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1.
When lysed in an actin stabilizing buffer, protoplasts madefrom tobacco BY-2 suspension culture cells formed plasma membraneghosts that retained both cortical actin and microtubules. Distinctcytoskeletal arrays occurred: the most common ghost array (typeI) derived from protoplasts in interphase and had random actinand microtubules, although the alignment of the actin was dependent,at least partially, on microtubule organization. Type II ghostswere larger and more irregular in shape than type I ghosts,and were characterized by a lack of microtubules and the presenceof distinctive arrays of actin bundles in concentric arcs. Theseghosts derived from protoplasts lacking cortical microtubulesproduced when wall digestion occurred while the cells were incell division, or from protoplasts isolated in the presenceof 100 µM propyzamide. Because type II ghosts derivedfrom protoplasts of similar size to those that give rise totype I ghosts, and because type II ghosts retained ordered actinarrays while the parent protoplasts had random cortical actin,type II ghosts apparently form differently to type I ghosts.We speculate that instead of the protoplast being sheared offto produce a round ghost, the plasma membrane tears and collapsesonto the slide, ordering the actin bundles in the process. Oneimplication of this model would be that cortical microtubulesprovide structural support to the plasma membrane of the protoplastso that only in their absence do the type II ghosts form. (Received May 26, 1998; Accepted October 26, 1998)  相似文献   

2.
Plasma membrane ghosts form when plant protoplasts attached to a substrate are lysed to leave a small patch of plasma membrane. We have identified several factors, including the use of a mildly acidic actin stabilization buffer and the inclusion of glutaraldehyde in the fixative, that allow immunofluorescent visualization of extensive cortical actin arrays retained on membrane ghosts made from tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) suspension-cultured cells (line Bright Yellow 2). Normal microtubule arrays were also retained using these conditions. Membrane-associated actin is random; it exhibits only limited coalignment with the microtubules, and microtubule depolymerization in whole cells before wall digestion and ghost formation has little effect on actin retention. Actin and microtubules also exhibit different sensitivities to the pH and K+ and Ca2+ concentrations of the lysis buffer. There is, however, strong evidence for interactions between actin and the microtubules at or near the plasma membrane, because both ghosts and protoplasts prepared from taxol-pretreated cells have microtubules arranged in parallel arrays and an increased amount of actin coaligned with the microtubules. These experiments suggest that the organization of the cortical actin arrays may be dependent on the localization and organization of the microtubules.  相似文献   

3.
Cytoskeletal proteins assemble into dynamic polymers that play many roles in nuclear and cell division, signal transduction, and determination of cell shape and polarity. The distribution and dynamics of microtubules (MTs) and actin filaments (AFs) are determined, among other factors, by the location of their nucleation sites. Whereas the sites of microtubule nucleation in plants are known to be located under the plasma membrane and on the nuclear envelope during interphase, there is a striking lack of information about nucleation sites of AFs. In the studies reported herein, low temperature (0 °C) was used to de‐polymerize AFs and MTs in tobacco BY‐2 (Nicotiana tabacum L.) cells at interphase. The extent of de‐polymerization of cytoskeletal filaments in interphase cells during cold treatment and the subcellular distribution of nucleation sites during subsequent recovery at 25 °C were monitored by means of fluorescence microscopy. The results show that AFs re‐polymerized rapidly from sites located in the cortical region and on the nuclear envelope, similarly to the initiation sites of MTs. In contrast to MTs, however, complete reconstitution of AFs was preceded by the formation of transient actin structures including actin dots, rods, and filaments with a dotted signal. Immunoblotting of soluble and sedimentable protein fractions showed no changes in the relative amounts of free and membrane‐bound actin or tubulin.  相似文献   

4.
S. Hasezawa  H. Nozaki 《Protoplasma》1999,209(3-4):98-104
Summary Cortical microtubules (MTs) have been implicated in the morphogenesis of plant cells by regulating the orientation of newly deposited cellulose microfibrils (CMFs). However, the role of MTs in oriented CMF deposition is still unclear. We have investigated the mechanism of CMF deposition with cultured tobacco protoplasts derived from taxol-treated BY-2 cells (taxol protoplasts). The BY-2 protoplasts regenerated patches of β-l,3-glucan (callose) and fibrils of β-l,4-glucan (cellulose). Taxol protoplasts possessed the same ordered MT arrays as material cells and regenerated CMFs with patterns almost coincidental with MTs. Electron microscopy revealed that, on the surface of cultured taxol protoplasts, each CMF bundle appeared to be deposited on each cortical MT. These results suggest that MTs may attach directly to the cellulose-synthesizing complexes, by some form of linkage, and regulate the movement of these complexes in higher-plant cells.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Membrane ghosts prepared from tobacco BY-2 cells bound microtubules(MTs) that had been assembled in an extract of evacuolated protoplastsof the same cells and, as a result, the number of MTs on theghosts increased. MTs that had formed on the ghosts after incubationwith the extract were more sensitive to cold-treatment thanthe preexisting MTs. Binding of MTs was also observed on ghoststhat had been treated with a cold solution of Ca2+ to removepreexisting MTs. This result suggests that a system that mediatedthe binding of MTs to the plasma membrane remained on the ghosts.No binding of MTs was observed to ghosts that had been treatedwith trypsin. Preexisting MTs were removed by treatment with0.6 M KCl or 0.1 M Na2CO3. Membrane ghosts treated with KClor Na2CO3 did not bind MTs that had been assembled in the extractin the absence of taxol. However, ghosts prepared in the sameway did bind MTs that had been assembled in the extract in thepresence of taxol. It seems that treatment with KCl or Na2CO3removes a component(s) from the system that mediates the bindingof MTs to the plasma membrane and that a factor(s), associatedwith MTs assembled in the extract in the presence of taxol,compensates for the loss of this component(s) from the system. (Received August 12, 1993; Accepted January 26, 1994)  相似文献   

7.
Summary Embryogenic cultures have been produced for a wide range of conifers and current methods developed for spruce permit the maturation of high quality embryos that can be desiccated and then germinated to form plantlets. Embryogenic suspensions consisting of immature embryos are an excellent source of regenerable protoplasts. This review considers examples of applications of embryogenic suspension cultures for basic studies in three areas of plant cell biology. a) Immunofluorescence studies of microtubules in mitotic spruce cells reveal focused spindle poles at prophase and anphase, suggesting the presence of microtubule organizing centers (MTOCs). Antibodies known to recognize animal MTOCs do not stain the polar regions but do stain developing kinetochores. b) Embryo-derived protoplasts regenerate directly to somatic embryos. Fluorescence studies of the cytoskeleton in freshly derived protoplasts reveal random cortical microtubules and a fine network of actin filaments. During culture, protoplasts change shape and develop transverse cortical microtubule arrays. Embryonal cells of newly formed embryos possess distinctive arrays of cortical microtubules and networks of fine actin filaments while suspensor cells are characterized by transverse cortical microtubules and longitudinal actin cables. c) Transmission electron microscope studies of endocytosis in spruce protoplasts reveal an endocytotic pathway similar to that described previously for soybean. Uptake results are confirmed using high pressure freeze fixation instead of conventional chemical fixation. Presented in the Session-in-Depth Morphogenesis: Plant Cell and Tissue Differentiation at the 1994 Congress on Cell and Tissue Culture, Research Triangle Park, NC, June 4–7, 1994.  相似文献   

8.
A method for biochemically isolating microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) from the detergent-extracted cytoskeletons of carrot suspension cells has been devised. The advantage of cytoskeletons is that filamentous proteins are enriched and separated from vacuolar contents. Depolymerization of cytoskeletal microtubules with calcium at 4°C releases MAPs which are then isolated by association with taxol stabilized neurotubules. Stripped from microtubules (MTs) by salt, then dialysed, the resulting fraction contains a limited number of high molecular weight proteins. Turbidimetric assays demonstrate that this MAP fraction stimulates polymerization of tubulin at concentrations at which it does not self-assemble. By adding it to rhodamine-conjugated tubulin, the fraction can be seen to form radiating arrays of long filaments, unlike MTs induced by taxol. In the electron microscope, these arrays are seen to be composed of mainly single microtubules. Blot-affinity purified antibodies confirm that two of the proteins decorate cellular microtubules and fulfil the criteria for MAPs. Antibodies to an antigenically related triplet of proteins about 60–68 kDa (MAP 65) stain interphase, preprophase band, spindle and phragmoplast microtubules. Antibodies to the 120 kDa MAP also stain all of the MT arrays but labelling of the cortical MTs is more punctate and, unlike anti-MAP 65, the nuclear periphery is also stained. Both the anti-65 kDa and the anti-120 kDa antibodies stain cortical MTs in detergent-extracted, substrate-attached plasma membrane disks ('footprints'). Since the 120 kDa protein is detected at two surfaces (nucleus and plasma membrane) known to support MT growth in plants, it is hypothesized that it may function there in the attachment or nucleation of MTs.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract: Nascent cellulosic cell wall microfibrils and transverse (with respect of cell growth axis) arrays of cortical microtubules (MTs) beneath the plasma membrane (PM) are two well established features of the periphery of higher plant cells. Together with transmembrane synthase complexes, they represent the most characteristic form of a “cell periphery complex” of higher plant cells which determines the orientation of the diffuse (intercalary) type of their cell growth. However, there are some plant cell types having distinct cell cortex domains which are depleted of cortical MTs. These particular cell cortex domains are, instead, typically enriched with components of the actin‐based cytoskeleton. In higher plants, this feature is prominent at extending apices of two cell types displaying tip growth ‐ pollen tubes and root hairs. In the latter cell type, highly dynamic F‐actin meshworks accumulate at extending tips, and they appear to be critical for the apparently motile character of these subcellular domains. Importantly, tip growth of both root hairs and pollen tubes is immediately stopped when the most dynamic F‐actin population is depolymerized with low levels of anti‐F‐actin drugs. Intriguingly, MTs of tip‐growing plant cells are organized in the form of longitudinal arrays, throughout the cytoplasm, which interconnect the extending tips with the subapical nuclei. This suggests that actin‐rich cell cortex domains polarize plant “cell bodies” represented by nucleus‐MTs complexes. A similar polarization of “cell bodies” is typical of mitotic and cytokinetic plant cells. A further type of MT‐depleted and actomyosin‐enriched plant cell cortex domain comprises the plasmodesmata. Primary plasmodesmata are formed during cytokinesis as part of the myosin VIII‐enriched callosic cell plates, representing “juvenile” forms of the plant “cell periphery complex”. In phylogenetic terms the association between F‐actin and the PM may be considered for a more “primitive” form of cellular organization than does the association of cortical MTs with the PM. We hypothesize that the actin cytoskeleton is a natural partner of the PM in all eukaryotic cells. In most plant cells, however, it was replaced by a tubulin‐based “cell periphery apparatus” which regulates, via still unknown mechanisms, the spatial deposition of nascent cellulosic microfibrils synthesized by PM‐associated synthase complexes.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Myosin-Va was identified as a microtubule binding protein by cosedimentation analysis in the presence of microtubules. Native myosin-Va purified from chick brain, as well as the expressed globular tail domain of this myosin, but not head domain bound to microtubule-associated protein-free microtubules. Binding of myosin-Va to microtubules was saturable and of moderately high affinity (approximately 1:24 Myosin-Va:tubulin; Kd = 70 nM). Myosin-Va may bind to microtubules via its tail domain because microtubule-bound myosin-Va retained the ability to bind actin filaments resulting in the formation of cross-linked gels of microtubules and actin, as assessed by fluorescence and electron microscopy. In low Ca2+, ATP addition induced dissolution of these gels, but not release of myosin-Va from MTs. However, in 10 microM Ca2+, ATP addition resulted in the contraction of the gels into aster-like arrays. These results demonstrate that myosin-Va is a microtubule binding protein that cross-links and mechanochemically couples microtubules to actin filaments.  相似文献   

12.
Pribyl P  Cepák V  Zachleder V 《Protoplasma》2005,226(3-4):231-240
Summary. The aim of the study was to elucidate the effect of cadmium ions on the arrangement of the actin and tubulin cytoskeleton, as well as the relationships between cytoskeletal changes and growth processes in the green filamentous alga Spirogyra decimina. Batch cultures of algae were carried out under defined conditions in the presence of various cadmium concentrations. In control cells, the cytoskeleton appeared to be a transversely oriented pattern of both microtubules and actin filaments of various thickness in the cell cortex; colocalization of cortical microtubules and actin filaments was apparent. Microtubules were very sensitive to the presence of cadmium ions. Depending on the cadmium concentration and the time of exposure, microtubules disintegrated into short rod-shaped fragments or they completely disappeared. A steep increase in cell width and a decrease in growth rate accompanied (and probably ensued) a very rapid disintegration of microtubules. Actin filaments were more stable because they were disturbed several hours later than microtubules at any cadmium concentration used. When cadmium ions were washed out, the actin cytoskeleton was rebuilt even in cells in which actin filaments were completely disintegrated at higher cadmium concentrations (40 or 100 μM). The much more sensitive microtubules were regenerated after treatment with lower cadmium concentrations (10 or 15 μM) only. Correspondence and reprints: Centre of Phycology, Institute of Botany, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Dukelská 135, 379 82 Třeboň, Czech Republic.  相似文献   

13.
Actin filaments (AFs) and microtubules (MTs) are essential constituentsof the cytoskeleton in plant cells. Sliding of motor proteinsalong these cytoskeletons is believed to be necessary in variouscellular functions. In our previous study [Yokota et al. (1995b)Plant Cell Physiol. 36: 1563], we succeeded in isolating tubulinfrom cultured tobacco BY-2 cells, which in its polymerized formcan be translocated by the MT-based motor protein, dynein, invitro. In the present study, the method was modified to purifyboth tubulin and actin. Purified actin could be polymerizedand decorated by subfragment-1 (S-1) of skeletal muscle myosin.In the motility assay in vitro, AFs, thus prepared, could betranslocated by plant myosin isolated from lily pollen tubes.The sliding velocity of those AFs was similar to that of animalAFs prepared from chicken breast muscle, and comparable withthe velocity of cytoplasmic streaming in living pollen tubesof lily. Using S-1, motility assay was carried out. The slidingvelocity of plant AFs and that of muscle AFs were also similar.As far as we know, this is the first report of the sliding ofisolated plant AFs with myosin. (Received April 30, 1999; Accepted September 7, 1999)  相似文献   

14.
The microtubule preprophase bands (PPBs) participate in the sequence of events to position cell plates in most plants. However, the mechanism of PPB formation remains to be clarified. In the present study, the organization of PPBs in Arabidopsis suspension cultured cells was investigated by confocal laser scanning microscopy combined with pharmacological treatments of reagents specific for the cytoskeleton elements. Double staining of F-actin and microtubules (MTs) showed that actin filaments were arranged randomly and no colocalization with cortical MTs was observed in the interphase cells. However, cortical actin filaments showed colocalization with MTs during the formation of PPBs. A broad actin band formed with the broad MT band in the initiation of PPB and narrowed down together with the MT band to form the PPB. Nevertheless, broad MT bands were formed but failed to narrow down in cells treated with the F-actin disruptor latrunculin A. In contrast, in the presence of the F-actin stabilizer phalloidin, PPB formation did not exhibit any abnormality. Therefore, the integrity, but not the dynamics, of the actin cytoskeleton is necessary for the formation of normal PPBs. Treatment with 2, 3-butanedine monoxime, a myosin inhibitor, also resulted in the formation of broad MT bands, indicating that actomyosin may be involved in the rearrangement of MTs to form the PPBs. Double staining of MTs and myosin revealed that myosin concentrated on the PPB region during PPB formation. It is suggested that the actin cytoskeleton at the PPB site may serve as a rack to transport cortical MTs by using myosin when the broad MT band narrows down to form the PPB.  相似文献   

15.
F-actin and microtubule co-distribution and interaction were studied during anaphase-telophase. Rapid and drastic changes in the cytoskeleton during these particular stages were studied in isolated plant endosperm cells of the blood lily. These wall-free cells can be considered as natural dividing protoplasts. As identified previously, an F-actin cytoskeletal network characterized the plant cortex and formed an elastic cage around the spindle, remaining throughout interphase, mitosis and cytokinesis. Actin was specifically labeled by fluorescent phalloidin and/or monoclonal antibodies. Gold-labelled secondary antibodies were used for ultrastructural observations and silver-enhancement was applied for video-enhanced microscopy. Microtubule and microfilament dynamics and interaction were studied using drug antagonists to actin (cytochalasins B, D) and to tubulin (colchicine). This permitted precise correlations to be made between chromosome movement inhibition and alteration in the actin/tubulin cytoskeleton. During anaphase chromosome migration, the cortical actin network was stretched along the microtubular spindle, while it remained homogeneous when anaphase was inhibited by colchicine. Cytochalasins did not inhibit chromosome movement but altered actin distribution. A new population of actin filaments appeared at the equator in late anaphase before the microtubular phragmoplast was formed and contributed to cell plate formation. Our conclusion is that F-actin-microtubule interaction may contribute to the regulatory mechanism of plant cytokinesis.  相似文献   

16.
Nuclear inheritance is highly ordered, ensuring stringent, unbiased partitioning of chromosomes before cell division. In plants, however, little is known about the analogous cellular processes that might ensure unbiased inheritance of non-nuclear organelles, either in meristematic cell divisions or those induced during the acquisition of totipotency. We have investigated organelle redistribution and inheritance mechanisms during cell division in cultured tobacco mesophyll protoplasts. Quantitative analysis of organelle repositioning observed by autofluorescence of chloroplasts or green fluorescent protein (GFP), targeted to mitochondria or endoplasmic reticulum (ER), demonstrated that these organelles redistribute in an ordered manner before division. Treating protoplasts with cytoskeleton-disrupting drugs showed that redistribution depended on actin filaments (AFs), but not on microtubules (MTs), and furthermore, that an intact actin cytoskeleton was required to achieve unbiased organelle inheritance. Labelling the actin cytoskeleton with a novel GFP-fusion protein revealed a highly dynamic actin network, with local reorganisation of this network itself, appearing to contribute substantially to repositioning of chloroplasts and mitochondria. Our observations show that each organelle exploits a different strategy of redistribution to ensure unbiased partitioning. We conclude that inheritance of chloroplasts, mitochondria and ER in totipotent plant cells is an ordered process, requiring complex interactions with the actin cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

17.
The intracellular polymerization of cytoskeletal proteins into their supramolecular assemblies raises many questions regarding the regulatory patterns that control this process. Binding experiments using the ELISA solid phase system, together with protein assembly assays and electron microscopical studies provided clues on the protein-protein associations in the polymerization of tubulin and actin networks. In vitro reconstitution experiments of these cytoskeletal filaments using purified tau, tubulin, and actin proteins were carried out. Tau protein association with tubulin immobilized in a solid phase support system was inhibited by actin monomer, and a higher inhibition was attained in the presence of preassembled actin filaments. Conversely, tubulin and assembled microtubules strongly inhibited tau interaction with actin in the solid phase system. Actin filaments decreased the extent of in vitro tau-induced tubulin assembly. Studies on the morphological aspects of microtubules and actin filaments coexisting in vitro, revealed the association between both cytoskeletal filaments, and in some cases, the presence of fine filamentous structures bridging these polymers. Immunogold studies showed the association of tau along polymerized microtubules and actin filaments, even though a preferential localization of labeled tau with microtubules was revealed. The studies provide further evidence for the involvement of tau protein in modulating the interactions of microtubules and actin polymers in the organization of the cytsokeletal network.  相似文献   

18.
Hasezawa S  Nozaki H 《Protoplasma》1999,209(1-2):98-104
Cortical microtubules (MTs) have been implicated in the morphogenesis of plant cells by regulating the orientation of newly deposited cellulose microfibrils (CMFs). However, the role of MTs in oriented CMF deposition is still unclear. We have investigated the mechanism of CMF deposition with cultured tobacco protoplasts derived from taxol-treated BY-2 cells (taxol protoplasts). The BY-2 protoplasts regenerated patches of beta-l,3-glucan (callose) and fibrils of beta-l,4-glucan (cellulose). Taxol protoplasts possessed the same ordered MT arrays as material cells and regenerated CMFs with patterns almost coincidental with MTs. Electron microscopy revealed that, on the surface of cultured taxol protoplasts, each CMF bundle appeared to be deposited on each cortical MT. These results suggest that MTs may attach directly to the cellulose-synthesizing complexes, by some form of linkage, and regulate the movement of these complexes in higher-plant cells.  相似文献   

19.
Summary We irradiated chromosomal spindle fibres in crane-fly spermatocytes with an ultraviolet microbeam of 270 nm wavelength light with total energies near those that cause actin filaments in myofibrils to depolymerize; after irradiation we stained the cells with rhodamine-labelled phalloidin and with anti-tubulin antibodies. In some cells, the irradiation reduced both phalloidin and tubulin staining of the chromosomal spindle fibres; in other cells, the irradiations reduced phalloidin staining but not tubulin staining; in yet other cells, the irradiations reduced tubulin staining but not phalloidin staining. In all irradiated cells in which phalloidin staining was reduced in the irradiated areas phalloidin staining also was reduced poleward from the irradiated areas. These results show that phalloidin staining of chromosomal spindle fibres is not dependent on the presence of kinetochore microtubules, and, therefore, that actin filaments are present in the spindle fibres in vivo. We suggest that actin filaments present in spindle fibres in vivo may be involved in causing chromosome movements during anaphase.  相似文献   

20.
B G McLean  J Zupan    P C Zambryski 《The Plant cell》1995,7(12):2101-2114
Tobacco mosaic virus movement protein P30 complexes with genomic viral RNA for transport through plasmodesmata, the plant intercellular connections. Although most research with P30 focuses on its targeting to and gating of plasmodesmata, the mechanisms of P30 intracellular movement to plasmodesmata have not been defined. To examine P30 intracellular localization, we used tobacco protoplasts, which lack plasmodesmata, for transfection with plasmids carrying P30 coding sequences under a constitutive promoter and for infection with tobacco mosaic virus particles. In both systems, P30 appears as filaments that colocalize primarily with microtubules. To a lesser extent, P30 filaments colocalize with actin filaments, and in vitro experiments suggested that P30 can bind directly to actin and tubulin. This association of P30 with cytoskeletal elements may play a critical role in intracellular transport of the P30-viral RNA complex through the cytoplasm to and possibly through plasmodesmata.  相似文献   

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