Stabilization of cortical microtubules by the cell wall in cultured tobacco cells |
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Authors: | Tomohiro Akashi Shinji Kawasaki Hiroh Shibaoka |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, Osaka University, Toyonaka, 560 Osaka, Japan;(2) National Institute of Agrobiological Resources, Kan'non-dai, 305 Tsukuba Science City, Ibaraki, Japan;(3) Present address: Laboratory of Medical Mycology, Research Institute of Disease Mechanism and Control, Nagoya University School of Medicine, 466 Nagoya, Japan |
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Abstract: | Cortical microtubules (MTs) in protoplasts prepared from tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) BY-2 cells were found to be sensitive to cold. However, as the protoplasts regenerated cell walls they became resistant to cold, indicating that the cell wall stabilizes cortical MTs against the effects of cold. Since poly-l-lysine was found to stabilize MTs in protoplasts, we examined extensin, an important polycationic component of the cell wall, and found it also to be effective in stabilizing the MTs of protoplasts. Both extensin isolated from culture filtrates of tobacco BY-2 cells and extensin isolated in a similar way from cultures of tobacco XD-6S cells rendered the cortical MTs in protoplasts resistant to cold. Extensin at 0.1 mg·ml−1 was as effective as the cell wall in this respect. It is probable that extensin in the cell wall plays an important role in stabilizing cortical MTs in tobacco BY-2 cells. |
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Keywords: | Cell culture (MT stability) Cell wall and MT stability Extensin Microtubule (stability) Nicotiana (MT stabilization) Protoplast (microtubules) Temperature and MT stability |
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