Background & Aims: Celiac disease is a condition in which genetically predisposed people have an autoimmune reaction to gluten proteins found in all wheat types and closely related cereals such as barley and rye. This reaction causes the formation of autoantibodies and the destruction of the villi in the small intestine, which results in malabsorption of nutrientsand other gluten-induced autoimmune diseases. Sorghum is a cereal grain with potential to be developed into an important crop for human food products.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough plant cell bioenergetics is strongly affected by abiotic stresses, mitochondrial metabolism under stress is still largely unknown. Interestingly, plant mitochondria may control reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation by means of energy-dissipating systems. Therefore, mitochondria may play a central role in cell adaptation to abiotic stresses, which are known to induce oxidative stress at cellular level.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEtiolated early seedlings of durum wheat submitted to moderate and severe salt (NaCl) and osmotic (mannitol) stress showed no relevant increase of both transcript levels of two plant uncoupling protein (pUCP)-related genes and maximal pUCP activity in purified mitochondria (which estimates protein level); contrarily, pUCP functioning due to endogenous free fatty acids strongly increased. These results show that pUCP activation under hyperosmotic stress may be due to modulation of pUCP reaction rather than to an increased protein synthesis. Finally, a properly developed method, based on a single membrane potential measurement, to evaluate both pUCP maximal activity and functioning, is reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeawater stress effects on mitochondrial ATP synthesis and membrane potential (ΔΨ) were investigated in germinating durum wheat seedlings under moderate (22% seawater osmolarity, -0.62 MPa) and severe (37% seawater osmolarity, -1.04 MPa) stress.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenetic manipulation of durum wheats by tobacco rab-1 genes influence the trafficking of gluten proteins through the secretory system by up- or down-regulating the transport step from the ER to the Golgi apparatus which may in turn modify functional performance of the grain. Gluten proteins were extracted from two genetically manipulated lines - Svevo B730 1-1 and Ofanto B688 1-2 - and their control lines and were analyzed by two dimensional gel electrophoresis. When the two-dimensional maps were compared by image analysis no significant differences between the GM line with an up-regulated trafficking containing the wild type tobacco rab1 (Svevo B730 1-1) and its control (Svevo control).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFollowing the screening of a suppression subtractive library developed from durum wheat plants exposed to low temperature for 6 h, two early cold-regulated (e-cor) genes have been isolated. These genes, coding putatively for a ribokinase (7H8) and a C3H2C3 RING-finger protein (6G2), were characterized by the stress-induced retention of a subset of introns in the mature mRNA. This feature was dependent on cold for 7H8 and on cold and dehydration for 6G2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDrought, low temperature and salinity are the most important abiotic stress factors limiting crop productivity. A genomic map of major loci and QTLs affecting stress tolerance in Triticeae identified the crucial role of the group 5 chromosomes, where the highest concentration of QTLs and major loci controlling plant's adaptation to the environment (heading date, frost and salt tolerance) has been found. In addition, a conserved region with a major role in drought tolerance has been localized to the group 7 chromosomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn order to gain a first insight into the effects of reactive oxygen species (ROS) on plant mitochondria, we studied the effect of the ROS producing system consisting of xanthine plus xanthine oxidase on the rate of membrane potential (DeltaPsi) generation due to either succinate or NADH addition to durum wheat mitochondria as monitored by safranin fluorescence. We show that the early ROS production inhibits the succinate-dependent, but not the NADH-dependent, DeltaPsi generation and oxygen uptake. This inhibition appears to depend on the impairment of mitochondrial permeability to succinate.
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