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Dive into the research topics where Suzanne R. Abrams is active.

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Featured researches published by Suzanne R. Abrams.


Nature | 2006

The RNA-binding protein FCA is an abscisic acid receptor

Fawzi A. Razem; Ashraf El-Kereamy; Suzanne R. Abrams; Robert D. Hill

The phytohormone abscisic acid (ABA) regulates various physiological processes in plants. The molecular mechanisms by which this is achieved are not fully understood. Genetic approaches have characterized several downstream components of ABA signalling, but a receptor for ABA has remained elusive. Although studies indicate that several ABA response genes encode RNA-binding or RNA-processing proteins, none has been found to be functional in binding ABA. Here we show that FCA, an RNA-binding protein involved in flowering, binds ABA with high affinity in an interaction that is stereospecific and follows receptor kinetics. The interaction between FCA and ABA has molecular effects on downstream events in the autonomous floral pathway and, consequently, on the ability of the plant to undergo transition to flowering. We further show that ABA binding exerts a direct control on the FCA-mediated processing of precursor messenger RNA. Our results indicate that FCA is an ABA receptor involved in RNA metabolism and in controlling flowering time.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2008

The relationship of drought-related gene expression in Arabidopsis thaliana to hormonal and environmental factors

Daiqing Huang; Weiren Wu; Suzanne R. Abrams; Adrian J. Cutler

Almost 2000 drought-responsive genes were identified in Arabidopsis thaliana under progressive soil drought stress using whole-genome oligonucleotide microarrays. Most of the drought-regulated genes recovered to normal expression levels by 3 h after rewatering. It has previously been shown that the abscisic acid (ABA) analogue (+)-8′-acetylene-ABA (PBI425) hyperinduces many ABA-like changes in gene expression to reveal a more complete list of ABA-regulated genes, and it is demonstrated here that PBI425 produced a correspondingly increased drought tolerance. About two-thirds of drought-responsive genes (1310 out of 1969) were regulated by ABA and/or the ABA analogue PBI425. Analysis of promoter motifs suggests that many of the remaining drought-responsive genes may be affected by ABA signalling. Concentrations of endogenous ABA and its catabolites significantly increased under drought stress and either completely (ABA) or partially (ABA catabolites) recovered to normal levels by 3 h after rehydration. Detailed analyses of drought transcript profiles and in silico comparisons with other studies revealed that the ABA-dependent pathways are predominant in the drought stress responses. These comparisons also showed that other plant hormones including jasmonic acid, auxin, cytokinin, ethylene, brassinosteroids, and gibberellins also affected drought-related gene expression, of which the most significant was jasmonic acid. There is also extensive cross-talk between responses to drought and other environmental factors including light and biotic stresses. These analyses demonstrate that ABA-related stress responses are modulated by other environmental and developmental factors.


Plant Physiology | 2008

High Humidity Induces Abscisic Acid 8′-Hydroxylase in Stomata and Vasculature to Regulate Local and Systemic Abscisic Acid Responses in Arabidopsis

Masanori Okamoto; Yoko Tanaka; Suzanne R. Abrams; Yuji Kamiya; Motoaki Seki; Eiji Nambara

Levels of endogenous abscisic acid (ABA) are changed dynamically in response to environmental conditions. The ABA 8′-hydroxylase is a key enzyme in ABA catabolism and is encoded by CYP707A genes. In this study, we examined physiological roles of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) CYP707As in the plants response to changes in humidity. The cyp707a1 and cyp707a3 mutants displayed lower stomatal conductance under turgid conditions (relative humidity 60%) than the wild type. When wild-type plants were transferred to high-humidity conditions (relative humidity 90%), CYP707A1 and CYP707A3 transcript levels increased, followed by the reduction of ABA levels. The cyp707a3 mutant exhibited high ABA levels even after transferring to high-humidity conditions, whereas, under similar conditions, the cyp707a1 mutant exhibited low ABA levels comparable to the wild type. Analysis of spatial expression patterns by using transgenic plants harboring a promoter∷β-glucuronidase gene indicated that high-humidity-induced expression of CYP707A1 and CYP707A3 occurred primarily in guard cells and vascular tissues, respectively. Furthermore, stomatal closure of the cyp707a1 mutant, but not cyp707a3 mutant, was ABA hypersensitive when epidermal peel was treated with exogenous ABA, suggesting that CYP707A1 is essential for ABA catabolism inside the guard cells. These results implicate that CYP707A3 reduces the amount of mobile ABA in vascular tissues in response to high humidity, whereas CYP707A1 inactivates local ABA pools inside the guard cells. Taken together, ABA catabolism in both vascular tissues and guard cells participates in the systemic ABA action that controls stomatal movement in response to high humidity.


Plant Physiology | 2012

Gene Expression and Metabolite Profiling of Developing Highbush Blueberry Fruit Indicates Transcriptional Regulation of Flavonoid Metabolism and Activation of Abscisic Acid Metabolism

Michael Zifkin; Alena Jin; Jocelyn A. Ozga; L. Irina Zaharia; Johann P. Schernthaner; Andreas Gesell; Suzanne R. Abrams; James A. Kennedy; C. Peter Constabel

Highbush blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum) fruits contain substantial quantities of flavonoids, which are implicated in a wide range of health benefits. Although the flavonoid constituents of ripe blueberries are known, the molecular genetics underlying their biosynthesis, localization, and changes that occur during development have not been investigated. Two expressed sequence tag libraries from ripening blueberry fruit were constructed as a resource for gene identification and quantitative real-time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction primer design. Gene expression profiling by quantitative real-time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction showed that flavonoid biosynthetic transcript abundance followed a tightly regulated biphasic pattern, and transcript profiles were consistent with the abundance of the three major classes of flavonoids. Proanthocyanidins (PAs) and corresponding biosynthetic transcripts encoding anthocyanidin reductase and leucoanthocyanidin reductase were most concentrated in young fruit and localized predominantly to the inner fruit tissue containing the seeds and placentae. Mean PA polymer length was seven to 8.5 subunits, linked predominantly via B-type linkages, and was relatively constant throughout development. Flavonol accumulation and localization patterns were similar to those of the PAs, and the B-ring hydroxylation pattern of both was correlated with flavonoid-3′-hydroxylase transcript abundance. By contrast, anthocyanins accumulated late in maturation, which coincided with a peak in flavonoid-3-O-glycosyltransferase and flavonoid-3′5′-hydroxylase transcripts. Transcripts of VcMYBPA1, which likely encodes an R2R3-MYB transcriptional regulator of PA synthesis, were prominent in both phases of development. Furthermore, the initiation of ripening was accompanied by a substantial rise in abscisic acid, a growth regulator that may be an important component of the ripening process and contribute to the regulation of blueberry flavonoid biosynthesis.


Plant and Cell Physiology | 2010

Comprehensive Hormone Profiling in Developing Arabidopsis Seeds: Examination of the Site of ABA Biosynthesis, ABA Transport and Hormone Interactions

Yuri Kanno; Yusuke Jikumaru; Atsushi Hanada; Eiji Nambara; Suzanne R. Abrams; Yuji Kamiya; Mitsunori Seo

ABA plays important roles in many aspects of seed development, including accumulation of storage compounds, acquisition of desiccation tolerance, induction of seed dormancy and suppression of precocious germination. Quantification of ABA in the F(1) and F(2) populations originated from crosses between the wild type and an ABA-deficient mutant aba2-2 demonstrated that ABA was synthesized in both maternal and zygotic tissues during seed development. In the absence of zygotic ABA, ABA synthesized in maternal tissues was translocated into the embryos and partially induced seed dormancy. We also analyzed the levels of ABA metabolites, gibberellins, IAA, cytokinins, jasmonates and salicylic acid (SA) in the developing seeds of the wild type and aba2-2. ABA metabolites accumulated differentially in the silique and seed tissues during development. Endogenous levels of SA were elevated in aba2-2 in the later developmental stages, whereas that of IAA was reduced compared with the wild type. These data suggest that ABA metabolism depends on developmental stages and tissues, and that ABA interacts with other hormones to regulate seed developmental processes.


Plant Physiology | 1994

Response of Cultured Maize Cells to (+)-Abscisic Acid, (-)-Abscisic Acid, and Their Metabolites

John Balsevich; Adrian J. Cutler; Nancy Lamb; Laurie J. Friesen; Ebba U. Kurz; Michel Perras; Suzanne R. Abrams

The metabolism and effects of (+)-S- and (-)-R-abscisic acid (ABA) and some metabolites were studied in maize (Zea mays L. cv Black Mexican Sweet) suspension-cultured cells. Time-course studies of metabolite formation were performed in both cells and medium via analytical high-performance liquid chromatography. Metabolites were isolated and identified using physical and chemical methods. At 10 [mu]M concentration and 28[deg] C, (+)-ABA was metabolized within 24 h, yielding natural (-)-phaseic acid [(-)-PA] as the major product. The unnatural enantiomer (-)-ABA was less than 50% metabolized within 24 h and gave primarily (-)-7[prime]-hydroxyABA [(-)-7[prime]-HOABA], together with (+)-PA and ABA glucose ester. The distribution of metabolites in cells and medium was different, reflecting different sites of metabolism and membrane permeabilities of conjugated and nonconjugated metabolites. The results imply that (+)-ABA was oxidized to (-)-PA inside the cell, whereas (-)-ABA was converted to (-)-7[prime]-HOABA at the cell surface. Growth of maize cells was inhibited by both (+)- and (-)-ABA, with only weak contributions from their metabolites. The concentration of (+)-ABA that caused a 50% inhibition of growth of maize cells was approximately 1 [mu]M, whereas that for its metabolite (-)-PA was approximately 50 [mu]M. (-)-ABA was less active than (+)-ABA, with 50% growth inhibition observed at about 10 [mu]M. (-)-7[prime]-HOABA was only weakly active, with 50% inhibition caused by approximately 500 [mu]M. Time-course studies of medium pH indicated that (+)-ABA caused a transient pH increase (+0.3 units) at 6 h after addition that was not observed in controls or in samples treated with (-)-PA. The effect of (-)-ABA on medium Ph was marginal. No racemization at C-1[prime] of (+)-ABA, (-)-ABA, or metabolites was observed during the studies.


Plant Physiology | 2004

A New Abscisic Acid Catabolic Pathway

Rong Zhou; Adrian J. Cutler; Stephen J. Ambrose; Marek M. Galka; Ken M. Nelson; Timothy M. Squires; Mary K. Loewen; Ashok Jadhav; Andrew R. S. Ross; David C. Taylor; Suzanne R. Abrams

We report the discovery of a new hydroxylated abscisic acid (ABA) metabolite, found in the course of a mass spectrometric study of ABA metabolism in Brassica napus siliques. This metabolite reveals a previously unknown catabolic pathway for ABA in which the 9′-methyl group of ABA is oxidized. Analogs of (+)-ABA deuterated at the 8′-carbon atom and at both the 8′- and 9′-carbon atoms were fed to green siliques, and extracts containing the deuterated oxidized metabolites were analyzed to determine the position of ABA hydroxylation. The results indicated that hydroxylation of ABA had occurred at the 9′-methyl group, as well as at the 7′- and 8′-methyl groups. The chromatographic characteristics and mass spectral fragmentation patterns of the new ABA metabolite were compared with those of synthetic 9′-hydroxy ABA (9′-OH ABA), in both open and cyclized forms. The new compound isolated from plant extracts was identified as the cyclized form of 9′-OH ABA, which we have named neophaseic acid (neoPA). The proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectrum of pure neoPA isolated from immature seeds of B. napus was identical to that of the authentic synthetic compound. ABA and neoPA levels were high in young seeds and lower in older seeds. The open form (2Z,4E)-5-[(1R,6S)-1-Hydroxy-6-hydroxymethyl-2,6-dimethyl-4-oxo-cyclohex-2-enyl]-3-methyl-penta-2,4-dienoic acid, but not neoPA, exhibited ABA-like bioactivity in inhibiting Arabidopsis seed germination and in inducing gene expression in B. napus microspore-derived embryos. NeoPA was also detected in fruits of orange (Citrus sinensis) and tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum), in Arabidopsis, and in chickpea (Cicer arietinum), as well as in drought-stressed barley (Hordeum vulgare) and B. napus seedlings.


Phytochemistry | 1992

Metabolism of (+)- and (−)-abscisic acid by somatic embryo suspension cultures of white spruce

David I. Dunstan; Cheryl A. Bock; Garth D. Abrams; Suzanne R. Abrams

Abstract Somatic embryo suspension cultures of white spruce in medium containing (+)-abscisic acid [(+)-ABA], at an initial concentration of 15 μM, metabolized the ABA essentially completely within seven days. The metabolites accumulated in the liquid medium. The (+)-ABA was converted almost quantitively to phaseic acid, with little further transformation into dihydrophaseic acid. The sum of the concentrations of the two metabolites in the medium closely approximated the concentration of (+)-ABA initially supplied. (−)-ABA remained essentially unchanged under the same culture conditions, and when the cells were supplied with racemic (±)-ABA, only the (+) enantiomer was metabolized. When (+)- or (±)-ABA was present in the medium, the size of the embryos and their suspensors increased during the culture period, a development consistent with somatic embryo maturation. Embryos in control cultures lacking exogenously supplied ABA, and embryos in cultures provided with only (−)-ABA, did not increase in size. The early disappearance of the (+)-ABA from the suspension medium, and the completeness of its conversion to phaseic acid, raises the question of the relative roles of ABA and phaseic acid in the maturation of conifer somatic embryos.


Plant Cell and Environment | 2011

Molecular events of apical bud formation in white spruce, Picea glauca.

Walid El Kayal; Carmen C. G. Allen; Chelsea J.-T. Ju; Eri Adams; Susanne King-Jones; L. Irina Zaharia; Suzanne R. Abrams; Janice E. K. Cooke

Bud formation is an adaptive trait that temperate forest trees have acquired to facilitate seasonal synchronization. We have characterized transcriptome-level changes that occur during bud formation of white spruce [Picea glauca (Moench) Voss], a primarily determinate species in which preformed stem units contained within the apical bud constitute most of next seasons growth. Microarray analysis identified 4460 differentially expressed sequences in shoot tips during short day-induced bud formation. Cluster analysis revealed distinct temporal patterns of expression, and functional classification of genes in these clusters implied molecular processes that coincide with anatomical changes occurring in the developing bud. Comparing expression profiles in developing buds under long day and short day conditions identified possible photoperiod-responsive genes that may not be essential for bud development. Several genes putatively associated with hormone signalling were identified, and hormone quantification revealed distinct profiles for abscisic acid (ABA), cytokinins, auxin and their metabolites that can be related to morphological changes to the bud. Comparison of gene expression profiles during bud formation in different tissues revealed 108 genes that are differentially expressed only in developing buds and show greater transcript abundance in developing buds than other tissues. These findings provide a temporal roadmap of bud formation in white spruce.


Plant Science | 1991

Racemic abscisic acid and abscisyl alcohol promote maturation of white spruce (Picea glauca) somatic embryos

David I. Dunstan; Terry D. Bethune; Suzanne R. Abrams

Abstract Racemic abscisic acid [(±)-ABA] and racemic abscisyl alcohol were used to obtain maturation of white spruce (Picea glauca (Moench.) Voss) immature (stage 1) somatic embryos. Data for somatic embryo development were collected between 21 and 70 days after initiation of maturation treatments. The culture period for the maximum production of cotyledonary (stage 3) somatic embryos was approx. 42 days, with either 46 μM (±)-ABA or 41 μM abscisyl alcohol during the first 35 days. Two additional abscisic acid analogues, an acetylenic aldehyde and a dihydroacetylenic alcohol were less effective in promoting somatic embryo maturation. A comparison of the molecular structures of compounds indicated that the presence of an ABA-like side chain with two double bonds was most effective in white spruce somatic embryo maturation. Another factor that influenced the maturation process was the solvent used to dissolve (±)-ABA and the analogues. Somatic embryo development could be arrested at stage 3 by extending exposure to 60 μM (±)-ABA for up to 9 weeks. Germination resulted after removal of (±)-ABA.

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Ken M. Nelson

National Research Council

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Lawrence V. Gusta

University of Saskatchewan

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