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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Characterizations of Cation/H+ Antiporters from Arabidopsis and Zebrafish

Mei, Hui 2009 May 1900 (has links)
To maintain optimal cytosolic Ca2+ concentrations, cells employ three distinct strategies: 1) tightly regulated influx of Ca2+; 2) efficient efflux of Ca2+ from the cell; 3) sequestration of Ca2+ in organelles. Ca2+efflux and influx are mediated by diverse transporter systems, such as pumps, channels and antiporters. Vacuolar localized Ca2+/H+ exchangers such as Arabidopsis thaliana cation exchanger 1 (CAX1) play important roles in Ca2+ homeostasis. When expressed in yeast, CAX1 is regulated via an N-terminal autoinhibitory domain. I compared and contrasted the properties of Nterminal CAX1 variants in plants and yeast expression systems to determine if autoinhibition of CAX1 is occurring in planta. Although several plant transporters appear to contain N-terminal autoinhibitory domains, my work is the first to document clearly N-terminal-dependent regulation of a Ca2+ transporter in transgenic plants. In my second study, I characterized another Arabidopsis CAX, CAX4. CAX4 is expressed in the root apex and lateral root primordia and expression increased when Ni2+ or Mn2+ levels were elevated or Ca2+ was depleted. Transgenic plants expressing increased levels of CAX4 displayed symptoms consistent with increased sequestration of Ca2+ and Cd2+ into the vacuole. When CAX4 was highly expressed in an Arabidopsis cax1 mutant line with weak vacuolar Ca2+/H+ antiport activity, a 29% increase in Ca2+/H+ antiport was measured. A cax4 loss-of-function mutant and CAX4 RNA interference lines displayed altered root growth in response to Cd2+, Mn2+, and auxin. The DR5::GUS auxin reporter detected reduced auxin responses in the cax4 lines. My results indicate that CAX4 is a cation/H+ antiporter that plays an important function in root growth under heavy metal stress conditions. My third study is to characterize a zebrafish CAX. In this study, I have initiated characterization of a zebrafish CAX by initially expressing the open reading frame in yeast. Zebrafish Cax1 was localized on the yeast endomembranes and displayed Ca2+/H+ activity. In zebrafish embryos, Cax1 was specifically expressed in neural crest cells and morpholino knockdowns of cax1 caused defects in neural crest development as measured by alterations in pigmentation, defects in jaw development and reduction in expression of the neural crest marker, pax7. Collectively, our findings provide a previously unexpected role of CAX transporters in animal growth and development.

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