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1.
Plant J ; 69(3): 399-410, 2012 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21951134

ABSTRACT

Stromules are stroma-filled tubules that extend from the surface of plastids and allow the transfer of proteins as large as 550 kDa between interconnected plastids. The aim of the present study was to determine if plastid DNA or plastid ribosomes are able to enter stromules, potentially permitting the transfer of genetic information between plastids. Plastid DNA and ribosomes were marked with green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusions to LacI, the lac repressor, which binds to lacO-related sequences in plastid DNA, and to plastid ribosomal proteins Rpl1 and Rps2, respectively. Fluorescence from GFP-LacI co-localised with plastid DNA in nucleoids in all tissues of transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) examined and there was no indication of its presence in stromules, not even in hypocotyl epidermal cells, which contain abundant stromules. Fluorescence from Rpl1-GFP and Rps2-GFP was also observed in a punctate pattern in chloroplasts of tobacco and Arabidopsis [Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh.], and fluorescent stromules were not detected. Rpl1-GFP was shown to assemble into ribosomes and was co-localised with plastid DNA. In contrast, in hypocotyl epidermal cells of dark-grown Arabidopsis seedlings, fluorescence from Rpl1-GFP was more evenly distributed in plastids and was observed in stromules on a total of only four plastids (<0.02% of the plastids observed). These observations indicate that plastid DNA and plastid ribosomes do not routinely move into stromules in tobacco and Arabidopsis, and suggest that transfer of genetic information by this route is likely to be a very rare event, if it occurs at all.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis/cytology , DNA, Plant/metabolism , Nicotiana/cytology , Plastids/metabolism , Ribosomes/metabolism , Arabidopsis/genetics , Biological Transport , DNA, Chloroplast/metabolism , Green Fluorescent Proteins/genetics , Green Fluorescent Proteins/metabolism , Microscopy, Confocal , Plants, Genetically Modified/cytology , Plants, Genetically Modified/genetics , Nicotiana/genetics , Transformation, Genetic
2.
Plant J ; 69(3): 387-98, 2012 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21951173

ABSTRACT

Stromules are highly dynamic stroma-filled tubules that extend from the surface of all plastid types in all multi-cellular plants examined to date. The stromule frequency (percentage of plastids with stromules) has generally been regarded as characteristic of the cell and tissue type. However, the present study shows that various stress treatments, including drought and salt stress, are able to induce stromule formation in the epidermal cells of tobacco hypocotyls and the root hairs of wheat seedlings. Application of abscisic acid (ABA) to tobacco and wheat seedlings induced stromule formation very effectively, and application of abamine, a specific inhibitor of ABA synthesis, prevented stromule induction by mannitol. Stromule induction by ABA was dependent on cytosolic protein synthesis, but not plastid protein synthesis. Stromules were more abundant in dark-grown seedlings than in light-grown seedlings, and the stromule frequency was increased by transfer of light-grown seedlings to the dark and decreased by illumination of dark-grown seedlings. Stromule formation was sensitive to red and far-red light, but not to blue light. Stromules were induced by treatment with ACC (1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid), the first committed ethylene precursor, and by treatment with methyl jasmonate, but disappeared upon treatment of seedlings with salicylate. These observations indicate that abiotic, and most probably biotic, stresses are able to induce the formation of stromules in tobacco and wheat seedlings.


Subject(s)
Abscisic Acid/pharmacology , Nicotiana/cytology , Plant Cells/physiology , Plastids/metabolism , Triticum/cytology , Amino Acids, Cyclic/pharmacology , Droughts , Light , Plant Growth Regulators/pharmacology , Plant Proteins/biosynthesis , Plants, Genetically Modified/cytology , Potassium Chloride/pharmacology , Seedlings/physiology , Sodium Chloride/pharmacology , Stress, Physiological , Temperature
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