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Dive into the research topics where Taras Pasternak is active.

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Featured researches published by Taras Pasternak.


Plant Cell and Environment | 2009

Different stresses, similar morphogenic responses: integrating a plethora of pathways

Geert Potters; Taras Pasternak; Yves Guisez; Marcel A. K. Jansen

Exposure of plants to mild chronic stress can cause induction of specific, stress-induced morphogenic responses (SIMRs). These responses are characterized by a blockage of cell division in the main meristematic tissues, an inhibition of elongation and a redirected outgrowth of lateral organs. Key elements in the ontogenesis of this phenotype appear to be stress-affected gradients of reactive oxygen species (ROS), antioxidants, auxin and ethylene. These gradients are present at the the organismal level, but are integrated on the cellular level, affecting cell division, cell elongation and/or cell differentiation. Our analysis of the literature indicates that stress-induced modulation of plant growth is mediated by a plethora of molecular interactions, whereby different environmental signals can trigger similar morphogenic responses. At least some of the molecular interactions that underlie morphogenic responses appear to be interchangeable. We speculate that this complexity can be viewed in terms of a thermodynamic model, in which not the specific pathway, but the achieved metabolic state is biologically conserved.


The Plant Cell | 2013

Plastid-Localized Glutathione Reductase2–Regulated Glutathione Redox Status Is Essential for Arabidopsis Root Apical Meristem Maintenance

Xin Yu; Taras Pasternak; Monika Eiblmeier; Franck Anicet Ditengou; Philip Kochersperger; Jiaqiang Sun; Hui Wang; Heinz Rennenberg; William Teale; Ivan A. Paponov; Wenkun Zhou; Chuanyou Li; Xugang Li; Klaus Palme

Plastid-localized glutathione reductase2 regulates root growth and root meristem maintenance through modulation of its GSH redox status, resulting in regulation of downstream effectors of the auxin/PLETHORA pathway, as well as of some auxin/ PLETHORA-independent pathways. This function differs from that of glutathione reductase1, which is not essential for plant development. Glutathione is involved in thiol redox signaling and acts as a major redox buffer against reactive oxygen species, helping to maintain a reducing environment in vivo. Glutathione reductase (GR) catalyzes the reduction of glutathione disulfide (GSSG) into reduced glutathione (GSH). The Arabidopsis thaliana genome encodes two GRs: GR1 and GR2. Whereas the cytosolic/peroxisomal GR1 is not crucial for plant development, we show here that the plastid-localized GR2 is essential for root growth and root apical meristem (RAM) maintenance. We identify a GR2 mutant, miao, that displays strong inhibition of root growth and severe defects in the RAM, with GR activity being reduced to ∼50%. miao accumulates high levels of GSSG and exhibits increased glutathione oxidation. The exogenous application of GSH or the thiol-reducing agent DTT can rescue the root phenotype of miao, demonstrating that the RAM defects in miao are triggered by glutathione oxidation. Our in silico analysis of public microarray data shows that auxin and glutathione redox signaling generally act independently at the transcriptional level. We propose that glutathione redox status is essential for RAM maintenance through both auxin/PLETHORA (PLT)-dependent and auxin/PLT-independent redox signaling pathways.


Plant Journal | 2014

The iRoCS Toolbox – 3D analysis of the plant root apical meristem at cellular resolution

Thorsten Schmidt; Taras Pasternak; Kun Liu; Thomas Blein; Dorothée Aubry-Hivet; Alexander Dovzhenko; Jasmin Duerr; William Teale; Franck Anicet Ditengou; Hans Burkhardt; Olaf Ronneberger; Klaus Palme

To achieve a detailed understanding of processes in biological systems, cellular features must be quantified in the three-dimensional (3D) context of cells and organs. We described use of the intrinsic root coordinate system (iRoCS) as a reference model for the root apical meristem of plants. iRoCS enables direct and quantitative comparison between the root tips of plant populations at single-cell resolution. The iRoCS Toolbox automatically fits standardized coordinates to raw 3D image data. It detects nuclei or segments cells, automatically fits the coordinate system, and groups the nuclei/cells into the roots tissue layers. The division status of each nucleus may also be determined. The only manual step required is to mark the quiescent centre. All intermediate outputs may be refined if necessary. The ability to learn the visual appearance of nuclei by example allows the iRoCS Toolbox to be easily adapted to various phenotypes. The iRoCS Toolbox is provided as an open-source software package, licensed under the GNU General Public License, to make it accessible to a broad community. To demonstrate the power of the technique, we measured subtle changes in cell division patterns caused by modified auxin flux within the Arabidopsis thaliana root apical meristem.


Plant Methods | 2015

Protocol: an improved and universal procedure for whole-mount immunolocalization in plants

Taras Pasternak; Olaf Tietz; Katja Rapp; Maura Begheldo; Roland Nitschke; Benedetto Ruperti; Klaus Palme

Rapid advances in microscopy have boosted research on cell biology. However sample preparation enabling excellent reproducible tissue preservation and cell labeling for in depth microscopic analysis of inner cell layers, tissues and organs still represents a major challenge for immunolocalization studies. Here we describe a protocol for whole-mount immunolocalization of proteins which is applicable to a wide range of plant species. The protocol is improved and robust for optimal sample fixation, tissue clearing and multi-protein staining procedures and can be used in combination with simultaneous detection of specific sequences of nucleic acids. In addition, cell wall and nucleus labelling can be implemented in the protocol, thereby allowing a detailed analysis of morphology and gene expression patterns with single-cell resolution. Besides enabling accurate, high resolution and reproducible protein detection in expression and localization studies, the procedure takes a single working day to complete without the need for robotic equipment.


joint pattern recognition symposium | 2006

Fast scalar and vectorial grayscale based invariant features for 3d cell nuclei localization and classification

Janina Schulz; Thorsten Schmidt; Olaf Ronneberger; Hans Burkhardt; Taras Pasternak; Alexander Dovzhenko; Klaus Palme

Since biology and medicine apply increasingly fast volumetric imaging techniques and aim at extracting quantitative data from these images, the need for efficient image analysis techniques like detection and classification of 3D structures is obvious. A common approach is to extract local features, e.g. group integration has been used to gain invariance against rotation and translation. We extend these group integration features by including vectorial information and spherical harmonics descriptors. From our vectorial invariants we derive a very robust detector for spherical structures in low-quality images and show that it can be computed very fast. We apply these new invariants to 3D confocal laser-scanning microscope images of the Arabidopsis root tip and extract position and type of the cell nuclei. Then it is possible to build a biologically relevant, architectural model of the root tip.


Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 2014

The thiol compounds glutathione and homoglutathione differentially affect cell development in alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.)

Taras Pasternak; Han Asard; Geert Potters; Marcel A. K. Jansen

Glutathione (GSH) is an important scavenger of Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS), precursor of metal chelating phytochelatins, xenobiotic defence compound and regulator of cell proliferation. Homoglutathione (hGSH) is a GSH homologue that is present in several taxa in the family of Fabaceae. It is thought that hGSH performs many of the stress-defence roles typically ascribed to GSH, yet little is known about the potential involvement of hGSH in controlling cell proliferation. Here we show that hGSH/GSH ratios vary across organs and cells and that these changes in hGSH/GSH ratio occur during dedifferentiation and/or cell cycle activation events. The use of a GSH/hGSH biosynthesis inhibitor resulted in impaired cytokinesis in isolated protoplasts, showing the critical importance of these thiol-compounds for cell division. However, exposure of isolated protoplasts to exogenous GSH accelerated cytokinesis, while exogenous hGSH was found to inhibit the same process. We conclude that GSH and hGSH have distinct functional roles in cell cycle regulation in Medicago sativa L. GSH is associated with meristemic cells, and promotes cell cycle activation and induction of somatic embryogenesis, while hGSH is associated with differentiated cells and embryo proliferation.


Plant Journal | 2013

Modification of plant Rac/Rop GTPase signalling using bacterial toxin transgenes

Manoj K. Singh; Fugang Ren; Torsten Giesemann; Cristina Dal Bosco; Taras Pasternak; Thomas Blein; Benedetto Ruperti; Gudula Schmidt; Klaus Aktories; Arthur J. Molendijk; Klaus Palme

Bacterial protein toxins which modify Rho GTPase are useful for the analysis of Rho signalling in animal cells, but these toxins cannot be taken up by plant cells. We demonstrate in vitro deamidation of Arabidopsis Rop4 by Escherichia coli Cytotoxic Necrotizing Factor 1 (CNF1) and glucosylation by Clostridium difficile toxin B. Expression of the catalytic domain of CNF1 caused modification and activation of co-expressed Arabidopsis Rop4 GTPase in tobacco leaves, resulting in hypersensitive-like cell death. By contrast, the catalytic domain of toxin B modified and inactivated co-expressed constitutively active Rop4, blocking the hypersensitive response caused by over-expression of active Rops. In transgenic Arabidopsis, both CNF1 and toxin B inhibited Rop-dependent polar morphogenesis of leaf epidermal cells. Toxin B expression also inhibited Rop-dependent morphogenesis of root hairs and trichome branching, and resulted in root meristem enlargement and dwarf growth. Our results show that CNF1 and toxin B transgenes are effective tools in Rop GTPase signalling studies.


In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology – Plant | 2010

Dehydroascorbate and glutathione regulate the cellular development of Nicotiana tabacum L. SR-1 protoplasts

Geert Potters; Marcel A. K. Jansen; Nele Horemans; Yves Guisez; Taras Pasternak

A Nicotiana tabacum L. SR-1 leaf protoplast system was used to study the effects of dehydroascorbate and glutathione on cellular development. We found that dehydroascorbate is readily taken up by protoplasts and internally reduced to ascorbate. Concomitantly, cell division was inhibited and cell expansion stimulated. In this respect, dehydroascorbate counteracted auxin-mediated leaf protoplast development. In contrast to the effects of dehydroascorbate, glutathione-induced cell dedifferentiation, and this effect is similar to that mediated by high auxin concentrations. We conclude that dehydroascorbate and glutathione affect the auxin-mediated regulation of cellular development. Therefore, the biological role of these compounds extends beyond stress tolerance and defense.


Annals of Botany | 2013

The Arabidopsis thaliana Mob1A gene is required for organ growth and correct tissue patterning of the root tip

Francesco Pinosa; Maura Begheldo; Taras Pasternak; Monica Zermiani; Ivan A. Paponov; Alexander Dovzhenko; Gianni Barcaccia; Benedetto Ruperti; Klaus Palme

BACKGROUND AND AIMS The Mob1 family includes a group of kinase regulators conserved throughout eukaryotes. In multicellular organisms, Mob1 is involved in cell proliferation and apoptosis, thus controlling appropriate cell number and organ size. These functions are also of great importance for plants, which employ co-ordinated growth processes to explore the surrounding environment and respond to changing external conditions. Therefore, this study set out to investigate the role of two Arabidopsis thaliana Mob1-like genes, namely Mob1A and Mob1B, in plant development. METHODS A detailed spatio-temporal analysis of Mob1A and Mob1B gene expression was performed by means of bioinformatic tools, the generation of expression reporter lines and in situ hybridization of gene-specific probes. To explore the function of the two genes in plant development, knock-out and knock-down mutants were isolated and their phenotype quantitatively characterized. KEY RESULTS Transcripts of the two genes were detected in specific sets of cells in all plant organs. Mob1A was upregulated by several stress conditions as well as by abscisic acid and salicylic acid. A knock-out mutation in Mob1B did not cause any visible defect in plant development, whereas suppression of Mob1A expression affected organ growth and reproduction. In the primary root, reduced levels of Mob1A expression brought about severe defects in tissue patterning of the stem cell niche and columella and led to a decrease in meristem size. Moreover, loss of Mob1A function resulted in a higher sensitivity of root growth to abscisic acid. CONCLUSIONS Taken together, the results indicate that arabidopsis Mob1A is involved in the co-ordination of tissue patterning and organ growth, similarly to its orthologues in other multicellular eukaryotes. In addition, Mob1A serves a plant-specific function by contributing to growth adjustments in response to stress conditions.


Joint DAGM (German Association for Pattern Recognition) and OAGM Symposium | 2012

Modeling of Sparsely Sampled Tubular Surfaces Using Coupled Curves

Thorsten Schmidt; Margret Keuper; Taras Pasternak; Klaus Palme; Olaf Ronneberger

We present a variational approach to simultaneously trace the axis and determine the thickness of 3-D (or 2-D) tubular structures defined by sparsely and unevenly sampled noisy surface points. Many existing approaches try to solve the axis-tracing and the precise fitting in two subsequent steps. In contrast to this our model is initialized with a small cylinder segment and converges to the final tubular structure in a single energy minimization using a gradient descent scheme. The energy is based on the error of fit and simultaneously penalizes strong curvature and thickness variations. We demonstrate the performance of this closed formulation on volumetric microscopic data sets of the Arabidopsis root tip, where only the nuclei of the cells are visible.

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Klaus Palme

University of Freiburg

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Hui Wang

University of Freiburg

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Olaf Tietz

University of Freiburg

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