Alexander Ciattoni
@aciattoni.bsky.social
30 followers 40 following 6 posts
Plant Scientist @ipbhalle.bsky.social. Currently doing a PhD with @marischuster.bsky.social
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Reposted by Alexander Ciattoni
jxbotany.bsky.social
💡 SPECIAL ISSUE VIEWPOINT 💡

Immune proteases are promising targets for protein engineering 🛠️ to boost disease resistance in plants 🌾 - Schuster et al.

🔗 doi.org/10.1093/jxb/...

#PlantScience 🧪 @marischuster.bsky.social @aciattoni.bsky.social
Fig. 1.Four classes of roles of immune proteases illustrated via examples. (i) Pathogen perception: Required for Cladosporium Resistance-3 (Rcr3) protease is inhibited by the fungal avirulence effector Avr2. The Rcr3-Avr2 complex is recognized by the immune receptor Cf-2, triggering a defence response (Kruger et al, 2002). (ii) Regulation of the immune response: METACASPASE 4 (MC4) is activated by calcium upon wounding or pathogen attack. MC4 cleaves tonoplast-located ProPEP1 releasing PEP1 to the apoplast where it is perceived by PEP RECEPTORS (PEPRs) thereby initiating defence responses (Hander et al, 2019). (iii) Counteracting pathogen effectors: soybean aspartic protease GmAP5, degrades the Phytophthora sojae virulence factor glycoside hydrolase family 12 (GH12) protein, XEG1 (Xia et al., 2020). (iv) Direct pathogen attack: secreted aspartic proteases (SAPs) cleave Pseudomonas syringae MucD protein thereby suppressing bacterial growth (Wang et al., 2019).
aciattoni.bsky.social
My flatmate asked if I’ve ever made a GMO. This sparked a discussion making me realize how challenging science communication is and how scientists often lack training in it. I’m catching up with a podcast by @orlandodl.bsky.social that explains GMOs to a broader audience... while working with GMOs😅
Laboratory setup with a laptop playing a podcast close to markers and a syringe with a plant in the left foreground and more of this plant in a tray a bit more behind
Reposted by Alexander Ciattoni
aciattoni.bsky.social
I love the Bluesky community, but I regret Mastodon didn't become the path scientists followed, as it was the logical choice. We didn't learn from Twitter's mistakes and Bluesky risks becoming Twitter 2.0 in a few years. @fabmusacchio.bsky.social nicely summarised my concerns here: s.42l.fr/lJRVqxGY
Reflections on joining Bluesky: Opportunities and risks for the scientific community
Over the past two weeks, I have taken a closer look at Bluesky, exploring its features and dynamics through the lens of my own experience within the neuroscience community. So far, my impressions have...
s.42l.fr
Reposted by Alexander Ciattoni
bumblingbiochemist.bsky.social
I’m so proud to be a part of this OER that aims to lower the barrier for professors to incorporate molecular modeling & visualization into their courses (i.e. teaching students to interact w/3D models of proteins & other macromolecular structures &/or making custom figures)! doi.org/10.15781/m4z...
Seeing the Invisible: Learning to Teach with Biomolecular Visualization – Simple Book Publishing
Seeing the Invisible: Learning to Teach with Biomolecular Visualization – Simple Book Publishing
doi.org
aciattoni.bsky.social
I can highly recommend the flowering inoculation protocol (doi.org/fmcxgb) as alternative to the dipping method. The easy version of it is: spin a 2mL o/n Agro culture and resuspend in 2mL 5%Sucrose + 0.02%Silwet L-77. Pipette ~5µL per bud cluster. For highest transformation rates repeat after 1week
The floral inoculating protocol: a simplified Arabidopsis thaliana transformation method modified from floral dipping
The floral dip protocol mediated by Agrobacterium tumefaciens is the most widely used transformation method for Arabidopsis thaliana. The “floral dip” …
doi.org
Reposted by Alexander Ciattoni
courtneyherms.bsky.social
Stop citing journal names in your presentations - but PMIDs are too long (I will never get all of those numbers in the correct order!)
Check out this awesome tool that takes your DOI from 10.1371/journal.pbio.3002882 to pw75.
Much more accessible and easy for the audience!
aciattoni.bsky.social
I really hope to see this change! Yet I would recommend to use the shortdoi service ( www.shortdoi.org ) to generate a shorter ID, compared to PMID. It allows IDs for anything that has a DOI, ie preprints included
www.shortdoi.org
aciattoni.bsky.social
I really hope to see this change! Yet I would recommend to use the shortdoi service ( www.shortdoi.org ) to generate a shorter ID, compared to PMID. It allows IDs for anything that has a DOI, ie preprints included
www.shortdoi.org
Reposted by Alexander Ciattoni
snp2prot.bsky.social
Students at @leibnizipk.bsky.social have organised a well-crafted conference #PSSC-2025 in the previous few days. SNP2Prot members were able to join in this event and meet the Leibniz plant community🍀

@leibniz-gemeinschaft.de @unihalle.bsky.social @ipbhalle.bsky.social @unileipzig.bsky.social
Plant Science Student Conference 2025,
June 30 – July 2 Plant Science Student Conference 2025,
June 30 – July 2 Plant Science Student Conference 2025,
June 30 – July 2 Plant Science Student Conference 2025,
June 30 – July 2
Reposted by Alexander Ciattoni
marischuster.bsky.social
@aciattoni.bsky.social representing the #ReceptorBiochemistry group @ipbhalle.bsky.social at #PSSC2025.
Enjoy!
aciattoni.bsky.social
Really happy to be at the 20th Plant Science Student Conference #PSSC2025 @leibnizipk.bsky.social
I am looking forward to exciting talks and discussions in the next few days.
aciattoni.bsky.social
Really happy to be at the 20th Plant Science Student Conference #PSSC2025 @leibnizipk.bsky.social
I am looking forward to exciting talks and discussions in the next few days.
Reposted by Alexander Ciattoni
elife.bsky.social
Our authors can freely speculate the meaning and implications of their data in our new section:

💡 Ideas and Speculation 💡
buff.ly/0I8lpwz
Illustration featuring green/orange dots and dashes, with the heading:  "Ideas and Speculation. A new article section for your next publication".