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1.
The actin cytoskeleton is a key target for signaling networks and plays a central role in translating signals into cellular responses in eukaryotic cells. Self-incompatibility (SI) is an important mechanism responsible for preventing self-fertilization. The SI system of Papaver rhoeas pollen involves a Ca2+-dependent signaling network, including massive actin depolymerization as one of the earliest cellular responses, followed by the formation of large actin foci. However, no analysis of these structures, which appear to be aggregates of filamentous (F-)actin based on phalloidin staining, has been carried out to date. Here, we characterize and quantify the formation of F-actin foci in incompatible Papaver pollen tubes over time. The F-actin foci increase in size over time, and we provide evidence that their formation requires actin polymerization. Once formed, these SI-induced structures are unusually stable, being resistant to treatments with latrunculin B. Furthermore, their formation is associated with changes in the intracellular localization of two actin-binding proteins, cyclase-associated protein and actin-depolymerizing factor. Two other regulators of actin dynamics, profilin and fimbrin, do not associate with the F-actin foci. This study provides, to our knowledge, the first insights into the actin-binding proteins and mechanisms involved in the formation of these intriguing structures, which appear to be actively formed during the SI response.The ability to perceive and integrate signals into networks is essential for all eukaryotic cells. The actin cytoskeleton is a major target and integrator of signaling networks in eukaryotic cells. In plants, many extracellular stimuli lead to rapid structural changes in the actin cytoskeleton (Staiger, 2000; Hussey et al., 2006). Although many of the signaling intermediates that regulate actin dynamics are well defined in animal cells and yeast (Iden and Collard, 2008; Thomas et al., 2009), considerably less is known for plants. However, it is generally accepted that actin-binding proteins (ABPs) function as transducers of cellular stimuli into changes in cellular architecture (Hussey et al., 2006; Staiger and Blanchoin, 2006; Thomas et al., 2009). This includes three abundant monomer-binding proteins, profilin, actin-depolymerizing factor (ADF), and cyclase-associated protein (CAP), which function synergistically to stimulate actin turnover in vitro (Chaudhry et al., 2007). Bundling and cross-linking proteins, such as fimbrin, function to stabilize actin filaments into higher order structures (Kovar et al., 2000b; Thomas et al., 2009). These and other regulators of actin turnover are likely targets for signal-mediated changes in actin architecture in response to biotic and abiotic stresses.Self-incompatibility (SI) is a genetically controlled system to prevent self-fertilization in flowering plants. SI is controlled by a multiallelic S-locus; S-specific pollen rejection results from the interaction of pollen S- and pistil S-determinants that have matching alleles (Franklin-Tong, 2008). In Papaver rhoeas, the pistil S-determinants (previously called S proteins, recently renamed PrsS; Foote et al., 1994; Wheeler et al., 2009) act as ligands, interacting with the pollen S-determinant PrpS (Wheeler et al., 2009), triggering increases in calcium influx and increases in cytosol-free calcium in incompatible pollen (Franklin-Tong et al., 1993, 1997, 2002). The Ca2+-mediated signaling network results in rapid inhibition of incompatible pollen tube growth and triggers programmed cell death (PCD) involving several caspase-like activities (Thomas and Franklin-Tong, 2004; Bosch and Franklin-Tong, 2007).The SI response and the Ca2+-signaling pathway in Papaver stimulate rapid reorganization and massive depolymerization of actin filaments in incompatible pollen tubes (Geitmann et al., 2000; Snowman et al., 2002). Moreover, it has been demonstrated that changes in actin dynamics are necessary and sufficient for PCD initiation (Thomas et al., 2006). Intriguingly, there seems to be cross talk between actin and microtubule cytoskeletons in mediating PCD in pollen (Poulter et al., 2008). Thus, there is compelling evidence for signaling to the actin cytoskeleton in mediating PCD during SI (for a recent review, see Bosch et al., 2008). SI also triggers further changes to the actin cytoskeleton. Small F-actin foci are formed, and these increase in size within the first hour after SI stimulus and remain observable for at least 3 h (Geitmann et al., 2000; Snowman et al., 2002). These aggregates contain F-actin, as they stain with rhodamine phalloidin. The formation of the small actin foci and the larger F-actin structures occurs after cessation of pollen tube growth, so they are unlikely to play a role in pollen inhibition.Punctate F-actin foci are unusual structures, and there appears to be a paucity of examples of their formation in any eukaryotic cell type. Actin patches are associated with endocytosis in normally growing yeast (Pelham and Chang, 2001; Kaksonen et al., 2003; Ayscough, 2004; Young et al., 2004), and “actin nodules” are formed during filipodia formation in platelets (Calaminus et al., 2008). Actin bodies are formed when yeast cells enter the quiescent cycle (Sagot et al., 2006), and Hirano bodies are observed in animal cells and Dictyostelium undergoing stress or in the disease state (Hirano, 1994; Maselli et al., 2002). Large star-shaped actin arrays have been observed in pollen tubes growing in vivo (Lord, 1992), but their nature and function are unknown. When we first described the SI-induced structures, we avoided the terminology of patches or bodies, as it was not known whether they were either structurally or functionally comparable to any of these previously characterized actin-based structures.Studies on the SI-mediated actin responses to date have focused on the initial phase of depolymerization, and no analysis of what is involved in the formation of the large punctate actin foci has been made. Here, we show that the formation of punctate actin foci requires actin polymerization, but once formed they are unusually stable. Moreover, we find that their formation correlates with changes in the intracellular localization of two ABPs, CAP and ADF, but not with two other key regulators of actin dynamics, profilin and fimbrin.  相似文献   

2.
In lily (Lilium formosanum) pollen tubes, pectin, a major component of the cell wall, is delivered through regulated exocytosis. The targeted transport and secretion of the pectin-containing vesicles may be controlled by the cortical actin fringe at the pollen tube apex. Here, we address the role of the actin fringe using three different inhibitors of growth: brefeldin A, latrunculin B, and potassium cyanide. Brefeldin A blocks membrane trafficking and inhibits exocytosis in pollen tubes; it also leads to the degradation of the actin fringe and the formation of an aggregate of filamentous actin at the base of the clear zone. Latrunculin B, which depolymerizes filamentous actin, markedly slows growth but allows focused pectin deposition to continue. Of note, the locus of deposition shifts frequently and correlates with changes in the direction of growth. Finally, potassium cyanide, an electron transport chain inhibitor, briefly stops growth while causing the actin fringe to completely disappear. Pectin deposition continues but lacks focus, instead being delivered in a wide arc across the pollen tube tip. These data support a model in which the actin fringe contributes to the focused secretion of pectin to the apical cell wall and, thus, to the polarized growth of the pollen tube.Pollen tubes provide an excellent model for studying the molecular and physiological processes that lead to polarized cell growth. Because all plant cell growth results from the regulated yielding of the cell wall in response to uniform turgor pressure (Winship et al., 2010; Rojas et al., 2011), the cell wall of the pollen tube must yield only at a particular spot: the cell apex, or tip. To accomplish the extraordinary growth rates seen in many species, and to balance the thinning of the apical wall due to rapid expansion, the pollen tube delivers prodigious amounts of wall material, largely methoxylated pectins, to the tip in a coordinated manner. Recent studies suggest that the targeted exocytosis increases the extensibility of the cell wall matrix at the tip, which then yields to the existing turgor pressure, permitting the tip to extend or grow (McKenna et al., 2009; Hepler et al., 2013). There are many factors that influence exocytosis in growing pollen tubes; in this study, we investigate the role of the apical actin fringe.For many years, it has been known that an actin structure exists near the pollen tube tip, yet its exact form has been a matter of some contention (Kost et al., 1998; Lovy-Wheeler et al., 2005; Wilsen et al., 2006; Cheung et al., 2008; Vidali et al., 2009; Qu et al., 2013). The apical actin structure has been variously described as a fringe, a basket, a collar, or a mesh. Using rapid freeze fixation of lily (Lilium formosanum) pollen tubes followed by staining with anti-actin antibodies, the structure appears as a dense fringe of longitudinally oriented microfilaments, beginning 1 to 5 µm behind the apex and extending 5 to 10 µm basally. The actin filaments are positioned in the cortical cytoplasm close to the plasma membrane (Lovy-Wheeler et al., 2005). More recently, we used Lifeact-mEGFP, a probe that consistently labels this palisade of longitudinally oriented microfilaments in living cells (Vidali et al., 2009; Fig. 1A, left column). For the purposes of this study, we will refer to this apical organization of actin as a fringe.Open in a separate windowFigure 1.The actin fringe and the thickened pollen tube tip wall are stable, although dynamic, structures during pollen tube growth. A, The left column shows a pollen tube transformed with Lifeact-mEGFP imaged with a spinning-disc confocal microscope. Maximal projections from every 15 s are shown. The right column shows epifluorescence images of a pollen tube stained with PI. Again, images captured every 15 s are shown. Bars = 10 μm. B, The data from the pollen tube in A expressing Lifeact-mEGFP were subjected to kymograph analysis using an 11-pixel strip along the image’s midline. C, The first three frames from the pollen tube in A and B were assigned the colors red, blue, and green, respectively, and then overlaid. Areas with white show the overlap of all three. The fringe is stable, but most of its constituent actin is not shared between frames.Many lines of evidence demonstrate that actin is required for pollen tube growth. Latrunculin B (LatB), which blocks actin polymerization, inhibits pollen tube growth and disrupts the cortical fringe at concentrations as low as 2 nm. Higher concentrations are needed to block pollen grain germination and cytoplasmic streaming (Gibbon et al., 1999; Vidali et al., 2001). Actin-binding proteins, including actin depolymerizing factor-cofilin, formin, profilin, and villin, and signaling proteins, such as Rho-of-Plants (ROP) GTPases and their effectors (ROP interacting crib-containing proteins [RICs]), also have been shown to play critical roles in growth and actin dynamics (Fu et al., 2001; Vidali et al., 2001; Allwood et al., 2002; Chen et al., 2002; Cheung and Wu, 2004; McKenna et al., 2004; Gu et al., 2005; Ye et al., 2009; Cheung et al., 2010; Staiger et al., 2010; Zhang et al., 2010a; Qu et al., 2013; van Gisbergen and Bezanilla, 2013).Our understanding of the process of exocytosis and pollen tube elongation has been influenced by ultrastructural images of pollen tube tips, which reveal an apical zone dense with vesicles (Cresti et al., 1987; Heslop-Harrison, 1987; Lancelle et al., 1987; Steer and Steer, 1989; Lancelle and Hepler, 1992; Derksen et al., 1995). It has long been assumed that these represent exocytotic vesicles destined to deliver new cell wall material. This model of polarized secretion has been challenged in recent years in studies using FM dyes. Two groups have suggested that exocytosis occurs in a circumpolar annular zone (Bove et al., 2008; Zonia and Munnik, 2008). However, other studies, using fluorescent beads attached to the cell surface, indicate that the maximal rate of expansion, and of necessity the greatest deposition of cell wall material, occurs at the apex along the polar axis of the tube (Dumais et al., 2006; Rojas et al., 2011). Similarly, our experiments with propidium iodide (PI; McKenna et al., 2009; Rounds et al., 2011a) and pectin methyl esterase fused to GFP (McKenna et al., 2009) show that the wall is thickest at the very tip and suggest that wall materials are deposited at the polar axis, consistent with the initial model of exocytosis (Lancelle and Hepler, 1992). Experiments using tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) pollen and a receptor-like kinase fused to GFP also indicate that exocytosis occurs largely at the apical polar axis (Lee et al., 2008).Many researchers argue that apical actin is critical for exocytosis (Lee et al., 2008; Cheung et al., 2010; Qin and Yang, 2011; Yan and Yang, 2012). More specifically, recent work suggests that the fringe participates in targeting vesicles and thereby contributes to changes in growth direction (Kroeger et al., 2009; Bou Daher and Geitmann, 2011; Dong et al., 2012). In this article, using three different inhibitors, namely brefeldin A (BFA), LatB, and potassium cyanide (KCN), we test the hypothesis that polarized pectin deposition in pollen tubes requires the actin fringe. Our data show that during normal growth, pectin deposition is focused to the apex along the polar axis of the tube. However, when growth is modulated, different end points arise, depending on the inhibitor. With BFA, exocytosis stops completely, and the fringe disappears, with the appearance of an actin aggregate at the base of the clear zone. LatB, as shown previously (Vidali et al., 2009), incompletely degrades the actin fringe and leaves a rim of F-actin around the apical dome. Here, we show that, in the presence of LatB, pectin deposition continues, with the focus of this activity shifting in position frequently as the slowly elongating pollen tube changes direction. With KCN, the actin fringe degrades completely, but exocytosis continues and becomes depolarized, with pectin deposits now occurring across a wide arc of the apical dome. This dome often swells as deposition continues, only stopping once normal growth resumes. Taken together, these results support a role for the actin fringe in controlling the polarity of growth in the lily pollen tube.  相似文献   

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Pollen tube growth is an essential aspect of plant reproduction because it is the mechanism through which nonmotile sperm cells are delivered to ovules, thus allowing fertilization to occur. A pollen tube is a single cell that only grows at the tip, and this tip growth has been shown to depend on actin filaments. It is generally assumed that myosin-driven movements along these actin filaments are required to sustain the high growth rates of pollen tubes. We tested this conjecture by examining seed set, pollen fitness, and pollen tube growth for knockout mutants of five of the six myosin XI genes expressed in pollen of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). Single mutants had little or no reduction in overall fertility, whereas double mutants of highly similar pollen myosins had greater defects in pollen tube growth. In particular, myo11c1 myo11c2 pollen tubes grew more slowly than wild-type pollen tubes, which resulted in reduced fitness compared with the wild type and a drastic reduction in seed set. Golgi stack and peroxisome movements were also significantly reduced, and actin filaments were less organized in myo11c1 myo11c2 pollen tubes. Interestingly, the movement of yellow fluorescent protein-RabA4d-labeled vesicles and their accumulation at pollen tube tips were not affected in the myo11c1 myo11c2 double mutant, demonstrating functional specialization among myosin isoforms. We conclude that class XI myosins are required for organelle motility, actin organization, and optimal growth of pollen tubes.Pollen tubes play a crucial role in flowering plant reproduction. A pollen tube is the vegetative cell of the male gametophyte. It undergoes rapid polarized growth in order to transport the two nonmotile sperm cells to an ovule. This rapid growth is supported by the constant delivery of secretory vesicles to the pollen tube tip, where they fuse with the plasma membrane to enlarge the cell (Bove et al., 2008; Bou Daher and Geitmann, 2011; Chebli et al., 2013). This vesicle delivery is assumed to be driven by the rapid movement of organelles and cytosol throughout the cell, a process that is commonly referred to as cytoplasmic streaming (Shimmen, 2007). Cytoplasmic streaming in angiosperm pollen tubes forms a reverse fountain: organelles moving toward the tip travel along the cell membrane, while organelles moving away from the tip travel through the center of the tube (Heslop-Harrison and Heslop-Harrison, 1990; Derksen et al., 2002). Drug treatments revealed that pollen tube cytoplasmic streaming and tip growth depend on actin filaments (Franke et al., 1972; Mascarenhas and Lafountain, 1972; Heslop-Harrison and Heslop-Harrison, 1989; Parton et al., 2001; Vidali et al., 2001). Curiously, very low concentrations of actin polymerization inhibitors can prevent growth without completely stopping cytoplasmic streaming, indicating that cytoplasmic streaming is not sufficient for pollen tube growth (Vidali et al., 2001). At the same time, however, drug treatments have not been able to specifically inhibit cytoplasmic streaming; thus, it is unknown whether cytoplasmic streaming is necessary for pollen tube growth.Myosins are actin-based motor proteins that actively transport organelles throughout the cell and are responsible for cytoplasmic streaming in plants (Shimmen, 2007; Sparkes, 2011; Madison and Nebenführ, 2013). Myosins can be grouped into at least 30 different classes based on amino acid sequence similarity of the motor domain, of which only class VIII and class XI myosins are found in plants (Odronitz and Kollmar, 2007; Sebé-Pedrós et al., 2014). Class VIII and class XI myosins have similar domain architecture. The N-terminal motor domain binds actin and hydrolyzes ATP (Tominaga et al., 2003) and is often preceded by an SH3-like (for sarcoma homology3) domain of unknown function. The neck domain, containing IQ (Ile-Gln) motifs, acts as a lever arm and is bound by calmodulin-like proteins that mediate calcium regulation of motor activity (Kinkema and Schiefelbein, 1994; Yokota et al., 1999; Tominaga et al., 2012). The coiled-coil domain facilitates dimerization (Li and Nebenführ, 2008), and the globular tail functions as the cargo-binding domain (Li and Nebenführ, 2007). Class VIII myosins also contain an N-terminal extension, MyTH8 (for myosin tail homology8; Mühlhausen and Kollmar, 2013), and class XI myosins contain a dilute domain in the C-terminal globular tail (Kinkema and Schiefelbein, 1994; Odronitz and Kollmar, 2007; Sebé-Pedrós et al., 2014). Recently, Mühlhausen and Kollmar (2013) proposed a new nomenclature for plant myosins based on a comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of all known plant myosins that clearly identifies paralogs and makes interspecies comparisons easier (Madison and Nebenführ, 2013).The localization of class VIII myosins, as determined by immunolocalization and the expression of fluorescently labeled full-length or tail constructs, has implicated these myosins in cell-to-cell communication, cell division, and endocytosis in angiosperms and moss (Reichelt et al., 1999; Van Damme et al., 2004; Avisar et al., 2008; Golomb et al., 2008; Sattarzadeh et al., 2008; Yuan et al., 2011; Haraguchi et al., 2014; Wu and Bezanilla, 2014). On the other hand, class XI myosin mutants have been studied extensively in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), which revealed roles for class XI myosins in cell expansion and organelle motility (Ojangu et al., 2007, 2012; Peremyslov et al., 2008, 2010; Prokhnevsky et al., 2008; Park and Nebenführ, 2013). Very few studies have examined the reproductive tissues of class XI myosin mutants. In rice (Oryza sativa), one myosin XI was shown to be required for normal pollen development under short-day conditions (Jiang et al., 2007). In Arabidopsis, class XI myosins are required for stigmatic papillae elongation, which is necessary for normal fertility (Ojangu et al., 2012). Even though pollen tubes of myosin XI mutants have not been examined, the tip growth of another tip-growing plant cell has been thoroughly examined in myosin mutants. Root hairs are tubular outgrowths of root epidermal cells that function to increase the surface area of the root for water and nutrient uptake. Two myosin XI mutants have shorter root hairs, of which the myo11e1 (xik; myosin XI K) mutation has been shown to be associated with a slower root hair growth rate and reduced actin dynamics compared with the wild type (Ojangu et al., 2007; Peremyslov et al., 2008; Park and Nebenführ, 2013). Higher order mutants have a further reduction in root hair growth and have altered actin organization (Prokhnevsky et al., 2008; Peremyslov et al., 2010). Disruption of actin organization was also observed in myosin XI mutants of the moss Physcomitrella patens (Vidali et al., 2010), where these motors appear to coordinate the formation of actin filaments in the apical dome of the tip-growing protonemal cells (Furt et al., 2013). Interestingly, organelle movements in P. patens are much slower than in angiosperms and do not seem to depend on myosin motors (Furt et al., 2012).The function of myosins in pollen tubes is currently not known, although it is generally assumed that they are responsible for the prominent cytoplasmic streaming observed in these cells by associating with organelle surfaces (Kohno and Shimmen, 1988; Shimmen, 2007). Myosin from lily (Lilium longiflorum) pollen tubes was isolated biochemically and shown to move actin filaments with a speed of about 8 µm s−1 (Yokota and Shimmen, 1994) in a calcium-dependent manner (Yokota et al., 1999). Antibodies against this myosin labeled small structures in both the tip region and along the shank (Yokota et al., 1995), consistent with the proposed role of this motor in moving secretory vesicles to the apex.In Arabidopsis, six of 13 myosin XI genes are highly expressed in pollen: Myo11A1 (XIA), Myo11A2 (XID), Myo11B1 (XIB), Myo11C1 (XIC), Myo11C2 (XIE), and Myo11D (XIJ; Peremyslov et al., 2011; Sparkes, 2011). The original gene names (Reddy and Day, 2001) are given in parentheses. Myo11D is the only short-tailed myosin XI in Arabidopsis (Mühlhausen and Kollmar, 2013) and lacks the typical myosin XI globular tail involved in cargo binding (Li and Nebenführ, 2007). The remaining genes have the same domain architecture as the conventional class XI myosins that have been shown to be involved in the elongation of trichomes, stigmatic papillae, and root hairs (Ojangu et al., 2007, 2012; Peremyslov et al., 2008, 2010; Prokhnevsky et al., 2008; Park and Nebenführ, 2013). Therefore, we predicted that these five pollen-expressed, conventional class XI myosins are required for the rapid elongation of pollen tubes. In this study, we examined transfer DNA (T-DNA) insertion mutants of Myo11A1, Myo11A2, Myo11B1, Myo11C1, and Myo11C2 for defects in fertility and pollen tube growth. Organelle motility and actin organization were also examined in myo11c1 myo11c2 pollen tubes.  相似文献   

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Initial pollen-pistil interactions in the Brassicaceae are regulated by rapid communication between pollen grains and stigmatic papillae and are fundamentally important, as they are the first step toward successful fertilization. The goal of this study was to examine the requirement of exocyst subunits, which function in docking secretory vesicles to sites of polarized secretion, in the context of pollen-pistil interactions. One of the exocyst subunit genes, EXO70A1, was previously identified as an essential factor in the stigma for the acceptance of compatible pollen in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and Brassica napus. We hypothesized that EXO70A1, along with other exocyst subunits, functions in the Brassicaceae dry stigma to deliver cargo-bearing secretory vesicles to the stigmatic papillar plasma membrane, under the pollen attachment site, for pollen hydration and pollen tube entry. Here, we investigated the functions of exocyst complex genes encoding the remaining seven subunits, SECRETORY3 (SEC3), SEC5, SEC6, SEC8, SEC10, SEC15, and EXO84, in Arabidopsis stigmas following compatible pollinations. Stigma-specific RNA-silencing constructs were used to suppress the expression of each exocyst subunit individually. The early postpollination stages of pollen grain adhesion, pollen hydration, pollen tube penetration, seed set, and overall fertility were analyzed in the transgenic lines to evaluate the requirement of each exocyst subunit. Our findings provide comprehensive evidence that all eight exocyst subunits are necessary in the stigma for the acceptance of compatible pollen. Thus, this work implicates a fully functional exocyst complex as a component of the compatible pollen response pathway to promote pollen acceptance.In flowering plants, sexual reproduction occurs as a result of constant communication between the male gametophyte and the female reproductive organ, from the initial acceptance of compatible pollen to final step of successful fertilization (for review, see Beale and Johnson, 2013; Dresselhaus and Franklin-Tong, 2013; Higashiyama and Takeuchi, 2015). In the Brassicaceae, the stigmas that present a receptive surface for pollen are categorized as dry and covered with unicellular papillae (Heslop-Harrison and Shivanna, 1977). Communication is initiated rapidly following contact of a pollen grain with a stigmatic papilla, as the role of the papillae is to regulate the early cellular responses leading to compatible pollen germination. The basal compatible pollen recognition response also presents a barrier to foreign pollen or is inhibited with self-incompatible pollen (for review, see Dickinson, 1995; Hiscock and Allen, 2008; Chapman and Goring, 2010; Indriolo et al., 2014b).The initial adhesive interaction between the pollen grain and the papilla cell in the Brassicaceae is mediated by the exine of the pollen grain and the surface of the stigmatic papilla (Preuss et al., 1993; Zinkl et al., 1999). A stronger connection results between the adhered pollen grain and the stigmatic papilla with the formation of a lipid-protein interface (foot) derived from the pollen coat and the stigmatic papillar surface (Mattson et al., 1974; Stead et al., 1980; Gaude and Dumas, 1986; Elleman and Dickinson, 1990; Elleman et al., 1992; Preuss et al., 1993; Mayfield et al., 2001). It is at this point that a Brassicaceae-specific recognition of compatible pollen is proposed to occur (Hülskamp et al., 1995; Pruitt, 1999), though the nature of this recognition system is not clearly defined. Two stigma-specific Brassica oleracea glycoproteins, the S-Locus Glycoprotein and S-Locus Related1 (SLR1) protein, play a role in compatible pollen adhesion (Luu et al., 1997, 1999), potentially through interactions with the pollen coat proteins, PCP-A1 and SLR1-BP, respectively (Doughty et al., 1998; Takayama et al., 2000). The simultaneous recognition of self-incompatible pollen would also take place at this stage (for review, see Dresselhaus and Franklin-Tong, 2013; Indriolo et al., 2014b; Sawada et al., 2014). Thus, this interface not only provides a strengthened bond between the pollen grain and stigmatic papilla, but likely facilitates the interaction of signaling proteins from both partners to promote specific cellular responses in the stigmatic papilla toward the pollen grain.One response regulated by these interactions is the release of water from the stigmatic papilla to the adhered compatible pollen grain to enable the pollen grain to rehydrate, germinate, and produce a pollen tube (Zuberi and Dickinson, 1985; Preuss et al., 1993). Upon hydration, the pollen tube emerges at the site of pollen-papilla contact and penetrates the stigma surface between the plasma membrane and the overlaying cell wall (Elleman et al., 1992; Kandasamy et al., 1994). Pollen tube entry into the stigmatic surface represents a second barrier, selecting compatible pollen tubes. Subsequently, the compatible pollen tubes traverse down to the base of the stigma, enter the transmitting tract, and grow intracellularly toward ovules for fertilization. Pollen-pistil interactions at these later stages are also highly regulated (for review, see Beale and Johnson, 2013; Dresselhaus and Franklin-Tong, 2013; Higashiyama and Takeuchi, 2015).EXO70A1, a subunit of the exocyst, was identified as a factor involved in early pollen-stigma interactions, where it is required in the stigma for the acceptance of compatible pollen and inhibited by the self-incompatibility response (Samuel et al., 2009). Stigmas from the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) exo70A1 mutant display constitutive rejection of wild-type-compatible pollen (Samuel et al., 2009; Safavian et al., 2014). This stigmatic defect was rescued by the stigma-specific expression of an Red Fluorescent Protein (RFP):EXO70A1 transgene (Samuel et al., 2009) or partially rescued by providing a high relative humidity environment (Safavian et al., 2014). In addition, the stigma-specific expression of an EXO70A1 RNA interference construct in Brassica napus ‘Westar’ resulted in impaired compatible pollen acceptance and a corresponding reduction in seed production compared with compatible pollinations with wild-type B. napus ‘Westar’ pistils (Samuel et al., 2009). From these studies, EXO70A1 was found to be a critical component in stigmatic papillae to promote compatible pollen hydration and pollen tube entry through the stigma surface. One of the functions of the exocyst is to mediate polar secretion (for review, see Heider and Munson, 2012; Zárský et al., 2013; Synek et al., 2014). Consistent with this, previous studies have observed vesicle-like structures in proximity to the stigmatic papillar plasma membrane in response to compatible pollen in both Brassica spp. and Arabidopsis species (Elleman and Dickinson, 1990, 1996; Dickinson, 1995; Safavian and Goring, 2013; Indriolo et al., 2014a). The secretory activity is predicted to promote pollen hydration and pollen tube entry. As well, consistent with the proposed inhibition of EXO70A1 by the self-incompatibility pathway (Samuel et al., 2009), a complete absence or a significant reduction of vesicle-like structures at the stigmatic papillar plasma membrane was observed in the exo70A1 mutant and with self-incompatible pollen (Safavian and Goring, 2013; Indriolo et al., 2014a).The exocyst is a well-defined complex in yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) and animal systems, consisting of eight subunits, SEC3, SEC5, SEC6, SEC8, SEC10, SEC15, EXO70, and EXO84 (TerBush et al., 1996; Guo et al., 1999). Exocyst subunit mutants were first identified in yeast as secretory mutants displaying a cytosolic accumulation of secretory vesicles (Novick et al., 1980). Subsequent work defined roles for the exocyst in vesicle docking at target membranes in processes such as regulated secretion, polarized exocytosis, and cytokinesis to facilitate membrane fusion by Soluble NSF Attachment protein Receptor (SNARE) complexes (for review, see Heider and Munson, 2012; Liu and Guo, 2012). In plants, genes encoding all eight exocyst subunits have been identified, and many of these genes exist as multiple copies. For example, the Arabidopsis genome contains single copy genes for SEC6 and SEC8, two copies each for SECRETORY3 (SEC3), SEC5, SEC10, and SEC15, three EXO84 genes, and 23 EXO70 genes (Chong et al., 2010; Cvrčková et al., 2012; Vukašinović et al., 2014). Ultrastructural studies using electron tomography uncovered the existence of a structure resembling the exocyst in Arabidopsis (Otegui and Staehelin, 2004; Seguí-Simarro et al., 2004). Localization studies of specific Arabidopsis exocyst subunits also supported conserved roles in polarized exocytosis and cytokinesis in plants. Localization studies have shown EXO70, SEC6, and SEC8 at the growing tip of pollen tubes (Hála et al., 2008), EXO70A1 at the stigmatic papillar plasma membrane (Samuel et al., 2009), SEC3a, SEC6, SEC8, SEC15b, EXO70A1, and EXO84b at the root epidermal cell plasma membrane and developing cell plate (Fendrych et al., 2010, 2013; Wu et al., 2013; Zhang et al., 2013; Rybak et al., 2014), and SEC3a at the plasma membrane in the embryo and root hair (Zhang et al., 2013). Similar to the yeast exocyst mutants, vesicle accumulation has also been observed in the exo70A1 and exo84b mutants (Fendrych et al., 2010; Safavian and Goring, 2013). Taken together, these findings strongly support that plant exocyst subunits function in vivo in vesicle docking at sites of polarized secretion and cytokinesis (for review, see Zárský et al., 2013). In support of this, a recent study investigating Transport Protein Particle (TRAPP)II and exocyst complexes during cytokinesis in Arabidopsis has identified all eight exocyst components in immunoprecipitated complexes (SEC3a/SEC3b, SEC5a, SEC6, SEC8, SEC10, SEC15b, EXO70A1, EXO70H2, and EXO84b; Rybak et al., 2014).Several plant exocyst subunit genes have been implicated in biological processes that rely on regulated vesicle trafficking, where corresponding mutants have displayed a range of growth defects. At the cellular level, these phenotypes have been associated with decreased cell elongation and polar growth (Cole et al., 2005, 2014; Wen et al., 2005; Synek et al., 2006), defects in cytokinesis and cell plate formation (Fendrych et al., 2010; Wu et al., 2013; Rybak et al., 2014), and disrupted Pin-Formed (PIN) auxin efflux carrier recycling and polar auxin transport (Drdová et al., 2013). Several Arabidopsis subunit mutants display strong growth defects such as the sec3a mutant with an embryo-lethal phenotype (Zhang et al., 2013), sec6, sec8, and exo84b mutants with severely dwarfed phenotypes and defects in root growth (Fendrych et al., 2010; Wu et al., 2013; Cole et al., 2014), and exo70A1 with a milder dwarf phenotype (Synek et al., 2006). The Arabidopsis exo70A1 mutant has also been reported to have defects in root hair elongation, hypocotyl elongation, compatible pollen acceptance, seed coat deposition, and tracheary element differentiation (Synek et al., 2006; Samuel et al., 2009; Kulich et al., 2010; Li et al., 2013). Essential roles for other exocyst subunits include Arabidopsis SEC5a/SEC5b, SEC6, SEC8, and SEC15a/SEC15b in male gametophyte development and pollen tube growth (Cole et al., 2005; Hála et al., 2008; Wu et al., 2013), SEC8 in seed coat deposition (Kulich et al., 2010), SEC5a, SEC8, EXO70A1, and EXO84b in root meristem size and root cell elongation (Cole et al., 2014), and a maize (Zea mays) SEC3 homolog in root hair elongation (Wen et al., 2005). Finally, the Arabidopsis EXO70B1, EXO70B2, and EXO70H1 subunits have been implicated in plant defense responses (Pecenková et al., 2011; Stegmann et al., 2012; Kulich et al., 2013; Stegmann et al., 2013).Even with these detailed studies on the functions of exocyst subunits in plants, a systematic demonstration of the requirement of all eight exocyst subunits in a specific plant biological process is currently lacking. EXO70A1 was previously identified as an essential factor in the stigma for compatible pollen-pistil interactions in Arabidopsis and B. napus (Samuel et al., 2009), and we hypothesized that this protein functions as part of the exocyst complex to tether post-Golgi secretory vesicles to stigmatic papillar plasma membrane (Safavian and Goring, 2013). To provide support for the proposed biological role of the exocyst in the stigma for compatible pollen acceptance, we investigated the roles of the remaining seven subunits, SEC3, SEC5, SEC6, SEC8, SEC10, SEC15, and EXO84, in Arabidopsis stigmatic papillae. Given that some Arabidopsis exocyst subunits were previously determined to be essential at earlier growth stages, stigma-specific RNA-silencing constructs were used for each exocyst subunit, and the early postpollination stages were analyzed for these transgenic lines. Our collective data demonstrates that all eight exocyst subunits are required in the stigma for the early stages of compatible pollen-pistil interactions.  相似文献   

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As pollen tubes grow toward the ovary, they are in constant contact with the pistil extracellular matrix (ECM). ECM components are taken up during growth, and some pistil molecules exert their effect inside the pollen tube. For instance, the Nicotiana alata 120-kD glycoprotein (120K) is an abundant arabinogalactan protein that is taken up from the ECM; it has been detected in association with pollen tube vacuoles, but the transport pathway between these compartments is unknown. We recently identified a pollen C2 domain-containing protein (NaPCCP) that binds to the carboxyl-terminal domain of 120K. As C2 domain proteins mediate protein-lipid interactions, NaPCCP could function in intracellular transport of 120K in pollen tubes. Here, we describe binding studies showing that the NaPCCP C2 domain is functional and that binding is specific for phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate. Subcellular fractionation, immunolocalization, and live imaging results show that NaPCCP is associated with the plasma membrane and internal pollen tube vesicles. Colocalization between an NaPCCP∷green fluorescent protein fusion and internalized FM4-64 suggest an association with the endosomal system. NaPCCP localization is altered in pollen tubes rejected by the self-incompatibility mechanism, but our hypothesis is that it has a general function in the transport of endocytic cargo rather than a specific function in self-incompatibility. NaPCCP represents a bifunctional protein with both phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate- and arabinogalactan protein-binding domains. Therefore, it could function in the transport of pistil ECM proteins in the pollen tube endomembrane system.Angiosperm sexual reproduction requires pollen transfer to a receptive stigma followed by its hydration, germination, and pollen tube growth. Pollen tubes grow through the stigma and style toward the ovule, where the sperm cells are discharged for fertilization. Pollen tubes do not divide; rather, they extend through tip growth while periodically producing callose plugs, separating highly vacuolated distal regions from the actively growing tip (Taylor and Hepler, 1997). The tip region shows strong zonation. An apical region or clear zone, a subapical, organelle-rich zone, a nuclear zone, and a distal vacuolated zone or plug region that may extend several centimeters are easily recognized (Mascarenhas, 1993). Proper deposition of wall material and rapid tube extension require coordination between GTPase-regulated trafficking pathways, the cytoskeleton, signaling pathways, and oscillatory ion and water fluxes (Li et al., 1999; Fu et al., 2001; Zonia et al., 2002; Camacho and Malhó, 2003; Chen et al., 2003; de Graaf et al., 2005; Gu et al., 2005).Pollen tube endomembrane system dynamics are critical for growth: wall materials are deposited by exocytosis, and the membrane is recovered by endocytosis (Picton and Steer, 1983; Cheung and Wu, 2008). Exocytosis of material synthesized in the Golgi occurs near the tip (Cheung et al., 2002). Additional wall material is produced by membrane-bound callose synthase, but this occurs behind the tip (Brownfield et al., 2007). Distinct endocytosis zones have been identified by pulse-chase membrane labeling, observations of charged nanoparticles, and electron microscopy (Derksen et al., 1995; Moscatelli et al., 2007; Zonia and Munnik, 2008). Clathrin-independent endocytosis occurs at the pollen tube apex; endocytic vesicles clearly contribute to vesicle populations in the clear zone once thought to be composed entirely of exocytic vesicles (Moscatelli et al., 2007; Bove et al., 2008; Zonia and Munnik, 2008). Inhibitor studies suggest that clathrin-dependent endocytosis occurs in the organelle-rich zone a few micrometers back from the tip (Moscatelli et al., 2007). Furthermore, coated vesicles have been observed from 6 to 15 μm from the tip by electron microscopy (Derksen et al., 1995).Pollen-pistil interactions influence pollen tube growth either positively or negatively. Positive effects are evident from the observation that pollen tubes grow as much as 10 times faster and achieve much greater lengths in planta than in culture (Cheung et al., 2000). Self-incompatibility (SI) systems provide the best understood examples of negative effects. In SI, pollen-pistil interactions cause rejection of closely related pollen tubes (de Nettancourt, 2001).Arabinogalactan proteins (AGPs) secreted into the pistil extracellular matrix (ECM) play key roles in both positive and negative interactions, but the underlying molecular interactions with pollen tubes are just beginning to be understood. The transmitting tract-specific (TTS) glycoprotein (Cheung et al., 1995; Wu et al., 1995, 2000) and the 120-kD glycoprotein (120K; Hancock et al., 2005) are pistil AGPs implicated in pollination in Nicotiana. Both are abundant components of the pistil ECM (Cheung et al., 1995; Lind et al., 1996) and share a conserved Cys-rich C-terminal domain (CTD). TTS was first described in Nicotiana tabacum (i.e. NtTTS) as a pollen tube attractant. Pollen tubes grow toward TTS in culture, and its glycosylation levels progressively increase closer to the ovary (Cheung et al., 1995). Pollen tubes deglycosylate TTS, which suggests that TTS may act as a nutritive factor (Wu et al., 1995) and, thus, positively affect pollen tube growth.120K is implicated in SI in Nicotiana alata (Cruz-Garcia et al., 2005; Hancock et al., 2005), a species that displays S-RNase-based gametophytic SI (McClure et al., 1989). In SI, compatibility is controlled by the polymorphic S-locus; pollen is rejected if its S-haplotype matches either of the two S-haplotypes in the diploid pistil (de Nettancourt, 2001). Each S-haplotype is unique and encodes separate pollen- and pistil-specificity genes (Kao and Tsukamoto, 2004). S-RNases determine specificity on the pistil side and directly inhibit the growth of closely related pollen tubes (McClure et al., 1989). S-locus F-box proteins (SLF/SFB) control specificity on the pollen side (Sijacic et al., 2004). SLF/SFB proteins bind S-RNase in vitro and appear to form several distinct complexes with other pollen proteins (Qiao et al., 2004; Hua and Kao, 2006; Huang et al., 2006). SI, therefore, is a clear example of inhibitory pollen-pistil interactions: interaction between a pistil protein, S-RNase, and a pollen protein, SLF/SFB, determines compatibility. However, other pistil factors are also required for SI (McClure et al., 1999; Hancock et al., 2005; McClure and Franklin-Tong, 2006). 120K, for example, is required for SI but does not directly contribute to S-specificity (Hancock et al., 2005).120K was first identified as an abundant component of the transmitting tract ECM that contains both arabinogalactan and extensin-like carbohydrate moieties (Lind et al., 1994). 120K is an S-RNase-binding protein that is taken up by growing pollen tubes (Lind et al., 1996; Cruz-Garcia et al., 2005; Goldraij et al., 2006). Immunolocalization studies show 120K in the pollen tube cytoplasm and associated with pollen tube tonoplast membranes (Lind et al., 1996; Goldraij et al., 2006). Goldraij et al. (2006) also found S-RNase in the lumen of pollen tube vacuoles. In many cases, S-RNase was found in vacuoles with 120K apparently embedded in the surrounding membrane. S-RNase is also found in vacuoles of incompatible pollen tubes, but the breakdown of these vacuoles late in SI and the concomitant release of S-RNase may contribute to the rejection mechanism. Other pistil proteins are also taken up by growing pollen tubes; for example, endocytosis of biotinylated stigma/style Cys-rich adhesin has been reported in lily (Lilium longiflorum) pollen tubes (Kim et al., 2006). Although the uptake of pistil proteins such as 120K and S-RNase has not been well characterized, it is likely that endocytosis and retrograde transport of ECM components occurs on a large scale. Thus, it is important to identify pollen proteins that interact with endocytic cargo from the pistil ECM and that could participate in transport through the pollen tube endomembrane system.We recently described a pollen-specific C2 domain-containing protein, NaPCCP, that interacts with the CTD of the potential cargo proteins, NaTTS and 120K. NaPCCP consists of a short N-terminal domain, an 80-residue C2 domain, and a 79-residue C-terminal region. In vitro pull-down assays showed that the C-terminal region of NaPCCP is sufficient for binding the AGP CTDs (Lee et al., 2008b). Originally implicated in binding mammalian protein kinase C to phosphatidylserine in a calcium-dependent manner (Bazzi and Nelsestuen, 1987, 1990; Brose et al., 1992), C2 domains are now known to contribute to transient membrane association of a variety of proteins with functions that include vesicular transport, lipid modification, GTPase regulation, ubiquitylation, and protein phosphorylation (Coussens et al., 1986; Clark et al., 1991; Brose et al., 1992; Cullen et al., 1995; Dunn et al., 2004). Calcium-independent lipid binding of C2 domain-containing proteins has also been reported (Damer and Creutz, 1994; Fukuda et al., 1994).Here, we report the lipid-binding properties of NaPCCP and its association with the pollen tube endomembrane system. Lipid overlay and liposome-binding experiments show that NaPCCP specifically binds to phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate (PI3P). Immunolocalization and live imaging studies of compatible pollen tubes show that NaPCCP is associated with the pollen tube plasma membrane (PM) and with punctate structures in the cytoplasm. In SI, incompatible pollen tubes show altered NaPCCP distributions. We speculate that NaPCCP is involved in the uptake and transport of proteins from the ECM.  相似文献   

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In growing plant cells, the combined activities of the cytoskeleton, endomembrane, and cell wall biosynthetic systems organize the cytoplasm and define the architecture and growth properties of the cell. These biosynthetic machineries efficiently synthesize, deliver, and recycle the raw materials that support cell expansion. The precise roles of the actin cytoskeleton in these processes are unclear. Certainly, bundles of actin filaments position organelles and are a substrate for long-distance intracellular transport, but the functional linkages between dynamic actin filament arrays and the cell growth machinery are poorly understood. The Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) “distorted group” mutants have defined protein complexes that appear to generate and convert small GTPase signals into an Actin-Related Protein2/3 (ARP2/3)-dependent actin filament nucleation response. However, direct biochemical knowledge about Arabidopsis ARP2/3 and its cellular distribution is lacking. In this paper, we provide biochemical evidence for a plant ARP2/3. The plant complex utilizes a conserved assembly mechanism. ARPC4 is the most critical core subunit that controls the assembly and steady-state levels of the complex. ARP2/3 in other systems is believed to be mostly a soluble complex that is locally recruited and activated. Unexpectedly, we find that Arabidopsis ARP2/3 interacts strongly with cell membranes. Membrane binding is linked to complex assembly status and not to the extent to which it is activated. Mutant analyses implicate ARP2 as an important subunit for membrane association.In plant cells, the actin cytoskeleton forms an intricate network of polymers that organizes the cytoplasm and defines the long-distance intracellular trafficking patterns of the cell. The actin network is critical not only for tip-growing cells (for review, see Cole and Fowler, 2006; Lovy-Wheeler et al., 2007) but also during the coordinated cell expansion that occurs in cells that utilize a diffuse growth mechanism (for review, see Wasteneys and Galway, 2003; Smith and Oppenheimer, 2005). For example, the polarized diffuse growth of leaf trichomes is highly sensitized to actin cytoskeleton disruption (Mathur et al., 1999; Szymanski et al., 1999), and a recent analysis of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) ACTIN mutants revealed widespread cell swelling and isotropic expansion in numerous cell types in the root and shoot (Kandasamy et al., 2009). The actin network is dynamic. The array reorganizes during cell morphogenesis (Braun et al., 1999; Szymanski et al., 1999) and in response to endogenous (Lemichez et al., 2001) and external (Hardham et al., 2007) cues. A major research goal is to better understand not only how plant cells convert G-actin subunits to particular actin filament arrays but also how the actin network interacts with the cellular growth machinery during cell expansion.This is a difficult problem to solve, because in expanding vacuolated cells the actin array adopts numerous configurations and consists of dense meshworks of cortical actin filaments and bundles (Baluska et al., 2000), thick actin bundles that penetrate the central vacuole (Higaki et al., 2006), and meshworks of filaments and bundles that surround the nucleus and chloroplasts (Kandasamy and Meagher, 1999; Collings et al., 2000). The spatial relationships between these actin networks and localized cell expansion are not obvious. Certainly, the plasma membrane-cell wall interface is a critical location for the regulated delivery and fusion of vesicles containing cell wall polysaccharides. Frequent reports of localized domains of enriched cortical actin signal at regions of presumed localized cell expansion have led to the widely held view that the cortical actin array creates local tracks for vesicle-mediated secretion (for review, see Smith and Oppenheimer, 2005; Hussey et al., 2006). In one study, the dynamics of actin filaments were analyzed in living hypocotyl epidermal cells that utilize a diffuse growth mechanism (Staiger et al., 2009). In this case, individual actin filaments are very unstable and randomly oriented; therefore, the precise relationships between cortical F-actin, vesicle delivery, and cell shape change remain obscure. The best known function for the actin cytoskeleton is that of a track for myosin-dependent vesicle and organelle trafficking (Shimmen, 2007). The actin bundle network mediates the transport of cargo between endomembrane compartments (Geldner et al., 2001; Kim et al., 2005) and the long-distance actomyosin transport of a variety of organelles, including the Golgi (Nebenfuhr et al., 1999; Peremyslov et al., 2008; Prokhnevsky et al., 2008). Generation of distributed (Gutierrez et al., 2009; Timmers et al., 2009) and localized (Wightman and Turner, 2008) actin bundle networks appears to define early steps in the trafficking of Golgi-localized cellulose synthase complexes to the sites of primary and secondary wall synthesis, respectively.Plant cells employ diverse collections of G-actin-binding proteins, actin filament nucleators, and actin-bundling and cross-linking proteins to generate and remodel the F-actin network (for review, see Staiger and Blanchoin, 2006). One actin filament nucleator, termed the Actin-Related Protein2/3 (ARP2/3) complex, controls numerous aspects of plant morphogenesis and development. The vertebrate complex consists of the actin-related proteins ARP2 and ARP3 and five other unrelated proteins termed ARPC1 to ARPC5, in order of decreasing mass. ARP2/3 in isolation is inactive, but in the presence of proteins termed nucleation-promoting factors such as WAVE/SCAR (for WASP family Verprolin homologous/Suppressor of cAMP Repressor), ARP2/3 is converted into an efficient actin filament-nucleating machine (for review, see Higgs and Pollard, 2001; Welch and Mullins, 2002). In mammalian cells, ARP2/3 activities are linked to membrane dynamics. Keratocytes that crawl persistently on a solid substrate appear to use ARP2/3-generated dendritic actin filament networks at the leading edge to either drive or consolidate plasma membrane protrusion (Pollard and Borisy, 2003; Ji et al., 2008). In many vertebrate cell types, ARP2/3 has a strong punctate intracellular localization (Welch et al., 1997; Strasser et al., 2004), which could reflect hypothesized activities at the Golgi (Stamnes, 2002) or late endosomal (Fucini et al., 2002; Holtta-Vuori et al., 2005) compartment.Genetic studies in plants reveal nonessential but widespread functions for ARP2/3. In the moss Physcomitrella patens, the ARPC4 and ARPC1 subunit genes are critical during tip growth of protonemal filaments (Harries et al., 2005; Perroud and Quatrano, 2006). In Arabidopsis, loss of either ARP2/3 subunit gene or mutations in WAVE complex genes that positively regulate ARP2/3 cause complicated syndromes, including the loss of polarized diffuse growth throughout the shoot epidermis, defective cell-cell adhesion, and decreased hypocotyl elongation (for review, see Szymanski, 2005). Altered responses to exogenous Suc (Li et al., 2004; Zhang et al., 2008) and reduced root elongation (Dyachok et al., 2008) are also reported for wave and arp2/3 strains. In higher plants, the involvement of ARP2/3 in tip growth and root hair development is more subtle. In Lotus japonicus, mutation of NAP1 and PIR1, known positive regulators of ARP2/3 (Basu et al., 2004; Deeks et al., 2004; El-Assal et al., 2004a), causes incompletely penetrant root hair phenotypes, but in the presence of symbiotic bacteria, the mutants have defective infection threads and reduced root nodule formation. Arabidopsis arp2/3 mutants do not have obvious tip growth defects in pollen tubes or root hairs, but in the presence of GFP:TALIN (Mathur et al., 2003b) and in double mutant combinations with the actin-binding protein CAP1 (Deeks et al., 2007), the effects of ARP2/3 on root hair growth are unmasked.In Arabidopsis, the genetics of the positive regulation of ARP2/3 are well characterized and appear to occur solely through another heteromeric complex termed WAVE (Eden et al., 2002; for review, see Szymanski, 2005). The putative WAVE/SCAR complex contains five subunits, one of which is the ARP2/3 activator SCAR. Plant SCARs contain conserved N-terminal and C-terminal domains that mediate interactions with other WAVE complex proteins and ARP2/3 activation, respectively (Frank et al., 2004; Basu et al., 2005). In nonplant systems, the regulatory relationships between WAVE and ARP2/3 appear to vary between cell types and species (for review, see Bompard and Caron, 2004; Stradal and Scita, 2006). However, in Arabidopsis, double mutant analyses indicate that WAVE is the sole pathway for ARP2/3 activation and that all subunits positively regulate ARP2/3 (Deeks et al., 2004; Basu et al., 2005; Djakovic et al., 2006). SCAR quadruple mutants are indistinguishable from arp2/3 null plants (Zhang et al., 2008). In moss, BRICK1 and ARP2/3 mutants have similar phenotypes, suggesting conserved regulatory relationships between WAVE and ARP2/3 in the plant kingdom (Harries et al., 2005; Perroud and Quatrano, 2006, 2008).Despite extensive molecular genetic knowledge about the ARP2/3 pathway and the strong actin cytoskeleton and growth phenotypes of arp2/3 plants, there are few direct data on the existence of the plant complex and its cellular function. There are reports of ARP2/3 localization based on the behavior of individual subunits (Le et al., 2003). In some cases, the results are weakened by the unknown specificity of heterologous ARP2/3 antibodies (Van Gestel et al., 2003; Fiserova et al., 2006). A specific antibody was raised against Silvetia ARP2 (Hable and Kropf, 2005). In developing zygotes, rhizhoid emergence is an early and actin-dependent developmental event, and at this stage a broad subcortical cone of ARP2 signal extends from the nuclear envelope toward the rhizhoid apex (Hable and Kropf, 2005). Double labeling experiments detected considerable overlap between ARP2 and actin, but surprisingly, there was a broad cortical domain of putative organelle-associated distal ARP2 that did not overlap with actin. In tip-growing P. patens chloronema cells, ARPC4 also appears to be membrane associated and localizes to a broad subcortical apical zone (Perroud and Quatrano, 2006). For these localization and genetic studies that rely on individual ARP2/3 subunits, it is important to prove that a plant ARP2/3 complex exists to test for an association of the complex with endomembrane compartments.In this paper, we provide several lines of evidence for an evolutionarily conserved pathway for ARP2/3 complex assembly in plant cells. These studies are based in part on genetic and biochemical analyses of the putative ARP2/3 subunit gene ARPC4. We found that disruption of the ARPC4 gene caused catastrophic disassembly of the complex and an array of phenotypes that were indistinguishable from known arp2/3 mutants. Chromatography experiments clearly revealed that functional hemagglutinin (HA)-tagged ARPC4 and endogenous ARP3 subunits assemble fully into ARP2/3 complexes. Surprisingly, much of the cellular pool of the plant ARP2/3 complex is membrane associated. An analysis of an extensive collection of wave and arp2/3 mutants allowed us to conclude that the normal association with membranes depended on the presence of ARP2 and the assembly status of the complex but not on the existence of an active pool of ARP2/3 in the cell.  相似文献   

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The role of calcium-mediated signaling has been extensively studied in plant responses to abiotic stress signals. Calcineurin B-like proteins (CBLs) and CBL-interacting protein kinases (CIPKs) constitute a complex signaling network acting in diverse plant stress responses. Osmotic stress imposed by soil salinity and drought is a major abiotic stress that impedes plant growth and development and involves calcium-signaling processes. In this study, we report the functional analysis of CIPK21, an Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) CBL-interacting protein kinase, ubiquitously expressed in plant tissues and up-regulated under multiple abiotic stress conditions. The growth of a loss-of-function mutant of CIPK21, cipk21, was hypersensitive to high salt and osmotic stress conditions. The calcium sensors CBL2 and CBL3 were found to physically interact with CIPK21 and target this kinase to the tonoplast. Moreover, preferential localization of CIPK21 to the tonoplast was detected under salt stress condition when coexpressed with CBL2 or CBL3. These findings suggest that CIPK21 mediates responses to salt stress condition in Arabidopsis, at least in part, by regulating ion and water homeostasis across the vacuolar membranes.Drought and salinity cause osmotic stress in plants and severely affect crop productivity throughout the world. Plants respond to osmotic stress by changing a number of cellular processes (Xiong et al., 1999; Xiong and Zhu, 2002; Bartels and Sunkar, 2005; Boudsocq and Lauriére, 2005). Some of these changes include activation of stress-responsive genes, regulation of membrane transport at both plasma membrane (PM) and vacuolar membrane (tonoplast) to maintain water and ionic homeostasis, and metabolic changes to produce compatible osmolytes such as Pro (Stewart and Lee, 1974; Krasensky and Jonak, 2012). It has been well established that a specific calcium (Ca2+) signature is generated in response to a particular environmental stimulus (Trewavas and Malhó, 1998; Scrase-Field and Knight, 2003; Luan, 2009; Kudla et al., 2010). The Ca2+ changes are primarily perceived by several Ca2+ sensors such as calmodulin (Reddy, 2001; Luan et al., 2002), Ca2+-dependent protein kinases (Harper and Harmon, 2005), calcineurin B-like proteins (CBLs; Luan et al., 2002; Batistič and Kudla, 2004; Pandey, 2008; Luan, 2009; Sanyal et al., 2015), and other Ca2+-binding proteins (Reddy, 2001; Shao et al., 2008) to initiate various cellular responses.Plant CBL-type Ca2+ sensors interact with and activate CBL-interacting protein kinases (CIPKs) that phosphorylate downstream components to transduce Ca2+ signals (Liu et al., 2000; Luan et al., 2002; Batistič and Kudla, 2004; Luan, 2009). In several plant species, multiple members have been identified in the CBL and CIPK family (Luan et al., 2002; Kolukisaoglu et al., 2004; Pandey, 2008; Batistič and Kudla, 2009; Weinl and Kudla, 2009; Pandey et al., 2014). Involvement of specific CBL-CIPK pair to decode a particular type of signal entails the alternative and selective complex formation leading to stimulus-response coupling (D’Angelo et al., 2006; Batistič et al., 2010).Several CBL and CIPK family members have been implicated in plant responses to drought, salinity, and osmotic stress based on genetic analysis of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) mutants (Zhu, 2002; Cheong et al., 2003, 2007; Kim et al., 2003; Pandey et al., 2004, 2008; D’Angelo et al., 2006; Qin et al., 2008; Tripathi et al., 2009; Held et al., 2011; Tang et al., 2012; Drerup et al., 2013; Eckert et al., 2014). A few CIPKs have also been functionally characterized by gain-of-function approach in crop plants such as rice (Oryza sativa), pea (Pisum sativum), and maize (Zea mays) and were found to be involved in osmotic stress responses (Mahajan et al., 2006; Xiang et al., 2007; Yang et al., 2008; Tripathi et al., 2009; Zhao et al., 2009; Cuéllar et al., 2010).In this report, we examined the role of the Arabidopsis CIPK21 gene in osmotic stress response by reverse genetic analysis. The loss-of-function mutant plants became hypersensitive to salt and mannitol stress conditions, suggesting that CIPK21 is involved in the regulation of osmotic stress response in Arabidopsis. These findings are further supported by an enhanced tonoplast targeting of the cytoplasmic CIPK21 through interaction with the vacuolar Ca2+ sensors CBL2 and CBL3 under salt stress condition.  相似文献   

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Post-Golgi protein sorting and trafficking to the plasma membrane (PM) is generally believed to occur via the trans-Golgi network (TGN). In this study using Nicotiana tabacum pectin methylesterase (NtPPME1) as a marker, we have identified a TGN-independent polar exocytosis pathway that mediates cell wall formation during cell expansion and cytokinesis. Confocal immunofluorescence and immunogold electron microscopy studies demonstrated that Golgi-derived secretory vesicles (GDSVs) labeled by NtPPME1-GFP are distinct from those organelles belonging to the conventional post-Golgi exocytosis pathway. In addition, pharmaceutical treatments, superresolution imaging, and dynamic studies suggest that NtPPME1 follows a polar exocytic process from Golgi-GDSV-PM/cell plate (CP), which is distinct from the conventional Golgi-TGN-PM/CP secretion pathway. Further studies show that ROP1 regulates this specific polar exocytic pathway. Taken together, we have demonstrated an alternative TGN-independent Golgi-to-PM polar exocytic route, which mediates secretion of NtPPME1 for cell wall formation during cell expansion and cytokinesis and is ROP1-dependent.Plant development and growth require coordinated tissue and cell polarization. Two of the most essential cellular processes involved in polarization are cell expansion and cytokinesis, which determines cell morphology and functions (Jaillais and Gaude, 2008; Dettmer and Friml, 2011; Li et al., 2012). Pollen tube and root hair growth require highly polarized membrane trafficking (Libault et al., 2010; Kroeger and Geitmann, 2012). Cytokinesis, by which new cells are formed, separates daughter cells by forming a new structure within the cytoplasm termed the cell plate (CP). Made up of a cell wall (CW), surrounded by new plasma membrane (PM), the cell plate is generally considered to be an example of internal cell polarity in a nonpolarized plant cell (Bednarek and Falbel, 2002; Baluska et al., 2006).The conventional view of pollen tube tip growth and cell plate formation is supported by polar exocytic secretion of numerous vesicles (diameter of 60–100 nm) to the pollen tube tip and phragmoplast areas during cytokinesis. These polar exocytic vesicles, which are generally believed to originate from the Golgi apparatus, are delivered to the site of secretion via the cytoskeleton and fuse with the target membrane with the aid of fusion factors (Jurgens, 2005; Backues et al., 2007). However, whether these polar exocytic vesicles undergoing post-Golgi trafficking are part of the conventional Golgi-trans-Golgi network (TGN)-PM/CP exocytosis or are derived from some other unidentified exocytic secretion pathway remain unclear.Polar exocytosis is regulated and controlled by a conserved Rho GTPase signaling network in fungi, animals, and plants (Burkel et al., 2012; Ridley, 2013). Rho of plant (ROP), the sole subfamily of Rho GTPases in plant, participate in signaling pathways that regulate cytoskeleton organization and endomembrane trafficking, consequently determining cell polarization, polar growth and cell morphogenesis (Gu et al., 2005; Lee et al., 2008). In growing pollen tubes, ROP1 participates in regulating polar exocytosis in the tip region via two downstream pathways to regulate apical F-actin dynamics: RIC4-mediated F-actin polymerization and RIC3-mediated apical actin depolymerization. A constitutively active mutant of ROP1 (CA-rop1) prevents fusion of these vesicles with the PM and enhances the accumulation of exocytic vesicles in the apical cortex of pollen tubes (Lee et al., 2008). Although ROP GTPases have been extensively researched, their roles in polar membrane expansion in pollen tubes and epidermal pavement cells remains unclear (Xu et al., 2010; Yang and Lavagi, 2012), and there have been insufficient studies on the functions of ROPs in controlling cell plate formation during cytokinesis. Cell division requires precise regulation and spatial organization of the cytoskeleton for delivery of secretion vesicles to the expanding cell plate (Molendijk et al., 2001).In addition, newly made cell walls during cell expansion and cell plate formation require sufficient plasticity in order to integrate new membrane materials to support the polarized membrane extension. They also should be strong enough to withstand the internal turgor pressure and thereby maintain the shape of the cell (Zonia and Munnik, 2011; Hepler et al., 2013). Recent studies have demonstrated that pectins are important for both cytokinesis and cell expansion (Moore and Staehelin, 1988; Bosch et al., 2005; Chebli et al., 2012; Altartouri and Geitmann, 2015; Bidhendi and Geitmann, 2016). Pectins are one of the major cell wall components of the middle lamella and primary cell wall. They are polymerized and methylesterified in the Golgi and subsequently released into the apoplastic space as “soft” methylesterified polymers. The homogalacturonan components of pectin are later de-methylesterified by pectin methylesterases (PMEs). The demethylesterified pectins can be cross-linked, interact with Ca2+, and finally form the “hard” pectin matrix of the cell wall. Therefore, the enzymatic activity of PMEs determines the rigidity of the cell wall (Micheli, 2001; Peaucelle et al., 2011).In Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) pollen tubes, PMEs are found predominantly polar localized in the tip region and determine the rigidity of the apical cell wall (Bosch et al., 2005; Jiang et al., 2005; Fayant et al., 2010; Chebli et al., 2012; Wang et al., 2013). PME isoform knockout mutants in Arabidopsis (AtPPME1 or vanguard1) produce unstable pollen tubes which burst when germinated in vitro and have reduced fertilization abilities (Jiang et al., 2005; Rockel et al., 2008). Recent studies have shown that in growing tobacco pollen tubes, polar targeting of NtPPME1 to the pollen tube apex depends on an apical F-actin mesh network (Wang et al., 2013). Although the functions of PME in cell wall constriction are well documented, the intracellular secretion and regulation mechanism of the exocytic process of PME still remain largely unexplored. In addition, pectins are also found to be abundant in the forming cell plate, raising the possibility that PMEs may also function during cell plate formation (Moore and Staehelin, 1988; Dhonukshe et al., 2006).In our study, we have used NtPPME1 as a marker to identify a polar exocytic process which is distinct from the conventional Golgi-TGN-PM exocytosis pathway in both pollen tube tip growth and cell plate formation. We have identified a Golgi-derived secretory vesicle (GDSV) for the polar secretion and targeting of NtPPME1 to the cell wall that bypasses the TGN during cell polarization. Further investigations using ROP1 mutants have shown that this polar exocytosis is ROP1 dependent.  相似文献   

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To investigate sepal/petal/lip formation in Oncidium Gower Ramsey, three paleoAPETALA3 genes, O. Gower Ramsey MADS box gene5 (OMADS5; clade 1), OMADS3 (clade 2), and OMADS9 (clade 3), and one PISTILLATA gene, OMADS8, were characterized. The OMADS8 and OMADS3 mRNAs were expressed in all four floral organs as well as in vegetative leaves. The OMADS9 mRNA was only strongly detected in petals and lips. The mRNA for OMADS5 was only strongly detected in sepals and petals and was significantly down-regulated in lip-like petals and lip-like sepals of peloric mutant flowers. This result revealed a possible negative role for OMADS5 in regulating lip formation. Yeast two-hybrid analysis indicated that OMADS5 formed homodimers and heterodimers with OMADS3 and OMADS9. OMADS8 only formed heterodimers with OMADS3, whereas OMADS3 and OMADS9 formed homodimers and heterodimers with each other. We proposed that sepal/petal/lip formation needs the presence of OMADS3/8 and/or OMADS9. The determination of the final organ identity for the sepal/petal/lip likely depended on the presence or absence of OMADS5. The presence of OMADS5 caused short sepal/petal formation. When OMADS5 was absent, cells could proliferate, resulting in the possible formation of large lips and the conversion of the sepal/petal into lips in peloric mutants. Further analysis indicated that only ectopic expression of OMADS8 but not OMADS5/9 caused the conversion of the sepal into an expanded petal-like structure in transgenic Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) plants.The ABCDE model predicts the formation of any flower organ by the interaction of five classes of homeotic genes in plants (Yanofsky et al., 1990; Jack et al., 1992; Mandel et al., 1992; Goto and Meyerowitz, 1994; Jofuku et al., 1994; Pelaz et al., 2000, 2001; Theißen and Saedler, 2001; Pinyopich et al., 2003; Ditta et al., 2004; Jack, 2004). The A class genes control sepal formation. The A, B, and E class genes work together to regulate petal formation. The B, C, and E class genes control stamen formation. The C and E class genes work to regulate carpel formation, whereas the D class gene is involved in ovule development. MADS box genes seem to have a central role in flower development, because most ABCDE genes encode MADS box proteins (Coen and Meyerowitz, 1991; Weigel and Meyerowitz, 1994; Purugganan et al., 1995; Rounsley et al., 1995; Theißen and Saedler, 1995; Theißen et al., 2000; Theißen, 2001).The function of B group genes, such as APETALA3 (AP3) and PISTILLATA (PI), has been thought to have a major role in specifying petal and stamen development (Jack et al., 1992; Goto and Meyerowitz, 1994; Krizek and Meyerowitz, 1996; Kramer et al., 1998; Hernandez-Hernandez et al., 2007; Kanno et al., 2007; Whipple et al., 2007; Irish, 2009). In Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), mutation in AP3 or PI caused identical phenotypes of second whorl petal conversion into a sepal structure and third flower whorl stamen into a carpel structure (Bowman et al., 1989; Jack et al., 1992; Goto and Meyerowitz, 1994). Similar homeotic conversions for petal and stamen were observed in the mutants of the AP3 and PI orthologs from a number of core eudicots such as Antirrhinum majus, Petunia hybrida, Gerbera hybrida, Solanum lycopersicum, and Nicotiana benthamiana (Sommer et al., 1990; Tröbner et al., 1992; Angenent et al., 1993; van der Krol et al., 1993; Yu et al., 1999; Liu et al., 2004; Vandenbussche et al., 2004; de Martino et al., 2006), from basal eudicot species such as Papaver somniferum and Aquilegia vulgaris (Drea et al., 2007; Kramer et al., 2007), as well as from monocot species such as Zea mays and Oryza sativa (Ambrose et al., 2000; Nagasawa et al., 2003; Prasad and Vijayraghavan, 2003; Yadav et al., 2007; Yao et al., 2008). This indicated that the function of the B class genes AP3 and PI is highly conserved during evolution.It has been thought that B group genes may have arisen from an ancestral gene through multiple gene duplication events (Doyle, 1994; Theißen et al., 1996, 2000; Purugganan, 1997; Kramer et al., 1998; Kramer and Irish, 1999; Lamb and Irish, 2003; Kim et al., 2004; Stellari et al., 2004; Zahn et al., 2005; Hernandez-Hernandez et al., 2007). In the gymnosperms, there was a single putative B class lineage that duplicated to generate the paleoAP3 and PI lineages in angiosperms (Kramer et al., 1998; Theißen et al., 2000; Irish, 2009). The paleoAP3 lineage is composed of AP3 orthologs identified in lower eudicots, magnolid dicots, and monocots (Kramer et al., 1998). Genes in this lineage contain the conserved paleoAP3- and PI-derived motifs in the C-terminal end of the proteins, which have been thought to be characteristics of the B class ancestral gene (Kramer et al., 1998; Tzeng and Yang, 2001; Hsu and Yang, 2002). The PI lineage is composed of PI orthologs that contain a highly conserved PI motif identified in most plant species (Kramer et al., 1998). Subsequently, there was a second duplication at the base of the core eudicots that produced the euAP3 and TM6 lineages, which have been subject to substantial sequence changes in eudicots during evolution (Kramer et al., 1998; Kramer and Irish, 1999). The paleoAP3 motif in the C-terminal end of the proteins was retained in the TM6 lineage and replaced by a conserved euAP3 motif in the euAP3 lineage of most eudicot species (Kramer et al., 1998). In addition, many lineage-specific duplications for paleoAP3 lineage have occurred in plants such as orchids (Hsu and Yang, 2002; Tsai et al., 2004; Kim et al., 2007; Mondragón-Palomino and Theißen, 2008, 2009; Mondragón-Palomino et al., 2009), Ranunculaceae, and Ranunculales (Kramer et al., 2003; Di Stilio et al., 2005; Shan et al., 2006; Kramer, 2009).Unlike the A or C class MADS box proteins, which form homodimers that regulate flower development, the ability of B class proteins to form homodimers has only been reported in gymnosperms and in the paleoAP3 and PI lineages of some monocots. For example, LMADS1 of the lily Lilium longiflorum (Tzeng and Yang, 2001), OMADS3 of the orchid Oncidium Gower Ramsey (Hsu and Yang, 2002), and PeMADS4 of the orchid Phalaenopsis equestris (Tsai et al., 2004) in the paleoAP3 lineage, LRGLOA and LRGLOB of the lily Lilium regale (Winter et al., 2002), TGGLO of the tulip Tulipa gesneriana (Kanno et al., 2003), and PeMADS6 of the orchid P. equestris (Tsai et al., 2005) in the PI lineage, and GGM2 of the gymnosperm Gnetum gnemon (Winter et al., 1999) were able to form homodimers that regulate flower development. Proteins in the euAP3 lineage and in most paleoAP3 lineages were not able to form homodimers and had to interact with PI to form heterodimers in order to regulate petal and stamen development in various plant species (Schwarz-Sommer et al., 1992; Tröbner et al., 1992; Riechmann et al., 1996; Moon et al., 1999; Winter et al., 2002; Kanno et al., 2003; Vandenbussche et al., 2004; Yao et al., 2008). In addition to forming dimers, AP3 and PI were able to interact with other MADS box proteins, such as SEPALLATA1 (SEP1), SEP2, and SEP3, to regulate petal and stamen development (Pelaz et al., 2000; Honma and Goto, 2001; Theißen and Saedler, 2001; Castillejo et al., 2005).Orchids are among the most important plants in the flower market around the world, and research on MADS box genes has been reported for several species of orchids during the past few years (Lu et al., 1993, 2007; Yu and Goh, 2000; Hsu and Yang, 2002; Yu et al., 2002; Hsu et al., 2003; Tsai et al., 2004, 2008; Xu et al., 2006; Guo et al., 2007; Kim et al., 2007; Chang et al., 2009). Unlike the flowers in eudicots, the nearly identical shape of the sepals and petals as well as the production of a unique lip in orchid flowers make them a very special plant species for the study of flower development. Four clades (1–4) of genes in the paleoAP3 lineage have been identified in several orchids (Hsu and Yang, 2002; Tsai et al., 2004; Kim et al., 2007; Mondragón-Palomino and Theißen, 2008, 2009; Mondragón-Palomino et al., 2009). Several works have described the possible interactions among these four clades of paleoAP3 genes and one PI gene that are involved in regulating the differentiation and formation of the sepal/petal/lip of orchids (Tsai et al., 2004; Kim et al., 2007; Mondragón-Palomino and Theißen, 2008, 2009). However, the exact mechanism that involves the orchid B class genes remains unclear and needs to be clarified by more experimental investigations.O. Gower Ramsey is a popular orchid with important economic value in cut flower markets. Only a few studies have been reported on the role of MADS box genes in regulating flower formation in this plant species (Hsu and Yang, 2002; Hsu et al., 2003; Chang et al., 2009). An AP3-like MADS gene that regulates both floral formation and initiation in transgenic Arabidopsis has been reported (Hsu and Yang, 2002). In addition, four AP1/AGAMOUS-LIKE9 (AGL9)-like MADS box genes have been characterized that show novel expression patterns and cause different effects on floral transition and formation in Arabidopsis (Hsu et al., 2003; Chang et al., 2009). Compared with other orchids, the production of a large and well-expanded lip and five small identical sepals/petals makes O. Gower Ramsey a special case for the study of the diverse functions of B class MADS box genes during evolution. Therefore, the isolation of more B class MADS box genes and further study of their roles in the regulation of perianth (sepal/petal/lip) formation during O. Gower Ramsey flower development are necessary. In addition to the clade 2 paleoAP3 gene OMADS3, which was previously characterized in our laboratory (Hsu and Yang, 2002), three more B class MADS box genes, OMADS5, OMADS8, and OMADS9, were characterized from O. Gower Ramsey in this study. Based on the different expression patterns and the protein interactions among these four orchid B class genes, we propose that the presence of OMADS3/8 and/or OMADS9 is required for sepal/petal/lip formation. Further sepal and petal formation at least requires the additional presence of OMADS5, whereas large lip formation was seen when OMADS5 expression was absent. Our results provide a new finding and information pertaining to the roles for orchid B class MADS box genes in the regulation of sepal/petal/lip formation.  相似文献   

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