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Xue N, Sun M, Gai Z, Bai M, Sun J, Sai S, Zhang L. Genome-Wide Identification and Expression Analysis of Calmodulin (CaM) and Calmodulin-Like (CML) Genes in the Brown Algae Saccharina japonica. PLANTS (BASEL, SWITZERLAND) 2023; 12:1934. [PMID: 37653850 PMCID: PMC10222329 DOI: 10.3390/plants12101934] [Citation(s) in RCA: 1] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 03/09/2023] [Revised: 04/30/2023] [Accepted: 05/02/2023] [Indexed: 09/02/2023]
Abstract
Calmodulins (CaMs) and Calmodulin-like proteins (CMLs) are vital in plant growth, development, and stress responses. However, CaMs and CMLs have not been fully identified and characterized in brown algae, which has been evolving independently of the well-studied green plant lineage. In this study, whole-genome searches revealed one SjCaM and eight SjCMLs in Saccharina japonica, and one EsCaM and eleven EsCMLs in Ectocarpus sp. SjCaM and EsCaM encoded identical protein products and shared 88.59-89.93% amino acid identities with Arabidopsis thaliana AtCaMs, thereby indicating that brown algae CaMs retained a similar Ca2+ sensors function as in plants. The phylogenetic and gene structure analysis results showed that there was significant divergence in the gene sequences among brown algae CMLs. Furthermore, evolutionary analysis indicated that the function of brown alga CMLs was relatively conserved, which may be related to the fact that brown algae do not need to face complex environments like terrestrial plants. Regulatory elements prediction and the expression analysis revealed the probable functioning of SjCaM/CML genes in gametophyte development and the stress response in S. japonica. In addition, the SjCaM/SjCMLs interacting proteins and chemicals were preliminarily predicted, suggesting that SjCaM/SjCMLs might play putative roles in Ca2+/CaM-mediated growth and development processes and stimulus responses. Therefore, these results will facilitate our understanding of the evolution of brown algae CaMs/CMLs and the functional identification of SjCaM/SjCMLs.
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Affiliation(s)
- Nianchao Xue
- School of Marine Science and Engineering, Qingdao Agricultural University, Qingdao 266109, China
| | - Minghui Sun
- School of Marine Science and Engineering, Qingdao Agricultural University, Qingdao 266109, China
| | - Zihan Gai
- School of Marine Science and Engineering, Qingdao Agricultural University, Qingdao 266109, China
| | - Meihan Bai
- School of Marine Science and Engineering, Qingdao Agricultural University, Qingdao 266109, China
| | - Juan Sun
- National Engineering Science Research & Development Center of Algae and Sea Cucumbers of China, Shandong Technology Innovation Center of Algae and Sea Cucumber, Provincial Key Laboratory of Genetic Improvement & Efficient Culture of Marine Algae of Shandong, Shandong Oriental Ocean Sci-Tech Co., Ltd., Yantai 264003, China
| | - Shan Sai
- National Engineering Science Research & Development Center of Algae and Sea Cucumbers of China, Shandong Technology Innovation Center of Algae and Sea Cucumber, Provincial Key Laboratory of Genetic Improvement & Efficient Culture of Marine Algae of Shandong, Shandong Oriental Ocean Sci-Tech Co., Ltd., Yantai 264003, China
| | - Linan Zhang
- School of Marine Science and Engineering, Qingdao Agricultural University, Qingdao 266109, China
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Robinson KR, Wozniak M, Pu R, Messerli M. Symmetry breaking in the zygotes of the fucoid algae: controversies and recent progress. Curr Top Dev Biol 1999; 44:101-25. [PMID: 9891878 DOI: 10.1016/s0070-2153(08)60468-8] [Citation(s) in RCA: 17] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/09/2023]
Abstract
Despite its many advantages as an experimental system for the study of the epigenesis of polarity, it is obvious that the fucoid zygote also presents many problems. The development of polarity proceeds largely independently of direct gene action and thus may be considered a problem in cellular physiology. Ca2+ appears to play an important role in the process, but the optical properties of the zygotes (opacity and autofluorescence) hamper the use of modern methods of visualizing the distribution of Ca2+ and other ions. Likewise, other approaches, such as injection of fluorescent-labeled G-actin, in order to study the dynamics of actin filaments, are subject to the same limitations. It may be that the application of two-photon microscopy will enable experimenters to avoid some of these problems. This technique uses excitation wavelengths that are twice the wavelength of maximum absorption by fluorophores, and sufficient photon density for absorption is achieved only in a thin section. The fucoid zygotes are considerably more transparent to longer wavelengths, so attenuation of the exciting light and autofluorescence should be significantly reduced. Perhaps we will then be able to see further into these opaque cells. Another problem concerns the use of different species and genera. This may be unavoidable; for example, those of us who are land-locked tend to rely on Pelvetia, as it travels and stores better than the various species of Fucus and is less seasonal. Our colleagues fortunate enough to work near the ocean prefer to use the species that are locally available. Nevertheless, it is important to be careful about cross-genus and cross-species generalizations. While it is unlikely, based on what we know, that there are fundamental differences in physiological mechanisms among species, there may be small but still important differences in details. Obviously, investigators should directly compare results in more than one species whenever possible. The area of greatest disagreement, perhaps, concerns the mechanism of polarity formation, as opposed to its overt manifestation, germination. Are Ca2+ and actin involved or not? Assuming Ca2+ is involved, is the source internal or external? One basis for the different findings may be the differences in the strength of the polarizing signal provided to the zygotes. Clearly, the cells have powerful mechanisms for amplifying a faint asymmetry and developing an axis in response to an external signal. Furthermore, the fucoids generally develop in the intertidal zone and thus must be adapted to meeting the challenge of a widely varying external environment. They may have alternate mechanisms for responding to unilateral light. We have adopted the approach of presenting the cells with a fairly weak light signal--the minimum required to induce a considerable degree of organization of a population of zygotes. We then determine the effects of various inhibitors on photopolarization. One advantage of this approach is that it has allowed us to find treatments that increase the sensitivity of the zygotes to light, something that would not be possible if the untreated controls were fully polarized. Some of the differences between our results and those of others may be related to their use of a stronger light stimulus. It may be that if given a strong stimulus, a sufficient trace is left in the cells so that they can organize an axis when an inhibitor is removed. Careful consideration of this point may help to reconcile apparently contradictory findings. Despite these difficulties, the fucoid zygotes are likely to continue to be an important experimental system. Technology, including the development of more specific inhibitory reagents, may allow some of the shortcomings of the system to be overcome, and careful consideration of experimental conditions may resolve some of the points of disagreement.
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Affiliation(s)
- K R Robinson
- Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907, USA
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Pu R, Robinson KR. Cytoplasmic calcium gradients and calmodulin in the early development of the fucoid alga Pelvetia compressa. J Cell Sci 1998; 111 ( Pt 21):3197-207. [PMID: 9763514 DOI: 10.1242/jcs.111.21.3197] [Citation(s) in RCA: 28] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/20/2022] Open
Abstract
The predicted existence of cytoplasmic Ca2+ gradients during the photopolarization of the zygotes of the brown algae, Pelvetia and Fucus, has proved to be difficult to establish, and the downstream targets of the putative gradients are not known. We have used quantitative microinjection of the long excitation wavelength Ca2+ indicator, Calcium Crimson, and of antibodies against calmodulin to investigate these matters in the zygotes and early embryos of Pelvetia. We found that there is a window of cytoplasmic Calcium Crimson concentration that gives an adequate signal above autofluorescence yet allows normal development of the zygotes. As Calcium Crimson is not a ratiometric indicator, we injected other zygotes with a Ca2+-insensitive dye, rhodamine B, and imaged the cells at the same time that Calcium Crimson-injected cells were imaged. Ratios were calculated by dividing the averaged pixel values of Calcium Crimson images by the averaged pixel values of corresponding rhodamine B images. By this method, we observed the formation of a cytoplasmic Ca2+ gradient within one hour of the exposure of the cells to unilateral blue light during the photosensitive period. The region of high Ca2+ was localized to and predictive of the site of future rhizoid formation. We validated this somewhat indirect method by applying it to the growing rhizoid, where the existence of a tip-localized Ca2+ gradient is well established. The method clearly revealed the known gradient. The injection of ungerminated zygotes with antibodies made against Dictyostelium calmodulin inhibited germination, and this inhibition was abolished if the calmodulin antibodies were coinjected with an excess of purified maize calmodulin. Likewise, the growth of the rhizoids was inhibited by calmodulin antibody injections. The fungus-derived calmodulin antagonist, ophiobolin A, which has previously been shown to be a potent inhibitor of germination, also inhibited rhizoidal growth. Our results provide evidence that a cytoplasmic Ca2+ gradient is present during photopolarization and that calmodulin acts as a mediator of Ca2+ gradients throughout the early developmental processes of germination and rhizoidal growth in Pelvetia compressa.
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Affiliation(s)
- R Pu
- Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907-1392, USA
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Abstract
Calmodulin is a small Ca2+-binding protein that acts to transduce second messenger signals into a wide array of cellular responses. Plant calmodulins share many structural and functional features with their homologs from animals and yeast, but the expression of multiple protein isoforms appears to be a distinctive feature of higher plants. Calmodulin acts by binding to short peptide sequences within target proteins, thereby inducing structural changes, which alters their activities in response to changes in intracellular Ca2+ concentration. The spectrum of plant calmodulin-binding proteins shares some overlap with that found in animals, but a growing number of calmodulin-regulated proteins in plants appear to be unique. Ca2+-binding and enzymatic activation properties of calmodulin are discussed emphasizing the functional linkages between these processes and the diverse pathways that are dependent on Ca2+ signaling.
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Affiliation(s)
- Raymond E. Zielinski
- Department of Plant Biology and the Physiological and Molecular Plant Biology Program, University of Illinois, 1201 W. Gregory Drive, Urbana, Illinois 61801; e-mail:
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Tirlapur UK, Kranz E, Cresti M. Characterisation of isolated egg cells, in vitro fusion products and zygotes of Zea mays L. using the technique of image analysis and confocal laser scanning microscopy. ZYGOTE 1995; 3:57-64. [PMID: 7613875 DOI: 10.1017/s0967199400002380] [Citation(s) in RCA: 22] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/26/2023]
Abstract
Changes in membrane Ca2+, calcium receptor protein calmodulin, endoplasmic reticulum (ER), mitochondria and cellulose in unfixed, living, isolated egg cells and fusion products of pairs of one egg and one sperm cell of Zea mays L. have been investigated using chlorotetracycline, fluphenazine, immunocytochemical techniques, 3,3'-dihexyloxa-carbocyanine iodide (DiOC6(3)) and calcofluor white in conjunction with computer-controlled video image analysis. In addition, confocal laser scanning microscopy has been used in conjunction with ethidium bromide to detect the nature and location of the sperm cell nuclear chromatin before and after karyogamy. Digitised video images of chlorotetracycline (CTC) fluorescence reveal that egg cells contain high levels of membrane Ca2+ in organelles present around the nucleus while the cytosolic signal is relatively low. Intense CTC fluorescence is invariably present just below the plasma membrane of egg cells and a certain degree of regionalised distribution of Ca2+ in cytoplasm is also discernible. Similarly, the fluphenazine (FPZ)-detectable calmodulin (CaM) and that localised immunocytochemically using monoclonal anti-CaM antibodies reveal high levels of CaM in the vicinity of the nucleus in egg cells. Only a few ER profiles and mitochondria could be visualised in the egg cell and no calcofluor fluorescence could be detected. Following in vitro fertilisation of single isolated eggs substantial changes in the Ca2+ levels occur which include an increase in the membrane Ca2+ of the fusion product, particularly in the cytosol and around the nucleus. Unlike in the eggs the fine CTC fluorescence signal below the plasma membrane is not detectable in the fusion products.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Affiliation(s)
- U K Tirlapur
- Dipartimento di Biologia Ambientale, Università di Siena, Italy
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Abstract
Environmental and hormonal signals control diverse physiological processes in plants. The mechanisms by which plant cells perceive and transduce these signals are poorly understood. Understanding biochemical and molecular events involved in signal transduction pathways has become one of the most active areas of plant research. Research during the last 15 years has established that Ca2+ acts as a messenger in transducing external signals. The evidence in support of Ca2+ as a messenger is unequivocal and fulfills all the requirements of a messenger. The role of Ca2+ becomes even more important because it is the only messenger known so far in plants. Since our last review on the Ca2+ messenger system in 1987, there has been tremendous progress in elucidating various aspects of Ca(2+) -signaling pathways in plants. These include demonstration of signal-induced changes in cytosolic Ca2+, calmodulin and calmodulin-like proteins, identification of different Ca2+ channels, characterization of Ca(2+) -dependent protein kinases (CDPKs) both at the biochemical and molecular levels, evidence for the presence of calmodulin-dependent protein kinases, and increased evidence in support of the role of inositol phospholipids in the Ca(2+) -signaling system. Despite the progress in Ca2+ research in plants, it is still in its infancy and much more needs to be done to understand the precise mechanisms by which Ca2+ regulates a wide variety of physiological processes. The purpose of this review is to summarize some of these recent developments in Ca2+ research as it relates to signal transduction in plants.
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Affiliation(s)
- B W Poovaiah
- Department of Horticulture, Washington State University, Pullman
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Abstract
Zygotes of fucoid algae have long been studied as a paradigm for cell polarity. Polarity is established early in the first cell cycle and is then expressed as localized growth and invariant cell division. The fertilized egg is a spherical cell and, by all accounts, bears little or no asymmetry. Polarity is acquired epigenetically a few hours later in the form of a rhizoid/thallus axis. The initial stage of polarization is axis selection, during which zygotes monitor environment gradients to determine the appropriate direction for rhizoid formation. In their natural setting in the intertidal zone, sunlight is probably the most important polarizing vector; rhizoids form away from the light. The mechanism by which zygotes perceive environmental gradients and transduce that information into an intracellular signal is unknown but may involve a phosphatidylinositol cycle. Once positional information has been recorded, the cytoplasm and membrane are reorganized in accordance with the vectorial information. The earliest detectable asymmetries in the polarizing zygote are localized secretion and generation of a transcellular electric current. Vesicle secretion and the inward limb of the current are localized at the presumptive rhizoid. The transcellular current may establish a cytoplasmic Ca2+ gradient constituting a morphogenetic field, but this remains controversial. Localized secretion and establishment of transcellular current are sensitive to treatment with cytochalasins, indicating that cytoplasmic reorganization is dependent on the actin cytoskeleton. The nascent axis at first is labile and susceptible to reorientation by subsequent environmental vectors but soon becomes irreversibly fixed in its orientation. Locking the axis in place requires both cell wall and F-actin and is postulated to involve an indirect transmembrane bridge linking cortical actin to cell wall. This bridge anchors relevant structures at the presumptive rhizoid and thereby stabilizes the axis. Approximately halfway through the first cell cycle, the latent polarity is expressed morphologically in the form of rhizoid growth. Elongation is by tip growth and does not appear to be fundamentally different from tip growth in other organisms. The zygote always divides perpendicular to the growth axis, and this is controlled by the microtubule cytoskeleton. Two microtubule-organizing centers on the nuclear envelope rotate such that they align with the growth axis. They then serve as spindle poles during mitosis. Cytokinesis bisects the axial spindle, resulting in a transverse crosswall. Although the chronology of cellular events associated with polarity is by now rather detailed, causal mechanisms remain obscure.
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Affiliation(s)
- D L Kropf
- Department of Biology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City 84112
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Kropf DL, Hopkins R, Quatrano RS. Protein synthesis and morphogenesis are not tightly linked during embryogenesis in Fucus. Dev Biol 1989; 134:451-61. [PMID: 2472985 DOI: 10.1016/0012-1606(89)90118-8] [Citation(s) in RCA: 23] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/01/2023]
Abstract
Fertilized eggs of the brown alga Fucus have long been used as model organisms for investigating the early events in the establishment of polarity and subsequent embryogenesis since large numbers of zygotes can easily be obtained. We have analyzed protein synthesis in eggs and embryos during the first day of development using two-dimensional gels and found that synthesis of 12 of the 60 most prominent proteins changed either qualitatively or quantitatively. Actin and beta-tubulin were identified by immunoblotting; synthesis of these cytoskeletal proteins was initiated at different times during the first 12 hr of development. Unique, reproducible patterns of protein synthesis observed during development in the light permitted accurate staging of developing embryos. Inhibitors such as cytochalasin and sucrose, however, blocked morphogenesis without affecting protein synthesis, and, conversely, growth in the dark delayed protein synthesis but had very little effect on the timing of morphogenesis. The data are consistent with morphogenesis and protein synthesis being relatively independent during early embryogenesis. Actinomycin D added soon after fertilization had no effect on protein synthesis 1 day later, indicating that the proteins analyzed were encoded by maternal mRNA stored in the egg.
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Affiliation(s)
- D L Kropf
- Department of Botany and Plant Pathology, Oregon State University, Corvallis 97331
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