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1.
Front Plant Sci ; 9: 1766, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30619384

ABSTRACT

Plant organ shape is determined by the spatial-temporal expression of genes that control the direction and rate of cell division and expansion, as well as the mechanical constraints provided by the rigid cell walls and surrounding cells. Despite the importance of organ morphology during the plant life cycle, the interplay of patterning genes with these mechanical constraints and the cytoskeleton is poorly understood. Shapes of harvestable plant organs such as fruits, leaves, seeds and tubers vary dramatically among, and within crop plants. Years of selection have led to the accumulation of mutations in genes regulating organ shapes, allowing us to identify new genetic and molecular components controlling morphology as well as the interactions among the proteins. Using tomato as a model, we discuss the interaction of Ovate Family Proteins (OFPs) with a subset of TONNEAU1-recruiting motif family of proteins (TRMs) as a part of the protein network that appears to be required for interactions with the microtubules leading to coordinated multicellular growth in plants. In addition, SUN and other members of the IQD family also exert their effects on organ shape by interacting with microtubules. In this review, we aim to illuminate the probable mechanistic aspects of organ growth mediated by OFP-TRM and SUN/IQD via their interactions with the cytoskeleton.

2.
Planta ; 238(3): 587-97, 2013 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23784715

ABSTRACT

Kinesin-like calmodulin-binding protein (KCBP), a member of the Kinesin 14 family, is a minus end directed C-terminal motor unique to plants and green algae. Its motor activity is negatively regulated by calcium/calmodulin binding, and its tail region contains a secondary microtubule-binding site. It has been identified but not functionally characterized in the conifer Picea abies. Conifer pollen tubes exhibit polarized growth as organelles move into the tip in an unusual fountain pattern directed by microfilaments but uniquely organized by microtubules. We demonstrate here that PaKCBP and calmodulin regulate elongation and motility. PaKCBP is a 140 kDa protein immunolocalized to the elongating tip, coincident with microtubules. This localization is lost when microtubules are disrupted with oryzalin, which also reorganizes microfilaments into bundles. Colocalization of PaKCBP along microtubules is enhanced when microfilaments are disrupted with latrunculin B, which also disrupts the fine network of microtubules throughout the tip while preserving thicker microtubule bundles. Calmodulin inhibition by W-12 perfusion reversibly slows pollen tube elongation, alters organelle motility, promotes microfilament bundling, and microtubule bundling coincident with increased PaKCBP localization. The constitutive activation of PaKCBP by microinjection of an antibody that displaces calcium/calmodulin and activates microtubule bundling repositions vacuoles in the tip before rapidly stopping organelle streaming and pollen tube elongation. We propose that PaKCBP is one of the target proteins in conifer pollen modulated by calmodulin inhibition leading to microtubule bundling, which alters microtubule and microfilament organization, repositions vacuoles and slows organelle motility and pollen tube elongation.


Subject(s)
Kinesins/metabolism , Picea/metabolism , Pollen Tube/metabolism , Actin Cytoskeleton/metabolism , Calmodulin/metabolism , Microtubules/metabolism
3.
J Exp Bot ; 56(420): 2619-28, 2005 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16118258

ABSTRACT

Pollen tubes are an established model system for examining polarized cell growth. The focus here is on pollen tubes of the conifer Norway spruce (Picea abies, Pinaceae); examining the relationship between cytosolic free Ca2+, tip elongation, and intracellular motility. Conifer pollen tubes show important differences from their angiosperm counterparts; they grow more slowly and their organelles move in an unusual fountain pattern, as opposed to reverse fountain, in the tip. Ratiometric ion imaging of growing pollen tubes, microinjected with fura-2-dextran, reveals a tip-focused [Ca2+]i gradient extending from 450 nM at the extreme apex to 225 nM at the base of the tip clear zone. Injection of 5,5' dibromo-BAPTA does not dissipate the apical gradient, but stops cell elongation and uniquely causes rapid, transient increases of apical free Ca2+. The [Ca2+]i gradient is, however, dissipated by reversible perfusion of extracellular caffeine. When the basal cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration falls below 150 nM, again a large increase in apical [Ca2+]i occurs. An external source of calcium is not required for germination but significantly enhances elongation. However, both germination and elongation are significantly inhibited by the inclusion of calcium channels blockers, including lanthanum, gadolinium, or verapamil. Modulation of intracellular calcium also affects organelle position and motility. Extracellular perfusion of lanthanides reversibly depletes the apical [Ca2+]i gradient, altering organelle positioning in the tip. Later, during recovery from lanthanide perfusion, organelle motility switches direction to a reverse fountain. When taken together these data show a unique interplay in Picea abies pollen tubes between intracellular calcium and the motile processes controlling cellular organization.


Subject(s)
Calcium/metabolism , Magnoliopsida/metabolism , Picea/metabolism , Pollen/anatomy & histology , Pollen/metabolism , Caffeine/pharmacology , Calcium Channel Blockers/pharmacology , Calcium Signaling/drug effects , Gadolinium/pharmacology , Germination , Lanthanum/pharmacology , Picea/anatomy & histology , Picea/drug effects , Picea/physiology , Pollen/drug effects , Pollen/physiology , Verapamil/pharmacology
4.
Planta ; 219(1): 103-9, 2004 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14740215

ABSTRACT

This study investigates how microtubules and microfilaments control organelle motility within the tips of conifer pollen tubes. Organelles in the 30-microm-long clear zone at the tip of Picea abies (L.) Karst. (Pinaceae) pollen tubes move in a fountain pattern. Within the center of the tube, organelles move into the tip along clearly defined paths, move randomly at the apex, and then move away from the tip beneath the plasma membrane. This pattern coincides with microtubule and microfilament organization and is the opposite of the reverse fountain seen in angiosperm pollen tubes. Application of latrunculin B, which disrupts microfilaments, completely stops growth and reduces organelle motility to Brownian motion. The clear zone at the tip remains intact but fills with thin tubules of endoplasmic reticulum. Applications of amiprophosmethyl, propyzamide or oryzalin, which all disrupt microtubules, stop growth, alter organelle motility within the tip, and alter the organization of actin microfilaments. Amiprophosmethyl inhibits organelle streaming and collapses the clear zone of vesicles at the extreme tip together with the disruption of microfilaments leading into the tip, leaving the plasma membrane intact. Propyzamide and oryzalin cause the accumulation of membrane tubules or vacuoles in the tip that reverse direction and stream in a reverse fountain. The microtubule disruption caused by propyzamide and oryzalin also reorganizes microfilaments from a fibrillar network into pronounced bundles in the tip cytoplasm. We conclude that microtubules control the positioning of organelles into and within the tip and influence the direction of streaming by mediating microfilament organization.


Subject(s)
Actin Cytoskeleton/physiology , Flowers/physiology , Microtubules/physiology , Picea/physiology , Sulfanilamides , Actin Cytoskeleton/drug effects , Actin Cytoskeleton/ultrastructure , Bridged Bicyclo Compounds, Heterocyclic/pharmacology , Cell Culture Techniques , Dinitrobenzenes/pharmacology , Endoplasmic Reticulum/physiology , Endoplasmic Reticulum/ultrastructure , Flowers/growth & development , Flowers/ultrastructure , Microtubules/drug effects , Microtubules/ultrastructure , Organelles/physiology , Organelles/ultrastructure , Picea/growth & development , Picea/ultrastructure , Thiazoles/pharmacology , Thiazolidines
5.
Am J Bot ; 79(10): 1113-1118, 1992 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30139132

ABSTRACT

The organic acid-secreting trichomes of chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.) were exposed to 2.5 mm lanthanum nitrate for 24 hr, and this concentration did not inhibit trichome secretion compared with that of controls. We subsequently used this nontoxic concentration of lanthanum to examine endocytosis. In the stalk cells of these secretory trichomes, exogenously applied lanthanum nitrate was present in cell walls and vacuoles, as well as within both invaginations in the plasma membrane and vesicles in the peripheral cytoplasm between the plasma membrane and the tonoplast. In the head cells, lanthanum nitrate was present in cell walls and in vesicles that form a layer in the cytoplasm around the edge of the head cells, but was not present in vacuoles. We propose that fluid phase endocytosis targeted to the vacuole takes place in the stalk cells and that endocytosis occurs in the head cells to remove excess plasma membrane after the fusion of secretory vesicles with the plasma membrane. This is the first demonstration of endocytosis in secretory trichomes.

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