Higher Plants (higher + plant)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Structure of Cymbidine A, a Monomeric Peptidoglycan-Related Compound with Hypotensive and Diuretic Activities, Isolated from a Higher Plant, Cymbidium goeringii (Orchidaceae).

CHEMINFORM, Issue 44 2007
Kinzo Watanabe
Abstract ChemInform is a weekly Abstracting Service, delivering concise information at a glance that was extracted from about 200 leading journals. To access a ChemInform Abstract, please click on HTML or PDF. [source]


Putative Nitrogen Sensing Systems in Higher Plants

JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE PLANT BIOLOGY, Issue 8 2006
Hon-Ming Lam
Abstract Nitrogen (N) metabolism is essential for the biosynthesis of vital biomolecules. N status thus exerts profound effects on plant growth and development, and must be closely monitored. In bacteria and fungi, a few sophisticated N sensing systems have been extensively studied. In animals, the ability to receive amino acid signals has evolved to become an integral part of the nervous coordination system. In this review, we will summarize recent developments in the search for putative N sensing systems in higher plants based on homologous systems in bacteria, fungi, and animals. Apparently, although plants have separated and diversified from other organisms during the evolution process, striking similarities can be found in their N sensing systems compared with those of their counterparts; however, our understanding of these systems is still incomplete. Significant modifications of the N sensing systems (including cross-talk with other signal transduction pathways) in higher plants may be a strategy of adaptation to their unique mode of life. (Managing editor: Ping He) [source]


Photoactive Protochlorophyllide Regeneration in Cotyledons and Leaves from Higher Plants,,

PHOTOCHEMISTRY & PHOTOBIOLOGY, Issue 5 2000
Benoît Schoefs
ABSTRACT Chlorophyll accumulation during greening implies the continuous transformation of photoactive protochlorophyllide (Pchlide) to chlorophyllide. Since this reaction is a light-dependent step, the study of regeneration of photoactive Pchlide under a continuous illumination is difficult. Therefore this process is best studied on etiolated plants during a period of darkness following the initial photoreduction of photoactive Pchlide. In this study, the regeneration process has been studied using spinach cotyledons, as well as barley and bean leaves, illuminated by a single saturating flash. The regeneration was characterized using 77 K fluorescence emission and excitation spectra and high-performance liquid chromatography. The fluorescence data indicated that the same spectral forms of photoactive Pchlide are regenerated by different pathways: (1) photoactive Pchlide regeneration starts immediately after the photoreduction through the formation of a nonphotoactive Pchlide form, emitting fluorescence at approximately 651 nm. This form is similar to the large aggregate of photoactive Pchlide present before the illumination, but it contains oxidized form of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate, instead of the reduced form (NADPH), in the ternary complexes; and (2) after the dislocation of the large aggregates of chlorophyllide,light-dependent NADPH:Pchlide a photooxidoreductase,NADPH ternary complexes, the regeneration occurs at the expense of the several nonphotoactive Pchlide spectral forms present before the illumination. [source]


N-Glycosylation in the Moss Physcomitrella patens is Organized Similarly to that in Higher Plants

PLANT BIOLOGY, Issue 6 2003
A. Koprivova
Abstract: Allergenicity of plant glycoproteins in humans may prevent the use of plants as production factories for pharmaceutically important proteins. The major difference between plant and mammalian N-glycans is the presence of xylosyl and ,1,3-fucosyl residues in the former. In a first step towards "humanization" of the N-glycosylation pathway in the moss Physcomitrella patens, which could be an excellent system for industrial production of therapeutic proteins, we isolated the cDNAs and genes for N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase I (GNTI), ,1,3-fucosyltransferase, and ,1,2-xylosyltransferase. Sequence analysis revealed that all three proteins are homologous to their counterparts from higher plants, however, the conservation of the primary structure was only 35 - 45 %. The gene encoding the key enzyme of the pathway, gntI, was disrupted in P. patens by homologous recombination. Although the mutation of this gene in mouse or A. thaliana led to a significantly altered pattern of N-glycans, the glycosylation pattern in the gntI knockouts did not differ from that in wild-type moss and was identical to that in higher plants. Protein secretion, analysed in assays with recombinant human VEGF121 protein, was not affected in the knockouts. We conclude from our findings that the N-glycosylation pathway in P. patens is identically organized to that in higher plants. However, P. patens probably possesses more than one isoform of GNTI which complicates a straightforward knockout. Therefore, and since complex type structures appear more desirable than oligomannosidic N-glycans, future modifications of the pathway should target ,1,3-fucosyltransferase and/or ,1,2-xylosyltransferase. [source]