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1.
Sakurai N  Domoto K  Takagi S 《Planta》2005,221(1):66-74
In leaf epidermal cells of the aquatic angiosperm Vallisneria gigantea Graebner, high-intensity blue light induces the actin-dependent avoidance response of chloroplasts. By semi-quantitative motion analysis and phalloidin staining, time courses of the blue-light-induced changes in the mode of movement of individual chloroplasts and in the configuration of actin filaments were examined in the presence and absence of a flavoprotein inhibitor, diphenylene iodonium. In dark-adapted cells, short, thick actin bundles seemed to surround each chloroplast, which was kept motionless in the outer periclinal cytoplasm of the cells. After 10 min of irradiation with high-intensity blue light, a rapid, unidirectional movement of chloroplasts was induced, concomitant with the appearance of aggregated, straight actin bundles stretched over the outer periclinal cytoplasm. Diphenylene iodonium inhibited the avoidance response of chloroplasts, apparently by delaying a change in the mode of chloroplast movement from random sway to unidirectional migration, by suppressing the appearance of aggregated, straight actin bundles. In partially irradiated individual cells, redistribution of chloroplasts and reorganization of actin filaments occurred only in the areas exposed to blue light. From the results, we propose that the short, thick actin bundles in the vicinity of chloroplasts function to anchor the chloroplasts in dark-adapted cells, and that the aggregated, straight actin bundles organized under blue-light irradiation provide tracks for unidirectional movement of chloroplasts.Preliminary results of part of the local irradiation study have already been reported in abstract form [N. Sakurai et al. (2002) J Photosci 9:326–328].  相似文献   

2.
The plant organelles, chloroplast and nucleus, change their position in response to light. In Arabidopsis thaliana leaf cells, chloroplasts and nuclei are distributed along the inner periclinal wall in darkness. In strong blue light, they become positioned along the anticlinal wall, while in weak blue light, only chloroplasts are accumulated along the inner and outer periclinal walls. Blue-light dependent positioning of both organelles is mediated by the blue-light receptor phototropin and controlled by the actin cytoskeleton. Interestingly, however, it seems that chloroplast movement requires short, fine actin filaments organized at the chloroplast edge, whereas nuclear movement does cytoplasmic, thick actin bundles intimately associated with the nucleus. Although there are many similarities between photo-relocation movements of chloroplasts and nuclei, plant cells appear to have evolved distinct mechanisms to regulate actin organization required for driving the movements of these organelles.Key words: actin, Arabidopsis, blue light, chloroplast positioning, phototropin, nuclear positioning  相似文献   

3.
4.
Chloroplasts gather in areas irradiated with weak light to maximize photosynthesis (the accumulation response). They move away from areas irradiated with strong light to minimize damage of the photosynthetic apparatus (the avoidance response). The processes underlying these chloroplast movements can be divided into three parts: photoperception, signal transduction, and chloroplast movement. Photoreceptors for chloroplast movement have been identified recently in various plant species. A blue light receptor phototropin (phot) mediates chloroplast photorelocation movement in the seed plant Arabidopsis thaliana, the fern Adiantum capillus-veneris, the moss Physcomitrella patens and possibly the green alga Mougeotia scalaris. A chimeric photoreceptor between phytochrome and phototropin, neochrome (neo), was found in some advanced ferns and in the green alga M. scalaris. While the mechanism of chloroplast movement is not well understood, it is known that actin filaments play an important role in this process. To understand the molecular mechanisms associated with chloroplast movement, several mutants were isolated in A. thaliana (jac1 and chup1) and the corresponding genes were cloned. In this review, recent progress in photoreceptor research into chloroplast movement in various plant species and the possible factors functioning in signal transduction or the regulation of actin filaments identified in A. thaliana is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Chloroplast relocation in mesophyll cells of Arabidopsis thaliana was observed microscopically and analyzed by microbeam irradiation. Chloroplasts located along the anticlinal walls in dark-adapted cells. When part of a cell was irradiated with a microbeam of high fluence rate blue light (B) simultaneously with background red light (R) on the whole cell, the chloroplasts moved towards the B-irradiated area, but did not enter the beam. The background R illumination activated cytoplasmic motility as well as chloroplast movement. Without R illumination, there was little chloroplast relocation. In light-adapted cells in which the chloroplasts were spread over the cell surface perpendicular to the incident light, R-illumination had the same effect. Under background R, the chloroplasts moved out of the area irradiated with a B microbeam of 8 or 30 W m(-2) (avoidance response), but chloroplasts outside the beam moved towards the area irradiated with the B microbeam (accumulation response). These results suggest that the signals for accumulation and avoidance responses were generated in a single cell by high fluence rate B. cry1cry2, npq1 and nph1 mutants showed B-induced chloroplast relocation. Both the accumulation and avoidance responses were observed in all the mutants, although in the nph1 mutant, the sensitivity of accumulation movement was slightly lower than that of the wild type. We discuss the possible photoreceptor for B-induced chloroplast relocation.  相似文献   

6.
A. Kadota  M. Wada 《Protoplasma》1992,167(1-2):97-107
Summary Changes in the organization of cortical actin microfilaments during phytochrome-mediated and blue light-induced photoorientation of chloroplasts were investigated by rhodamine-phalloidin staining in protonemal cells of the fernAdiantum capillusveneris. Low- and high-fluence rate responses were induced by partial irradiation of individual cells with a microbeam of 20 m in width. In the low-fluence rate responses to red and blue light, a circular structure composed of microfilaments was induced on the chloroplast concentrated in the irradiated region, on the side facing the plasma membrane, as already reported in the case of the low-fluence rate response induced by polarized red or blue light. Such a structure was not observed on the chloroplasts located far from the microbeam. Time-course studies revealed that the structure was induced after the chloroplasts gathered in the illuminated region and that the structure disappeared before chloroplasts moved out of this region when the microbeam was turned off. In the high-fluence rate response to blue light, chloroplasts avoided the irradiated site but accumulated in the shaded area adjacent the edges of microbeam. The circular structure made of microfilaments was also observed on the chloroplasts gathered in the area and it showed the same behavior with respect to its appearance and disappearance during a light/dark regime as in the case of the low-fluence rate response. However, no such circular structure was observed in the high-fluence rate response to red light, in which case the chloroplasts also avoided the illuminated region but no accumulation in the adjacent areas was induced. These results indicate that the circular structure composed of microfilaments may play a role in the anchorage of the chloroplast during intracellular photo-orientation.  相似文献   

7.
Chloroplasts migrate in response to different light intensities. Under weak light, chloroplasts gather at an illuminated area to maximize light absorption and photosynthesis rates (the accumulation response). In contrast, chloroplasts escape from strong light to avoid photodamage (the avoidance response). Photoreceptors involved in these phenomena have been identified in Arabidopsis thaliana and Adiantum capillus-veneris. Chloroplast behavior has been studied in detail during the accumulation response, but not for the avoidance response. Hence, we analyzed the chloroplast avoidance response in detail using dark-adapted Adiantum capillus-veneris gametophyte cells and partial cell irradiation with a microbeam of blue light. Chloroplasts escaped from an irradiated spot. Both duration of this response and the distance of the migrated chloroplasts were proportional to the total fluence irradiated. The speed of movement during the avoidance response was dependent on the fluence rate, but the speed of the accumulation response towards the microbeam from cell periphery was constant irrespective of fluence rate. When a chloroplast was only partially irradiated with a strong microbeam, it moved away towards the non-irradiated region within a few minutes. During this avoidance response two additional microbeam irradiations were applied to different locus of the same chloroplast. Under these conditions the chloroplast changed the moving direction after a lag time of a few minutes without rolling. Taken together, these findings indicate that chloroplasts can move in any direction and never have an intrinsic polarity. Similar phenomenon was observed in chloroplasts of Arabidopsis thaliana palisade cells.  相似文献   

8.
All land plants (embryophytes) use a phragmoplast for cytokinesis. Phragmoplasts are distinctive cytoskeletal structures that are instrumental in the deposition of new walls in both vegetative and reproductive phases of the life cycle. In meristems, the phragmoplast is initiated among remaining non-kinetochore spindle fibers between sister nuclei and expands to join parental walls at the site previously marked by the preprophase band of microtubules (PPB). The microtubule cycle and cell cycle are closely coordinated: the hoop-like cortical microtubules of interphase are replaced by the PPB just prior to prophase, the PPB disappears as the spindle forms, and the phragmoplast mediates cell plate deposition after nuclear division. In the reproductive phase, however, cortical microtubules and PPBs are absent and cytokinesis may be uncoupled from the cell cycle resulting in multinucleate cells (syncytia). Minisyncytia of 4 nuclei occur in microsporocytes and several (typically 8) nuclei occur in the developing megagametophyte. Macrosyncytia with thousands of nuclei may occur in the nuclear type endosperm. Cellularization of syncytia involves formation of adventitious phragmoplasts at boundaries of nuclear-cytoplasmic domains (NCDs) defined by radial microtubule systems (RMSs) emanating from non-sister nuclei. Once initiated in the region of microtubule overlap at interfaces of opposing RMSs, the adventitious phragmoplasts appear structurally identical to interzonal phragmoplasts. Phragmoplasts are constructed of multiple opposing arrays similar to what have been termed microtubule converging centers. The individual phragmoplast units are distinctive fusiform bundles of anti-parallel microtubules bisected by a dark mid-zone where vesicles accumulate and fuse into a cell plate.  相似文献   

9.
When prothalli ofAdiantum capillus-veneris L. were kept for 2 d in the dark, chloroplasts gathered along the anticlinal walls (Kagawa and Wada, 1994, J Plant Res 107: 389–398). In these dark-adapted prothallial cells, irradiation with a microbeam (10 gm in diameter) of red (R) or blue light (B) for 60 s moved the chloroplasts towards the irradiated locus during a subsequent dark period. Chloroplasts located less than 20 gm from the center of the R microbeam (18 J·m–2) moved towards the irradiated locus. The higher the fluence of the light, the greater the distance from which chloroplasts could be attracted. The B microbeam was less effective than the R microbeam. Chloroplasts started to move anytime up to 20 min after the R stimulus, but with the B microbeam the effect of the stimulus was usually apparent within 10 min after irradiation. The velocity of chloroplast migration was independent of light-fluence in both R and B and was about - 0.3 m·min–1 between 15 min and 30 min after irradiation. Whole-cell irradiation with far-red light immediately after R- and B-microbeam irradiations demonstrated that these responses were mediated by phytochrome and a blue-light-absorbing pigment, respectively. Sequential treatment with R and B microbeams, whose fluence rates were less than the threshold values when applied separately, resulted in an additive effect and induced chloroplast movement, strongly suggesting that signals from phytochrome and the blue-light-absorbing pigment could interact at some point before the induction of chloroplast movement.Abbreviations B blue light - FR far-red light - IR infrared light - R red light  相似文献   

10.
The cortical cytoplasm of the giant cells of Bryopsis contains hundreds of interconnected microtubule (MT) bundles aligned along the cell's long axis. Actin fibers show an extensive but not exclusive superposition with these MT bundles. Chloroplasts move parallel to the bundles. Colchicine (0.5 mM), vinblastine (0.1 mM), and the herbicide ami-prophosmethyl (APM, 1-5 microM) strongly inhibit chloroplast movement and severely disrupt both the MT and the actin network. Additionally, APM leads to the appearance of large actin bundles up to 5 microns in diameter and several tens of micron in length. Erythro-9-[3-(2-hydroxynonyl)]adenine (EHNA, 1 mM) does not block chloroplast movement, but affects chloroplast behavior by causing transient aggregations. The MT network is not significantly changed by EHNA, but actin fibers converge in large, radially symmetric complexes in regions of chloroplast aggregates. Cytochalasin D (CD, 1-10 micrograms/ml) leads to a significant but transient reduction of chloroplast speed within the first 60 min, as the actin network breaks down into small foci. Within the next 1 to 3 h of treatment, these foci segregate into massive clusters where chloroplasts remain immobilized. At the same time, chloroplast movement recovers in other areas of the cell. This recovery coincides with the reappearance of actin filament bundles in these cell regions. The MT cytoskeleton is not significantly affected by CD. These data are inconsistent with a mechanism of chloroplast movement in Bryopsis based solely on either MTs or actin, but instead they suggest an intimate interaction of both cytoskeletal networks in maintaining the spatial organization of the cytoplasm and in supporting chloroplast movement.  相似文献   

11.
Local irradiation of the alga Vaucheria sessilis (Vauch.) D.C. with blue light, which stimulates cortical fiber reticulation and chloroplast aggregation (M.R. Blatt and W.R. Briggs, 1980, Planta 147, 355–362), also induces an outward-directed current from the irradiated region of the cell. This current appears in conjunction with cortical fiber reticulation and precedes chloroplast aggregation. The current is not photosynthetic in origin, as indicated by experiments with 3(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethyl urea and carbonyl-cyanide-m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP). It shows a wavelength-dependence similar to that of chloroplast aggregation and reaches a maximum of 500 nA cm-2 with saturating light intensities. The current is not dependent upon the presence of Na+, K+, or Cl- in a test medium containing only Na+, K+, Ca2+, and Cl-, but is inhibited, apparently nonspecifically, in the absence of external calcium. Both the light-induced current and chloroplast aggregation are stimulated by increases in the external KCl concentration and are inhibited by sub-micromolar concentrations of CCCP or by external pHs below approximately 5.5. We suggest that blue light stimulates the local extrusion of cations, possibly of protons, at the plasma membrane, an event which may act to destabilize the cortical fibers in Vaucheria, disrupt cytoplasmic streaming, and eventually lead to organelle aggregation in the light.C.I.W.-D.P.B. Publication No. 712  相似文献   

12.

Background

The mechanism of the light-dependent movements of chloroplasts is based on actin and myosin but its details are largely unknown. The movements are activated by blue light in terrestrial angiosperms. The aim of the present study was to determine the role of myosin associated with the chloroplast surface in the light-induced chloroplast responses in Arabidopsis thaliana. The localization of myosins was investigated under blue light intensities generating avoidance and accumulation responses of chloroplasts. The localization was compared in wild type plants and in phot2 mutant lacking the avoidance response.

Results

Wild type and phot2 mutant plants were irradiated with strong (36 µEm−2s−1) and/or weak (0.8 µEm−2s−1) blue light. The leaf tissue was immunolabeled with antimyosin antibodies. Different arrangements of myosins were observed in the mesophyll depending on the fluence rate in wild type plants. In tissue irradiated with weak blue light myosins were associated with chloroplast envelopes. In contrast, in tissue irradiated with strong blue light chloroplasts were almost myosin-free. The effect did not occur in red light and in the phot2 mutant.

Conclusions

Myosin displacement is blue light specific, i.e., it is associated with the activation of a specific blue-light photoreceptor. We suggest that the reorganization of myosins is essential for chloroplast movement. Myosins appear to be the final step of the signal transduction pathway starting with phototropin2 and leading to chloroplast movements.Key Words: Arabidopsis, blue light, chloroplast movements, myosins, phototropins  相似文献   

13.
Chloroplast photorelocation movement towards weak light and away from strong light is essential for plants to adapt to the fluctuation of ambient light conditions. In the previous study, we showed that blue light receptor phototropins mediated blue light-induced chloroplast movement in Arabidopsis by regulating short actin filaments localized at the chloroplast periphery (cp-actin filaments) rather than actin cables in the cytoplasm. However, the signaling pathway for the chloroplast photorelocation movement is still unclear. We also identified JAC1 (J-domain protein required for chloroplast accumulation response 1) as an essential component for the accumulation response and dark positioning in Arabidopsis. We recently determined the crystal structure of the J-domain of JAC1. The JAC1 J-domain has a positively charged surface, which forms a putative interface with the Hsc70 chaperone by analogy to that of bovine auxilin. Furthermore, the mutation of the highly conserved HPD motif in the JAC1 J-domain impaired the in vivo activity of JAC1. These data suggest that JAC1 cochaperone activity with HSC70 is essential for chloroplast photorelocation movement.Key words: Arabidopsis, auxilin, blue light, clathrin, endocytosis, J-domain, organelle movement, phototropin  相似文献   

14.
Chloroplast movement in Alocasia macrorrhiza   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Chloroplast movements in a rainforest understory plant Alocasia macrorrhiza (L.) G. Don are striking, creating changes in leaf transmittance that are visible to the naked eye. We have characterized the light requirements for these changes and the resulting changes in light penetration to different cell layers within the leaf and through the entire thickness of the leaf. Plants were grown either in a relatively constant, growth-chamber environment or in a variable, greenhouse environment. Irradiance-response curves for chloroplast movement were the same for both groups of plants, saturating at about 1 000 μmol m−2 s−1, though only the greenhouse-grown plants normally encountered light sufficient to drive the movement. Chloroplast movement caused changes in whole-leaf transmittance on the order of a few percent across the entire visible spectrum. Transmittance changes were larger within the leaf, especially directly under the palisade layer. Chloroplast movement could be manipulated experimentally by removing blue wavelengths from the spectrum of incident light or by treating with cytochalasin D.  相似文献   

15.
孙铭明  靳硕  刘祥林  何奕昆 《遗传》2006,28(6):754-760
种子植物含有5个已分离的光受体和至少1个未鉴定的蓝光/紫外光-A受体。隐花色素(CRY1、CRY2和CRY3) 调节植物的生长发育,而向光蛋白(PHOT1和PHOT2) 调节植物对光的营养反应。黄素可以吸收蓝光和紫外光-A,是生色团。对这些光受体的结构和作用模式已了解很多。苔藓植物小立碗藓中含有2个已分离的隐花色素(CRY1a和CRY1b),负责调节侧枝形成和生长素代谢;有4个向光蛋白(PHOTA1,PHOTA2,PHOTB1,PHOTB2) 调节叶绿体的运动。苔藓细胞内蓝光/紫外光-A刺激引发的信号转导有Ca2+参与。  相似文献   

16.
Blue light-induced chloroplast relocation   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
Chloroplast relocation movement is induced by blue light in most plants tested. Under weak light, chloroplasts move toward a brighter area in a cell (called low-fluence-rate response or accumulation movement), but they avoid strong light and move away from the light (called high-fluence-rate response or avoidance movement). Recently, mutants deficient in the chloroplast avoidance movement were isolated from Arabidopsis thaliana. The results of mutant analyses revealed that the phototropin photoreceptors phot1 and phot2 both control chloroplast accumulation while phot2 alone controls the avoidance movements.  相似文献   

17.
In mesophyll cells of the water plant Lemna trisulca L. chloroplasts redistribute in response to blue light. In the present study it is shown that an actin depolymerizing agent cytochalasin D, a crosslinker of actin subunits in F-actin m-maleimidobenzoic acid N-hydroxysuccinimide ester (MBS) as well as N-ethylmaleimide (NEM)—a sulfhydryl group reagent, are potent inhibitors of these blue light-induced chloroplast movements in Lemna. Extraction with cold, buffered glycerol solution preserves light-induced chloroplast arrangements within cells producing permeabilized cell models. ‘Reactivation’ of these cell models by Mg-ATP results in remarkable movements which can be inhibited by treatment with NEM and cytochalasin D. Immunofluorescence microscopy demonstrates that a component which is associated with isolated Lemna chloroplasts cross-reacts with antibodies directed against bovine myosin. These results indicate that a contractile actomyosin system is involved in blue light-induced chloroplast movements in Lemna and a putative motor protein, similar to myosin, is associated with the surface of Lemna chloroplasts.  相似文献   

18.
Chloroplast movements are among the mechanisms allowing plants to cope with changes in their environment. Chloroplasts accumulate at illuminated cell areas under weak light while they avoid areas exposed to strong light. These directional responses may be controlled by blue and/or red light, depending on the plant group. In terrestrial angiosperms only the blue light perceived by phototropins is active. The last decade has seen a rapid development of studies on the mechanism of directional chloroplast movements, which started with an identification of the photoreceptors. A forward genetic approach has been used to identify the components which control chloroplast movements. This review summarizes the current state of research into the signalling pathways which lead to chloroplast responses. First, the molecular properties of phototropins are presented, followed by a characterization both of proteins which are active downstream of phototropins and of secondary messengers. Finally, cross-talk between light signalling involved in chloroplast movements and other signalling pathways is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
We have reported in a previous paper that dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) induces the formation of huge bundles of actin filaments in the nuclei of Dictyostelium mucoroides. The present study was performed to provide electron microscope data on the induction of nuclear actin bundles, illustrating both their formation and their reversion, as well as on the effects of various factors on the induction. The large nuclear bundles of actin appeared after 20--30 min of treatment with 10% DMSO. A DMSO concentration of 5 or 10% was optimal for the induction of the bundles. The nuclear actin bundle reverted to the original morphology within 5 min after removing DMSO. Induction of nuclear actin bundles was inhibited by Mg++ and low temperatures, but not by Na+, K+, Ca++, ATP, 3'5'-cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP), phosphate buffer, or cytochalasin B. Neither NaN3 nor cycloheximide totally inhibited the induction of the bundles.  相似文献   

20.
Photoorientation of chloroplasts mediated by phytochrome and blue light-absorbing pigment in protonemal cells of the fernAdiantum was studied by use of inhibitors of the cytoskeleton and was analyzed with a video-tracking system. The photoorientation responses were inhibited by cytochalasin B and by N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) but not by colchicine, suggesting that the photomovement depends on the actomyosin system. In the dark, chloroplasts moved randomly, being independent of one another. After induction of photoorientation by polarized red light, most chloroplasts that had been located at the margin of cells moved almost perpendicularly to the cell axis toward the site of photoorientation. This type of movement was hardly ever observed in the dark. Under polarized blue light, such specific movements were less evident but were still observed in the case of a few chloroplasts. After photoorientation was complete, chloroplasts still moved in random directions but their mobility was lower than that in the dark, indicating the presence of some anchoring mechanism. When EGTA was applied, photoorientation was inhibited but this inhibition was overcome by the addition of CaCl2. Video-tracking of chloroplasts in the dark revealed that the mobility of chloroplasts was higher in medium with EGTA than in medium with EGTA plus CaCl2 and that many of the chloroplasts moved jerkily in the medium with EGTA. This change in the nature of movements was also seen under polarized light, resulting in the disturbance of photoorientation. These results indicate that the inhibition of photoorientation at low concentrations of Ca2+ ions may be due to change in the nature of chloroplast movement.  相似文献   

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