Research Environment for Plant Biology at UNC
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1. In vivo Genomics: Visualizing Heterotrimeric G protein Interactions in Arabidopsis Heterotrimeric
G proteins couple signals that bind membrane hormone receptors to downstream
effectors such as enzymes and ion channels. Thus these complexes are
an important point for control of signal transduction. While metazoan
cells have hundreds of different heterotrimeric complexes and thousands of
receptors making the study of these pathways in animal cells difficult,
plant cells have essentially only one complex, thus an understanding of the
transduction mechanisms is at reach with Arabidopsis. This 2010
project focuses on a cell biological techniques called FRET (Fluorescence
Resonance Energy Transfer) to "visualize" in vivo the coupling of
receptors to effectors by the Arabidopsis G complex. 2.
Analysis
of Two-Component Signaling in Arabidopsis Two-component
systems are the primary means by which bacteria sense and respond to
environmental stimuli. These systems are comprised of a number of distinct
elements, namely histidine kinases, response regulators and in the case of
phosphorelays, histidine phosphotransfer proteins (HPts). Genetic and
molecular studies in Arabidopsis have implicated two-component elements in
hormone signaling, red-light perception, circadian rhythms and perhaps
osmosensing. This site describes studies focused on these Arabidopsis
two-component elements. 3.
The Arabidopsis RPM1 Signaling
Network: A paradigm for NBS-LRR mediated plant disease resistance. This Arabidopsis 2010 proposal uses a multidisciplinary approach to determine the function for a network or group of genes. The network in question includes members of the Nucleotide Binding site-Leucine-Rich-Repeat (NB-LRR) class of disease resistance proteins and key regulators of their function. Experiments proposed will determine how NB-LRR proteins are assembled into signal competent form before infection, and how their action is triggered by proteins produced by plant pathogens. This proposal uses complementary biochemical and genetic tools that were generated in the PI’s lab to dissect the RPM1-dependent disease resistance network. But because the function of NB-LRR proteins is regulated by several common components, data to be generated in this research are also germane to the study of disease resistance in general. The proposal makes use of an expanding NB-LRR protein tool kit in several Aims. The study of NB-LRR proteins in Arabidopsis has led to the notion that part of their activity is guided toward monitoring the cellular integrity of other host cellular machines. This proposal focuses also one of those important cellular components, the RIN4 protein. RIN4 shares a small plant-specific domain of unknown function, called NOI, with several other Arabidopsis proteins. This plant-specific protein family will also be studied.
Overall yield losses to pathogens can be as high as 30%. A detailed view of
the molecular control of disease resistance is emerging from a community
focus on the application of Arabidopsis to important problems in plant
pathology. The reference plant is useful for studies of nearly all classes
of pathogens that are agronomically relevant. Hence, the broader impacts of
the proposed research project are that the results will significantly inform
translation to crop species. In fact, this has already begun with the
cloning and utilization of orthologues from crops of relevant genes first
identified in Arabidopsis. The use of genetics, molecular biology,
biochemistry, and cell biology makes this project an excellent training
ground for scientists from undergraduate to post-doctoral levels. Topics
investigated in this research project are incorporated into a course taught
by the PI on “Strategies of Host-Microbe Interactions”. The PI’s lab has
actively sought to engage undergraduates in research projects and the PI is
inv
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