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Featured researches published by Zanmin Hu.


Plant Physiology | 2008

NaCl-Induced Alternations of Cellular and Tissue Ion Fluxes in Roots of Salt-Resistant and Salt-Sensitive Poplar Species

Jian Sun; Shaoliang Chen; Songxiang Dai; Ruigang Wang; Niya Li; Xin Shen; Xiaoyang Zhou; Cunfu Lu; Xiaojiang Zheng; Zanmin Hu; Zengkai Zhang; Jin Song; Yue Xu

Using the scanning ion-selective electrode technique, fluxes of H+, Na+, and Cl− were investigated in roots and derived protoplasts of salt-tolerant Populus euphratica and salt-sensitive Populus popularis 35-44 (P. popularis). Compared to P. popularis, P. euphratica roots exhibited a higher capacity to extrude Na+ after a short-term exposure to 50 mm NaCl (24 h) and a long term in a saline environment of 100 mm NaCl (15 d). Root protoplasts, isolated from the long-term-stressed P. euphratica roots, had an enhanced Na+ efflux and a correspondingly increased H+ influx, especially at an acidic pH of 5.5. However, the NaCl-induced Na+/H+ exchange in root tissues and cells was inhibited by amiloride (a Na+/H+ antiporter inhibitor) or sodium orthovanadate (a plasma membrane H+-ATPase inhibitor). These results indicate that the Na+ extrusion in stressed P. euphratica roots is the result of an active Na+/H+ antiport across the plasma membrane. In comparison, the Na+/H+ antiport system in salt-stressed P. popularis roots was insufficient to exclude Na+ at both the tissue and cellular levels. Moreover, salt-treated P. euphratica roots retained a higher capacity for Cl− exclusion than P. popularis, especially during a long term in high salinity. The pattern of NaCl-induced fluxes of H+, Na+, and Cl− differs from that caused by isomotic mannitol in P. euphratica roots, suggesting that NaCl-induced alternations of root ion fluxes are mainly the result of ion-specific effects.


Transgenic Research | 2003

Chloroplast Transformation in Oilseed Rape

Bing-Kai Hou; Yihua Zhou; Li-Hong Wan; Zhong-Lin Zhang; Gui-Fang Shen; Zheng-Hua Chen; Zanmin Hu

The chloroplast transformation vector pNRAB carries two expression cassettes for the spectinomycin resistance gene aadA and the insect resistance gene cry1Aa10. The two cassettes are sited between the rps7 and ndhB targeting fragments. Biolistic delivery of the vector DNA, followed by spectinomycin selection, yielded chloroplast transformants at a frequency of four in 1000 bombarded cotyledon petioles. PCR analysis and Southern blot of PCR products confirmed the site-specific integration of aadA and cry1Aa10 into the chloroplast genomes of transgenic oilseed rape. When transgenic oilseed rape leaves were fed to second instar Plutella xylostera larvae, 47% mortality was observed against this insect and the surviving larvae had significantly lower weight than the control. This is the first report of chloroplast transformation in oilseed rape and the introduction of novel genes between the rps7 and ndhB genes in the chloroplast genome. This offers an opportunity for improvement of oilseed rape by chloroplast genetic engineering.


Plant Cell and Environment | 2010

H2O2 and cytosolic Ca2+ signals triggered by the PM H-coupled transport system mediate K+/Na+ homeostasis in NaCl-stressed Populus euphratica cells.

Jian Sun; Meijuan Wang; Mingquan Ding; Shurong Deng; Meiqin Liu; Cunfu Lu; Xiaoyang Zhou; Xin Shen; Xiaojiang Zheng; Zengkai Zhang; Jin Song; Zanmin Hu; Yue Xu; Shaoliang Chen

Using confocal microscopy, X-ray microanalysis and the scanning ion-selective electrode technique, we investigated the signalling of H(2)O(2), cytosolic Ca(2+) ([Ca(2+)](cyt)) and the PM H(+)-coupled transport system in K(+)/Na(+) homeostasis control in NaCl-stressed calluses of Populus euphratica. An obvious Na(+)/H(+) antiport was seen in salinized cells; however, NaCl stress caused a net K(+) efflux, because of the salt-induced membrane depolarization. H(2)O(2) levels, regulated upwards by salinity, contributed to ionic homeostasis, because H(2)O(2) restrictions by DPI or DMTU caused enhanced K(+) efflux and decreased Na(+)/H(+) antiport activity. NaCl induced a net Ca(2+) influx and a subsequent rise of [Ca(2+)](cyt), which is involved in H(2)O(2)-mediated K(+)/Na(+) homeostasis in salinized P. euphratica cells. When callus cells were pretreated with inhibitors of the Na(+)/H(+) antiport system, the NaCl-induced elevation of H(2)O(2) and [Ca(2+)](cyt) was correspondingly restricted, leading to a greater K(+) efflux and a more pronounced reduction in Na(+)/H(+) antiport activity. Results suggest that the PM H(+)-coupled transport system mediates H(+) translocation and triggers the stress signalling of H(2)O(2) and Ca(2+), which results in a K(+)/Na(+) homeostasis via mediations of K(+) channels and the Na(+)/H(+) antiport system in the PM of NaCl-stressed cells. Accordingly, a salt stress signalling pathway of P. euphratica cells is proposed.


Tree Physiology | 2009

Calcium mediates root K+/Na+ homeostasis in poplar species differing in salt tolerance

Jian Sun; Songxiang Dai; Ruigang Wang; Shaoliang Chen; Niya Li; Xiaoyang Zhou; Cunfu Lu; Xin Shen; Xiaojiang Zheng; Zanmin Hu; Zengkai Zhang; Jin Song; Yue Xu

Using the non-invasively ion-selective microelectrode technique, flux profiles of K(+), Na(+) and H(+) in mature roots and apical regions, and the effects of Ca(2+) on ion fluxes were investigated in salt-tolerant poplar species, Populus euphratica Oliver and salt-sensitive Populus simonii x (P. pyramidalis + Salix matsudana) (Populus popularis 35-44, P. popularis). Compared to P. popularis, P. euphratica roots exhibited a greater capacity to retain K(+) after exposure to a salt shock (SS, 100 mM NaCl) and a long-term (LT) salinity (50 mM NaCl, 3 weeks). Salt shock-induced K(+) efflux in the two species was markedly restricted by K(+) channel blocker, tetraethylammonium chloride, but enhanced by sodium orthovanadate, the inhibitor of plasma membrane (PM) H(+)-ATPase, suggesting that the K(+) efflux is mediated by depolarization-activated (DA) channels, e.g., KORCs (outward rectifying K(+) channels) and NSCCs (non-selective cation channels). Populus euphratica roots were more effective to exclude Na(+) than P. popularis in an LT experiment, resulting from the Na(+)/H(+) antiport across the PM. Moreover, pharmacological evidence implies that the greater ability to control K(+)/Na(+) homeostasis in salinized P. euphratica roots is associated with the higher H(+)-pumping activity, which provides an electrochemical H(+) gradient for Na(+)/H(+) exchange and simultaneously decreases the NaCl-induced depolarization of PM, thus reducing Na(+) influx via NSCCs and K(+) efflux through DA-KORCs and DA-NSCCs. Ca(2+) application markedly limited salt-induced K(+) efflux but enhanced the apparent Na(+) efflux, thus enabling the two species, especially the salt-sensitive poplar, to retain K(+)/Na(+) homeostasis in roots exposed to prolonged NaCl treatment.


Journal of Genetics and Genomics | 2009

Advances in chloroplast engineering

Huan-Huan Wang; Weibo Yin; Zanmin Hu

The chloroplast is a pivotal organelle in plant cells and eukaryotic algae to carry out photosynthesis, which provides the primary source of the worlds food. The expression of foreign genes in chloroplasts offers several advantages over their expression in the nucleus: high-level expression, transgene stacking in operons and a lack of epigenetic interference allowing stable transgene expression. In addition, transgenic chloroplasts are generally not transmitted through pollen grains because of the cytoplasmic localization. In the past two decades, great progress in chloroplast engineering has been made. In this paper, we review and highlight recent studies of chloroplast engineering, including chloroplast transformation procedures, controlled expression of plastid transgenes in plants, the expression of foreign genes for improvement of plant traits, the production of biopharmaceuticals, metabolic pathway engineering in plants, plastid transformation to study RNA editing, and marker gene excision system.


Plant Cell and Environment | 2012

An ATP signalling pathway in plant cells: extracellular ATP triggers programmed cell death in Populus euphratica

Jian Sun; Chunlan Zhang; Shurong Deng; Cunfu Lu; Xin Shen; Xiaoyang Zhou; Xiaojiang Zheng; Zanmin Hu; Shaoliang Chen

We elucidated the extracellular ATP (eATP) signalling cascade active in programmed cell death (PCD) using cell cultures of Populus euphratica. Millimolar amounts of eATP induced a dose- and time-dependent reduction in viability, and the agonist-treated cells displayed hallmark features of PCD. eATP caused an elevation of cytosolic Ca(2+) levels, resulting in Ca(2+) uptake by the mitochondria and subsequent H(2) O(2) accumulation. P. euphratica exhibited an increased mitochondrial transmembrane potential, and cytochrome c was released without opening of the permeability transition pore over the period of ATP stimulation. Moreover, the eATP-induced increase of intracellular ATP, essential for the activation of caspase-like proteases and subsequent PCD, was found to be related to increased mitochondrial transmembrane potential. NO is implicated as a downstream component of the cytosolic Ca(2+) concentration but plays a negligible role in eATP-stimulated cell death. We speculate that ATP binds purinoceptors in the plasma membrane, leading to the induction of downstream intermediate signals, as the proposed sequence of events in PCD signalling was terminated by the animal P2 receptor antagonist suramin.


International Journal of Plant Sciences | 2003

Development of Salinity‐Tolerant Wheat Recombinant Lines from a Wheat Disomic Addition Line Carrying a Thinopyrum junceum Chromosome

Richard R.-C. Wang; Xiaomei Li; Zanmin Hu; Ji‐Yi Zhang; Steve R. Larson; Xueyong Zhang; Catherine M. Grieve; Michael C. Shannon

Three Triticum aestivum L. × Thinopyrum junceum (L.) A. Löve partial amphidiploids (2n=8x=56; 21″ ABD + 7″ Eb/Ee) and 11 derived disomic addition lines (2n=44) were screened for salt tolerance in hydroponic solutions. One addition line (AJDAj5, 21″ ABD + 1″ Eb) had salt tolerance comparable to that in partial amphidiploids. It was crossed to a wheat line having the PhI allele from Aegilops speltoides Tausch to induce homoeologous pairing. F2 plants were subjected to salt screening and advanced to 30 F3 families, which were screened again. Four F3 lines were more tolerant than AJDAj5 when screened in a final electrical conductivity of 42 dS/m. Because one of the four lines was sterile, only three lines were further verified for their salinity tolerance and were cytologically and molecularly analyzed. These lines were translocation lines with 42 chromosomes having tiny fluorescent hybridization signals detected at interstitial positions of less condensed chromosomes using the genomic in situ hybridization technique. Amplified fragment length polymorphism analyses revealed the presence of very few (ca. 4%) putative markers specific to the Eb‐chromosome addition line. These lines also had from 2% to 14% of markers specific to the Ph inhibitor line and a few new AFLP markers that were not found in the two parental lines and the common wheat background, cv. Chinese Spring. Two recombinant lines were more salt tolerant than either parent, while the third one was as tolerant as either parent, which was more tolerant than Chinese Spring. The former two lines are valuable germplasm for breeding salt‐tolerant wheat cultivars.


Plant Physiology | 2015

Genomic Foundation of Starch-to-Lipid Switch in Oleaginous Chlorella spp.

Jianhua Fan; Kang Ning; Xiaowei Zeng; Yuanchan Luo; Dongmei Wang; Jianqiang Hu; Jing Li; Hui Xu; Jianke Huang; Minxi Wan; Weiliang Wang; Daojing Zhang; Guomin Shen; Conglin Run; Junjie Liao; Lei Fang; Shi Huang; Xiaoyan Jing; Xiaoquan Su; Anhui Wang; Lili Bai; Zanmin Hu; Jian Xu; Yuanguang Li

The versatile chlorophyta Chlorella pyrenoidosa provides genomic insights into the trophic diversity and metabolic dynamics. The ability to rapidly switch the intracellular energy storage form from starch to lipids is an advantageous trait for microalgae feedstock. To probe this mechanism, we sequenced the 56.8-Mbp genome of Chlorella pyrenoidosa FACHB-9, an industrial production strain for protein, starch, and lipids. The genome exhibits positive selection and gene family expansion in lipid and carbohydrate metabolism and genes related to cell cycle and stress response. Moreover, 10 lipid metabolism genes might be originated from bacteria via horizontal gene transfer. Transcriptomic dynamics tracked via messenger RNA sequencing over six time points during metabolic switch from starch-rich heterotrophy to lipid-rich photoautotrophy revealed that under heterotrophy, genes most strongly expressed were from the tricarboxylic acid cycle, respiratory chain, oxidative phosphorylation, gluconeogenesis, glyoxylate cycle, and amino acid metabolisms, whereas those most down-regulated were from fatty acid and oxidative pentose phosphate metabolism. The shift from heterotrophy into photoautotrophy highlights up-regulation of genes from carbon fixation, photosynthesis, fatty acid biosynthesis, the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway, and starch catabolism, which resulted in a marked redirection of metabolism, where the primary carbon source of glycine is no longer supplied to cell building blocks by the tricarboxylic acid cycle and gluconeogenesis, whereas carbon skeletons from photosynthesis and starch degradation may be directly channeled into fatty acid and protein biosynthesis. By establishing the first genetic transformation in industrial oleaginous C. pyrenoidosa, we further showed that overexpression of an NAD(H) kinase from Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) increased cellular lipid content by 110.4%, yet without reducing growth rate. These findings provide a foundation for exploiting the metabolic switch in microalgae for improved photosynthetic production of food and fuels.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Expression of Multiple Resistance Genes Enhances Tolerance to Environmental Stressors in Transgenic Poplar (Populus × euramericana ‘Guariento’)

Xiaohua Su; Yanguang Chu; Huan Li; Yingjie Hou; Bingyu Zhang; Qinjun Huang; Zanmin Hu; Rongfeng Huang; Yingchuan Tian

Commercial and non-commercial plants face a variety of environmental stressors that often cannot be controlled. In this study, transgenic hybrid poplar (Populus × euramericana ‘Guariento’) harboring five effector genes (vgb, SacB, JERF36, BtCry3A and OC-I) were subjected to drought, salinity, waterlogging and insect stressors in greenhouse or laboratory conditions. Field trials were also conducted to investigate long-term effects of transgenic trees on insects and salt tolerance in the transformants. In greenhouse studies, two transgenic lines D5-20 and D5-21 showed improved growth, as evidenced by greater height and basal diameter increments and total biomass relative to the control plants after drought or salt stress treatments. The improved tolerance to drought and salt was primarily attributed to greater instantaneous water use efficiency (WUEi) in the transgenic trees. The chlorophyll concentrations tended to be higher in the transgenic lines under drought or saline conditions. Transformed trees in drought conditions accumulated more fructan and proline and had increased Fv/Fm ratios (maximum quantum yield of photosystem II) under waterlogging stress. Insect-feeding assays in the laboratory revealed a higher total mortality rate and lower exuviation index of leaf beetle [Plagiodera versicolora (Laicharting)] larvae fed with D5-21 leaves, suggesting enhanced insect resistance in the transgenic poplar. In field trials, the dominance of targeted insects on 2-year-old D5-21 transgenic trees was substantially lower than that of the controls, indicating enhanced resistance to Coleoptera. The average height and DBH (diameter at breast height) of 2.5-year-old transgenic trees growing in naturally saline soil were 3.80% and 4.12% greater than those of the control trees, but these increases were not significant. These results suggested that multiple stress-resistance properties in important crop tree species could be simultaneously improved, although additional research is needed to fully understand the relationships between the altered phenotypes and the function of each transgene in multigene transformants.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2013

Populus euphratica XTH overexpression enhances salinity tolerance by the development of leaf succulence in transgenic tobacco plants

Yansha Han; Wei Wang; Jian Sun; Mingquan Ding; Rui Zhao; Shurong Deng; Feifei Wang; Yue Hu; Yang Wang; Yanjun Lu; Liping Du; Zanmin Hu; Heike Diekmann; Xin Shen; Andrea Polle; Shaoliang Chen

Populus euphratica is a salt-tolerant tree species that develops leaf succulence after a prolonged period of salinity stress. In the present study, a putative xyloglucan endotransglucosylase/hydrolase gene (PeXTH) from P. euphratica was isolated and transferred to tobacco plants. PeXTH localized exclusively to the endoplasmic reticulum and cell wall. Plants overexpressing PeXTH were more salt tolerant than wild-type tobacco with respect to root and leaf growth, and survival. The increased capacity for salt tolerance was due mainly to the anatomical and physiological alterations caused by PeXTH overexpression. Compared with the wild type, PeXTH-transgenic plants contained 36% higher water content per unit area and 39% higher ratio of fresh weight to dry weight, a hallmark of leaf succulence. However, the increased water storage in the leaves in PeXTH-transgenic plants was not accompanied by greater leaf thickness but was due to highly packed palisade parenchyma cells and fewer intercellular air spaces between mesophyll cells. In addition to the salt dilution effect in response to NaCl, these anatomical changes increased leaf water-retaining capacity, which lowered the increase of salt concentration in the succulent tissues and mesophyll cells. Moreover, the increased number of mesophyll cells reduced the intercellular air space, which improved carbon economy and resulted in a 47–78% greater net photosynthesis under control and salt treatments (100–150mM NaCl). Taken together, the results indicate that PeXTH overexpression enhanced salt tolerance by the development of succulent leaves in tobacco plants without swelling.

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Yuhong Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Weibo Yin

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Li-Ying Song

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jun Hu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Chengming Fan

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jian Sun

University of Minnesota

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Xin Shen

University of Minnesota

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Cunfu Lu

Beijing Forestry University

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