Project description:Analysis of the subunits composition of the thylakoids protein complexes in Picea abies (Norway spruce) by means of two-dimensional large-pore Blue-Native/sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (2D lpBN/SDS-PAGE) and in-gel tryptic digestion of single spots.
Project description:Soils are a huge reservoir of organic C, and the efflux of CO2 from soils is one of the largest fluxes in the global C cycle. Out of all natural environments, soils probably contain the greatest microbial biomass and diversity, which classifies them as one of the most challenging habitats for microbiologists (Mocali and Benedetti, 2010). Until today, it is not well understood how soil microorganisms will respond to a warmer climate. Warming may give competitive advantage to species adapted to higher temperatures (Rinnan et al., 2009). The mechanisms behind temperature adaptations of soil microbes could be shifts within the microbial community. How microbial communities will ultimately respond to climate change, however, is still a matter of speculation. As a post-genomic approach in nature, metaproteomics allows the simultaneous examination of various protein functions and responses, and therefore is perfectly suited to investigate the complex interplay between respiration dynamics, microbial community architecture, and ecosystem functioning in a changing environment (Bastida et al., 2012). Thereby we will gain new insights into responses to climate change from a microbial perspective. Our study site was located at 910 m a.s.l. in the North Tyrolean Limestone Alps, near Achenkirch, Austria The 130 year-old mountain forests consist of Norway spruce (Picea abies) with inter-spread of European beech (Fagus sylvatica) and silver fir (Abies alba). Three experimental plots with 2 × 2 m warmed- and control- subplots were installed in 2004. The temperature difference between control and warmed plots was set to 4 °C at 5 cm soil depth. Soil was warmed during snow-free seasons. In order to extract proteins from forest soil samples, the SDS–phenol method was adopted as previously described by Keiblinger et al. (2012). Protein extractions were performed from each subplot soil samples. The abundance of protein-assigned microbial phylogenetic and functional groups, were calculated based on the normalized spectral abundance factor (NSAF, Zybailov et al., 2006).
Project description:We investigated root associated fungi in young Norway spruce (Picea abies) cuttings rooted from slow- and fast-growing trees showing variable growth rate in long-term field experiments and compared their roots’ gene expression patterns five and 18 months after adventitious root initiation. Gene expression patterns of adventitious roots could not be systematically linked with the growth phenotype at the initiation of root formation, and thus fundamental differences in the receptiveness of fungal symbionts could not be assumed.
Project description:The goal is to look at changes in the pattern of expression of the xylem transcriptome through the growth season in two spruces (Picea glauca and Picea abies).
Project description:The widespread use of plant grafting has enabled different plants to join and combine their best properties to improve stress tolerance, growth and yields. Grafting is commonly performed between closely related eudicots or gymnosperms where mechanisms permit tissue fusion yet limit success as plants become unrelated. To investigate these aspects, we developed a micrografting method using young conifer tree seedlings that enabled divergent conifer members to successfully graft. Conifer grafts showed rapid connection of phloem and xylem at the junction, while a genome-wide transcriptome analysis of the Picea abies (Norway spruce) healing junction revealed differential expression of thousands of genes including those related to auxin response and cell wall biogenesis. We compared these genes to those induced during Arabidopsis thaliana graft healing and found a common activation of cambium, cell division, phloem and xylem-related genes. A gene regulatory network analysis revealed that PHYTOCHROME A SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION 1 (PAT1) acted as a central hub during Picea grafting and was also induced during Arabidopsis grafting. Arabidopsis mutants lacking PATs failed to attach tissues or successfully graft, while complementing Arabidopsis PAT mutants with the Picea abies PAT1 homolog could rescue tissue attachment and enhance callus formation. Together, our data demonstrate a competency for young tissues to graft to distantly related species and identifies the PAT gene family as conserved regulators of graft healing and tissue regeneration in eudicots and gymnosperms.
Project description:The widespread use of plant grafting has enabled different plants to join and combine their best properties to improve stress tolerance, growth and yields. Grafting is commonly performed between closely related eudicots or gymnosperms where mechanisms permit tissue fusion yet limit success as plants become unrelated. To investigate these aspects, we developed a micrografting method using young conifer tree seedlings that enabled divergent conifer members to successfully graft. Conifer grafts showed rapid connection of phloem and xylem at the junction, while a genome-wide transcriptome analysis of the Picea abies (Norway spruce) healing junction revealed differential expression of thousands of genes including those related to auxin response and cell wall biogenesis. We compared these genes to those induced during Arabidopsis thaliana graft healing and found a common activation of cambium, cell division, phloem and xylem-related genes. A gene regulatory network analysis revealed that PHYTOCHROME A SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION 1 (PAT1) acted as a central hub during Picea grafting and was also induced during Arabidopsis grafting. Arabidopsis mutants lacking PATs failed to attach tissues or successfully graft, while complementing Arabidopsis PAT mutants with the Picea abies PAT1 homolog could rescue tissue attachment and enhance callus formation. Together, our data demonstrate a competency for young tissues to graft to distantly related species and identifies the PAT gene family as conserved regulators of graft healing and tissue regeneration in eudicots and gymnosperms.
Project description:Histone modification H3K27me3 profilings by the CUT&RUN method (Skene et al., 2017) were performed using embryonic callus and non-embryonic callus of Picea abies to identify genes related to somatic embryogenesis capacity.
Project description:Transcriptome analysis of small RNA was performed using pollen and embryonic callus, and vegetative tissues, needles of Picea abies to address differences in small RNA profiles between reproductive tissues and vegetative tissues in gymnosperm.
2019-12-21 | GSE129413 | GEO
Project description:Defense priming of Norway spruce (Picea abies)