A roadmap for zinc trafficking in the developing barley grain based on laser capture microdissection and gene expression profiling.

Abstract

Nutrients destined for the developing cereal grain encounter several restricting barriers on their path towards their final storage sites in the grain. In order to identify transporters and chelating agents that may be involved in transport and deposition of zinc in the barley grain, expression profiles have been generated of four different tissue types: the transfer cells, the aleurone layer, the endosperm, and the embryo. Cells from these tissues were isolated with the ‘laser capture microdissection’ technology and the extracted RNA was subjected to three rounds of T7-based amplification. The amplified RNA was subsequently hybridized to Affymetrix 22K Barley GeneChips. Due to the short average length of the amplified transcripts and the positioning of numerous probe sets at locations more than 400 base pairs (bp) from the poly(A)-tail, a normalization approach was used where the probe positions were taken into account. On the basis of the expression levels of a number of metal homeostasis genes, a working model is proposed for the translocation of zinc from the phloem to the storage sites in the developing grain.

Citation

Journal of Experimental Botany (2009) 60 (4) 1333-1347 [doi:10.1093/jxb/erp023]

A roadmap for zinc trafficking in the developing barley grain based on laser capture microdissection and gene expression profiling.

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2009