Sławomir Borek
Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań
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Featured researches published by Sławomir Borek.
Journal of Experimental Botany | 2009
Sławomir Borek; Stanisława Pukacka; Krzysztof Michalski; Lech Ratajczak
A comparative study was carried out on the dynamics of lipid accumulation in developing seeds of three lupine species. Lupine seeds differ in lipid content; yellow lupine (Lupinus luteus L.) seeds contain about 6%, white lupine (Lupinus albus L.) 7–14%, and Andean lupine (Lupinus mutabilis Sweet) about 20% of lipids by dry mass. Cotyledons from developing seeds were isolated and cultured in vitro for 96 h on Heller medium with 60 mM sucrose (+S) or without sucrose (–S). Each medium was additionally enriched with 35 mM asparagine or 35 mM NaNO3. Asparagine caused an increase in protein accumulation and simultaneously decreased the lipid content, but nitrate increased accumulation of both protein and lipid. Experiments with [1-14C]acetate and [2-14C]acetate showed that the decrease in lipid accumulation in developing lupine seeds resulted from exhaustion of lipid precursors rather than from degradation or modification of the enzymatic apparatus. The carbon atom from the C-1 position of acetate was liberated mainly as CO2, whereas the carbon atom from the C-2 position was preferentially used in anabolic pathways. The dominant phospholipid in the investigated lupine seed storage organs was phosphatidylcholine. The main fatty acid in yellow lupine cotyledons was linoleic acid, in white lupine it was oleic acid, and in Andean lupine it was both linoleic and oleic acids. The relationship between stimulation of lipid and protein accumulation by nitrate in developing lupine cotyledons and enhanced carbon flux through glycolysis caused by the inorganic nitrogen form is discussed.
Journal of Plant Physiology | 2011
Sławomir Borek; Katarzyna Nuc
This study revealed that cytosolic aconitase (ACO, EC 4.2.1.3) and isocitrate lyase (ICL, EC 4.1.3.1, marker of the glyoxylate cycle) are active in germinating protein seeds of yellow lupine. The glyoxylate cycle seems to function not only in the storage tissues of food-storage organs, but also in embryonic tissue of growing embryo axes. Sucrose (60mM) added to the medium of in vitro culture of embryo axes and cotyledons decreased activity of lipase (LIP, EC 3.1.1.3) and activity of glutamate dehydrogenase (NADH-GDH, EC 1.4.1.2). The opposite effect was caused by sucrose on activity of cytosolic ACO, ICL as well as NADP(+)-dependent (EC 1.1.1.42) and NAD(+)-dependent (EC 1.1.1.41) isocitrate dehydrogenase (NADP-IDH and NAD-IDH, respectively); activity of these enzymes was clearly stimulated by sucrose. Changes in the activity of LIP, ACO, NADP-IDH, and NAD-IDH caused by sucrose were based on modifications in gene expression because corresponding changes in the enzyme activities and in the mRNA levels were observed. The significance of cytosolic ACO and NADP-IDH in carbon flow from storage lipid to amino acids, as well as the peculiar features of storage lipid breakdown during germination of lupine seeds are discussed.
Journal of Plant Physiology | 2003
Sławomir Borek; Wiktoria Ratajczak; Lech Ratajczak
The metabolism of 14C-acetate was investigated during the in vitro germination of yellow lupine seeds. Carbon atoms (14C) from the C-2 position of acetate were incorporated mainly into amino acids: aspartate, glutamate, and glutamine and into sugars: glucose, sucrose, and fructose. In contrast to this, 14C from the C-1 position of acetate was released mainly as 14CO2. Incorporation of 1-14C and 2-14C from acetate into amino acids and sugars in seedling axes was more intense when sucrose was added to the medium. However, in cotyledons where lipids are converted to carbohydrates, this process was inhibited by exogenous sucrose. Since acetate is the product of fatty acid beta-oxidation, our results indicate that, at least in lupine, seed storage lipids can be converted not only to sucrose, but mainly to amino acids. Inhibitory effects of sucrose on the incorporation of 14C from acetate into amino acids and sugars in cotyledons of lupine seedlings may be explained as the effect of regulation of the glyoxylate cycle by sugars.
Acta Physiologiae Plantarum | 2001
Sławomir Borek; Iwona Morkunas; Wiktoria Ratajczak; Lech Ratajczak
The pathways of arginine transformations in organs of yellow lupin (Lupinus luteus L.) cultivated in vitro in the presence and absence of sucrose were investigated. Isolated embryo axes, isolated cotyledons and seeds deprived of their coat were cultured for 96 h on Heller medium with 60 mM saccharose (the fed variant, +S), without sugar (the starved variant, −S) and for 72 h without sugar, followed by 24 h in its presence (the transferred variant, −S→+S). Activities of arginine decarboxylase [EC 4.1.1.19], arginase [EC 3.5.3.1], and urease [EC 3.5.1.5] were assessed in extracts from isolated embryo axes. They were the highest in the sugar-starved variant. Supplementation of the medium with saccharose resulted in decrease in enzyme activities. The level of urea was higher (of ca. 20 %) in starved embryos than in embryos grown in the saccharose-containing medium. Moreover, participation of transamination in arginine catabolism was evidenced.
Acta Physiologiae Plantarum | 2002
Sławomir Borek; Wiktoria Ratajczak
The intensity of protein reserve activation in yellow lupine (Lupinus luteus L.) organs cultured in vitro in the presence of saccharose and without sugar in the medium was studied. Isolated embryo axes, excised cotyledons and seeds deprived of their testae were grown on Heller medium: a) with 60 mM saccharose (+S), b) without sugar (−S) and c) for 72 hours without saccharose + for 24 hours in the presence of saccharose (−S→+S). Using nitroanilide substrates, exo- and endopeptidase proteolytic activity was investigated in enzymatic extracts. Proteolytic activity was examined in organs isolated from swollen seeds and also in organs cultured for 24, 48, 72 and 96 hours. The proteolytic activity was higher in organs cultured on medium without saccharose. Stimulation of the proteolytic activity on the first day of culture was not significant, but intensified in the successive days of culture. The organ subcultured onto a medium with saccharose (−S→+S) caused a significant limitation of proteolytic activity, even to a markedly lower level in comparison to that activity level in the material continuously supplemented with saccharose. Observations of ultrastructure in Transmission Electron Microscopy revealed increased protein body degradation in the absence of saccharose in the medium and an increased degree of cell vacuolization, which may be indicative of intensifying autophagic processes under conditions of carbohydrate deficit.
Acta Physiologiae Plantarum | 2011
Sławomir Borek; Szymon Kubala; Sylwia Kubala; Lech Ratajczak
Storage lipid and protein breakdown in germinating seeds of yellow (Lupinus luteus L.), white (L. albus L.), and Andean lupine (L. mutabilis Sweet) and regulatory function of sucrose were investigated. Less oil bodies were detected in organs of yellow lupine seeds, whereas the highest content of oil bodies was noticed in the Andean lupine seeds. Mature, air-dried yellow, white and Andean lupine seeds do not contain starch. Starch grains appear the earliest in white lupine seeds during imbibition. Sucrose deficiency in tissues enhances breakdown of storage lipid, protein and temporary starch in cotyledons. In sucrose starved embryo axes of all investigated lupine species, an increased level of vacuolization was noted. Interconnections between catabolism of storage protein and storage lipid in germinating lupine seeds were identified by applying 14C-acetate. To assess the importance of key processes in storage lipid breakdown NaF (inhibitor of glycolysis and gluconeogenesis), KCN, NaN3 and SHAM (inhibitors of mitochondrial electron transport chain) and MSO (inhibitor of glutamine synthetase) were used. Radioactivity coming from 14C-acetate was released as 14CO2 but mostly was incorporated into ethanol-soluble fraction of embryo axes and cotyledons. Respiratory inhibitors caused a significant decrease in 14CO2 and ethanol fractions in all three lupine species studied. MSO stimulated release of 14CO2 and radioactivity of ethanol fractions in yellow lupine organs fed with sucrose, but in Andean lupine MSO enhanced the production of 14CO2 and radioactivity of ethanol fractions both in organs fed and not fed with sucrose. Different strategies of storage compound breakdown are proposed, depending on relative proportion in storage protein and lipid content in lupine seeds.
Acta Physiologiae Plantarum | 1999
Wiktoria Ratajczak; Sławomir Borek; Arkadiusz Podgórski; Lech Ratajczak
A study on globulins, major storage proteins in yellow lupin seeds, called conglutins, was conducted using SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. In this paper, an extensive and not yet published list of yellow lupin conglutins is presented. The patterns of subunits of major conglutins in seeds of three yellow lupin cultivars were similar to each other, varying only in the level of some polypeptides. Investigations of seeds of cultivar Parys showed considerable quantitative differences in major subunits. Some minor subunits occurred only in some seeds and were absent in the others. Great differences were shown between single individuals in the amount of subunits of conglutin which is of the most nutritional value due to high content of methionine.
Journal of Pineal Research | 2018
Agnieszka Kobylińska; Sławomir Borek; Małgorzata M. Posmyk
Recent studies have shown that melatonin is an important molecule in plant physiology. It seems that the most important is that melatonin efficacy eliminates oxidative stress (direct and indirect antioxidant) and moreover induce plant stress reaction and switch on different defence strategies (preventively and interventively actions). In this report, the impact of exogenous melatonin on carbohydrate metabolism in Nicotiana tabacum L. line Bright Yellow 2 (BY‐2) suspension cells during sugar starvation was examined. We analysed starch concentration, α‐amylase and PEPCK activity as well as proteolytic activity in culture media. It has been shown that BY‐2 cell treatment with 200 nM of melatonin improved viability of sugar‐starved cells. It was correlated with higher starch content and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK) activity. The obtained results revealed that exogenous melatonin under specific conditions (stress) can play regulatory role in sugar metabolism, and it may modulate carbohydrate concentration in etiolated BY‐2 cells. Moreover, our results confirmed the hypothesis that if the starch is synthesised even in sugar‐starved cells, it is highly probable that melatonin shifts the BY‐2 cell metabolism on gluconeogenesis pathway and allows for synthesis of carbohydrates from nonsugar precursors, that is amino acids. These points to another defence strategy that was induced by exogenous melatonin applied in plants to overcome adverse environmental conditions.
Journal of Plant Physiology | 2017
Sławomir Borek; Ewelina Paluch-Lubawa; Stanisława Pukacka; Małgorzata Pietrowska-Borek; Lech Ratajczak
The research was conducted on embryo axes of yellow lupin (Lupinus luteus L.), white lupin (Lupinus albus L.) and Andean lupin (Lupinus mutabilis Sweet), which were isolated from imbibed seeds and cultured for 96h in vitro under different conditions of carbon and nitrogen nutrition. Isolated embryo axes were fed with 60mM sucrose or were sugar-starved. The effect of 35mM asparagine (a central amino acid in the metabolism of germinating lupin seeds) and 35mM nitrate (used as an inorganic kind of nitrogen) on growth, storage lipid breakdown and autophagy was investigated. The sugar-starved isolated embryo axes contained more total lipid than axes fed with sucrose, and the content of this storage compound was even higher in sugar-starved isolated embryo axes fed with asparagine. Ultrastructural observations showed that asparagine significantly slowed down decomposition of autophagic bodies, and this allowed detailed analysis of their content. We found peroxisomes inside autophagic bodies in cells of sugar-starved Andean lupin embryo axes fed with asparagine, which led us to conclude that peroxisomes may be degraded during autophagy in sugar-starved isolated lupin embryo axes. One reason for the slower degradation of autophagic bodies was the markedly lower lipolytic activity in axes fed with asparagine.
Archive | 2014
Małgorzata Pietrowska-Borek; Tamara Chadzinikolau; Sławomir Borek
Cyclic nucleotides, cAMP and cGMP, are important signaling molecules that control a range of cellular functions and modulate different reactions. The level of the cyclic nucleotides is elevated and decreased by nucleotide cyclases and phosphodiesterases, respectively. The adenylate and guanylate cyclases synthesize cAMP and cGMP from ATP and GTP, respectively, while phosphodiesterases hydrolyze the cyclic nucleotides to AMP and GMP. An important aspect of cyclic nucleotide signal transduction has been identified and characterized during research on their receptors, such as cyclic nucleotide-dependent protein kinases and cyclic nucleotide-gated ion channels. It was proved that these receptors are involved in mediation of many effects of cyclic nucleotides. In the last decade, the participation of cyclic nucleotides in plant resistance to abiotic and biotic stresses has been extensively studied. The results of this research have shown that cAMP and cGMP are involved in signal transduction in response to various environmental stresses.