|
|
||||||||
|
Plant Physiol, November 1999, Vol. 121, pp. 687-693
UPDATE ON SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |
INTRODUCTION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Photosynthesis converts solar energy to chemical energy, which then drives the synthesis of sugars from carbon dioxide and water. Sugars play multiple roles in all aspects of plant life. First, they provide the main respiratory substrates for the generation of energy and metabolic intermediates that are then used for the synthesis of macromolecules and other cell constituents. Second, Rib and deoxy-Rib sugars form part of the structure of DNA and RNA. Third, polysaccharides are the major structural elements of plant cell walls. Fourth, linkage to sugar is required for proper functioning of many proteins and lipids. As a consequence, the abundance and depletion of sugars or their derivatives initiate various responses in plants and have profound effects on plant metabolism, growth, and development.
Plants are considered to be carbon autotrophs, but they can be considered as carbon heterotrophs during some part of their life cycle and in some of their non-green organs such roots, stems, and flowers, which are not involved in photosynthesis. Furthermore, carbohydrate depletion can occur and is a fact of life in most plants. For instance, variations in environmental factors such as light, water, or temperature and attacks by pathogens or herbivores may lead to a significant decrease in the efficiency of photosynthesis in source tissues (such as leaves that synthesize and export carbohydrates) and thus reduce the supply of carbohydrates to sink tissues (such as the non-green tissues that import carbohydrates for respiration, growth, and development). Under certain growth conditions, such as during an annual resting season or after leaf shedding, photosynthesis is turned off or operates to a lower degree, and carbohydrate reserves must be utilized and may become limited in nonphotosynthetic tissues. In germinating seeds under unfavorable environmental conditions the mobilization of stores in the cotyledons is delayed, which may result in the depletion of available carbohydrates and a decrease in seedling vigor. Knowledge about the response to sugar starvation and adaptation mechanisms in plants is of both fundamental and agronomic importance.
In nature, the cessation of growth of a heterotrophic living organism is often brought about by a poor nutrient environment, a commonly encountered stress. Environmental changes affect various biochemical reactions, often disturbing the balanced distribution of metabolites within cells. In most instances, living cells show a rapid molecular response to overcome adverse environmental conditions. How a living organism survives during periods of environmental stress is an exciting area of research. The most extensive studies have been done with microorganisms. The ability of microorganisms to sense and respond to unscheduled changes in their environment is crucial to their survival. When cells of microorganisms encounter unfavorable nutrient conditions, they ultimately enter a stationary phase. Cells in the stationary phase are physiologically, biochemically, and morphologically different from cells growing exponentially. Studies using Escherichia coli and yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) have indicated that entry into the stationary phase is a complex, highly regulated process that activates a program for long-term survival. The program includes the lack of a requirement for added nutrients and an absence of cell division. The similarities of eukaryotic and prokaryotic microorganisms in their responses to nutrient limitations suggest that such responses are based on evolutionarily conserved genetic mechanisms.
Similarly, sugar starvation initiates changes in substantial physiological and biochemical processes with the goal of sustaining respiration and other essential metabolic processes in plants. Sugar starvation also initiates changes in cellular processes to recycle cellular constituents and dramatically changes the pattern of gene expression. However, the underlying mechanisms used by plant cells to cope with sugar starvation are largely unknown, and only recently have these questions been addressed experimentally. This lack of knowledge contrasts with the situation in bacteria and yeast, where the molecular biology and physiology of mutants have yielded extensive information about responses to sugar starvation. This review discusses the recent advances made in our understanding of the molecular events that operate in microorganisms upon sugar starvation, as well as the cellular and genetic responses of plants to sugar starvation.
| |
SUGAR STARVATION IN BACTERIA |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The majority of bacteria spend most of their time in a
nutrient-limited starvation phase and as a result have evolved
mechanisms that allow them to survive under these conditions and to
resume growth once nutrients become available. Some bacteria, e.g.
Bacillus spp., undergo major differentiation programs that
lead to the formation of highly stress-resistant endospores or cysts.
Other bacteria, e.g. E. coli, even without the formation of
differentiated cells, enter starvation-induced programs that allow them
to survive long periods of non-growth and to restart growth when
nutrients become available. These starvation-induced programs often
lead to the formation of metabolically less-active cells that are more resistant to a wide range of environmental stresses. This adaptation to
starvation conditions is often accompanied by a change in cell size and
the induction of genes and stabilization of proteins essential for
long-term survival. Evidence suggests that there is a general
starvation response among various bacteria species. For example, Glc-
or nitrogen-starved cultures of E. coli exhibit resistance
to heat or hydrogen peroxide (Jenkins et al., 1988
). The
nitrogen-fixing bacterium Rhizobium leguminosarum can
survive carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus starvation for at least 2 months with little loss of viability. Upon carbon starvation, R. leguminosarum cells undergo reductive cell division and the levels
of protein, DNA, and RNA synthesis decrease to base levels, mRNA
stabilizes, and the starved cells are cross-protected against pH, heat,
osmotic, and oxidative shock (Thorne and Williams, 1997
).
In E. coli, nutrient-starved stationary-phase cells have
been used as a model system for studying the molecular mechanism that
regulates gene expression under nutrient starvation. Stationary-phase cells have a small spherical shape, are resistant to multiple stresses,
synthesize glycogen, and survive long-term starvation. Genes expressed
during adaptation to starvation conditions involve several classes of
starvation genes that code for special stress-resistant proteins. The
two major classes of genes induced upon carbon starvation are
cst genes, which require cAMP and enhance the cell's
metabolic potential, and pex genes, which do not require
cAMP but play a more direct protective role against stresses (Matin,
1991
). A protective role of stress-resistant proteins is proposed due
to their ability to rescue misfolded macromolecules (Matin, 1991
).
Expression of the stress-resistant proteins depends on an intact
rpoS allele (Hengge-Aronis, 1993
). However, a common
consensus sequence has not been found among various promoters
controlled by rpoS, and thus a regulatory cascade that
mediates expression of the rpoS-dependent genes has been
suggested (Hengge-Aronis, 1993
). The protein encoded by rpoS
is an alternative
factor of RNA polymerase and is designated as
s. Evidence shows that the
s factors are regulated primarily at the
post-transcriptional level by a mechanism that involves a mRNA
secondary structure (McCann et al., 1993
). In addition, carbon
starvation in E. coli might be sensed through the
accumulation of homoserine lactone (Huisman and Kolter, 1994
).
| |
SUGAR STARVATION IN YEAST |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Stress conditions imposed on yeast can be as diverse as nutrient
starvation, suboptimal temperatures or osmolarity, high ethanol concentrations, the presence of heavy metals or oxidation compounds, and desiccation (Ruis and Schüller, 1995
). Similarity in response to these stresses has been observed and the previous exposure to one
stress generally increases the acquisition of tolerance against
challenge by another stress (cross-protection or cross-resistance) (Lewis et al., 1995
; Ruis and Schüller, 1995
). These observations indicate that cells possess one central molecular mechanism that can be
activated by various factors and, upon activation, will protect cells
against a number of conditions threatening their survival.
Some carbohydrates or proteins induced by various stresses have been
suggested to play a protective role against stresses. For example, a
close correlation was observed between the content of trehalose, one of
the major reserve carbohydrates in yeast, and the stress resistance of
the cells. The levels of trehalose and stress resistance increase
rapidly upon exhaustion of Glc in the culture medium (Panek and Panek,
1990
). The level of trehalose also increases strongly upon starvation
of an essential nutrient such as nitrogen, phosphate, or sulfate in a
Glc-containing medium (Attfiel et al., 1992
). The same is true
during sublethal heat, freeze-thaw, and desiccation treatment
(Hottiger et al., 1987
; Attfiel et al., 1992
). Genes that
have been demonstrated to contribute significantly to the ability of
yeast cells to survive severe stress include CTT1 (encoding
the cytosolic catalase T) and HSP104 and HSP70
(encoding heat shock proteins) (Ruis and Schüller, 1995
).
How yeast cells respond to a wide range of stresses through a
convergent molecular mechanism(s) remains largely unclear. Specific gene control elements and stress-activated transcription factors binding to them are probably shared by the stress-responsive genes. A
common feature at the transcriptional level, the stress-response element (STRE), a cis-acting element with the core consensus
CCCCT, has been found to be present in the promoters of genes induced by various stresses (Varela et al., 1995
). STRE activity correlates well with the potential to establish stress tolerance (Ruis and Schüller, 1995
). Msn2p, a transcription factor that activates STRE-regulated genes in response to stress, has been identified. Mutants defective in Msn2p exhibit pleiotrophic hypersensitivity to
stress factors (Schmitt and McEntee, 1996
). How stress signals are
transmitted to STREs is not clear, and this raises the question of
whether the various stress factors create a common pathway or multiple
pathways that then transmit signals to the stress-specific STREs. STRE
activities have been shown to be controlled by the high osmolarity
glycerol pathway and the protein kinase A pathway (signaling nutrient
stress), suggesting that different signals are transmitted through
different pathways (Ruis and Schüller, 1995
).
Dramatic morphological changes can be observed in yeast undergoing
nutrient starvation. The depletion of nutrients such as carbon,
nitrogen, sulfur, or amino acids induces autophagy in yeast (Takeshige
et al., 1992
). Autophagy is the major route of delivery of cytoplasmic
proteins into vacuoles/lysosomes under conditions in which cells
require enhanced protein degradation and remodeling of components
(Dunn, 1994
). A Ser/Thr protein kinase gene, APG1, is
essential for both the autophagic process and the maintenance of
viability of yeast under starvation conditions (Matsuura et al., 1997
).
It is therefore hypothesized that autophagy-dependent reconstruction of
cellular constituents is required for long-term viability in starvation
conditions and that the process involves regulation by protein
phosphorylation (Matsuura et al., 1997
).
| |
PLANT CELL METABOLISM ALTERED BY SUGAR STARVATION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Over the past 20 years, carbohydrate starvation has been studied
in a number of plant species. Physiological and cellular changes that
occur during a plant's transition to sugar starvation are most
extensively studied in excised maize root tips (Brouquisse et al.,
1991
; Dieuaide et al., 1992
), cultured sycamore cells (Journet et al.,
1986
; Aubert et al., 1996
), and cultured rice suspension cells (Chen et
al., 1994
). These studies have shown that sugar starvation generally
triggers sequential changes in the following cellular events: (a)
arrest of cell growth, (b) rapid consumption of cellular carbohydrate
content and decrease in respiration rate, (c) degradation of lipids and
proteins, (d) increase in accumulation of Pi, phosphorylcholine, and
free amino acids, and (e) decline in glycolytic enzymatic activities.
It appears that changes in metabolism are involved in the adaptation
response of plant cells to sugar starvation. For example, cells in
roots (Brouquisse et al., 1991
) and leaves (Peeters and Van Laere,
1992
), cultured suspension cells (Journet et al., 1986
; Chen et al.,
1994
), and callus cells (Tassi et al., 1992
) modify their metabolism to
survive in the absence of sugar. In sugar-starved cultured cells, there
is a decrease in enzymatic activities related to sugar metabolism and
respiration (Journet et al., 1986
; Brouquisse et al., 1991
), nitrate
reduction and assimilation (Brouquisse et al., 1992
), and protein
synthesis (Tassi et al., 1992
). Decreases in these enzymatic activities
presumably protect cells against nutrient stress by switching off
biosynthesis (i.e. growth) to conserve energy. At the same time, an
increase in enzymatic activities related to catabolism of fatty acids
(Dieuaide et al., 1992
), amino acids (Brouquisse et al., 1992
), and
proteins (Tassi et al., 1992
) occurs. Such a change can substitute
protein and lipid catabolism for sugar catabolism to sustain
respiration and metabolic processes (Journet et al., 1986
; Brouquisse
et al., 1991
).
Although these metabolic changes appear to enhance the survival of
cultured cells under Glc starvation, they finally result in
irreversible damages and cell death (Brouquisse et al., 1991
; Chen et
al., 1994
). Similar metabolic changes occur in plant organs or tissues
during senescence or in postharvest situations (Noodén, 1988
;
King et al., 1990
). A common mechanism that regulates metabolic processes during sugar starvation and senescence has been suggested (Noodén, 1988
). Sugar starvation has also been described as a component of senescence (Dieuaide et al., 1992
).
| |
VACUOLAR AUTOPHAGY IN PLANT CELLS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
In Suc-starved sycamore and rice suspension cells, the decline in
cellular sugar and starch contents couples with the decline in
metabolic activity and the increase in vacuolar autophagic activity
(Journet et al., 1986
; Chen et al., 1994
). Triggering of such
autophagic processes presumably involves the regression of cytoplasm,
including the organelles, and the recycling of respiratory substrates
(Journet et al., 1986
; Chen et al., 1994
; Aubert et al., 1996
). This
process is well documented in animal cells (Marzella and Glaumann,
1987
) and has been implicated in the nonselective bulk degradation of
proteins triggered by nutrient deprivation. Autophagy in plant, animal,
and yeast systems is often associated with nutrient starvation. In
Suc-provided rice suspension cells, the size of the vacuole is small
(Fig. 1a). Vacuolar autophagic activity
begins a few hours after Suc starvation, and vacuole size expands
either by engulfing neighboring cytoplasm and organelles (except the
nucleus) or by vacuoles fusing together (Fig. 1b). After a long period
of Suc starvation, the vacuole volume becomes extremely large and the
cytoplasm and the leftover organelles (mostly mitochondria) are
confined to a narrow area adjacent to cell walls (Fig. 1c). Plant
vacuoles are rich in hydrolases, and cytoplasm sequestered by the
autophagic vacuoles is eventually degraded by these enzymes. Vacuolar
autophagy has also been observed in plants undergoing senescence
(Matile and Winkenbach, 1971
). Due to the presence of intracellular
pools of carbohydrates and the ability to control the autophagic
process, plant cells can survive for some time after carbohydrate
starvation.
|
| |
PLANT CELL RESPONSE TO SUGAR STARVATION AT THE GENE EXPRESSION LEVEL |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Sugar plays an important dual role in regulating the expression of
various genes in plants. In general, sugar favors the expression of
enzymes in connection with biosynthesis, utilization, and storage of
reserves (including starch, lipid, and proteins). On the other hand,
sugar represses the expression of enzymes involved in photosynthesis and reserve mobilization (Koch, 1996
). The events of cellular responses
to sugar starvation is shown in Figure 2.
Generally, gene expression repressed by sugar is up-regulated by sugar
starvation, whereas that enhanced by sugar is down-regulated. The
alteration of gene expression by sugar starvation results in the
induction of synthesis of preexisting or new proteins and repression of normally expressed proteins.
|
A large and specific set of genes whose expression is induced by sugar
starvation has been reported (Koch, 1996
). For example, sugar
starvation induces the expression of photosynthetic genes in maize
mesophyll protoplasts (Sheen, 1990
),
-amylase genes in rice
suspension cells and germinating embryos (Yu et al., 1991
, 1996
), Suc
synthase (Sh1) gene in maize root tips (Koch et al., 1992
), and malate
synthase and isocitrate lyse genes in cucumber (Graham et al., 1994
).
At the beginning of rice seed germination, active metabolism and a rise
in the respiration rate cause rapid sugar depletion in the embryo,
which then triggers the expression of
-amylase genes and degradation
of starch in this tissue (Yu et al., 1996
). Sugar depletion is also
proposed to be a primary factor in initiating the synthesis of
phytohormone GA in the embryo, since sugar reduces the quantity of GA
in this tissue (Yu et al., 1996
).
Most studies on the mechanisms of sugar repression of gene
expression in microorganisms and plants have emphasized regulation at
the transcriptional level. In plants, while sugar repression of genes
involved in photosynthesis (Sheen, 1990
) and the glyoxylate cycle
(Graham et al., 1994
) operates at the transcriptional level, sugar
repression of
-amylase gene expression involves control of
transcription and mRNA stability (Sheu et al., 1996
; Chan et al., 1994
,
1998
; Lu et al., 1998
). Search for cis-regulatory elements in the
promoters of sugar-regulated genes is important in understanding the
mechanism of sugar regulation of gene expression. Although carbohydrate
depletion induces expression of a large set of genes essential for
various physiological processes, the cis-acting sugar response
elements in the promoters of these genes have not been extensively studied.
A sugar response complex in the promoter region of a
Suc-deprivation-induced rice
-amylase gene,
Amy3, has
been identified. This complex contains three essential motifs for a
high level of sugar-starvation-induced gene expression in rice cells
(Lu et al., 1998
). One of the motifs, a TATCCA element, along with its
variants, are present at a proximity upstream of the transcription start sites of 18
-amylase genes isolated from various plant species
(Yu, 1999
) and several other sugar-repressible genes. The TATCCA
element is present in tandem repeat between position
116 to
105 of
the transcription start site of
Amy3 (Lu et al., 1998
).
Nuclear proteins from rice suspension cells that bind to the TATCCA
element in a sequence-specific and sugar-dependent manner have also
been identified (Lu et al., 1998
). A 20-bp sequence upstream of the
transcription start site of the maize Suc synthase gene
Shrunken is sufficient to confer sugar inhibition of
downstream reporter gene expression (Maas et al., 1990
). There is no
homology between the sugar response sequences of the
Amy3
and the 20-bp sequence of the Shrunken promoters. However,
the TATCCA element is present between position
136 and position
141
of the Shrunken promoter, which could be another control
element that exhibits a function similar to the 20-bp sequence (Maas et
al., 1990
).
| |
SUGAR SENSING AND SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION IN PLANT CELLS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Information concerning the sugar status of plant cells is of great
importance in initiating changes in gene expression and subsequent
metabolic and developmental responses. The mechanisms used by plant
cells to sense sugars and to process this information are largely
unknown. Yeast has been an essential model for studies on the
mechanisms of sugar sensing and signal transduction employed in plant
cells. In yeast, genes required for growth on carbon sources other than
Glc are repressed by the presence of Glc in the medium and can be
derepressed when Glc is removed. This is the phenomenon of Glc
repression that requires a mechanism for sensing the availability of
Glc. Hexokinase, the enzyme that catalyzes the phosphorylation of
hexose sugars at the first step of the glycolytic pathway, has been
implicated as a Glc sensor in organisms as diverse as yeast (Rose et
al., 1991
) and mammals (Efrat et al., 1994
). Recent studies suggest
that hexokinase also acts as a primary sugar sensor in plants (Jang and
Sheen, 1997
; Smeekens and Rook, 1997
). However, the notion that
hexokinase is a primary sugar sensor was recently challenged, and
multiple sugar-sensing pathways were proposed to exist in plants
(Halford et al., 1999
). The other sugar-sensing systems proposed to
exist in plants are a hexose transporter and/or receptor signaling
pathway and a Suc transporter and/or receptor signaling pathway
(Smeekens and Rook, 1997
; Halford et al., 1999
).
Knowledge of the downstream components of the Glc-signaling pathway in
plants has just begun to emerge. In fungi, the SNF1 protein (Suc
non-fermenting 1) is required for derepression of nearly all
Glc-repressed genes and is an integral component of the sugar signal
transduction pathway (Ronne, 1995
). SNF1 is a Ser/Thr protein kinase
and the active kinase is a high-molecular-mass complex. The SNF1
complex contains three proteins that are homologs of three subunits of
the mammalian AMPK (AMP-activated protein kinase) (Hardie et al.,
1998
). AMPK is one component of a kinase cascade that is activated in a
highly sensitive manner by the elevation of AMP and the depletion of
ATP. The AMPK cascade has been shown to be activated by environmental
stresses that deplete cellular ATP, for example, in pancreatic
cells by Glc deprivation (Salt et al., 1998
). It is therefore suggested
that the SNF1 complex in yeast might be activated in a manner similar
to AMPK in mammals in response to Glc deprivation, and a change in the
ATP level might be the signal that indicates the availability of sugar
(Halford et al., 1999
).
Recently, the requirement for a SNF1-related protein kinase-1 (SnRK1)
in Suc-activated expression of a Suc synthase gene was demonstrated in
potato by an antisense RNA approach (Purcell et al., 1998
). This
study indicated that SNF1 in plants may play a role analogous to that
of SNF1 in yeast (Halford et al., 1999
). However, whether SnRK1
activity is regulated by Glc or another hexose and whether plant SNF1
homologs also play a role in the derepression of sugar-repressible
genes remains to be determined. Identification of other functional
components in the sugar signal transduction pathway are also important
for determining whether the mechanisms through which cells sense sugar
availability and respond by changing gene expression are conserved or
diverged between yeast and plants throughout evolution. Based on the
available information, a model of sugar sensing, signal transduction,
and mechanisms of gene regulation in plant cells is shown in Figure 3.
|
| |
CONCLUSIONS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Bacteria and yeast have developed mechanisms to react to depletion
of nutrients in their environment and protect themselves against damage
caused by nutrient stress and other stresses. Some components of stress
signal pathways have been shown to be conserved among yeast, mammal,
and plant cells (Ruis and Schüller, 1995
; Hardie et al., 1998
).
Studies on the mechanisms of signal transduction and gene regulation in
response to sugar deprivation will determine which strategies nature
uses to deal with problems encountered by cells living in an
unfavorable environment. However, many questions with respect to the
underlying molecular mechanisms employed by plants in the adaptation to
sugar deprivation remain to be answered. An understanding of how plants
respond to sugar starvation and regulate the mobilization of stored
carbohydrates can also help us to design crops with higher
stress-tolerant capacity and is thus of biotechnological importance.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
I thank Dr. Maarten J. Chrispeels for critical review of the manuscript, and Lin-Tze Yu and Douglas Platt for help in preparing the manuscript.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
Received July 22, 1999; accepted August 10, 1999.
1 Research in the author's laboratory is supported by grants from Academia Sinica and the National Science Council of the Republic of China.
* E-mail sumay{at}ccvax.sinica.edu.tw; fax 886-2-2788-2695 or 886-2-2782-6085.
| |
LITERATURE CITED |
|---|
|
|
|---|
-amylase promoter by carbohydrate starvation.
J Biol Chem
269: 17635-17641
-amylase gene functions as a sugar-dependent mRNA stability determinant.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
95: 6543-6547
-amylases, carbohydrate metabolism, and autophagy in cultured rice cells are coordinately regulated by sugar nutrient.
Plant J
6: 625-636
[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
-oxidation after glucose starvation in maize root tips.
Plant Physiol
99: 595-600
-cell glucose sensor.
Trends Biochem Sci
19: 535-538
[CrossRef][Medline]
-amylase gene serves as a transcriptional enhancer.
J Biol Chem
273: 10120-10131
factor KatF is regulated posttranscriptionally during carbon starvation.
J Bacteriol
175: 2143-2149
cells, and may regulate insulin release.
Biochem J
335: 533-539
-amylase genes that is modulated through complicated transcriptional and posttranscriptional processes.
J Biol Chem
271: 26998-27004
-amylase gene expression.
In
K Shimamoto, ed, Molecular Biology of Rice. Springer-Verlag, Tokyo, pp 161-178
-amylase gene expression in suspension-cultured cells of rice.
J Biol Chem
266: 21131-21137
-amylase genes and metabolic activities in germinating cereal grains.
Plant Mol Biol
30: 1277-1289
[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
B. Usadel, O. E. Blasing, Y. Gibon, K. Retzlaff, M. Hohne, M. Gunther, and M. Stitt Global Transcript Levels Respond to Small Changes of the Carbon Status during Progressive Exhaustion of Carbohydrates in Arabidopsis Rosettes Plant Physiology, April 1, 2008; 146(4): 1834 - 1861. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
C.-A. Lu, C.-C. Lin, K.-W. Lee, J.-L. Chen, L.-F. Huang, S.-L. Ho, H.-J. Liu, Y.-I. Hsing, and S.-M. Yu The SnRK1A Protein Kinase Plays a Key Role in Sugar Signaling during Germination and Seedling Growth of Rice PLANT CELL, August 1, 2007; 19(8): 2484 - 2499. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
R. Muller, M. Morant, H. Jarmer, L. Nilsson, and T. H. Nielsen Genome-Wide Analysis of the Arabidopsis Leaf Transcriptome Reveals Interaction of Phosphate and Sugar Metabolism Plant Physiology, January 1, 2007; 143(1): 156 - 171. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. Nicolai, M.A. Roncato, A.S. Canoy, D. Rouquie, X. Sarda, G. Freyssinet, and C. Robaglia Large-Scale Analysis of mRNA Translation States during Sucrose Starvation in Arabidopsis Cells Identifies Cell Proliferation and Chromatin Structure as Targets of Translational Control Plant Physiology, June 1, 2006; 141(2): 663 - 673. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
J. Price, A. Laxmi, S. K. St. Martin, and J.-C. Jang Global Transcription Profiling Reveals Multiple Sugar Signal Transduction Mechanisms in Arabidopsis PLANT CELL, August 1, 2004; 16(8): 2128 - 2150. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
A. L. Contento, S.-J. Kim, and D. C. Bassham Transcriptome Profiling of the Response of Arabidopsis Suspension Culture Cells to Suc Starvation Plant Physiology, August 1, 2004; 135(4): 2330 - 2347. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
H. P. d. Santos, E. Purgatto, H. Mercier, and M. S. Buckeridge The Control of Storage Xyloglucan Mobilization in Cotyledons of Hymenaea courbaril Plant Physiology, May 1, 2004; 135(1): 287 - 299. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
S. I. Gibson Sugar and phytohormone response pathways: navigating a signalling network J. Exp. Bot., January 2, 2004; 55(395): 253 - 264. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
W. G. van Doorn Is Petal Senescence Due to Sugar Starvation? Plant Physiology, January 1, 2004; 134(1): 35 - 42. [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
B. Cakir, A. Agasse, C. Gaillard, A. Saumonneau, S. Delrot, and R. Atanassova A Grape ASR Protein Involved in Sugar and Abscisic Acid Signaling PLANT CELL, September 1, 2003; 15(9): 2165 - 2180. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
S. Cortes, M. Gromova, A. Evrard, C. Roby, A. Heyraud, D. B. Rolin, P. Raymond, and R. M. Brouquisse In Plants, 3-O-Methylglucose Is Phosphorylated by Hexokinase But Not Perceived as a Sugar Plant Physiology, February 1, 2003; 131(2): 824 - 837. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
S.-F. Fu, W.-C. Chou, D.-D. Huang, and H.-J. Huang Transcriptional Regulation of a Rice Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Gene, OsMAPK4, in Response to Environmental Stresses Plant Cell Physiol., August 15, 2002; 43(8): 958 - 963. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
C.-A. Lu, T.-h. D. Ho, S.-L. Ho, and S.-M. Yu Three Novel MYB Proteins with One DNA Binding Repeat Mediate Sugar and Hormone Regulation of {alpha}-Amylase Gene Expression PLANT CELL, August 1, 2002; 14(8): 1963 - 1980. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
P. Che, E. S. Wurtele, and B. J. Nikolau Metabolic and Environmental Regulation of 3-Methylcrotonyl-Coenzyme A Carboxylase Expression in Arabidopsis Plant Physiology, June 1, 2002; 129(2): 625 - 637. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
F. Rolland, B. Moore, and J. Sheen Sugar Sensing and Signaling in Plants PLANT CELL, May 1, 2002; 14(90001): S185 - 205. [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
P.-W. Chen, C.-A. Lu, T.-S. Yu, T.-H. Tseng, C.-S. Wang, and S.-M. Yu Rice alpha -Amylase Transcriptional Enhancers Direct Multiple Mode Regulation of Promoters in Transgenic Rice J. Biol. Chem., April 12, 2002; 277(16): 13641 - 13649. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
|