in northern Sweden during natural autumn senescence. Of the 13,490 spotted clones, 3,792 represented genes with significant expression in all leaf samples from the seven studied dates.ConclusionsWe observed a major shift in gene expression, coinciding with massive chlorophyll degradation, that reflected a shift from photosynthetic competence to energy generation by mitochondrial respiration, oxidation of fatty acids and nutrient mobilization. Autumn senescence had much in common with senescence in annual plants; for example many proteases were induced. We also found evidence for increased transcriptional activity before the appearance of visible signs of senescence, presumably preparing the leaf for degradation of its components.
BMC Plant Biology | 2005
Richard Moyle; Mark L Crowe; Jonni Ripi-Koia; David J. Fairbairn; José Ramón Botella
BackgroundA world first pineapple EST sequencing program has been undertaken to investigate genes expressed during non-climacteric fruit ripening and the nematode-plant interaction during root infection. Very little is known of how non-climacteric fruit ripening is controlled or of the molecular basis of the nematode-plant interaction. PineappleDB was developed to provide the research community with access to a curated bioinformatics resource housing the fruit, root and nematode infected gall expressed sequences.DescriptionPineappleDB is an online, curated database providing integrated access to annotated expressed sequence tag (EST) data for cDNA clones isolated from pineapple fruit, root, and nematode infected root gall vascular cylinder tissues. The database currently houses over 5600 EST sequences, 3383 contig consensus sequences, and associated bioinformatic data including splice variants, Arabidopsis homologues, both MIPS based and Gene Ontology functional classifications, and clone distributions. The online resource can be searched by text or by BLAST sequence homology. The data outputs provide comprehensive sequence, bioinformatic and functional classification information.ConclusionThe online pineapple bioinformatic resource provides the research community with access to pineapple fruit and root/gall sequence and bioinformatic data in a user-friendly format. The search tools enable efficient data mining and present a wide spectrum of bioinformatic and functional classification information. PineappleDB will be of broad appeal to researchers investigating pineapple genetics, non-climacteric fruit ripening, root-knot nematode infection, crassulacean acid metabolism and alternative RNA splicing in plants.
Plant Molecular Biology | 2013
Richard Moyle; Robert G. Birch
Promoter regions of six sugarcane Loading Stem Gene (ScLSG) alleles were analyzed using bioinformatic and transgenic approaches. Stable transgene expression analyses, on multiple independent lines per construct, revealed differences between ScLSG promoters in absolute levels and in tissue-selectivity of luciferase reporter activity. Four promoters drove peak expression in the sucrose-loading zone and maintained substantial expression throughout mature stems. One drove a pattern of gradual increase along the stem maturation profile. In general, stem: root expression ratio increased with plant age. The ScLSG5 promoter had the fewest light-enhanced and root-expression motifs in bioinformatic analysis, and drove the highest level and specificity of transgene expression in stems. This indicates the potential to further improve the stem specificity of ScLSG promoter sequences by eliminating enhancers of expression in other tissues. An intron in the 5′UTR was important for expression strength. The ScLSG promoters will be useful for research and biotechnology in sugarcane, where the tailored expression of transgenes in stems is important for enhanced accumulation of sugar or value-added products, and for development as a bioenergy feedstock.
Functional Plant Biology | 2004
Somrutai Winichayakul; Richard Moyle; Dacey J. Ryan; Kevin J. F. Farnden; Kevin M. Davies; Simon A. Coupe
The Asparagus officinalis L. asparagine (Asn) synthetase (AS) promoter was analysed for elements responding to carbohydrate and senescence signals. Transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana L. plants containing deletion constructs of the -1958 bp AS promoter linked to the β-glucuronidase (GUS) reporter gene (AS::GUS) were analysed by measuring GUS specific activity. Inclusion of sucrose (Suc), glucose (Glc) or fructose (Fru) in plant media repressed levels of GUS activity in -1958AS::GUS plants, regardless of the light environment, with increases in GUS found 1 d after incubation on Suc-lacking media. Hexokinase is likely to be involved in the signal pathway, as Suc, Glc, Fru, 2-deoxy-d-glucose and mannose were more effective repressors than 3-O-methylglucose, and the hexokinase inhibitor mannoheptulose reduced repression. Plants containing AS::GUS constructs with deletions that reduced the promoter to less than -405 bp did not show low sugar induction. AS::GUS activity was significantly higher in excised leaves induced to senesce by dark storage for 24 h, compared to fresh leaves, for lines containing at least -640 bp of the AS promoter but not those with -523 bp or smaller promoter fragments. Fusion of the -640 to -523 bp region to a -381AS::GUS construct generated a promoter that retained senescence induction but lacked low sugar induction. Alignment of this region to the 33-bp senescence-related sequence of the Arabidopsis and Brassica napus L. SAG12 promoters identified the sequence TTGCACG as being conserved in all the promoters, and which may be an important senescence-responsive element.
Functional Plant Biology | 2004
Somrutai Winichayakul; Richard Moyle; Simon A. Coupe; Kevin M. Davies; Kevin J. F. Farnden
In asparagus (Asparagus officinalis L.), increased levels of asparagine (Asn) and Asn synthetase (AS) transcript are detected during foliar senescence and in harvested spears, possibly triggered by signals from a reduced supply of carbohydrate. To identify cis-elements mediating this regulation, the asparagus AS gene promoter was isolated and analysed by DNA sequencing, followed by expression of AS::GUS (β-glucuronidase) reporter-gene constructs in transgenic tissue, and electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSA). The 1958-base pair (bp) region of the AS promoter upstream of the translation initiation ATG (-1958 bp region) was sufficient to confer sucrose (Suc)-regulated expression on the GUS reporter gene in asparagus callus and protoplasts, which were transformed by particle bombardment and electroporation, respectively. Removal of Suc from callus or protoplast media resulted in the induction of GUS activity. Deletion analysis of this 1958-bp fragment identified elements in the -640 to -266bp region as important for both high GUS levels and mediating the Suc response. This was supported by EMSA results, which showed the formation of three nuclear protein-DNA complexes with the -558 to -284 bp fragment of the promoter. A 20-bp oligonucleotide, designed to match the sequence from -423 to -404 bp, was able to out-compete formation of one of these protein-DNA complexes, suggesting a specific interaction with this sequence. This region of the promoter, overlapping with the 20-bp oligonucleotide sequence, contains a 10-bp stretch identical to a sequence previously shown to mediate low Suc induction of an Oryza sativa (rice) α-amylase gene, and may thus represent a conserved Suc-responsive element.
BMC Plant Biology | 2012
Jonni Koia; Richard Moyle; José Ramón Botella
BackgroundPineapple (Ananas comosus) is a tropical fruit crop of significant commercial importance. Although the physiological changes that occur during pineapple fruit development have been well characterized, little is known about the molecular events that occur during the fruit ripening process. Understanding the molecular basis of pineapple fruit ripening will aid the development of new varieties via molecular breeding or genetic modification. In this study we developed a 9277 element pineapple microarray and used it to profile gene expression changes that occur during pineapple fruit ripening.ResultsMicroarray analyses identified 271 unique cDNAs differentially expressed at least 1.5-fold between the mature green and mature yellow stages of pineapple fruit ripening. Among these 271 sequences, 184 share significant homology with genes encoding proteins of known function, 53 share homology with genes encoding proteins of unknown function and 34 share no significant homology with any database accession. Of the 237 pineapple sequences with homologs, 160 were up-regulated and 77 were down-regulated during pineapple fruit ripening. DAVID Functional Annotation Cluster (FAC) analysis of all 237 sequences with homologs revealed confident enrichment scores for redox activity, organic acid metabolism, metalloenzyme activity, glycolysis, vitamin C biosynthesis, antioxidant activity and cysteine peptidase activity, indicating the functional significance and importance of these processes and pathways during pineapple fruit development. Quantitative real-time PCR analysis validated the microarray expression results for nine out of ten genes tested.ConclusionsThis is the first report of a microarray based gene expression study undertaken in pineapple. Our bioinformatic analyses of the transcript profiles have identified a number of genes, processes and pathways with putative involvement in the pineapple fruit ripening process. This study extends our knowledge of the molecular basis of pineapple fruit ripening and non-climacteric fruit ripening in general.
Plant Cell Reports | 2002
Richard Moyle; Judy M. Moody; L. Phillips; Christian Walter; A. Wagner
Abstract. A putative promoter fragment of a Pinus radiata gene encoding a multi-functional O-methyltransferase (AEOMT) was isolated from genomic DNA. Sequence analysis revealed a number of putative cis elements, including AC-rich motifs common in promoters of genes related to the phenylpropanoid pathway. The isolated promoter was fused to the GUS reporter gene and its expression profile analyzed in transgenic tobacco and in transient transformation experiments with P. radiata embryogenic and xylogenic tissue. The promoter conferred weak expression in embryogenic tissue but caused strong GUS activity in both ray parenchyma cells and developing tracheary elements of xylem strips. Histochemical analysis in transgenic tobacco plants revealed that the AEOMT promoter induced GUS expression in cell types associated with lignification, such as developing vessels, phloem and wood fibers and xylem parenchyma as well as in non-lignifying phloem parenchyma. The isolated promoter was activated by challenge of the tissue with a fungal pathogen. Our results also indicate that the control of lignin-related gene expression is conserved and can be compared in evolutionarily distant species such as tobacco and pine.
Plant Molecular Biology | 2013
Jonni Koia; Richard Moyle; Caroline E. Hendry; Lionel Lim; José Ramón Botella
The availability of a variety of promoter sequences is necessary for the genetic engineering of plants, in basic research studies and for the development of transgenic crops. In this study, the promoter and 5′ untranslated regions of the evolutionally conserved protein translation factor SUI1 gene and ribosomal protein L36 gene were isolated from pineapple and sequenced. Each promoter was translationally fused to the GUS reporter gene and transformed into the heterologous plant system Arabidopsis thaliana. Both the pineapple SUI1 and L36 promoters drove GUS expression in all tissues of Arabidopsis at levels comparable to the CaMV35S promoter. Transient assays determined that the pineapple SUI1 promoter also drove GUS expression in a variety of climacteric and non-climacteric fruit species. Thus the pineapple SUI1 and L36 promoters demonstrate the potential for using translation factor and ribosomal protein genes as a source of promoter sequences that can drive constitutive transgene expression patterns.
Plant Molecular Biology Reporter | 2015
Peter R. Sternes; Richard Moyle
Deep sequencing has advanced the discovery and analysis of the small RNA component of transcriptomes and has revealed developmentally-regulated populations of small RNAs consistent with key roles in plant development. To study small RNA transcriptome complexity and explore their roles in sugarcane development, we obtained almost 50 million small RNA reads from suspension cells, embryogenic calli, leaf, apex and a developmental series of stem internodes. The complexity of the small RNA component of the transcriptome varied between tissues. The undifferentiated and young tissue type libraries had lower redundancy levels than libraries generated from maturing and mature tissues. The ratio of 21:24 nt small RNAs also varied widely between different tissue types, as did the proportion of abundant small RNAs derived from each putative origin of small RNA biogenesis. Cluster analysis indicates many abundant small RNAs display developmental expression patterns. There was substantial variation in isomiR composition, abundance and expression patterns within sugarcane microRNA (miRNA) families. Two hundred and fifty-six isomiRs from 36 miRNA families were identified by homology to known miRNA families from a range of plant species. Many isomiRs and miRNA families appear to be developmentally regulated, including a subset of miRNAs that are progressively upregulated during stem internode maturation. Transcribed sequences putatively targeted by abundant sugarcane small RNAs were predicted and miRNA directed cleavage of 18 predicted sugarcane targets were validated by 5′ RACE.