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1.
Protoplasma ; 215(1-4): 21-34, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11732060

ABSTRACT

Tradescantia virginiana leaf epidermal cells were plasmolysed by sequential treatment with 0.8 M and 0.3 M sucrose. Plasmolysis revealed adhesion of the plasma membrane to the cell wall at sites coinciding with cytoskeletal arrays involved in the polarisation of cells undergoing asymmetric divisions--cortical actin patch--and in the establishment and maintenance of the division site--preprophase band of microtubules and filamentous (F) actin. The majority of cells retained adhesions at the actin patch throughout mitosis. However, only approximately 13% of cells formed or retained attachments at the site of the preprophase band. After the breakdown of the nuclear envelope, plasmolysis had a dramatic effect on spindle orientation, cell plate formation, and the plane of cytokinesis. Spindles were rotated at abnormal angles including tilted into the plane of the epidermis. Cell plates formed but were quickly replaced by vacuole-like intercellular compartments containing no Tinopal-stainable cell wall material. This compartment usually opened to the apoplast at one side, and cytokinesis was completed by the furrow extending across the protoplast. This atypical cytokinesis was facilitated by a phragmoplast containing microtubules and F-actin. Progression of the furrow was unaffected by 25 micrograms of cytochalasin B per ml but inhibited by 10 microM oryzalin. Phragmoplasts were contorted and misguided and cytokinesis prolonged, indicating severe disruption to the guidance mechanisms controlling phragmoplast expansion. These results are discussed in terms of cytoskeleton-plasma membrane-cell wall connections that could be important to the localisation of plasma membrane molecules defining the cortical division site and hence providing positional information to the cytokinetic apparatus, and/or for providing an anchor for cytoplasmic F-actin necessary to generate tension on the phragmoplast and facilitate its directed, planar expansion.


Subject(s)
Cell Division , Cell Membrane/ultrastructure , Cell Wall/ultrastructure , Magnoliopsida/physiology , Mitosis , Plant Epidermis/ultrastructure , Sulfanilamides , Actins/metabolism , Cell-Matrix Junctions/ultrastructure , Cytochalasin B/pharmacology , Cytoskeleton/ultrastructure , Dinitrobenzenes/pharmacology , Herbicides/pharmacology , Magnoliopsida/ultrastructure , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Plant Epidermis/drug effects , Plant Epidermis/physiology , Plant Leaves/physiology , Plant Leaves/ultrastructure , Spindle Apparatus/physiology , Spindle Apparatus/ultrastructure
2.
Plant Physiol ; 124(4): 1637-47, 2000 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11115881

ABSTRACT

Profilin (PFN) is an ubiquitous, low-M(r), actin-binding protein involved in the organization of the cytoskeleton of eukaryotes including higher plants. PFNs are encoded by a multigene family in Arabidopsis. We have analyzed in vivo functions of Arabidopsis PFN by generating transgenic plants carrying a 35S-PFN-1 or 35S-antisense PFN-1 transgene. Etiolated seedlings underexpressing PFN (PFN-U) displayed an overall dwarf phenotype with short hypocotyls whose lengths were 20% to 25% that of wild type (WT) at low temperatures. Light-grown PFN-U plants were smaller in stature and flowered early. Compared with equivalent cells in WT, most cells in PFN-U hypocotyls and roots were shorter, but more isodiametric, and microscopic observations of etiolated PFN-U hypocotyls revealed a rough epidermal surface. In contrast, light-grown seedlings overexpressing PFN had longer roots and root hair although etiolated seedlings overexpressing PFN were either the same size or slightly longer than WT seedlings. Transgenic seedlings harboring a PFN-1-GUS transgene directed expression in root and root hair and in a ring of cells at the elongating zone of the root tip. As the seedlings matured PFN-1-GUS was mainly expressed in the vascular bundles of cotyledons and leaves. Our results show that Arabidopsis PFNs play a role in cell elongation, cell shape maintenance, polarized growth of root hair, and unexpectedly, in determination of flowering time.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis/growth & development , Contractile Proteins , Microfilament Proteins/physiology , Actins/metabolism , Arabidopsis/cytology , Arabidopsis/genetics , Arabidopsis Proteins , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Hypocotyl/genetics , Hypocotyl/growth & development , Microfilament Proteins/genetics , Microfilament Proteins/metabolism , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Phenotype , Plant Development , Plant Roots/genetics , Plant Roots/metabolism , Plants/genetics , Plants/ultrastructure , Plants, Genetically Modified , Profilins , RNA, Plant/genetics , RNA, Plant/metabolism , Time Factors , Tissue Distribution
3.
Am J Bot ; 86(2): 153-72, 1999 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21680355

ABSTRACT

The unique cytokinetic apparatus of higher plant cells comprises two cytoskeletal systems: a predictive preprophase band of microtubules (MTs), which defines the future division site, and the phragmoplast, which mediates crosswall formation after mitosis. We review features of plant cell division in an evolutionary context and from the viewpoint that the cell is a domain of cytoplasm (cytoplast) organized around the nucleus by a cytoskeleton consisting of a single "tensegral" unit. The term "tensegrity" is a contraction of "tensional integrity" and the concept proposes that the whole cell is organized by an integrated cytoskeleton of tension elements (e.g., actin fibers) extended over compression-resistant elements (e.g., MTs).During cell division, a primary role of the spindle is seen as generating two cytoplasts from one with separation of chromosomes a later, derived function. The telophase spindle separates the newly forming cytoplasts and the overlap between half spindles (the shared edge of two new domains) dictates the position at which cytokinesis occurs. Wall MTs of higher plant cells, like the MT cytoskeleton in animal and protistan cells, spatially define the interphase cytoplast. Redeployment of actin and MTs into the preprophase band (PPB) is the overt signal that the boundary between two nascent cytoplasts has been delineated. The "actin-depleted zone" that marks the site of the PPB throughout mitosis may be a more persistent manifestation of this delineation of two domains of cortical actin. The growth of the phragmoplast is controlled by these domains, not just by the spindle. These domains play a major role in controlling the path of phragmoplast expansion. Primitive land plants show different morphological changes that reveal that the plane of division, with or without the PPB, has been determined well in advance of mitosis.The green alga Spirogyra suggests how the phragmoplast system might have evolved: cytokinesis starts with cleavage and then actin-related determinants stimulate and positionally control cell-plate formation in a phragmoplast arising from interzonal MTs from the spindle. Actin in the PPB of higher plants may be assembling into a potential furrow, imprinting a cleavage site whose persistent determinants (perhaps actin) align the outgrowing edge of the phragmoplast, as in Spirogyra. Cytochalasin spatially disrupts polarized mitosis and positioning of the phragmoplast. Thus, the tensegral interaction of actin with MTs (at the spindle pole and in the phragmoplast) is critical to morphogenesis, just as they seem to be during division of animal cells. In advanced green plants, intercalary expansion driven by turgor is controlled by MTs, which in conjunction with actin, may act as stress detectors, thereby affecting the plane of division (a response clearly evident after wounding of tissue). The PPB might be one manifestation of this strain detection apparatus.

4.
Plant Cell ; 10(11): 1875-88, 1998 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9811795

ABSTRACT

The cytoskeleton plays a major role in the spatial regulation of plant cell division and morphogenesis. Arrays of microtubules and actin filaments present in the cell cortex during prophase mark sites to which phragmoplasts and associated cell plates are guided during cytokinesis. During interphase, cortical microtubules are believed to influence the orientation of cell expansion by guiding the pattern in which cell wall material is laid down. Little is known about the mechanisms that regulate these cytoskeleton-dependent processes critical for plant development. Previous work showed that the Tangled1 (Tan1) gene of maize is required for spatial regulation of cytokinesis during maize leaf development but not for leaf morphogenesis. Here, we examine the cytoskeletal arrays associated with cell division and morphogenesis during the development of tan1 and wild-type leaves. Our analysis leads to the conclusion that Tan1 is required both for the positioning of cytoskeletal arrays that establish planes of cell division during prophase and for spatial guidance of expanding phragmoplasts toward preestablished cortical division sites during cytokinesis. Observations on the organization of interphase cortical microtubules suggest that regional influences may play a role in coordinating cell expansion patterns among groups of cells during leaf morphogenesis.


Subject(s)
Genes, Plant , Zea mays/cytology , Zea mays/genetics , Actins/metabolism , Cell Division/genetics , Cytoskeleton/ultrastructure , Microtubules/ultrastructure , Mutation , Plant Leaves/cytology , Plant Leaves/growth & development , Plant Leaves/metabolism , Zea mays/growth & development
5.
Cell Motil Cytoskeleton ; 36(1): 55-67, 1997.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8986377

ABSTRACT

We have studied pre-mitotic nuclear migration in living subsidiary mother cells (SMCs) of Tradescantia virginiana. Divisions in the four SMCs of each stomatal complex are asymmetrical and are preceded by the migration of nuclei from random locations in the cells to positions adjacent to the central guard mother cells (GMCs). In newly polarised SMCs, nuclei display erratic movements which gradually dampen over time. In older complexes, where nuclear migration occurred earlier in the ontogeny of the leaf, nuclei are stably positioned and change in morphology from spherical to dome-shaped. Labelling with bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) shows that SMCs polarised in G1 of the cell cycle and remain polarised for a minimum of 22 h before entering mitosis, while the inducing GMCs stay in G1. Centrifugation (1,320 g, 15 min) of epidermal peels displaces the majority of nuclei to the centrifugal end of cells, including nuclei in polarised SMCs. After centrifugation, most SMC nuclei return towards the GMCs within 100 min in control and 5 microM oryzalin treated peels. However, nuclei are unable to reposition in the presence of cytochalasin B (5 micrograms/ml). Thus, the signal for SMC polarisation is issued very early in the ontogeny of the cells (G1), is apparently sustained for a prolonged period, and results in the actin-dependent migration of nuclei towards the GMC. Cytological changes and nuclear migrations similar to those occurring in polarising SMCs can be induced by a local application of pressure to the surface of epidermal cells.


Subject(s)
Actins/physiology , Cell Nucleus/physiology , G1 Phase/physiology , Mitosis/physiology , Cell Cycle/physiology , Cell Nucleus/drug effects , Cell Polarity , Cytoskeleton/physiology , Dimethyl Sulfoxide/pharmacology , In Vitro Techniques , Movement , Plant Cells , Plant Leaves/cytology , Pressure , Signal Transduction
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