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1.
The endodermal cells of the shoot are thought to be the gravity-sensing cells in Arabidopsis. The amyloplasts in the endodermis that sediment in the direction of gravity may act as statoliths. Endodermis-specific expression of SGR2 and ZIG using the SCR promoter could complement the abnormal shoot gravitropism of the sgr2 and zig mutants, respectively. The abnormalities in amyloplast sedimentation observed in both mutants recovered simultaneously. These results indicate that both genes in the endodermal cell layer are crucial for shoot gravitropism. ZIG encodes AtVTI11, which is a SNARE involved in vesicle transport to the vacuole. The fusion protein of SGR2 and green fluorescent protein localized to the vacuole and small organelles. These observations indicate that ZIG and SGR2 are involved in the formation and function of the vacuole, a notion supported by the results of subcellular analysis of the sgr2 and zig mutants with electron microscopy. These results strongly suggest that the vacuole participates in the early events of gravitropism and that SGR2 and ZIG functions are involved.  相似文献   

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Higher plants use the sedimentation of amyloplasts in statocytes as statolith to sense the direction of gravity during gravitropism. In Arabidopsis thaliana inflorescence stem statocyte, amyloplasts are in complex movement; some show jumping-like saltatory movement and some tend to sediment toward the gravity direction. Here, we report that a RING-type E3 ligase SHOOT GRAVITROPISM9 (SGR9) localized to amyloplasts modulates amyloplast dynamics. In the sgr9 mutant, which exhibits reduced gravitropism, amyloplasts did not sediment but exhibited increased saltatory movement. Amyloplasts sometimes formed a cluster that is abnormally entangled with actin filaments (AFs) in sgr9. By contrast, in the fiz1 mutant, an ACT8 semidominant mutant that induces fragmentation of AFs, amyloplasts, lost saltatory movement and sedimented with nearly statically. Both treatment with Latrunculin B, an inhibitor of AF polymerization, and the fiz1 mutation rescued the gravitropic defect of sgr9. In addition, fiz1 decreased saltatory movement and induced amyloplast sedimentation even in sgr9. Our results suggest that amyloplasts are in equilibrium between sedimentation and saltatory movement in wild-type endodermal cells. Furthermore, this equilibrium is the result of the interaction between amyloplasts and AFs modulated by the SGR9. SGR9 may promote detachment of amyloplasts from AFs, allowing the amyloplasts to sediment in the AFs-dependent equilibrium of amyloplast dynamics.  相似文献   

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The starch‐statolith hypothesis proposes that starch‐filled amyloplasts act as statoliths in plant gravisensing, moving in response to the gravity vector and signaling its direction. However, recent studies suggest that amyloplasts show continuous, complex movements in Arabidopsis shoots, contradicting the idea of a so‐called ‘static’ or ‘settled’ statolith. Here, we show that amyloplast movement underlies shoot gravisensing by using a custom‐designed centrifuge microscope in combination with analysis of gravitropic mutants. The centrifuge microscope revealed that sedimentary movements of amyloplasts under hypergravity conditions are linearly correlated with gravitropic curvature in wild‐type stems. We next analyzed the hypergravity response in the shoot gravitropism 2 (sgr2) mutant, which exhibits neither a shoot gravitropic response nor amyloplast sedimentation at 1  g . sgr2 mutants were able to sense and respond to gravity under 30  g conditions, during which the amyloplasts sedimented. These findings are consistent with amyloplast redistribution resulting from gravity‐driven movements triggering shoot gravisensing. To further support this idea, we examined two additional gravitropic mutants, phosphoglucomutase (pgm) and sgr9, which show abnormal amyloplast distribution and reduced gravitropism at 1  g . We found that the correlation between hypergravity‐induced amyloplast sedimentation and gravitropic curvature of these mutants was identical to that of wild‐type plants. These observations suggest that Arabidopsis shoots have a gravisensing mechanism that linearly converts the number of amyloplasts that settle to the ‘bottom’ of the cell into gravitropic signals. Further, the restoration of the gravitropic response by hypergravity in the gravitropic mutants that we tested indicates that these lines probably have a functional gravisensing mechanism that is not triggered at 1  g .  相似文献   

6.
The F-actin cytoskeleton is hypothesized to play a role in signal transduction mechanisms of gravitropism by interacting with sedimenting amyloplasts as they traverse statocytes of gravistimulated plants. Previous studies have determined that pharmacological disruption of the F-actin cytoskeleton with latrunculin B (Lat-B) causes increased gravitropism in stem-like organs and roots, and results in a more rapid settling of amyloplasts in the columella cells of Arabidopsis roots. These results suggest that the actin cytoskeleton modulates amyloplast movement and also gravitropic signal transduction. To determine the effect of F-actin disruption on amyloplast sedimentation in stem-like organs, Arabidopsis hypocotyls were treated with Lat-B and a detailed analysis of amyloplast sedimentation kinetics was performed by determining amyloplast positions in endodermal cells at various time intervals following reorientation. Confocal microscopy was used to confirm that Lat-B effectively disrupts the actin cytoskeleton in these cells. The results indicate that amyloplasts in hypocotyl endodermal cells settle more quickly compared with amyloplasts in root columella cells. F-actin disruption with Lat-B severely reduces amyloplast mobility within Arabidopsis endodermal statocytes, and these results suggest that amyloplast sedimentation within the hypocotyl endodermal cell is F-actin-dependent. Thus, a model for gravitropism in stem-like organs is proposed in which F-actin modulates the gravity response by actively participating in statolith repositioning within the endodermal statocytes.  相似文献   

7.
We developed an adequate method for the in vivo analysis of organelle dynamics in the gravity-perceptive cell (endodermis) of the Arabidopsis thaliana inflorescence stem, revealing behavior of amyloplasts and vacuolar membranes in those cells. Amyloplasts in the endodermis showed saltatory movements even before gravistimulation by reorientation, and these movements were confirmed as microfilament dependent. From our quantitative analysis in the wild type, the gravity-oriented movement of amyloplasts mainly occurred during 0 to 3 min after gravistimulation by reorientation, supporting findings from our previous physiological study. Even after microfilament disruption, the gravity-oriented movement of amyloplasts remained. By contrast, in zig/sgr4 mutants, where a SNARE molecule functioning in vacuole biogenesis has been disrupted, the movement of amyloplasts in the endodermis is severely restricted both before and after gravistimulation by reorientation. Here, we describe vacuolar membrane behavior in these cells in the wild-type, actin filament-disrupted, and zig/sgr4 mutants and discuss its putatively important features for the perception of gravity. We also discuss the data on the two kinds of movements of amyloplasts that may play an important role in gravitropism: (1) the leading edge amyloplasts and (2) the en mass movement of amyloplasts.  相似文献   

8.
The actin cytoskeleton is a crucial component in plant gravitropism, and studies confirm that alterations to actin filaments (F-actin) can have dramatic effects on gravitropic curvature in roots and shoots. Many models for gravisensing in higher plants suggest that the key to gravity perception and signal transduction lies in intimate interactions between F-actin and amyloplasts. In this study, we investigated gravitropism in hypocotyls by analyzing the effect of myosin inhibition on gravitropic curvature in order to clarify the role of the actomyosin system in shoot gravitropism. To study amyloplast movement in endodermal cells (i.e., gravity-perceiving statocytes) of living seedlings, we repositioned a confocal laser scanning microscope (CLSM) so that its rotatable stage was oriented vertically. Seedlings containing green fluorescent protein-labeled endodermal amyloplasts were incubated with the ATPase inhibitor 2,3-butanedione monoxime (BDM) and then mounted on the stage so that the hypocotyls were vertical. Using CLSM, we imaged the endodermal amyloplasts, while the hypocotyls were oriented vertically and also after they were reoriented by 90°. Our results show that BDM reduces gravitropic curvature in a concentration-dependent manner. In addition, BDM increases amyloplast movement in hypocotyls of vertical seedlings, but reduces amyloplast movement in hypocotyls of reoriented seedlings, suggesting that myosin may participate in the intracellular transport of amyloplasts in statocytes. These results can be explained in the context of amyloplasts as both noise indicators and gravity susceptors, with BDM producing less coherent amyloplast movement that results in an increased signal-to-noise ratio, which may account for at least part of the observed reduction in gravitopic curvature.  相似文献   

9.
In higher plants, the shoot and the root generally show negative and positive gravitropism, respectively. To elucidate the molecular mechanisms involved in gravitropism, we have isolated many shoot gravitropism mutants in Arabidopsis. The sgr2 and zig/sgr4 mutants exhibited abnormal gravitropism in both inflorescence stems and hypocotyls. These genes probably are involved in the early step(s) of the gravitropic response. The sgr2 mutants also had misshapen seed and seedlings, whereas the stem of the zig/sgr4 mutants elongated in a zigzag fashion. The SGR2 gene encodes a novel protein that may be part of a gene family represented by bovine phosphatidic acid-preferring phospholipase A1 containing a putative transmembrane domain. This gene family has been reported only in eukaryotes. The ZIG gene was found to encode AtVTI11, a protein that is homologous with yeast VTI1 and is involved in vesicle transport. Our observations suggest that the two genes may be involved in a vacuolar membrane system that affects shoot gravitropism.  相似文献   

10.
In flowering plants, gravity perception appears to involve the sedimentation of starch-filled plastids, called amyloplasts, within specialized cells (the statocytes) of shoots (endodermal cells) and roots (columella cells). Unfortunately, how the physical information derived from amyloplast sedimentation is converted into a biochemical signal that promotes organ gravitropic curvature remains largely unknown. Recent results suggest an involvement of the Translocon of the Outer Envelope of (Chloro) plastids (TOC) in early phases of gravity signal transduction within the statocytes. This review summarizes our current knowledge of the molecular mechanisms that govern gravity signal transduction in flowering plants and summarizes models that attempt to explain the contribution of TOC proteins in this important behavioral plant growth response to its mechanical environment.Key words: gravitropism, root, amyloplast, TOC complex, TOC132, TOC75  相似文献   

11.
The endodermis and shoot gravitropism   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Shoots and roots of higher plants exhibit negative and positive gravitropism, respectively. A variety of gravitropic mutants have recently been isolated from Arabidopsis, the characterization of which demonstrates that the molecular mechanisms of the gravitropic responses in roots, hypocotyls and inflorescence stems are different. The cytological and molecular analysis of two mutants, shoot gravitropism 1 (sgrl), which is allelic to scarecrow (scr), and sgr7, which is allelic to short-root(shr), indicate that the endodermis is the site of gravity perception in shoots. These data suggest a new model for shoot gravitropism.  相似文献   

12.
Amyloplasts are hypothesized to play a key role in the cellular mechanisms of gravity perception in plants. While previous studies have examined the effects of starch deficiency on gravitropic sensitivity, in this paper, we report on gravitropism in plants with a greater amount of starch relative to the normal wild type. Thus, we have studied the sex1 (starch excess) mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana, which accumulates extra starch because it is defective in a protein involved in the regulation of starch mobilization. Compared to the wild type (WT), sex1 seedlings contained excess starch in cotyledons, hypocotyls, the root-hypocotyl transition zone, the body of the root, root hairs, and in peripheral rootcap cells. Sedimented amyloplasts were found in both the WT and in sex1 in the rootcap columella and in the endodermis of stems, hypocotyls, and petioles. In roots, the starch content and amyloplast sedimentation in central columella cells and the gravitropic sensitivity were comparable in sex1 and the WT. However, in hypocotyls, the sex1 mutant was much more sensitive to gravity during light-grown conditions compared to the WT. This difference was correlated to a major difference in size of plastids in gravity-perceiving endodermal cells between the two genotypes (i.e., sex1 amyloplasts were twice as big). These results are consistent with the hypothesis that only very large changes in starch content relative to the WT affect gravitropic sensitivity, thus indicating that wild-type sensing is not saturated.  相似文献   

13.
The gravitropism defective 2 (grv2) mutants of Arabidopsis show reduced shoot phototropism and gravitropism. Amyloplasts in the shoot endodermal cells of grv2 do not sediment to the same degree as in wild type. The GRV2 gene encodes a 277-kD polypeptide that is 42% similar to the Caenorhabditis elegans RME-8 protein, which is required for endocytosis. We hypothesize that a defect in endocytosis may affect both the initial gravity sensing via amyloplasts sedimentation and the subsequent more general tropic growth response.  相似文献   

14.
H Fukaki  H Fujisawa    M Tasaka 《Plant physiology》1996,110(3):945-955
In higher plants shoots show a negative gravitropic response but little is known about its mechanism. To elucidate this phenomenon, we have isolated a number of mutants with abnormal shoot gravitropic responses in Arabidopsis thaliana. Here we describe mainly three mutants: sgr1-1, sgr2-1, and sgr3-1 (shoot gravitropism). Genetic analysis confirmed that these mutations were recessive and occurred at three independent loci, named SGR1, SGR2, and SGR3, respectively. In wild type, both inflorescence stems and hypocotyls show negative gravitropic responses. The sgr1-1 mutants showed no response to gravity either by inflorescence stems or by hypocotyls. The sgr2-1 mutants also showed no gravitropic response in inflorescence stems but showed a reduced gravitropic response in hypocotyls. In contrast, the sgr3-1 mutant was found to have reduced gravitropic responses in inflorescence stems but normal gravitropic responses in hypocotyls. These results suggest that some genetic components of the regulatory mechanisms for gravitropic responses are common between inflorescence stems and hypocotyls, but others are not. In addition, these sgr mutants were normal with respect to root gravitropism, and their inflorescence stems and hypocotyls could carry out phototropism. We conclude that SGR1, SGR2, and SGR3 are novel genetic loci specifically involved in the regulatory mechanisms of shoot gravitropism in A. thaliana.  相似文献   

15.
Shoots of higher plants exhibit negative gravitropism. However, little is known about the mechanism or site of gravity perception in shoots. We have identified two loci that are essential for normal shoot gravitropism in Arabidopsis thaliana . Genetic analysis demonstrated that the shoot gravitropism mutants sgr1 and sgr7 are allelic to the radial pattern mutants, scr and shr , respectively. Characterization of the aerial phenotype of these mutants revealed that the primary defect is the absence of a normal endodermis in hypocotyls and inflorescence stems. This indicates that the endodermis is essential for shoot gravitropism and strongly suggests that this cell layer functions as the gravity-sensing cell layer in dicotyledonous plant shoots. These results also demonstrate that, in addition to their previously characterized role in root radial patterning, SCR and SHR regulate the radial organization of the shoot axial organs in Arabidopsis .   相似文献   

16.
Shoots of higher plants grow upward in response to gravity.To elucidate the molecular mechanism of this response, we haveisolated shoot gravitropism (sgr) mutants in Arabidopsis thaliana.In this report, we describe three novel mutants, sgr4-1, sgr5-1and sgr6-1 whose inflorescence stems showed abnormal gravitropicresponses as previously reported for sgr1, sgr2 and sgr3. Thesenew sgr mutations were recessive and occurred at three independentgenetic loci. The sgr4-1 mutant showed severe defect in gravitropismof both inflorescence stem and hypocotyl but were normal inroot gravitropism as were sgr1 and sgr2. The sgr5-1 and sgr6-1mutants showed reduced gravitropism only in inflorescence stemsbut normal in both hypocotyls and roots as sgr3. These resultssupport the hypothesis that some mechanisms of gravitropismare genetically different in these three organs in A. thaliana.In addition, these mutants showed normal phototropic responses,suggesting that SGR4, SGR5 and SGR6 genes are specifically involvedin gravity perception and/or gravity signal transduction forthe shoot gravitropic response. (Received November 21, 1996; Accepted February 17, 1997)  相似文献   

17.
The shoots of a Japanese strain of morning glory ( Pharbitis nil  ) called 'Shidare-asagao' display agravitropic and weeping growth. It has been shown that this shoot agravitropism may be due to the defective differentiation of endodermal cells that contain statoliths. Roots of the weeping morning glory show normal responsiveness to gravity and the shoots are positively phototropic. Shoots of the morning glory cultivar Violet used as a wild type exhibited distinct circumnutation with circular movements that increase as the plants grow. In weeping morning glory, however, nutation was limited to slight back and forth or side to side movements. To determine whether endodermal cells participate in circumnutation through a function that is independent of their role in gravitropism, the nutational movements of various gravitropic mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana were compared. The inflorescences of wild-type Arabidopsis showed relatively large circular movements. Inflorescences of the pgm-1 mutant, which is defective in starch synthesis, showed reduced nutation. Even more seriously affected were the sgr1-1 / scr-3 and sgr7-1 / shr-2 mutants, which are defective in endodermal cell differentiation, and the auxin-resistant axr2-1 mutant showed no significant nutational movements at all. 1- N -naphthylphthalamic acid (NPA) could inhibit Violet circumnutation, supporting the notion that auxin participates in circumnutation. Thus, the gravitropic response is an essential component in plant shoot circumnutation. Endodermal cells are involved in such circumnutation possibly because of their role in inducing the gravitropic response.  相似文献   

18.
Roots of the aquatic angiosperm Limnobium spongia (Bosc) Steud.were evaluated by light and electron microscopy to determinethe distribution of organelle sedimentation towards gravity.Roots of Limnobium are strongly gravitropic. The rootcap consistsof only two layers of cells. Although small amyloplasts arepresent in the central cap cells, no sedimentation of any organelle,including amyloplasts, was found. In contrast, both amyloplastsand nuclei sediment consistently and completely in cells ofthe elongation zone. Sedimentation occurs in one cell layerof the cortex just outside the endodermis. Sedimentation ofboth amyloplasts and nuclei begins in cells that are in theirinitial stages of elongation and persists at least to the levelof the root where root hairs emerge. This is the first modernreport of the presence of sedimentation away from, but not in,the rootcap. It shows that sedimentation in the rootcap is notnecessary for gravitropic sensing in at least one angiosperm.If amyloplast sedimentation is responsible for gravitropic sensing,then the site of sensing in Limnobium roots is the elongationzone and not the rootcap. These data do not necessarily conflictwith the hypothesis that sensing occurs in the cap in otherroots, since Limnobium roots are exceptional in rootcap originand structure, as well as in the distribution of organelle sedimentation.Similarly, if nuclear sedimentation is involved in gravitropicsensing, then nuclear mass would function in addition to, notinstead of, that of amyloplasts.Copyright 1994, 1999 AcademicPress Limnobium spongia, gravitropism, roots, sedimentation, cortex  相似文献   

19.
A lettuce (Lactuca sativa L.) mutant that exhibits a procumbent growth habit was identified and characterized. In two wild type (WT) genetic backgrounds, segregation patterns revealed that the mutant phenotype was controlled by a recessive allele at a single locus, which was designated weary. Hypocotyls and inflorescence stems of plants homozygous for the weary allele exhibited reduced gravitropic responses compared with WT plants, but roots exhibited normal gravitropism. Microscopic analysis revealed differences in the radial distribution of amyloplasts in hypocotyl and inflorescence stem cells of weary and WT plants. Amyloplasts occurred in a single layer of endodermal cells in WT hypocotyls and inflorescence stems. By contrast, amyloplasts were observed in several layers of cortical cells in weary hypocotyls, and weary inflorescence stem cells lacked amyloplasts entirely. These results are consistent with the proposed role of sedimenting amyloplasts in shoot gravitropism of higher plants. The phenotype associated with the weary mutant is similar to that described for the Arabidopsis mutant sgr1/scr, which is defective in radial patterning and gravitropism.  相似文献   

20.
The amyloplasts found in the apical hook cells of etiolated pea (Pisum sativum L.) epicotyls were randomly distributed. Sedimentation of endodermal amyloplasts in the direction of gravity became apparent in the transition from the hook to the top of the main axis of the epicotyl. Cortical amyloplasts in this region were not, however, sedimented. These patterns of sedimentation could not be related to changes in amyloplast size, and it is proposed that cytoplasmic properties determine amyloplast behaviour.The differentiation of plastids in the hook differed between the amyloplast-containing endodermal cells and the cortical cells, in which amoeboid plastids predominated over amyloplasts. Amyloplasts disappeared from the cortical cells in the main axis of the epicotyl, but in the endodermal cells sedimented amyloplasts were found throughout the upper epicotyl.Etiolated epicotyls induced to grow horizontally by treatment with ethylene had a normal content of amyloplasts, sedimented in the direction of gravity.  相似文献   

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