Thomas J. Gianfagna
Rutgers University
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Journal of Experimental Botany | 2012
Emily B. Merewitz; Hongmei Du; Wenjuan Yu; Yimin Liu; Thomas J. Gianfagna; Bingru Huang
Increased endogenous plant cytokinin (CK) content through transformation with an adenine isopentyl transferase (ipt) gene has been associated with improved plant drought tolerance. The objective of this study is to determine metabolic changes associated with elevated CK production in ipt transgenic creeping bentgrass (Agrostis stolonifera L.) with improved drought tolerance. Null transformants (NTs) and plants transformed with ipt controlled by a stress- or senescence-activated promoter (SAG12-ipt) were exposed to well-watered conditions or drought stress by withholding irrigation in an environmental growth chamber. Physiological analysis confirmed that the SAG12-ipt line (S41) had improved drought tolerance compared with the NT plants. Specific metabolite changes over the course of drought stress and differential accumulation of metabolites in SAG12-ipt plants compared with NT plants at the same level of leaf relative water content (47% RWC) were identified using gas chromatography–mass spectroscopy. The metabolite profiling analysis detected 45 metabolites differentially accumulated in response to ipt expression or drought stress, which included amino acids, carbohydrates, organic acids, and organic alcohols. The enhanced drought tolerance of SAG12-ipt plants was associated with the maintenance of accumulation of several metabolites, particularly amino acids (proline, γ-aminobutyric acid, alanine, and glycine) carbohydrates (sucrose, fructose, maltose, and ribose), and organic acids that are mainly involved in the citric acid cycle. The accumulation of these metabolites could contribute to improved drought tolerance due to their roles in the stress response pathways such as stress signalling, osmotic adjustment, and respiration for energy production.
Journal of Experimental Botany | 2011
Emily B. Merewitz; Thomas J. Gianfagna; Bingru Huang
Water stress reduces endogenous cytokinin (CK) content and may inhibit CK production. Maintenance of endogenous CK levels by genetic transformation with ipt in leaves and roots undergoing senescence may promote stress tolerance. This study was designed to determine the physiological effects of ipt expression on immature and mature leaves and in roots for plants exposed to different levels of water stress for creeping bentgrass (Agrostis stolonifera). Plants containing the ipt gene, encoding the enzyme adenine isopentenyl phosphotransferase for CK synthesis ligated to a senescence-activated promoter (SAG12), and wild-type ‘Penncross’ (WT) were grown hydroponically in a growth chamber and exposed to water stress by weekly additions of polyethylene glycol 8000 to reduce the growing solution osmotic potential from –0.05 to –0.3, –0.5, –0.7, –1.0, and –1.4 MPa. Immature and mature leaves and roots of SAG12-ipt creeping bentgrass were evaluated for ipt expression, CK content, leaf relative water content (RWC), chlorophyll content (Chl), photochemical efficiency (FvFm), osmotic adjustment (OA), photosynthesis rate (Pn), stomatal conductance (gs), transpiration (E), water use efficiency (WUE), carbon isotope discrimination (Δ), and root viability. Expression of ipt was detected in all plant parts and a higher CK content, primarily in the form of isopentyladenine (iPa), was found in SAG12-ipt plants but not in the WT plants under water stress. Immature leaves exhibited higher iPa and OA at all treatment levels. Mature leaves of SAG12-ipt plants maintained higher OA, Pn, Chl, WUE, and Δ, whereas gs and E were relatively unaffected compared to the WT. Roots of SAG12-ipt plants had higher levels of iPa and greater root viability than the WT. The results demonstrate that expression of ipt enhanced the tolerance of creeping bentgrass to water stress, which could be attributed to the positive effects on osmotic adjustment, efficient water use, and maintaining higher photosynthetic rate primarily for mature leaves, as well as increased root viability.
Archive | 1987
Thomas J. Gianfagna
Plant growth regulators have been an important component in agricultural production even prior to the identification of plant hormones. As early as the turn of the century, fires were lit adjacent to fields in order to synchronize flowering in mango and pineapple (50). Gas powered generators were used as the source for the post-harvest heat treatment of lemons that stimulated ripening and degreening (12). The ethylene generated as a result of incomplete combustion, rather than higher temperatures, stimulated flowering and ripening in both cases, although this fact was unknown at the time. Plant growth regulators are now used on over one million hectares worldwide on a diversity of crops each year (61). Most of these applications are, however, confined to high-value horticultural crops rather than field crops, although there are several significant exceptions. Chlormequat chloride (2-chloroethyltrimethylammonium chloride) is used to reduce lodging in wheat. This application is generally limited to Europe, where under conditions of high fertility, lodging in small grains contributes significantly to yield reduction. Glyphosine (N,N,bis(phosphonomethyl)glycine) is used in sugarcane to increase the sucrose content of the cane. This compound acts by diverting carbohydrate into sucrose storage rather than fiber production.
Journal of Experimental Botany | 2010
Yan Xu; Thomas J. Gianfagna; Bingru Huang
Cytokinins (CKs) are known to regulate leaf senescence and affect heat tolerance, but mechanisms underlying CK regulation of heat tolerance are not well understood. A comprehensive proteomic study was conducted to identify proteins altered by the expression of the adenine isopentenyl transferase (ipt) gene controlling CK synthesis and associated with heat tolerance in transgenic plants for a C3 perennial grass species, Agrostis stolonifera. Transgenic plants with two different inducible promoters (SAG12 and HSP18) and a null transformant (NT) containing the vector without ipt were exposed to 20 °C (control) or 35 °C (heat stress) in growth chambers. Two-dimensional electrophoresis and mass spectrometry analysis were performed to identify protein changes in leaves and roots in response to ipt expression under heat stress. Transformation with ipt resulted in protein changes in leaves and roots involved in multiple functions, particularly in energy metabolism, protein destination and storage, and stress defence. The abundance levels of six leaf proteins (enolase, oxygen-evolving enhancer protein 2, putative oxygen-evolving complex, Rubisco small subunit, Hsp90, and glycolate oxidase) and nine root proteins (Fd-GOGAT, nucleotide-sugar dehydratase, NAD-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase, ferredoxin-NADP reductase precursor, putative heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein A2, ascorbate peroxidase, dDTP-glucose 4–6-dehydratases-like protein, and two unknown proteins) were maintained or increased in at least one ipt transgenic line under heat stress. The diversity of proteins altered in transgenic plants in response to heat stress suggests a regulatory role for CKs in various metabolic pathways associated with heat tolerance in C3 perennial grass species.
Plant Growth Regulation | 1999
Madhu Aneja; Thomas J. Gianfagna; Edward Ng
Cocoa flowers have a limited period of longevity; more than 90% of unpollinated flowers abscised within 32 h after anthesis. Abscisic acid (ABA) levels increased significantly prior to abscission. By 21 h after anthesis, ABA levels had increased almost 10-fold, and by 32 h flowers had 20-fold higher levels of ABA than at anthesis. Fluridone completely inhibited both the increase in ABA, the formation of an abscission zone, and the abscission and senescence of flowers. In contrast, ethylene production increased only slightly 21 h after anthesis and was only 2-fold higher after 32 h. Aminoethoxyvinylglycine (AVG) delayed but did not prevent abscission. In cocoa flowers, ABA is the primary regulator of abscission; ethylene accelerates abscission but only in the presence of ABA. Naphthalene acetic acid (NAA) treatment of flowers at anthesis prevented abscission zone formation and flower abscission, but did not induce fruit set. All parts of the NAA-treated flower except the pedicel senesced after 6 days. NAA+AVG treatment only delayed, whereas fluridone treatment completely prevented flower senescence.
Plant Science | 2002
Xiangyang Li; Jinpeng Xing; Thomas J. Gianfagna; Harry W. Janes
ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (AGPase, EC2.7.7.27) is a key regulatory enzyme in starch biosynthesis. The enzyme is a heterotetramer with two S and two B subunits. In tomato, there are three multiple forms of the S subunit gene. Agp S1, S2 and B are highly expressed in fruit from 10 to 25 days after anthesis. Agp S3 is only weakly expressed in fruit. Sucrose significantly elevates expression of Agp S1, S2 and B in both leaves and fruits. Agp S1 exhibits the highest degree of regulation by sucrose. In fact, sucrose may be required for Agp S1 expression. For excised leaves incubated in water, no transcripts for Agp S1 could be detected in the absence of sucrose, whereas it took up to 16 h in water before transcripts were no longer detectable for Agp S2 and B. Neither Agp S3 nor the tubulin gene is affected by sucrose, demonstrating that this response is specifically regulated by a carbohydrate metabolic signal, and is not due to a general increase in metabolism caused by sucrose treatment. Truncated versions of the promoter for Agp S1 indicate that a specific region 1.3-3.0 kb upstream from the transcription site is responsible for sucrose sensitivity. This region of the S1 promoter contains several cis-acting elements present in the promoters of other genes that are also regulated by sucrose.
Phytochemistry | 2001
Qin Yue; Chunlin Wang; Thomas J. Gianfagna; William A. Meyer
Volatile compounds produced by intact plants and ground leaf tissue from endophyte-infected (E+) and endophyte-free (E-) tall fescue (Festuca arundinacea Schreb.) were collected by a purge-and-trap procedure and analyzed by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry The volatile compound profile from ground leaf tissue was similar between E+ and E- clonal plants; however, the sheaths of E+ clonal plants produced higher levels of 1-octen-3-ol, a characteristic volatile compound derived from lipid peroxidation in fungi, which was absent in E- clonal plants. Intact plants produced fewer volatiles than macerated leaves. At 25 degrees C, (Z)-3-hexen-1-ol acetate was the most abundant compound, accounting for 77 and 89% of the total volatile emission from E+ and E- plants, respectively. Higher temperature (32 degrees C) significantly reduced the production of (Z)-3-hexen-1-ol acetate. Nonanal was the most abundant compound at 32 degrees C accounting for 52 and 45% of the total volatile emission from E+ and E- plants. Treatment of E+ and E- plants with jasmonic acid (JA) dramatically altered the volatile compound profile. The levels of (E)-beta-ocimene increased more than 200-fold and accounted for at least 43% of the total volatile emission. Although the presence of endophyte resulted in some qualitative and quantitative differences in the production of volatile compounds, they are unlikely to account for the differences in insect resistance between E+ and E- plants. Nevertheless, the production of a unique spectrum of volatiles after JA treatment may represent a significant plant-based defense response in tall fescue that is independent of endophyte.
Plant Science | 1998
Bing-Yuan Chen; Harry W. Janes; Thomas J. Gianfagna
Four ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (AGP) cDNAs were cloned from tomato fruit and leaves by the PCR techniques. Three of them (agp S1, agp S2, and agp S3) encode the large subunit of AGP, the fourth one (agp B) encodes the small subunit. The deduced amino acid sequences of the cDNAs show very high identities (96-98%) to the corresponding potato AGP isoforms, although there are major differences in tissue expression profiles. All four tomato AGP transcripts were detected in fruit and leaves; the predominant ones in fruit are agp B and agp S1, whereas in leaves they are agp B and agp S3. Genomic southern analysis suggests that the four AGP transcripts are encoded by distinct genes.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2010
John P. Munafo; Ahalya Ramanathan; Leslie S. Jimenez; Thomas J. Gianfagna
The bulbs of the Easter lily ( Lilium longiflorum Thunb.) are used as a food and medicine in several Asian cultures, and they are cultivated as an ornamental plant throughout the world. A new steroidal glycoalkaloid and two new furostanol saponins, along with two known steroidal glycosides, were isolated from the bulbs of L. longiflorum. The new steroidal glycoalkaloid was identified as (22R,25R)-spirosol-5-en-3beta-yl O-alpha-l-rhamnopyranosyl-(1-->2)-[6-O-acetyl-beta-d-glucopyranosyl-(1-->4)]-beta-d-glucopyranoside. The new furostanol saponins were identified as (25R)-26-O-(beta-d-glucopyranosyl)-furost-5-en-3beta,22alpha,26-triol 3-O-alpha-l-rhamnopyranosyl-(1-->2)-alpha-l-arabinopyranosyl-(1-->3)-beta-d-glucopyranoside and (25R)-26-O-(beta-d-glucopyranosyl)-furost-5-en-3beta,22alpha,26-triol 3-O-alpha-l-rhamnopyranosyl-(1-->2)-alpha-l-xylopyranosyl-(1-->3)-beta-d-glucopyranoside. The previously known steroidal glycosides, (22R,25R)-spirosol-5-en-3beta-yl O-alpha-l-rhamnopyranosyl-(1-->2)-beta-d-glucopyranosyl-(1-->4)-beta-d-glucopyranoside and (25R)-26-O-(beta-d-glucopyranosyl)-furost-5-en-3beta,22alpha,26-triol 3-O-alpha-l-rhamnopyranosyl-(1-->2)-beta-d-glucopyranosyl-(1-->4)-beta-d-glucopyranoside were identified in L. longiflorum for the first time. These new compounds from L. longiflorum and the isolation methodologies employed can be used for studies on the biological role of steroidal glycosides in plant development and plant-pathogen interactions, as well as for studies in food and human health, for which little is known.
Plant Growth Regulation | 2005
Y.Y. Luo; Thomas J. Gianfagna; Harry W. Janes; Bingru Huang; Zhaolong Wang; Jinpeng Xing
Transgenic tomato plants were produced with the isopentenyl transferase gene (ipt) ligated to a promoter that is active exclusively in sink tissue. Initially, transgenic plants had smaller, round-scale leaves, swollen stems, and exhibited early development of lateral shoots compared to wild type. Expression of the ipt gene resulted in the formation of unbranched roots on cuttings and delayed senescence in excised leaves. Callus and root formation occurred on excised leaves and leaf discs during dark incubation. The retention percentage of chlorophyll, as well as cytokinin in excised leaves or discs was significantly greater than wild type. Transgenic tomato fruit had elevated levels of cytokinins in the first days after fruit set and these levels were maintained longer during fruit development.