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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A novel, inducible carbon-phosphorus bond cleavage enzyme, phosphonopyruvate hydrolase, was detected in cell-free extracts of Burkholderia cepacia Pal6, an environmental isolate capable of mineralising L-phosphonoalanine as carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus source. The activity was induced only in the presence of phosphonoalanine, did not require phosphate
starvation
for induction and was uniquely specific for phosphonopyruvate, producing equimolar quantities of pyruvate and inorganic phosphate. The native enzyme had a molecular mass of some 232 kDa and showed activation by metal ions in the order Co2+ > Ni2+ > Mg2+ > Zn2+ > Fe2+ > Cu2+. Temperature and pH optima in crude cell extracts were 50 degrees C and 7.5, respectively, and activity was inhibited by EDTA,
phosphite
, sulfite, mercaptoethanol and sodium azide. Phosphonopyruvate hydrolase is the third bacterial C-P bond cleavage enzyme reported to date that proceeds via a hydrolytic mechanism.
...
PMID:Initial in vitro characterisation of phosphonopyruvate hydrolase, a novel phosphate starvation-independent, carbon-phosphorus bond cleavage enzyme in Burkholderia cepacia Pal6. 1064 2
When inorganic phosphate is limiting, Arabidopsis has the facultative ability to metabolize exogenous nucleic acid substrates, which we utilized previously to identify insensitive phosphate
starvation
response mutants in a conditional genetic screen. In this study, we examined the effect of the phosphate analog,
phosphite
(Phi), on molecular and morphological responses to phosphate
starvation
. Phi significantly inhibited plant growth on phosphate-sufficient (2 mM) and nucleic acid-containing (2 mM phosphorus) media at concentrations higher than 2.5 mM. However, with respect to suppressing typical responses to phosphate limitation, Phi effects were very similar to those of phosphate. Phosphate
starvation
responses, which we examined and found to be almost identically affected by both anions, included changes in: (a) the root-to-shoot ratio; (b) root hair formation; (c) anthocyanin accumulation; (d) the activities of phosphate
starvation
-inducible nucleolytic enzymes, including ribonuclease, phosphodiesterase, and acid phosphatase; and (e) steady-state mRNA levels of phosphate
starvation
-inducible genes. It is important that induction of primary auxin response genes by indole-3-acetic acid in the presence of growth-inhibitory Phi concentrations suggests that Phi selectively inhibits phosphate
starvation
responses. Thus, the use of Phi may allow further dissection of phosphate signaling by genetic selection for constitutive phosphate
starvation
response mutants on media containing organophosphates as the only source of phosphorus.
...
PMID:Attenuation of phosphate starvation responses by phosphite in Arabidopsis. 1170 78
The influence of
phosphite
(H2PO3-) on the response of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to orthophosphate (HPO4(2-); Pi)
starvation
was assessed. Phosphate-repressible acid phosphatase (rAPase) derepression and cell development were abolished when phosphate-sufficient (+Pi) yeast were subcultured into phosphate-deficient (-Pi) media containing 0.1 mM
phosphite
. By contrast, treatment with 0.1 mM
phosphite
exerted no influence on rAPase activity or growth of +Pi cells. 31P NMR spectroscopy revealed that
phosphite
is assimilated and concentrated by yeast cultured with 0.1 mM
phosphite
, and that the levels of sugar phosphates, pyrophosphate, and particularly polyphosphate were significantly reduced in the
phosphite
-treated -Pi cells. Examination of
phosphite
's effects on two PHO regulon mutants that constitutively express rAPase indicated that (i) a potential target for
phosphite
's action in -Pi yeast is Pho84 (plasmalemma high-affinity Pi transporter and component of a putative phosphate sensor-complex), and that (ii) an additional mechanism exists to control rAPase expression that is independent of Pho85 (cyclin-dependent protein kinase). Marked accumulation of polyphosphate in the delta pho85 mutant suggested that Pho85 contributes to the control of polyphosphate metabolism. Results are consistent with the hypothesis that
phosphite
obstructs the signaling pathway by which S. cerevisiae perceives and responds to phosphate deprivation at the molecular level.
...
PMID:Phosphite disrupts the acclimation of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to phosphate starvation. 1176 57
Phosphate (Pi) plays a central role as reactant and effector molecule in plant cell metabolism. However, Pi is the least accessible macronutrient in many ecosystems and its low availability often limits plant growth. Plants have evolved an array of molecular and morphological adaptations to cope with Pi limitation, which include dramatic changes in gene expression and root development to facilitate Pi acquisition and recycling. Although physiological responses to Pi
starvation
have been increasingly studied and understood, the initial molecular events that monitor and transmit information on external and internal Pi status remain to be elucidated in plants. This review summarizes molecular and developmental Pi
starvation
responses of higher plants and the evidence for coordinated regulation of gene expression, followed by a discussion of the potential involvement of plant hormones in Pi sensing and of molecular genetic approaches to elucidate plant signalling of low Pi availability. Complementary genetic strategies in Arabidopsis thaliana have been developed that are expected to identify components of plant signal transduction pathways involved in Pi sensing. Innovative screening methods utilize reporter gene constructs, conditional growth on organophosphates and the inhibitory properties of the Pi analogue
phosphite
, which hold the promise for significant advances in our understanding of the complex mechanisms by which plants regulate Pi-
starvation
responses.
...
PMID:Phosphate sensing in higher plants. 1201 Apr 62
Phosphate (Pi) and its analog
phosphite
(Phi) are acquired by plants via Pi transporters. Although the uptake and mobility of Phi and Pi are similar, there is no evidence suggesting that plants can utilize Phi as a sole source of phosphorus. Phi is also known to interfere with many of the Pi
starvation
responses in plants and yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae). In this study, effects of Phi on plant growth and coordinated expression of genes induced by Pi
starvation
were analyzed. Phi suppressed many of the Pi
starvation
responses that are commonly observed in plants. Enhanced root growth and root to shoot ratio, a hallmark of Pi stress response, was strongly inhibited by Phi. The negative effects of Phi were not obvious in plants supplemented with Pi. The expression of Pi
starvation
-induced genes such as LePT1, LePT2, AtPT1, and AtPT2 (high-affinity Pi transporters); LePS2 (a novel acid phosphatase); LePS3 and TPSI1 (novel genes); and PAP1 (purple acid phosphatase) was suppressed by Phi in plants and cell cultures. Expression of luciferase reporter gene driven by the Pi
starvation
-induced AtPT2 promoter was also suppressed by Phi. These analyses showed that suppression of Pi
starvation
-induced genes is an early response to addition of Phi. These data also provide evidence that Phi interferes with gene expression at the level of transcription. Synchronized suppression of multiple Pi
starvation
-induced genes by Phi points to its action on the early molecular events, probably signal transduction, in Pi
starvation
response.
...
PMID:Phosphite, an analog of phosphate, suppresses the coordinated expression of genes under phosphate starvation. 1211 77
Phosphite
(H(2)PO(3)(-), Phi) prevents the acclimation of plants and yeast to orthophosphate (Pi, HPO(4)(2-)) deprivation by specifically obstructing the derepression of genes encoding proteins characteristic of their Pi-
starvation
response. In this study, we report that prolonged (i.e., 3-4 weeks) culture of Brassica napus L. suspension cells in Pi-deficient (-Pi) media leads to programmed cell death (PCD). However, when the B. napus cells were subcultured into -Pi media containing 2 mM Phi, they initiated PCD within 5 days, with 95% cell death observed by day 9. Dying cells exhibited several morphological and biochemical features characteristic of PCD, including protoplast shrinkage, chromatin condensation, and fragmentation of nuclear DNA. Immunoblotting indicated that B. napus cells undergoing PCD upregulated a 30-kDa cysteine endoprotease that is induced during PCD in the inner integument cells of developing B. napus seeds. It is concluded that PCD in B. napus suspension cells is triggered by extended Pi
starvation
, and that Phi treatment greatly accelerates this process. Our results also infer that the adaptive value of acclimating at the molecular level to Pi-stress is to extend the viability of -Pi B. napus cell cultures by about 3 weeks.
...
PMID:Phosphite accelerates programmed cell death in phosphate-starved oilseed rape (Brassica napus) suspension cell cultures. 1292 May 96
Plants have evolved complex strategies to maintain phosphate (Pi) homeostasis and to maximize Pi acquisition when the macronutrient is limiting. Adjustment of root system architecture via changes in meristem initiation and activity is integral to the acclimation process. However, the mechanisms that monitor external Pi status and interpret the nutritional signal remain to be elucidated. Here, we present evidence that the Pi deficiency response, pdr2, mutation disrupts local Pi sensing. The sensitivity and amplitude of metabolic Pi-
starvation
responses, such as Pi-responsive gene expression or accumulation of anthocyanins and starch, are enhanced in pdr2 seedlings. However, the most conspicuous alteration of pdr2 is a conditional short-root phenotype that is specific for Pi deficiency and caused by selective inhibition of root cell division followed by cell death below a threshold concentration of about 0.1 mm external Pi. Measurements of general Pi uptake and of total phosphorus (P) in root tips exclude a defect in high-affinity Pi acquisition. Rescue of root meristem activity in Pi-starved pdr2 by
phosphite
(Phi), a non-metabolizable Pi analog, and divided-root experiments suggest that pdr2 disrupts sensing of low external Pi availability. Thus, PDR2 is proposed to function at a Pi-sensitive checkpoint in root development, which monitors environmental Pi status, maintains and fine-tunes meristematic activity, and finally adjusts root system architecture to maximize Pi acquisition.
...
PMID:Arabidopsis pdr2 reveals a phosphate-sensitive checkpoint in root development. 1499 15
The htx and ptx operons of Pseudomonas stutzeri WM88 allow for the use of the inorganic reduced phosphorus (P) compounds hypophosphite (P valence, +1) and
phosphite
(P valence, +3) as sole P sources. To support the proposed in vivo role for the htx and ptx operons, namely the use of
phosphite
and hypophosphite as alternative P sources, we used reporter gene fusions to examine their expression levels with respect to various P conditions. Expression of the htx and ptx operons was induced up to 17- and 22-fold, respectively, in cultures grown under phosphate
starvation
conditions relative to expression in medium with excess phosphate (Pi). However, the presence of the reduced P substrate hypophosphite,
phosphite
, or methylphosphonate, in addition to excess Pi, did not result in an increase in the expression of either operon. To provide further support for a role of the htx and ptx operons in Pi acquisition, we identified P. stutzeri phoBR homologs and constructed deletion mutants. Induction of the htx and ptx reporter gene fusions in response to growth on limiting Pi was abolished in DeltaphoB, DeltaphoR, and DeltaphoBR mutants, demonstrating that htx and ptx expression is phoBR dependent. The putative LysR-type regulator encoded by ptxE has no apparent role in the expression of the htx and ptx operons, as no effect was observed on the level of induction of either operon in a DeltaptxE mutant.
...
PMID:The htx and ptx operons of Pseudomonas stutzeri WM88 are new members of the pho regulon. 1531 93
Within 48 h of the addition of 2.5 mM phosphate (HPO42-, Pi) or
phosphite
(H2PO3-, Phi) to 8-day-old Pi-starved (-Pi) tomato suspension cells: (i) secreted and intracellular purple acid phosphatase (PAP) activities decreased by about 12- and 6-fold, respectively and (ii) immunoreactive PAP polypeptides either disappeared (secreted PAPs) or were substantially reduced (intracellular PAP). The degradation of both secreted PAP isozymes was correlated with the de novo synthesis of two extracellular serine proteases having M(r)s of 137 and 121 kDa. In vitro proteolysis of purified secreted tomato PAP isozymes occurred following their 24 h incubation with culture filtrate from Pi-resupplied cells. The results indicate that Pi or Phi addition to -Pi tomato cells induces serine proteases that degrade Pi-
starvation
inducible extracellular proteins.
...
PMID:Phosphate or phosphite addition promotes the proteolytic turnover of phosphate-starvation inducible tomato purple acid phosphatase isozymes. 1532 74
During phosphate (Pi)
starvation
in plants, membrane phospholipid content decreases concomitantly with an increase in non-phosphorus glycolipids. Although several studies have indicated the involvement of phytohormones in various physiological changes upon Pi
starvation
, the regulation of Pi-
starvation
induced membrane lipid alteration remains unknown. Previously, we reported the response of type B monogalactosyl diacylglycerol synthase genes (atMGD2 and atMGD3) to Pi
starvation
, and suggested a role for these genes in galactolipid accumulation during Pi
starvation
. We now report our investigation of the regulatory mechanism for the response of atMGD2/3 and changes in membrane lipid composition to Pi
starvation
. Exogenous auxin activated atMGD2/3 expression during Pi
starvation
, whereas their expression was repressed by cytokinin treatment in the root. Moreover, auxin inhibitors and the axr4 aux1 double mutation in auxin signaling impaired the increase of atMGD2/3 expression during Pi
starvation
, showing that auxin is required for atMGD2/3 activation. The fact that hormonal effects during Pi
starvation
were also observed with regard to changes in membrane lipid composition demonstrates that both auxin and cytokinin are indeed involved in the dynamic changes in membrane lipids during Pi
starvation
.
Phosphite
is not metabolically available in plants; however, when we supplied
phosphite
to Pi-starved plants, the Pi-
starvation
response disappeared with respect to both atMGD2/3 expression and changes in membrane lipids. These results indicate that the observed global change in plant membranes during Pi
starvation
is not caused by Pi-
starvation
induced damage in plant cells but rather is strictly regulated by Pi signaling and auxin/cytokinin cross-talk.
...
PMID:Membrane lipid alteration during phosphate starvation is regulated by phosphate signaling and auxin/cytokinin cross-talk. 1676 32
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