Development of Fe-deficiency responses in cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) roots: involvement of plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase activity. (17/376)

One of the mechanisms through which some strategy I plants respond to Fe-deficiency is an enhanced acidification of the rhizosphere due to proton extrusion. It was previously demonstrated that under Fe-deficiency, a strong increase in the H(+)-ATPase activity of plasma membrane (PM) vesicles isolated from cucumber roots occurred. This result was confirmed in the present work and supported by measurement of ATP-dependent proton pumping in inside-out plasma membrane vesicles. There was also an attempt to clarify the regulatory mechanism(s) which lead to the activation of the H(+)-ATPase under Fe-deficiency conditions. Plasma membrane proteins from Fe-deficient roots submitted to immunoblotting using polyclonal antibodies showed an increased level in the 100 kDa polypeptide. When the plasma membrane proteins were treated with trypsin a 90 kDa band appeared. This effect was accompanied by an increase in the enzyme activity, both in the Fe-deficient and in the Fe-sufficient extracts. These results suggest that the increase in the plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase activity seen under Fe-deficiency is due, at least in part, to an increased steady-state level of the 100 kDa polypeptide.  (+info)

Water stress enhances beta-amylase activity in cucumber cotyledons. (18/376)

Cotyledons detached from 4-d-old cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) seedlings were subjected to water stress (air-drying or PEG-treatment) to examine the effects of the stress on carbohydrate metabolism. Amylolytic activity in the cotyledon was increased about 6-fold by water stress within 1 d. The substrate specificity and the action pattern indicated that beta-amylase is responsible for the activity. Activities of azocaseinase, malate dehydrogenase and triose-phosphate isomerase were not affected by water stress, indicating that the effect of the stress on beta-amylase is rather specific. Cycloheximide-treatment strongly reduced the enhancement of beta-amylase activity. The hypocotyl of cucumber seedlings also exhibited an increase in the enzyme activity when subjected to water stress. The major free sugars in cucumber cotyledons were glucose, fructose, maltose, and sucrose; sucrose being the most abundant. Sucrose content in excised, unstressed cotyledons increased markedly during the incubation. Changes in other free sugars were small compared with that of sucrose. Starch also accumulated in unstressed cotyledons. In stressed cotyledons more sucrose and less starch accumulated than in unstressed ones. Such results were discussed in relation to the enhancement of beta-amylase activity.  (+info)

Control of Pythium root rot on hydroponically grown cucumbers with silver-coated cloth. (19/376)

Silver-coated cloth (SCC) effectively controlled root rot that was caused by Pythium aphanidermatum in hydroponically grown cucumber plants. The presence of SCC in the hydroponic solution reduced the root rot from 100% to 10% 20 days after inoculation with zoospores of P. aphanidermatum. It was suggested that the inhibition of SCC was caused not only by the silver ion dissolved from SCC, but also by the metallic silver and silver compounds formed on the surface of the root.  (+info)

Involvement of polyamines in the chilling tolerance of cucumber cultivars. (20/376)

The possible involvement of polyamines (PAs) in the chilling tolerance of cucumber (Cucumis sativus L. cv Jinchun No. 3 and cv Suyo) was investigated. Plants with the first expanded leaves were exposed to 3 degrees C or 15 degrees C in the dark for 24 h (chilling), and then transferred to 28 degrees C/22 degrees C under a 12-h photoperiod for another 24 h (rewarming). Chilling-tolerant cv Jinchun No. 3 showed a marked increase of free spermidine (Spd) in leaves, once during chilling and again during rewarming. Putrescine increased significantly during rewarming, but the increase of spermine was slight. Any of these PAs did not increase in chilling-sensitive cv Suyo during either period. PA-biosynthetic enzyme activities appear to mediate these differences between cultivars. Pretreatment of Spd to cv Suyo prevented chill-induced increases in the contents of hydrogen peroxide in leaves and activities of NADPH oxidases and NADPH-dependent superoxide generation in microsomes and alleviated chilling injury. Pretreatment of methylglyoxal-bis-(guanylhydrazone), a PA biosynthesis inhibitor, to chilled cv Jinchun No. 3 prevented Spd increase and enhanced microsomal NADPH oxidase activity and chilling injury. The results suggest that Spd plays important roles in chilling tolerance of cucumber, probably through prevention of chill-induced activation of NADPH oxidases in microsomes.  (+info)

Fatty acid 9- and 13-hydroperoxide lyases from cucumber. (21/376)

Fatty acid hydroperoxide lyase (HPL) is a novel P-450 enzyme that cleaves fatty acid hydroperoxides to form short-chain aldehydes and oxo-acids. In cucumber seedlings, the activities of both fatty acid 9HPL and 13HPL could be detected. High 9HPL activity was especially evident in hypocotyls. Using a polymerase chain reaction-based cloning strategy, we isolated two HPL-related cDNAs from cucumber hypocotyls. One of them, C17, had a frameshift and it was apparently expressed from a pseudogene. After repairing the frameshift, the cDNA was successfully expressed in Escherichia coli as an active HPL with specificity for 13-hydroperoxides. The other clone, C15, showed higher sequence similarity to allene oxide synthase (AOS). This cDNA was also expressed in E. coli, and the recombinant enzyme was shown to act both on 9- and 13-hydroperoxides, with a preference for the former. By extensive product analyses, it was determined that the recombinant C15 enzyme has only HPL activity and no AOS activity, in spite of its higher sequence similarity to AOS.  (+info)

Interaction between zucchini yellow mosaic potyvirus RNA-dependent RNA polymerase and host poly-(A) binding protein. (22/376)

Viral replication depends on compatible interactions between a virus and its host. For RNA viruses, the viral replicases (RNA-dependent RNA polymerases; RdRps) often associate with components of the host translational apparatus. To date, host factors interacting with potyvirus replicases have not been identified. The Potyviridae, which form the largest and most economically important plant virus family, have numerous similarities with the animal virus family, the Picornaviridae. Potyviruses have a single-stranded, plus sense genome; replication initiates at the viral-encoded, 3' poly-(A) terminus. The yeast two-hybrid system was used to identify host plant proteins associating with the RdRp of zucchini yellow mosaic potyvirus (ZYMV). Several cDNA clones representing a single copy of a poly-(A) binding protein (PABP) gene were isolated from a cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) leaf cDNA library. Deletion analysis indicated that the C-terminus of the PABP is necessary and sufficient for interaction with the RdRp. Full-length cucumber PABP cDNA was obtained using 5' RACE; in vitro and Escherichia coli-expressed PABP bound to poly-(A)-Sepharose and ZYMY RdRp with or without the presence of poly-(A). This is the first report of an interaction between a viral replicase and PABP and may implicate a role for host PABP in the potyviral infection process.  (+info)

Dehydration-induced redistribution of amphiphilic molecules between cytoplasm and lipids is associated with desiccation tolerance in seeds. (23/376)

This study establishes a relationship between desiccation tolerance and the transfer of amphiphilic molecules from the cytoplasm into lipids during drying, using electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy of amphiphilic spin probes introduced into imbibed radicles of pea (Pisum sativum) and cucumber (Cucumis sativa) seeds. Survival following drying and a membrane integrity assay indicated that desiccation tolerance was present during early imbibition and lost in germinated radicles. In germinated cucumber radicles, desiccation tolerance could be re-induced by an incubation in polyethylene glycol (PEG) before drying. In desiccation-intolerant radicles, partitioning of spin probes into lipids during dehydration occurred at higher water contents compared with tolerant and PEG-induced tolerant radicles. The difference in partitioning behavior between desiccation-tolerant and -intolerant tissues could not be explained by the loss of water. Consequently, using a two-phase model system composed of sunflower or cucumber oil and water, physical properties of the aqueous solvent that may affect the partitioning of amphiphilic spin probes were investigated. A significant relationship was found between the partitioning of spin probes and the viscosity of the aqueous solvent. Moreover, in desiccation-sensitive radicles, the rise in cellular microviscosity during drying commenced at higher water contents compared with tolerant or PEG-induced tolerant radicles, suggesting that the microviscosity of the cytoplasm may control the partitioning behavior in dehydrating seeds.  (+info)

Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase in cucumber (Cucumis sativus L.) roots under iron deficiency: activity and kinetic characterization. (24/376)

Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase) activity was investigated in cucumber roots grown under iron starvation. The enzyme extracted from plants grown in the presence and in the absence of Fe was characterized both kinetically and biochemically. Extractable PEPCase activity was increased by 4-fold in the absence of Fe. This increase began about 5 d after Fe starvation. Western blot analysis revealed the presence of two polypeptides with apparent molecular masses of 103 and 108 kDa. At the beginning both the polypeptides were equally present in the control and in the Fe-deficient roots. After 10 d of Fe starvation the increase was clearly evident and concerned, in particular, the polypeptide of 103 kDa whose enhancement was around 3-fold with respect to the control. Re-supply of iron to Fe-starved roots decreased both the activity and the concentration of the enzyme to the control values. Determination of kinetic parameters revealed that the K:(m) values for the substrates were the same, while the V:(max) was increased by four times for the enzyme extracted from Fe-deficient roots. Also the responses to pH changes and to the allosteric modulators malate and glucose-6-phosphate were different. The kinetic data, the increase in PEPCase specific activity and in the PEPCase polypeptides concentration seem to indicate that under Fe deficiency the enzyme regulation might be, in part, exerted at the transcriptional level.  (+info)