Project description:Pathak2013 - MAPK activation in response to various biotic stresses
MAPK activation mechanism in response to various biotic (fungal and bacterial pathogens) stress conditions in plants
This model is described in the article:
Modeling of the MAPK machinery activation in response to various abiotic and biotic stresses in plants by a system biology approach.
Pathak RK, Taj G, Pandey D, Arora S, Kumar A.
Bioinformation 2013; 9(9): 443-449
Abstract:
Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases (MAPKs) cascade plays an important role in regulating plant growth and development, generating cellular responses to the extracellular stimuli. MAPKs cascade mainly consist of three sub-families i.e. mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase (MAPKKK), mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase (MAPKK) and mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK), several cascades of which are activated by various abiotic and biotic stresses. In this work we have modeled the holistic molecular mechanisms essential to MAPKs activation in response to several abiotic and biotic stresses through a system biology approach and performed its simulation studies. As extent of abiotic and biotic stresses goes on increasing, the process of cell division, cell growth and cell differentiation slow down in time dependent manner. The models developed depict the combinatorial and multicomponent signaling triggered in response to several abiotic and biotic factors. These models can be used to predict behavior of cells in event of various stresses depending on their time and exposure through activation of complex signaling cascades.
This model is hosted on BioModels Database
and identified
by: BIOMD0000000492
.
To cite BioModels Database, please use: BioModels Database: An enhanced, curated and annotated resource
for published quantitative kinetic models
.
To the extent possible under law, all copyright and related or
neighbouring rights to this encoded model have been dedicated to the public
domain worldwide. Please refer to CC0 Public Domain
Dedication
for more information.
Project description:Pathak2013 - MAPK activation in response to various abiotic stresses
MAPK activation mechanism in response to various abiotic stress conditions, such as cold, salt, drought, H2O2, heavy metal and ethylene, in plants
This model is described in the article:
Modeling of the MAPK machinery activation in response to various abiotic and biotic stresses in plants by a system biology approach.
Pathak RK, Taj G, Pandey D, Arora S, Kumar A.
Bioinformation 2013; 9(9): 443-449
Abstract:
Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases (MAPKs) cascade plays an important role in regulating plant growth and development, generating cellular responses to the extracellular stimuli. MAPKs cascade mainly consist of three sub-families i.e. mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase (MAPKKK), mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase (MAPKK) and mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK), several cascades of which are activated by various abiotic and biotic stresses. In this work we have modeled the holistic molecular mechanisms essential to MAPKs activation in response to several abiotic and biotic stresses through a system biology approach and performed its simulation studies. As extent of abiotic and biotic stresses goes on increasing, the process of cell division, cell growth and cell differentiation slow down in time dependent manner. The models developed depict the combinatorial and multicomponent signaling triggered in response to several abiotic and biotic factors. These models can be used to predict behavior of cells in event of various stresses depending on their time and exposure through activation of complex signaling cascades.
This model is hosted on BioModels Database
and identified
by: BIOMD0000000491
.
To cite BioModels Database, please use: BioModels Database: An enhanced, curated and annotated resource
for published quantitative kinetic models
.
To the extent possible under law, all copyright and related or
neighbouring rights to this encoded model have been dedicated to the public
domain worldwide. Please refer to CC0 Public Domain
Dedication
for more information.
Project description:HvPap-1 is a C1A cysteine protease from barley that has been associated to endogenous processes and responds to abiotic and biotic stresses. Overexpressing and silencing lines were constructed to test the response of plants with variations in the levels of HvPap-1 to different stresses. RNA-seq analyses were done to know how changes in HvPap-1 expression levels affect the expression of other genes and the effect of these changes in the response of the plant.
Project description:Environmental stresses influence the growth of plants and the productivity of crops. Salinity is one of the most important abiotic stresses for agricultural crops. PCD is induced by various biotic and abiotic stresses in algae and higher plants, including high salinity treatment. OsPDCD5, an ortholog to mammalian-programmed cell death 5, is up-regulated under low temperature and NaCl treatments. We found that the transgenic rice which constitutively expressed anti-OsPDCD5 increased salt stress tolerance in unique ways. By using the Rice Genome Microarray, we identified target genes that were regulated in transgenic rice plants by anti-OsPDCD5.
Project description:Drought and herbivores are main threats to crop production. Barley plants were subjected to dehydration, spider mite attack or to a combination of both stresses. RNA-seq analyses were done to know how individual and double abiotic-biotic stresses promote changes in the transcriptome.
Project description:Environmental stresses influence the growth of plants and the productivity of crops. Salinity is one of the most important abiotic stresses for agricultural crops. PCD is induced by various biotic and abiotic stresses in algae and higher plants, including high salinity treatment. OsPDCD5, an ortholog to mammalian-programmed cell death 5, is up-regulated under low temperature and NaCl treatments. We found that the transgenic rice which constitutively expressed anti-OsPDCD5 increased salt stress tolerance in unique ways. By using the Rice Genome Microarray, we identi?ed target genes that were regulated in transgenic rice plants by anti-OsPDCD5. Leaf tissues of 2-week-old transgenic and nontransgenic seedlings (10 plants each) before 200mM NaCl treatment, 20mins and 3 hours after 200mM NaCl treatment, respectively, were selected.
Project description:Biotic and abiotic stresses limit agricultural yields, and plants are often simultaneously exposed to multiple stresses. Combinations of stresses such as heat and drought or cold and high light intensity, have profound effects on crop performance and yeilds To analyze such responses, we initially compared transcriptome changes in ten Arabidopsis thaliana ecotypes using cold, heat, high light, salt and flagellin treatments as single stress factors or their double combinations.
Project description:Plants are continuously exposed to a myriad of abiotic and biotic stresses. However, the molecular mechanisms by which these stress signals are perceived and transduced are poorly understood. To begin to identify primary stress signal transduction components we have focused on genes that respond rapidly (within 5 min) to stress signals. Because it has been hypothesized that detection of physical stress is a mechanism common to mounting a response against a broad range of environmental stresses, we have utilized mechanical wounding as the stress stimulus and performed whole genome microarray analysis of Arabidopsis thaliana leaf tissue. This led to the identification of a number of rapid wound responsive (RWR) genes. Comparison of RWR genes with published abiotic and biotic stress microarray datasets demonstrates a large overlap across a wide range of environmental stresses. Interestingly, RWR genes also exhibit a striking level and pattern of circadian regulation, with induced and repressed genes displaying antiphasic rhythms. Using bioinformatic analysis, we identified a novel motif overrepresented in the promoters of RWR genes, herein designated as the Rapid Stress Response Element (RSRE). We demonstrate in transgenic plants that multimerized RSREs are sufficient to confer a rapid response to both biotic and abiotic stresses in vivo, thereby establishing the functional involvement of this motif in primary transcriptional stress responses. Collectively, our data provide evidence for a novel cis-element that is distributed across the promoters of an array of diverse stress-responsive genes, poised to respond immediately and coordinately to stress signals. This structure suggests that plants may have a transcriptional network resembling the general stress signaling pathway in yeast and that the RSRE element may provide the key to this coordinate regulation. Experiment Overall Design: Three biological replicates of pooled plants were used for each treatment (Not wounded vs 5 min wounded). Each biological replicate is comprised of 2 technical replicates and a dye swap was performed for each technical replicate.