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1.
Tesson B  Hildebrand M 《PloS one》2010,5(12):e14300
BACKGROUND: The diatom cell wall, called the frustule, is predominantly made out of silica, in many cases with highly ordered nano- and micro-scale features. Frustules are built intracellularly inside a special compartment, the silica deposition vesicle, or SDV. Molecules such as proteins (silaffins and silacidins) and long chain polyamines have been isolated from the silica and shown to be involved in the control of the silica polymerization. However, we are still unable to explain or reproduce in vitro the complexity of structures formed by diatoms. METHODS/PRINCIPAL FINDING: In this study, using fluorescence microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and atomic force microscopy, we were able to compare and correlate microtubules and microfilaments with silica structure formed in diversely structured diatom species. The high degree of correlation between silica structure and actin indicates that actin is a major element in the control of the silica morphogenesis at the meso and microscale. Microtubules appear to be involved in the spatial positioning on the mesoscale and strengthening of the SDV. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These results reveal the importance of top down control over positioning of and within the SDV during diatom wall formation and open a new perspective for the study of the mechanism of frustule patterning as well as for the understanding of the control of membrane dynamics by the cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

2.
Diatoms possess silica-based cell walls with species-specific structures and ornamentations. Silica deposition in diatoms offers a model to study the processes involved in biomineralization. A new wall is produced in a specialized vesicle (silica deposition vesicle, SDV) and secreted. Thus proteins involved in wall biogenesis may remain associated with the mature cell wall. Here it is demonstrated that EDTA treatment removes most of the proteins present in mature cell walls of the marine diatom Cylindrotheca fusiformis. A main fraction consists of four related glycoproteins with a molecular mass of approximately 75 kDa. These glycoproteins were purified to homogeneity. They consist of repeats of Ca2+ binding domains separated by polypeptide stretches containing hydroxyproline. The proteins in the EDTA extract aggregate and precipitate in the presence of Ca2+. Immunological studies detected related proteins in the cell wall of the freshwater diatom Navicula pelliculosa, indicating that these proteins represent a new family of proteins that are involved in the biogenesis of diatom cell walls.  相似文献   

3.
Organic components associated with diatom cell wall silica are important for the formation, integrity, and function of the cell wall. Polysaccharides are associated with the silica, however their localization, structure, and function remain poorly understood. We used imaging and biochemical approaches to describe in detail characteristics of insoluble organic components associated with the cell wall in 5 different diatom species. Results show that an insoluble organic matrix enriched in mannose, likely the diatotepum, is localized on the proximal surface of the silica cell wall. We did not identify any organic matrix embedded within the silica. We also identified a distinct material consisting of glucose polymer with variable localization depending on the species. In some species this component was directly involved in the morphogenesis of silica structure while in others it appeared to be only a structural component of the cell wall. A novel glucose-rich structure located between daughter cells during division was also identified. This work for the first time correlates the structure, composition, and localization of insoluble organic matrices associated with diatom cell walls. Additionally we identified a novel glucose polymer and characterized its role during silica structure formation.  相似文献   

4.
SILICON METABOLISM IN DIATOMS: IMPLICATIONS FOR GROWTH    总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Diatoms are the world's largest contributors to biosilicification and are one of the predominant contributors to global carbon fixation. Silicon is a major limiting nutrient for diatom growth and hence is a controlling factor in primary productivity. Because our understanding of the cellular metabolism of silicon is limited, we are not fully knowledgeable about intracellular factors that may affect diatom productivity in the oceans. The goal of this review is to present an overview of silicon metabolism in diatoms and to identify areas for future research. Numerous studies have characterized parameters of silicic acid uptake by diatoms, and molecular characterization of transport has begun with the isolation of genes encoding the transporter proteins. Multiple types of silicic acid transporter gene have been identified in a single diatom species, and multiple types appear to be present in all diatom species. The controlled expression and perhaps localization of the transporters in the cell may be factors in the overall regulation of silicic acid uptake. Transport can also be regulated by the rate of silica incorporation into the cell wall, suggesting that an intracellular sensing and control mechanism couples transport with incorporation. Sizable intracellular pools of soluble silicon have been identified in diatoms, at levels well above saturation for silica solubility, yet the mechanism for maintenance of supersaturated levels has not been determined. The mechanism of intracellular transport of silicon is also unknown, but this must be an important part of the silicification process because of the close coupling between silica incorporation and uptake. Although detailed ultrastructural analyses of silica deposition have been reported, we know little about the molecular details of this process. However, proteins occluded within silica that promote silicification in vitro have recently been characterized, and the application of molecular techniques holds the promise of great advances in this area. Cellular energy for silicification and transport comes from aerobic respiration without any direct involvement of photosynthetic energy. As such, diatom silicon metabolism differs from that of other major limiting nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorous, which are closely linked to photosynthetic metabolism. Cell wall silicification and silicic acid transport are tightly coupled to the cell cycle, which results in a dependency in the extent of silicification on growth rate. Silica dissolution is an important part of diatom cellular silicon metabolism, because dissolution must be prevented in the living cell, and because much of the raw material for mineralization in natural assemblages is supplied by dissolution of dead cells. Perhaps part of the reason for the ecological success of diatoms is due to their use of a silicified cell wall, which has been calculated to impart a substantial energy savings to organisms that have them. However, the growth of diatoms and other siliceous organisms has depleted the oceans of silicon, such that silicon availability is now a major factor in the control of primary productivity. Much new progress in understanding silicon metabolism in diatoms is expected because of the application of molecular approaches and sophisticated analytical techniques. Such insight is likely to lead to a greater understanding of the role of silicon in controlling diatom growth, and hence primary productivity, and of the mechanisms involved in the formation of the intricate silicified structures of the diatom cell wall.  相似文献   

5.
Diatoms are unicellular algae that make cell walls out of silica with highly ornate features on the nano- to microscale. The complexity and variety of diatom cell wall structures exceeds those possible with synthetic materials chemistry approaches. Understanding the design and assembly processes involved in diatom silicification should provide insight into patterning on the unicellular level, and information for biomimetic approaches for materials synthesis. In this report we examine the formation of distinct cell wall structures (valves and girdle bands) in the diatom Cyclotella cryptica by high resolution imaging using SEM, AFM, and fluorescence microscopy. Special attention was paid to imaging structural intermediates, which provided insight into the underlying design and assembly principles involved. Distinct stages in valve formation were identified, indicating a transition from a fractally organized structure to a dynamic pathway-dependent process. Substructures in the valves appeared to be pre-positioned prior to complete silicification, suggesting that organics responsible for these structures were pre-assembled and put in place. Microtubules and microfilamentous actin play significant roles in the positioning process, and actin is also important in the pathway-dependent expansion of the front of silicification. Our results indicate that even though all silica structures in C. cryptica are made of assemblies of nanoparticulate silica, control of meso- and microscale structure occurs on a higher order. It is apparent that diatoms integrate bottom up and top down control and synthesis mechanisms to form the diversity of structures possible.  相似文献   

6.
An analysis of the expression and activity of silicon transporters (SITs) was done on synchronously growing cultures of the diatom Thalassiosira pseudonana to provide insight into the role these proteins play in cellular silicon metabolism during the cell cycle. The first SIT-specific polyclonal peptide antibody was generated and used in the immunoblot analysis of whole-cell protein lysates to monitor SIT protein levels during synchronized progression through the cell cycle. Peaks in SIT protein levels correlated with active periods of silica incorporation into cell wall substructures. Quantitative real-time PCR on each of the three distinct SIT genes (TpSIT1, TpSIT2, and TpSIT3) showed that mRNA levels for the most highly expressed SIT genes peaked during the S phase of the cell cycle, a period prior to maximal silicon uptake and during which cell wall silicification does not occur. Variations in protein and mRNA levels did not correlate, suggesting that a significant regulatory step of SITs is at the translational or posttranslational level. Surge uptake rates also did not correlate with SIT protein levels, suggesting that SIT activity is internally controlled by the rate of silica incorporation. This is the first study to characterize SIT mRNA and protein expression and cellular uptake kinetics during the course of the cell cycle and cell wall synthesis, and it provides novel insight into SIT regulation.  相似文献   

7.
Using a high-brilliance synchrotron X-ray source, combined small- and wide-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS and WAXS) was applied to study nanoscale characteristics, in particular pore size in the range of 3 to 65 nm, of a variety of unialgal cultures of centric and pennate diatoms, and of mixed diatom populations sampled in the field. Results of scattering analysis were compared with details of pore size, structure and orientation visible at the electron microscopic level. WAXS patterns did not reveal any crystalline phase or features of microcrystallinity (resolution 0.07 to 0.51 nm), which implies a totally amorphous character of the SiO2 matrix of the frustule material. SAXS data (resolution 3 to 65 nm) provided information on geometry, size, and distribution of pores in the silica. Overall, two pore regions were recognized that were common to the silica of all samples: the smallest (d less than 10 nm) regularly spaced and shaped spherically, the larger (up to 65 nm) being cylinders or slits. Apparently, at a nanoscale level diatomaceous silica is quite homologous among species, in agreement with the chemical principles of silica polymerization under the conditions of pH and precursor concentrations inside the silicon deposition vesicle. The final frustule "macro"-morphology is of course species-specific, being determined genetically. Synthetically-derived MCM-type silicas have a similarly organized pore distribution in an amorphous silica matrix as we found in all diatom species studied. We therefore suggest that organic molecules of a kind used as structure-directing agents to produce these artificial silicas play a role in the nucleation of the silica polymerization reaction and the shaping of pore morphology inside the silicon deposition vesicle of diatoms. Structure-directing molecules now await isolation from the SDV, followed by identification and characterisation by molecular techniques.  相似文献   

8.
In diatom silicon biomineralization peptides are believed to play a role in silica precipitation and the consequent structure direction of the cell wall. Characterization of such peptides should reveal the nature of this organic-inorganic interaction, knowledge that may eventually well be used to expand the existing range of artificial silicas ("biomimicking"). Biochemical studies on Navicula pelliculosa revealed a set of proteins, which have a high affinity for a solid silica matrix; some were only eluted from the matrix when SDS-denaturation was applied. One of the proteins with an affinity for silica, about 8.5 kDa, is shown to be a homologue of ubiquitin on the basis of its N-terminal amino acid sequence; ubiquitin itself is a highly conserved 8.6 kDa protein that is involved in protein degradation. This finding is in line with a model of silica biomineralization in diatoms that implies the removal of templating polypeptides when pores in the growing cell wall develop. Western blotting with specific anti-ubiquitin antibodies confirmed cross-reactivity. Immunocytochemical localization of ubiquitin indicates that it is present along the diatom cell wall and inside pores during different stages of valve formation.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Mechanisms acting in pattern morphogenesis in the cell walls of two distant groups of plants, pollen of spermatophytes and diatoms, are compared in order to discriminate common principles from plant group- and wall material-specific features. The exinous wall in pollen is sequentially deposited on the exocellular side of the plasmalemma, while the siliceous wall in diatoms is formed intracellularly within an expanding silica deposition vesicle (SDV) which is attached to the internal face of the plasmalemma. Two levels of patterning occur in diatom and pollen walls: the overall pattern stabilises the wall mechanically and is apparently initiated in both groups by the parent cell, and a microtubule-dependent aperture and portula pattern created by the new mitotic (diatoms) or meiotic (pollen) cells. The parent wall in diatoms, and also the callosic wall in microspores, functions as anchor surfaces for transient, species-specific patterned adhesions of the plasmalemma to these walls, involved in pattern and shape creation. Patterned adhesion and exocytosis is blocked in pollen walls where the plasmalemma is shielded by the endoplasmic reticulum at the sites of the future apertures. In diatoms, wall patterning is uncoupled from the formation of a siliceous wall per se when the SDV and its wall is formed without contact to the the plasmalemma. Conversely, a blue-print pattern laid out in advance along the plasmalemma can be found in several diatoms. This highlights the key function of the plasmalemma and its associated membrane skeleton (fibrous lamina), and its orchestrated co-operation with elements of the radial filamentous cytoskeleton (actin?) in pattern formation. The role of microtubules during generation of the overall pattern may be primarily a transport and stabilizing function. Auxiliary organelles (spacer vesicles, endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria) involved in diatoms for shaping the SDV, and a mechanism adhering and disconnecting this SDV together with spacer organelles in a species-specifically controlled sequence to and from the plasmalemma, are unnecessary for pollen wall patterning. The precise positioning of the portula pattern in diatom walls is discussed with respect to their role as permanent anchors of the cytoplasm to its wall, and in providing spatial information for nucelar migration and the next cell division, whereas apertures in pollen are for single use only.Abbreviations AF actin filaments - C/Ca callose - CF cleavage furrow - cPL cleavage plasmalemma - DV dense vesicles - ER endoplasmic reticulum - ET epitheca - HT hypotheca - mPL folded plasmalemma - MT microtubules - MTOC microtubule organising centre - PEV primexine (matrix) vesicles - PL plasmalemma - SDV silica deposition vesicle - Si silica - SL SDV-membrane - SPV spacer vesicles Dedicated to Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Eberhard Schnepf on the occasion of his retirement  相似文献   

10.
C. -W. Li  S. Chu  M. Lee 《Protoplasma》1989,151(2-3):158-163
Summary The present study on a centric diatom,Ditylum brightwellii, includes two parts: detection of sugars in the silica deposition vesicle (SDV) with lectins and labeling the developing siliceous cell wall in the SDV with rhodamine 123. Cells with developing valves are treated with SDS to remove all the cytoplasmic contents, then either stained with fluorescein labeled lectins or thin-sectioned and stained with colloidal gold labeled lectins. The results show that mannose is part of the organic matrix in the SDV. Rhodamine 123, a non-toxic fluorescent laser dye, enters the cell immediately and is trapped in the SDV probably by the high reducing potential of the SDV. Silica is co-deposited with rhodamine 123 in the SDV, and the resulting valves and girdle bands become fluorescent. Implications of this study for the mechanism of silicification are discussed.Abbreviation SDV Silica deposition vesicle  相似文献   

11.
Sumper  M. 《Journal of phycology》2000,36(S3):64-65
Diatoms are well known for the intricate patterns of their silica-based cell walls. The complex structures of diatom cell walls are species specific and become precisely reproduced during each cell division cycle, indicating a genetic control of silica biomineralization. Therefore, the formation of the diatom cell wall has been regarded as a paradigm for controlled production of nanostructured silica. However, the mechanisms allowing biosilicification to proceed at ambient temperature at high rates have remained enigmatic. Recently, we have shown that a set of highly cationic peptides (called silaffins) isolated from Cylindrotheca fusiformis shells are able to generate networks of silica nanospheres within seconds when added to a solution of silicic acid. Different silaffin species produce different morphologies of the precipitated silica. Silaffins contain covalently modified Lys-Lys elements. One of these lysine residues bears a novel type of protein modification, a polyamine consisting of 6–11 repeats of the N-methyl-propylamine unit. In addition to the silaffins, additional polyamine-containing substances have been isolated from a number of diatom species that may be involved in the control of biosilica morphology. Scanning electron microscopic analysis of diatom shells isolated in statu nascendi provide insights into the processes of pattern formation in biosilica. A model will be discussed that explains production of nanostructured biosilica in diatoms on the basis of these experimental results.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Summary The sequential wall formation in the centric diatom,Ditylum brightwellii (West) Grunow, is described. The silica deposition vesicle is formed by the coalescence of small vesicles. Silicification of the new valve starts from the central labiate process area prior to the completion of cytokinesis, and the developing valve grows in a centrifugal direction. The initiation of the structures on the valve follows the sequence: labiate process, marginal ridge, and rota. A novel labiate process apparatus, which is situated in the cytoplasm close to the developing labiate process, appears prior to the initiation of the labiate process and disappears upon its maturation. Segments of the girdle bands are formed in individual silica deposition vesicles after the valve matures and is exocytosed. Three morphological forms of deposited silica have been determined: thin base layers, microfibrils, and hexagonal columns. The involvement of cytoplasmic structures in the patterning of the siliceous wall is discussed.  相似文献   

14.
The xylem of higher plants offers support to aerial portions of the plant body and serves as conduit for the translocation of water and nutrients. Terminal differentiation of xylem cells typically involves deposition of thick secondary cell walls. This is a dynamic cellular process accompanied by enhanced rates of cellulose deposition and the induction of synthesis of specific secondary-wall matrix polysaccharides and lignin. The secondary cell wall is essential for the function of conductive and supportive xylem tissues. Recently, significant progress has been made in identifying the genes responsible for xylem secondary cell wall formation. However, our present knowledge is still insufficient to account for the molecular processes by which this complex system operates. To acquire further information about xylem secondary cell walls, we initially focused our research effort on a set of genes specifically implicated in secondary cell wall formation, as well as on loss-of-function mutants. Results from two microarray screens identified several key candidate genes responsible for secondary cell wall formation. Reverse genetic analyses led to the identification of a glycine-rich protein involved in maintaining the stable structure of protoxylem, which is essential for the transport of water and nutrients. A combination of expression analyses and reverse genetics allows us to systematically identify new genes required for the development of physical properties of the xylem secondary wall.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Cloning and identification of genes from the cambium of woody plants are important steps in the investigation of wood formation. In order to clone and identify the genes involved in wood formation, a cDNA library was constructed from the cambial tissue of Betula platyphylla Suk (birch). From the cDNA library, 2,878 high-quality ESTs were generated, representing 1,540 tentative unique genes (TUGs). Approximately 70% of the ESTs were matched to proteins in the NR database in GenBank and were grouped into 12 functional categories according to their functional annotation. Fifty TUGs potentially involved in wood formation, including the process of lignin biosynthesis, cell wall structure, cell wall polysaccharides synthesis or development regulation, were identified from the EST collection. The time course expression analysis of 13 wood formation related genes was further studied using RNA gel blot and semi-quantitative RT-PCR. The results showed that these genes were primarily expressed in tissue that was collected during two time periods, spring (26 April to 11 June) and later summer (30 July to 18 Sept). The bimodal expression curve of the genes indicates that both of these time periods are critical in wood formation in birch, and may be associated with cell wall expansion earlier in the year, and cell wall strengthening later in the year.  相似文献   

17.
After each division of a diatom cell, a new siliceous hypovalve is formed inside the silica deposition vesicle (SDV). We present the sequence of this early formation of the new valve in the pennate marine diatom Navicula salinarum (Grunow) Hustedt, visualized by using the fluorescent probe 2‐(4‐pyridyl)‐5‐((4‐(2‐dimethylaminoethylamino‐carbamoyl)methoxy)phenyl)oxazole (PDMPO). Our observations confirm that two‐dimensional expansion of the growing valve is a rapid process of no more than 15 min; three‐dimensional completion of the valve appears to be slower, lasting most of the time valve formation takes. The results are relevant to studies of the timing of molecular processes involved in valve formation (i.e. the bio‐ and morphogenesis of the SDV) in relation to uptake and transport of silicic acid. Use of this probe helps us to identify specific developmental stages for further detail analysis of diatom basilica formation, which eventually could lead to obtaining enriched SDV fractions.  相似文献   

18.
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20.
The spore wall of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a multilaminar extracellular structure that is formed de novo in the course of sporulation. The outer layers of the spore wall provide spores with resistance to a wide variety of environmental stresses. The major components of the outer spore wall are the polysaccharide chitosan and a polymer formed from the di-amino acid dityrosine. Though the synthesis and export pathways for dityrosine have been described, genes directly involved in dityrosine polymerization and incorporation into the spore wall have not been identified. A synthetic gene array approach to identify new genes involved in outer spore wall synthesis revealed an interconnected network influencing dityrosine assembly. This network is highly redundant both for genes of different activities that compensate for the loss of each other and for related genes of overlapping activity. Several of the genes in this network have paralogs in the yeast genome and deletion of entire paralog sets is sufficient to severely reduce dityrosine fluorescence. Solid-state NMR analysis of partially purified outer spore walls identifies a novel component in spore walls from wild type that is absent in some of the paralog set mutants. Localization of gene products identified in the screen reveals an unexpected role for lipid droplets in outer spore wall formation.  相似文献   

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