Dissecting Arabidopsis phospholipid signaling using reverse genetics
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| Award date | 19-09-2008 |
| Number of pages | 175 |
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| Abstract |
Living cells delimit themselves from their surroundings by a biological membrane.
This biological membrane is essential to maintain chemical gradients between the intracellular and extracellular environment and leakage would quickly be followed by death. The structural integrity of the membrane is the result of the biophysical properties of its primary building blocks, the phospholipids. Phospholipids have two hydrophobic fatty acid tails and a hydrophilic headgroup, held together by a simple glyceryl backbone. When in acqueous solution, phospholipids spontaneously form a bilayer with their hydrophobic tails facing each other and their hydrophilic headgroups forming hydrogen bonds with the water molecules in the solution. The result is a barrier that is impermeable to large and charged molecules. In addition to preventing molecules to leave or enter, the membrane is also involved in communication between the outside world and the inside of the cell. These two functions are reflected by the composition of the lipid bilayer. The majority of the phospholipids have a structural role and their concentrations are relatively constant. However, a minority of the phospholipids rapidly turn over in response to various external stimuli. In mammals, the role of phospholipids in intracellular signaling is well described. For plants, evidence for such roles is emerging, although differences are also found. Plant phospholipid signaling is the subject of my thesis. In the first two sections of the general introduction, phospholipid biosynthesis will be described, as well as the different species of phospholipids and their mode of action. In the third section we will focus on the available techniques to study plant phospholipid signaling and our model organism, Arabidopsis thaliana will be introduced. In the final sections of this introduction, an overview will be given of several biological processes that have been associated with phospholipid signaling. These sections form a bridge to the four experimental chapters of this thesis. In the last chapter, selected findings are discussed within a broader context. |
| Document type | PhD thesis |
| Note | Research conducted at: Universiteit van Amsterdam |
| Language | English |
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