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Featured researches published by Simone Altmann.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2007

Salicylic Acid Is Important for Basal Defense of Solanum tuberosum Against Phytophthora infestans

Vincentius A. Halim; Lennart Eschen-Lippold; Simone Altmann; Mandy Birschwilks; Dierk Scheel; Sabine Rosahl

The importance of the signaling compound salicylic acid for basal defense of potato (Solanum tuberosum L. cv. Désirée) against Phytophthora infestans, the causal agent of late blight disease, was assessed using transgenic NahG potato plants which are unable to accumulate salicylic acid. Although the size of lesions caused by P. infestans was not significantly different in wild-type and transgenic NahG plants, real-time polymerase chain reaction analyses revealed a drastic enhancement of pathogen growth in potato plants depleted of salicylic acid. Increased susceptibility of NahG plants correlated with compromised callose formation and reduced early defense gene expression. NahG plants pretreated with the salicylic acid analog 2,6-dichloro-isonicotinic acid allowed pathogen growth to a similar extent as did wild-type plants, indicating that salicylic acid is an important compound required for basal defense of potato against P. infestans.


Plant Journal | 2009

PAMP‐induced defense responses in potato require both salicylic acid and jasmonic acid

Vincentius A. Halim; Simone Altmann; Dorothea Ellinger; Lennart Eschen-Lippold; Otto Miersch; Dierk Scheel; Sabine Rosahl

To elucidate the molecular mechanisms underlying pathogen-associated molecular pattern (PAMP)-induced defense responses in potato (Solanum tuberosum), the role of the signaling compounds salicylic acid (SA) and jasmonic acid (JA) was analyzed. Pep-13, a PAMP from Phytophthora, induces the accumulation of SA, JA and hydrogen peroxide, as well as the activation of defense genes and hypersensitive-like cell death. We have previously shown that SA is required for Pep-13-induced defense responses. To assess the importance of JA, RNA interference constructs targeted at the JA biosynthetic genes, allene oxide cyclase and 12-oxophytodienoic acid reductase, were expressed in transgenic potato plants. In addition, expression of the F-box protein COI1 was reduced by RNA interference. Plants expressing the RNA interference constructs failed to accumulate the respective transcripts in response to wounding or Pep-13 treatment, neither did they contain significant amounts of JA after elicitation. In response to infiltration of Pep-13, the transgenic plants exhibited a highly reduced accumulation of reactive oxygen species as well as reduced hypersensitive cell death. The ability of the JA-deficient plants to accumulate SA suggests that SA accumulation is independent or upstream of JA accumulation. These data show that PAMP responses in potato require both SA and JA and that, in contrast to Arabidopsis, these compounds act in the same signal transduction pathway. Despite their inability to fully respond to PAMP treatment, the transgenic RNA interference plants are not altered in their basal defense against Phytophthora infestans.


Epigenetics | 2012

Maternal dietary protein restriction and excess affects offspring gene expression and methylation of non-SMC subunits of condensin I in liver and skeletal muscle

Simone Altmann; Eduard Murani; Manfred Schwerin; Cornelia C. Metges; Klaus Wimmers; Siriluck Ponsuksili

Recent evidence indicates that maternal nutrition during pregnancy influences gene expression in offspring through epigenetic alterations. In the present study we evaluated the effect of protein excess and deficiency during porcine pregnancy on offspring hepatic and skeletal muscular expression patterns of key genes of methionine metabolism (DNMT1, DNMT3a, DNMT3b, BHMT, MAT2B and AHCYL1), condensin I subunit genes (NCAPD2, NCAPG and NCAPH), important for chromosome condensation and segregation, global DNA methylation and gene-specific DNA methylation. German Landrace sows were randomly assigned to control (CO), high protein (HP) and low protein (LP) diet groups. Tissue samples of offspring were collected from fetal (dpc95), newborn (dpn1), weanling (dpn28) and finisher pigs (dpn188). Gene expression of DNMT1, DNMT3a and DNMT3b was influenced by both HP and LP diets, indicating an involvement of DNA methylation in fetal programming by maternal protein supply. Moreover, hepatic global methylation was significantly affected by protein restriction at dpc95 (p = 0.004) and by protein excess at dpn188 (p = 0.034). Gene expression in fetal liver was significantly different between CO and LP for NCAPD2 (p = 0.0005), NCAPG (p = 0.0009) and NCAPH (p < 0.0001). In skeletal muscle, LP fetuses had significantly altered gene expression of NCAPD2 (p = 0.020) and NCAPH (p = 0.001), compared with CO. Furthermore, NCAPG was differentially methylated among LP, HP and CO; indeed, a significant positive correlation was detected with transcript amount in fetal pigs (r = 0.47, p = 0.002). These data demonstrate that both restriction and excess dietary protein during pregnancy alters the offspring’s epigenetic marks and influences gene expression.


The Plant Cell | 2014

The ABC Transporter ABCG1 Is Required for Suberin Formation in Potato Tuber Periderm

Ramona Landgraf; Ulrike Smolka; Simone Altmann; Lennart Eschen-Lippold; Melanie Senning; Sophia Sonnewald; Benjamin Weigel; Nadezhda Frolova; Nadine Strehmel; Gerd Hause; Dierk Scheel; Christoph Böttcher; Sabine Rosahl

The water barrier function of potato tuber skin depends on the polyester suberin and associated waxes. Here, a transporter was identified that is required for the formation of suberin in potato tuber periderm; potato plants lacking this transporter give rise to tubers that are more prone to water loss. The lipid biopolymer suberin plays a major role as a barrier both at plant-environment interfaces and in internal tissues, restricting water and nutrient transport. In potato (Solanum tuberosum), tuber integrity is dependent on suberized periderm. Using microarray analyses, we identified ABCG1, encoding an ABC transporter, as a gene responsive to the pathogen-associated molecular pattern Pep-13. Further analyses revealed that ABCG1 is expressed in roots and tuber periderm, as well as in wounded leaves. Transgenic ABCG1-RNAi potato plants with downregulated expression of ABCG1 display major alterations in both root and tuber morphology, whereas the aerial part of the ABCG1-RNAi plants appear normal. The tuber periderm and root exodermis show reduced suberin staining and disorganized cell layers. Metabolite analyses revealed reduction of esterified suberin components and hyperaccumulation of putative suberin precursors in the tuber periderm of RNA interference plants, suggesting that ABCG1 is required for the export of suberin components.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2010

DL-β-Aminobutyric Acid-Induced Resistance of Potato Against Phytophthora infestans Requires Salicylic Acid but Not Oxylipins

Lennart Eschen-Lippold; Simone Altmann; Sabine Rosahl

Inducing systemic resistance responses in crop plants is a promising alternative way of disease management. To understand the underlying signaling events leading to induced resistance, functional analyses of plants defective in defined signaling pathway steps are required. We used potato, one of the economically most-important crop plants worldwide, to examine systemic resistance against the devastating late blight pathogen Phytophthora infestans, induced by treatment with dl-beta-aminobutyric acid (BABA). Transgenic plants impaired in either the 9-lipoxygenase pathway, which produces defense-related compounds, or the 13-lipoxygenase pathway, which generates jasmonic acid-derived signals, expressed wild-type levels of BABA-induced resistance. Plants incapable of accumulating salicylic acid (SA), on the other hand, failed to mount this type of induced resistance. Consistently, treatment of these plants with the SA analog 2,6-dichloroisonicotinic acid restored BABA-induced resistance. Together, these results demonstrate the indispensability of a functional SA pathway for systemic resistance in potato induced by BABA.


British Journal of Nutrition | 2012

Somatic cytochrome c (CYCS) gene expression and promoter-specific DNA methylation in a porcine model of prenatal exposure to maternal dietary protein excess and restriction

Simone Altmann; Eduard Murani; Manfred Schwerin; Cornelia C. Metges; Klaus Wimmers; Siriluck Ponsuksili

There is growing evidence that maternal nutrition during gestation has an important effect on offspring development as well as on their gene expression with long-term effects on the metabolic state. A potential mechanism forming long-lasting gene expression patterns is DNA methylation of cytosine in CpG dinucleotides within the promoter region of distinct genes. There has been special focus on mitochondrial dysfunction by prenatal malnourishment over the recent years. To this end, we investigated the gene expression of somatic cytochrome c (CYCS), an important member of the respiratory chain, in a porcine model of gestational protein over- and undersupply at 94 d post-conception and 1, 28 and 188 d of age, and analysed the association with the DNA methylation status within the CYCS promoter. Gene expression on day 1 post natum showed a significant increase in the low protein (LP) group (P = 0·0005) and a slight increase in the high protein (HP) group (P = 0·079) compared with the control (CO) group in the liver. The mean of the methylation level over forty-seven CpG sites from nucleotide (nt) - 417 to - 10 was significantly decreased in the LP (P = 0·007) and HP (P = 0·009) groups compared with that in the CO group. Excess and restricted protein supply during pregnancy led to hypomethylation of a number of CpG sites in the CYCS promoter, including those representing putative transcription factor-binding sites, associated with elevated expression levels. However, the impact of the low-protein gestation diet is more pronounced, indicating that the offspring could better adapt to excess rather than restricted protein supply.


Fish Physiology and Biochemistry | 2015

Identification and de novo sequencing of housekeeping genes appropriate for gene expression analyses in farmed maraena whitefish (Coregonus maraena) during crowding stress

Simone Altmann; Alexander Rebl; Carsten Kühn; Tom Goldammer

Maraena whitefish (Coregonus maraena; synonym Coregonus lavaretus f. balticus) is a high-quality food fish in the Southern Baltic Sea belonging to the group of salmonid fishes. Coregonus sp. is successfully kept in aquaculture throughout northern Europe (e.g. in Finland, Germany, Russia) and North America. In this regard, the molecular and immunological characterisation of stress response in maraena whitefish contributes to the development of robust and fast-growing maraena whitefish breeding strains for aquaculture. Thus, in the present study, the potential housekeeping genes beta actin (ACTB), elongation factor 1 alpha (EEF1A1), glyceraldehydes-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), ribosomal protein 9 (RPL9), ribosomal protein 32 (RPL32) and ribosomal protein S20 (RPS20) were de novo sequenced and tested concerning their applicability as reference genes in quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) in maraena whitefish under different stocking densities. For this purpose, tissue samples of liver, kidney, gills, head kidney, skin, adipose tissue, heart and dorsal fin were investigated. qPCR data were analysed with Normfinder tool to determine gene expression stability. DNA sequencing exposed transcribed paralogous EEF1A1A and EEF1A1B genes differing in their putative protein structure. Normfinder analysis revealed RPL9 and RPL32 as most stable, GAPDH and ACTB as least stable genes for qPCR analyses, respectively. This is the first study that provides a subset of seven de novo sequenced housekeeping genes usable as reference genes in studies of stress response in maraena whitefish.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2016

Adverse Husbandry of Maraena Whitefish Directs the Immune System to Increase Mobilization of Myeloid Cells and Proinflammatory Responses

Tomáš Korytář; Mareen Nipkow; Simone Altmann; Tom Goldammer; Bernd Köllner; Alexander Rebl

Adverse life circumstances evoke a common “conserved transcriptional response to adversity” (CTRA) in mammalian leukocytes. To investigate whether this pattern is preserved in lower vertebrates, maraena whitefish (Coregonus maraena) were exposed for 9 days to different stocking densities: ~10 kg/m3 (low density), ~33 kg/m3 (moderate), ~60 kg/m3 (elevated), and ~100 kg/m3 (high). Transcriptome profiling in the liver and kidney of individuals from each group suggested that crowding conditions activate stress-related signaling and effector pathways. Remarkably, about one-quarter of the genes differentially expressed under crowding conditions were involved in the activation of immune pathways such as acute-phase response and interleukin/TNF signaling attended by the simultaneous reduction of antiviral potency. Network analysis confirmed the complex interdigitation of immune- and stress-relevant pathways with interleukin-1 playing a central role. Antibody-based techniques revealed remarkable changes in the blood composition of whitefish and demonstrated the correlation between increasing stocking densities and elevated number of myeloid cells together with the increased phagocytic activity of peripheral blood leukocytes. In line with current studies in mammals, we conclude that crowding stress triggers in whitefish hallmarks of a CTRA, indicating that the stress-induced molecular mechanisms regulating the immune responses not only are conserved within mammals but were established earlier in evolution.


European Journal of Plant Pathology | 2010

Oxylipins are not required for R gene-mediated resistance in potato

Lennart Eschen-Lippold; Simone Altmann; Christiane Gebhardt; Cornelia Göbel; Ivo Feussner; Sabine Rosahl

The role of 9- and 13-lipoxygenase-derived oxylipins for race-cultivar-specific resistance in potato was analyzed by expressing RNA interference constructs against oxylipin biosynthetic genes in transgenic potato plants carrying the resistance gene R1 against Phytophthora infestans. Down-regulation of 9-lipoxygenase expression resulted in highly reduced levels of 9-hydroxyoctadecatrienoic acid after treatment with the pathogen-associated molecular pattern Pep-13. However, neither 9-lipoxygenase nor 9-divinyl ether synthase RNAi plants exhibited alterations in their resistance to P. infestans. Similarly, successful down-regulation of transcript accumulation of the 13-lipoxygenase pathway genes encoding allene oxide cyclase, 12-oxophytodienoic acid reductase 3 and the jasmonic acid receptor coronatine-insensitive 1 resulted in highly reduced levels of jasmonic acid after Pep-13 treatment. Race-cultivar-specific resistance, however, was not lost in these plants. Our results suggest that neither 9-lipoxygenase-derived oxylipins nor jasmonic acid are required for R-gene-mediated resistance in potato. Importantly, in tobacco, the silencing of 9-lipoxygenase expression was previously demonstrated to suppress race-cultivar-specific resistance. Thus, we conclude a differential requirement of oxylipins for R-gene-mediated resistance in different solanaceous plants.


Marine Genomics | 2016

Transcriptome sequencing of maraena whitefish (Coregonus maraena)

Andreas Brietzke; Andreas Borchel; Simone Altmann; Mareen Nipkow; Alexander Rebl; Ronald M. Brunner; Tom Goldammer

Maraena whitefish (Coregonus maraena, Bloch, 1779) is a high-quality food fish belonging to the family Salmonidae with considerable economic relevance in the Baltic area. Aquaculture of this species is fundamental for its successful conservation and thus sustainable fisheries. Robust fishes obtained from breeding lines build the basis for effective aquaculture. Doubtless, the utilization of transcriptome sequencing and identification of genetic markers contribute to this aim. 454 FLX Titanium Sequencing provided 1.31 million sequence reads representing a first insight into the C. maraena transcriptome. The 454 Newbler Assembly arranged 29,094 contigs with an average length of 798bp. We found a whole series of transcripts highly probably resulting from ancient genome duplication and annotated 2887 different transcripts with an average length of 812bp. Functional annotation obtained a transcript composition predominantly comprising enzyme-coding genes.

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