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1.
The intercellular and intracellular distribution of the movement protein (MP) of the Ob tobamovirus was examined in infected leaf tissues using an infectious clone of Ob in which the MP gene was translationally fused to the gene encoding the green fluorescent protein (GFP) of Aequorea victoria. In leaves of Nicotiana tabacum and N. benthamiana, the modified virus caused fluorescent infection sites that were visible as expanding rings. Microscopy of epidermal cells revealed subcellular patterns of accumulation of the MP:GFP fusion protein which differed depending upon the radial position of the cells within the fluorescent ring. Punctate, highly localized fluorescence was associated with cell walls of all of the epidermal cells within the infection site, and apparently represents association of the fusion protein with plasmodesmata; furthermore, fluorescence was retained in cell walls purified from infected leaves. Within the brightest region of the fluorescent ring, the MP:GFP was observed in irregularly shaped inclusions in the cortical regions of infected cells. Fluorescent filamentous structures presumed to represent association of MP:GFP with microtubules were observed, but were distributed differently within the infection sites on the two hosts. Within cells containing filaments, a number of fluorescent bodies, some apparently streaming in cytoplasmic strands, were also observed. The significance of these observations is discussed in relation to MP accumulation, targeting to plasmodesmata, and degradation.  相似文献   

2.
Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) derivatives that encode movement protein (MP) as a fusion to the green fluorescent protein (MP:GFP) were used in combination with antibody staining to identify host cell components to which MP and replicase accumulate in cells of infected Nicotiana benthamiana leaves and in infected BY-2 protoplasts. MP:GFP and replicase colocalized to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER; especially the cortical ER) and were present in large, irregularly shaped, ER-derived structures that may represent "viral factories." The ER-derived structures required an intact cytoskeleton, and microtubules appeared to redistribute MP:GFP from these sites during late stages of infection. In leaves, MP:GFP accumulated in plasmodesmata, whereas in protoplasts, the MP:GFP was targeted to distinct, punctate sites near the plasma membrane. Treating protoplasts with cytochalasin D and brefeldin A at the time of inoculation prevented the accumulation of MP:GFP at these sites. It is proposed that the punctate sites anchor the cortical ER to plasma membrane and are related to sites at which plasmodesmata form in walled cells. Hairlike structures containing MP:GFP appeared on the surface of some of the infected protoplasts and are reminiscent of similar structures induced by other plant viruses. We present a model that postulates the role of the ER and cytoskeleton in targeting the MP and viral ribonucleoprotein from sites of virus synthesis to the plasmodesmata through which infection is spread.  相似文献   

3.
The cellular localization and molecular interactions are indicative of functions of a protein. The development of a simple and efficient method for subcellular localization of a protein is indispensable to elucidate gene function in plants. In this study, we assessed the feasibility of Agrobacterium-mediated transformation (agroinfiltration) of tobacco and tomato leaf tissue to follow intracellular targeting of proteins from rice fused to green fluorescent protein (GFP). For this, a simple in planta assay for subcellular localization of rice proteins in the heterologous host systems of tobacco and tomato leaf via transient transformation was developed. We have tested the applicability of this method by expressing GFP fusions of the putative antiphagocytic protein 1 (APP1) (OsAPP, LOC_Os03g56930) and ZOS3-18-C2H2 zinc-finger protein (OsZF1, LOC_Os03g55540) from Oryza sativa L. subsp. japonica in tobacco and tomato leaf tissues. Our results demonstrate the suitability of GFP as a reporter in gene expression studies in tomato cv. MicroTom. The use of GFP-fused proteins from rice for subcellular targeting in the heterologous hosts of tobacco and tomato plant systems has been confirmed.Key words: agroinfiltration, confocal microscopy, GFP fusion protein, tomato cv, microtom  相似文献   

4.
Plasmodesmata mediate direct cell-to-cell communication in plants. One of their significant features is that primary plasmodesmata formed at the time of cytokinesis often undergo structural modifications, by the de novo addition of cytoplasmic strands across cell walls, to become complex secondary plasmodesmata during plant development. Whether such modifications allow plasmodesmata to gain special transport functions has been an outstanding issue in plant biology. Here we present data showing that the cucumber mosaic virus 3a movement protein (MP):green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion was not targeted to primary plasmodesmata in the epidermis of young or mature leaves in transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) plants constitutively expressing the 3a:GFP fusion gene. Furthermore, the cucumber mosaic virus 3a MP:GFP fusion protein produced in planta by biolistic bombardment of the 3a:GFP fusion gene did not traffic between cells interconnected by primary plasmodesmata in the epidermis of a young leaf. In contrast, the 3a MP:GFP was targeted to complex secondary plasmodesmata and trafficked from cell to cell when a leaf reached a certain developmental stage. These data provide the first experimental evidence, to our knowledge, that primary and complex secondary plasmodesmata have different protein-trafficking functions and suggest that complex secondary plasmodesmata may be formed to traffic specific macromolecules that are important for certain stages of leaf development.  相似文献   

5.
Recent studies of the tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) P30 movement protein (MP) fused with green fluorescent protein (GFP) during TMV infection described the involvement of elements of the cytoskeleton and components of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) in the intracellular trafficking of MP:GFP from the sites of synthesis in the cytoplasm to plasmodesmata. To examine in real-time the pattern of synthesis, accumulation and degradation of MP:GFP, we developed a method to immobilize protoplasts in agarose such that they are maintained alive for extended periods of time. The pattern of MP:GFP accumulation in single living protoplasts visualized by confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) was parallel to that previously described in a population of protoplasts harvested at different times post-infection. Additionally, a network of weakly fluorescent filaments, which are apparently different from microtubules, was observed to surround the nucleus and these filaments were associated with fluorescent bodies (previously identified as ER-derived structures). Later in infection, the fluorescent bodies increased in size and coalesced to form larger structures that accumulated near the periphery of the cells while highly fluorescent non-cortical filaments were observed distributed in the cytoplasm. The putative involvement of these filaments in targeting the fluorescent bodies to the periphery of the cell is discussed. Studies of single, embedded protoplasts make it possible to observe changes in amount and subcellular localization of viral and other proteins.  相似文献   

6.
The formation of virus movement protein (MP)-containing punctate structures on the cortical endoplasmic reticulum is required for efficient intercellular movement of Red clover necrotic mosaic virus (RCNMV), a bipartite positive-strand RNA plant virus. We found that these cortical punctate structures constitute a viral replication complex (VRC) in addition to the previously reported aggregate structures that formed adjacent to the nucleus. We identified host proteins that interacted with RCNMV MP in virus-infected Nicotiana benthamiana leaves using a tandem affinity purification method followed by mass spectrometry. One of these host proteins was glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase-A (NbGAPDH-A), which is a component of the Calvin-Benson cycle in chloroplasts. Virus-induced gene silencing of NbGAPDH-A reduced RCNMV multiplication in the inoculated leaves, but not in the single cells, thereby suggesting that GAPDH-A plays a positive role in cell-to-cell movement of RCNMV. The fusion protein of NbGAPDH-A and green fluorescent protein localized exclusively to the chloroplasts. In the presence of RCNMV RNA1, however, the protein localized to the cortical VRC as well as the chloroplasts. Bimolecular fluorescence complementation assay and GST pulldown assay confirmed in vivo and in vitro interactions, respectively, between the MP and NbGAPDH-A. Furthermore, gene silencing of NbGAPDH-A inhibited MP localization to the cortical VRC. We discuss the possible roles of NbGAPDH-A in the RCNMV movement process.  相似文献   

7.
Previous micro-injection studies showed that some recombinant viral movement proteins and plant proteins produced in and purified from Escherichia coli could traffic from cell to cell. However, the relevance of these findings obtained by micro-injecting proteins produced in E. coli to the real functions of these proteins when produced in planta has been questioned. In this study, specific gene constructs were delivered by biolistic bombardment into tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum var Samsun) leaf epidermis for in planta production of the green fluorescent protein (GFP) and various fusions between the cucumber mosaic virus 3a movement protein (3a MP) and GFP. Free GFP remained in cells producing it. In contrast, 3a MP:GFP fusion protein moved from approximately half of the cells producing it into neighboring cells. The movement also occurred at 4°C. A mutant 3a MP:GFP was incapable of cell-to-cell movement in all cases. A 3a MP:GUS fusion protein produced in this manner also moved from cell to cell. Our data provide direct evidence that specific viral proteins produced in planta can be transported between cells. Furthermore, our data suggest that the CMV 3a MP contains a signal for transport. Our approach is simple and efficient and has many potential applications in studying plasmodesma-mediated macromolecular transport.  相似文献   

8.
The movement protein (MP) and coat protein (CP) encoded by Alfalfa mosaic virus (AMV) RNA 3 are both required for virus transport. RNA 3 vectors that expressed nonfused green fluorescent protein (GFP), MP:GPF fusions, or GFP:CP fusions were used to study the functioning of mutant MP and CP in protoplasts and plants. C-terminal deletions of up to 21 amino acids did not interfere with the function of the CP in cell-to-cell movement, although some of these mutations interfered with virion assembly. Deletion of the N-terminal 11 or C-terminal 45 amino acids did not interfere with the ability of MP to assemble into tubular structures on the protoplast surface. Additionally, N- or C-terminal deletions disrupted tubule formation. A GFP:CP fusion was targeted specifically into tubules consisting of a wild-type MP. All MP deletion mutants that showed cell-to-cell and systemic movement in plants were able to form tubular structures on the surface of protoplasts. Brome mosaic virus (BMV) MP did not support AMV transport. When the C-terminal 48 amino acids were replaced by the C-terminal 44 amino acids of the AMV MP, however, the BMV/AMV chimeric protein permitted wild-type levels of AMV transport. Apparently, the C terminus of the AMV MP, although dispensable for cell-to-cell movement, confers specificity to the transport process.  相似文献   

9.
《Gene》1996,173(1):113-117
Two proteins of Aequorea victoria were molecularly engineered and produced in mammalian cells, in order to serve as specific reporters of subcellular microenvironments. Aequorin (AEQ), a Ca2+-sensitive photoprotein, was successfully targeted to three intracellular locations: cytosol, nucleus and mitochondria. The recombinant apoprotein, reconstituted into active AEQ by the addition of the prosthetic group to the culture medium, allows the direct measurement of [Ca2+] within those compartments, thus directly addressing questions of large biological interest. The same approach was utilized for the green fluorescent protein (GFP) for specific labelling, in vivo, of the various subcellular structures. GFP was targeted to mitochondria: the recombinant protein, strongly fluorescent in a highly reducing environment, provides a powerful tool for visualizing these organelles in living cells, and may represent the prototype of a new family of intracellularly targeted fluorescent probes.  相似文献   

10.
The green fluorescent protein (GFP) has become an ideal visual marker to monitor and quantify the expression of the transgene. It can be targeted to specific subcellular locations, including the endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, actin cytoskeleton and nuclei through the addition of signal peptides. Our previous work has resulted in transgenic citrus plants expressing cytoplasmic targeted GFP (Cy-GFP) or endoplasmic reticulum targeted GFP (Er-GFP) gene. To evaluate the localization of three different subcellular targeted GFP, i.e., Cy-GFP, Er-GFP and mitochondria targeted GFP (Mt-GFP) in citrus tissues and to utilize cell lines containing Mt-GFP for basic research in cell fusion, the plasmid pBI-mgfp4-coxIV encoding the Mt-GFP gene was successfully transferred into embryogenic callus of Valencia sweet orange (Citrus sinensis (L.) Osbeck) via Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation. Furthermore, we compared the specific expression of these three different subcellular localized GFP constructs in cells of different mature leaf tissues (upper epidermis, palisade parenchyma, spongy parenchyma and lower epidermis) by a confocal laser scanning microscope (CLSM). Cytoplasmic-localized GFP expression was observed throughout the cytoplasm but appeared to accumulate within the nucleoplasm. The Er-GFP occurred within a layer very close to the cell wall. In addition, a stable fluorescence on the ER network throughout the guard cells was detected. Interestingly, the Mt-GFP specifically expressed in the guard cells to particles of about 1–2 μm within the cytoplasm in this case. To verify that the fluorescent particles observable in the guard cells are indeed mitochondria, we co-localize the Mt-GFP fusion protein with a mitochondrial-specific dye in citrus protoplasts. These results demonstrate that the subcellular distribution of the three subcellular targeted GFP is very distinct in citrus leaf cells and the cell lines containing Mt-GFP gene can be further used in citrus basic cell fusion research.  相似文献   

11.
《Gene》1998,221(1):35-43
A series of versatile cloning vectors has been constructed that facilitate the expression of protein fusions to the Aequorea victoria green fluorescent protein (GFP) in plant cells. Amino-terminal- and carboxy-terminal protein fusions have been created and visualized by epifluorescence microscopy, both in transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana and after transient expression in onion epidermal cells. Using tandem dimers and other protein fusions to GFP, we found that the previously described localization of wild-type GFP to the cell nucleus is most likely due to diffusion of GFP across the nuclear envelope rather than to a cryptic nuclear localization signal. A fluorescence-based, quantitative assay for nuclear localization signals is described. In addition, we have employed the previously characterized mutants GFP–S65T and GFP–Y66H in order to allow for the expression of red-shifted and blue fluorescent proteins, respectively, which are suitable for double-labeling studies. Expression of GFP-fusions was controlled by a cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter. Using the Arabidopsis COP1 protein as a model, we confirmed a close similarity in the subcellular localization of native COP1 and the GFP-tagged COP1 protein. We demonstrated that COP1 was localized to discrete subnuclear particles and further confirmed that fusion to GFP did not compromise the activity of the wild-type COP1 protein.  相似文献   

12.

Background

Green fluorescent protein (GFP) and its fusion proteins have been used extensively to monitor and analyze a wide range of biological processes. However, proteolytic cleavage often removes GFP from its fusion proteins, not only causing a poor signal-to-noise ratio of the fluorescent images but also leading to wrong interpretations.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Here, we report that the M153R mutation in a ratiometric pH-sensitive GFP, pHluorin, significantly stabilizes its fusion products while the mutant protein still retaining a marked pH dependence of 410/470 nm excitation ratio of fluorescence intensity. The M153R mutation increases the brightness in vivo but does not affect the 410/470-nm excitation ratios at various pH values.

Conclusions/Significance

Since the pHluorin(M153R) probe can be directly fused to the target proteins, we suggest that it will be a potentially powerful tool for the measurement of local pH in living cells as well as for the analysis of subcellular localization of target proteins.  相似文献   

13.
Fusion proteins comprised of a binding domain and green fluorescent protein (GFP) have the potential to act as one-step binding reagents. In this study, eight single-chain antibodies (scFv) and one single-chain T-cell receptor (scTCR) were secreted as fusions to GFP using a Saccharomyces cerevisiae expression system. Fusion protein secretion levels ranged over 3 orders of magnitude, from 4 μg/liter to 4 mg/liter, and correlated well with the secretion levels of the unfused scFv/scTCR. Three fusion types with various linker lengths and fusion orientations were tested for each scFv/scTCR. Although the fusion protein secretion levels were not significantly affected by the nature of the fusion construct, the properties of the fusion protein were clearly influenced. The fluorescence yield per fusion molecule was increased by separating the scFv/scTCR and GFP with an extended (GGGGS)3 linker, and fusions with scFv/scTCR at the carboxy-terminus were more resistant to degradation. By evaluating leader sequence processing and using GFP fluorescence to track intracellular processing, it was determined that the majority of fusion protein synthesized by the yeast was not secreted and in most cases was accumulating in an immature, although active, endoplasmic-reticulum (ER)-processed form. This contrasted with unfused scFv, which accumulated in both immature ER-processed and mature post-Golgi forms. The results indicated that yeast can be used as an effective host for the secretion of scFv/scTCR-GFP fusion proteins and that as a result of intracellular secretory bottlenecks, there is considerable yeast secretory capacity remaining to be exploited.  相似文献   

14.
A novel cell-surface display system was constructed in Aspergillus oryzae. Each of the five genes encoding the putative cell-wall-localized protein from the A. oryzae genome was cloned and these cell-surface anchor functions were examined by fusion to the C-terminal of the green fluorescent protein (GFP). Using the MP1 and CWP proteins as anchor proteins, GFP signals were strongly observed on the cell surface of recombinant A. oryzae. When these proteins were used as anchor proteins for cell-surface display of β-glucosidase from A. oryzae, enzyme activity was detected on the cell surface. In particular, β-glucosidase activity of recombinant A. oryzae using MP1, a putative glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor protein was higher than CWP. Based on these results, it was concluded that the MP1 protein can act as a GPI-anchor protein in A. oryzae, and the proposed cell-surface display system using MP1 allows for the display of heterogeneous and endogenous proteins.  相似文献   

15.
Several plant viruses encode movement proteins (MPs) classified in the 30K superfamily. Despite a great functional diversity, alignment analysis of MP sequences belonging to the 30K superfamily revealed the presence of a central core region, including amino acids potentially critical for MP structure and functionality. We performed alanine‐scanning mutagenesis of the Ourmia melon virus (OuMV) MP, and studied the effects of amino acid substitutions on MP properties and virus infection. We identified five OuMV mutants that were impaired in systemic infection in Nicotiana benthamiana and Arabidopsis thaliana, and two mutants showing necrosis and pronounced mosaic symptoms, respectively, in N. benthamiana. Green fluorescent protein fusion constructs (GFP:MP) of movement‐defective MP alleles failed to localize in distinct foci at the cell wall, whereas a GFP fusion with wild‐type MP (GFP:MPwt) mainly co‐localized with plasmodesmata and accumulated at the periphery of epidermal cells. The movement‐defective mutants also failed to produce tubular protrusions in protoplasts isolated from infected leaves, suggesting a link between tubule formation and the ability of OuMV to move. In addition to providing data to support the importance of specific amino acids for OuMV MP functionality, we predict that these conserved residues might be critical for the correct folding and/or function of the MP of other viral species in the 30K superfamily.  相似文献   

16.
A key challenge in cell biology is to directly link protein localization to function. The green fluorescent protein (GFP)‐binding protein, GBP, is a 13‐kDa soluble protein derived from a llama heavy chain antibody that binds with high affinity to GFP as well as to some GFP variants such as yellow fluorescent protein (YFP). A GBP fusion to the red fluorescent protein (RFP), a molecule termed a chromobody, was previously used to trace in vivo the localization of various animal antigens. In this study, we extend the use of chromobody technology to plant cells and develop several applications for the in vivo study of GFP‐tagged plant proteins. We took advantage of Agrobacterium tumefaciens‐mediated transient expression assays (agroinfiltration) and virus expression vectors (agroinfection) to express functional GBP:RFP fusion (chromobody) in the model plant Nicotiana benthamiana. We showed that the chromobody is effective in binding GFP‐ and YFP‐tagged proteins in planta. Most interestingly, GBP:RFP can be applied to interfere with the function of GFP fusion protein and to mislocalize (trap) GFP fusions to the plant cytoplasm in order to alter the phenotype mediated by the targeted proteins. Chromobody technology, therefore, represents a new alternative technique for protein interference that can directly link localization of plant proteins to in vivo function.  相似文献   

17.
Xiong R  Wu J  Zhou Y  Zhou X 《Journal of virology》2008,82(24):12304-12311
Rice stripe virus (RSV) is the type member of the genus Tenuivirus. RSV has four single-stranded RNAs and causes severe disease in rice fields in different parts of China. To date, no reports have described how RSV spreads within host plants or the viral and/or host factor(s) required for tenuivirus movement. We investigated functions of six RSV-encoded proteins using trans-complementation experiments and biolistic bombardment. We demonstrate that NSvc4, encoded by RSV RNA4, supports the intercellular trafficking of a movement-deficient Potato virus X in Nicotiana benthamiana leaves. We also determined that upon biolistic bombardment or agroinfiltration, NSvc4:enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP) fusion proteins localize predominantly near or within the walls of onion and tobacco epidermal cells. In addition, the NSvc4:eGFP fusion protein can move from initially bombarded cells to neighboring cells in Nicotiana benthamiana leaves. Immunocytochemistry using tissue sections from RSV-infected rice leaves and an RSV NSvc4-specific antibody showed that the NSvc4 protein accumulated in walls of RSV-infected leaf cells. Gel retardation assays revealed that the NSvc4 protein interacts with single-stranded RNA in vitro, a common feature of many reported plant viral movement proteins (MPs). RSV NSvc4 failed to interact with the RSV nucleocapsid protein using yeast two-hybrid assays. Taken together, our data indicate that RSV NSvc4 is likely an MP of the virus. This is the first report describing a tenuivirus MP.  相似文献   

18.
The tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) movement protein (MP) required for the cell-to-cell spread of viral RNA interacts with the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) as well as with the cytoskeleton during infection. Whereas associations of MP with ER and microtubules have been intensely investigated, research on the role of actin has been rather scarce. We demonstrate that Nicotiana benthamiana plants transgenic for the actin-binding domain 2 of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) fimbrin (AtFIM1) fused to green fluorescent protein (ABD2:GFP) exhibit a dynamic ABD2:GFP-labeled actin cytoskeleton and myosin-dependent Golgi trafficking. These plants also support the movement of TMV. In contrast, both myosin-dependent Golgi trafficking and TMV movement are dominantly inhibited when ABD2:GFP is expressed transiently. Inhibition is mediated through binding of ABD2:GFP to actin filaments, since TMV movement is restored upon disruption of the ABD2:GFP-labeled actin network with latrunculin B. Latrunculin B shows no significant effect on the spread of TMV infection in either wild-type plants or ABD2:GFP transgenic plants under our treatment conditions. We did not observe any binding of MP along the length of actin filaments. Collectively, these observations demonstrate that TMV movement does not require an intact actomyosin system. Nevertheless, actin-binding proteins appear to have the potential to exert control over TMV movement through the inhibition of myosin-associated protein trafficking along the ER membrane.  相似文献   

19.
We investigated the applicability of the green fluorescent protein (GFP) of Aequorea victoria as a reporter for gene expression in an extremely halophilic organism: Halobacterium salinarum. Two recombinant GFPs were fused with bacteriorhodopsin, a typical membrane protein of H. salinarum. These fusion proteins preserved the intrinsic functions of each component, bacteriorhodopsin and GFP, were expressed in H. salinarum under conditions with an extremely high salt concentration, and were proved to be properly localized in its plasma membrane. These results suggest that GFP could be used as a versatile reporter of gene expression in H. salinarum for investigations of various halophilic membrane proteins, such as sensory rhodopsin or phoborhodopsin.  相似文献   

20.
As a non-immunoglobulin protein scaffold, human kringle domain (KD) has attractive properties such as high specificity, stability, and production in bacterial hosts. Here, we developed a rapid and sensitive fluorescence-linked immunosorbent assay (FLISA) system using a fluorescent kringle domain (fluoKD), a fusion protein of a green fluorescent protein (GFP), and a kringle domain variant (KD548). Two kinds of fluoKDs in which KD was fused to the N terminus of GFP (N-fluoKD) or the C terminus of GFP (C-fluoKD) were constructed and characterized. In Escherichia coli host, both fluoKDs were produced in high yield and solubility and were successfully purified by a simple procedure. The purified fluoKDs exhibited strong fluorescent activities and high affinities to the target antigen. Furthermore, it was successfully demonstrated that the FLISA with purified fluoKDs allowed for more rapid detection of target antigens with higher sensitivity compared with conventional enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), indicating that a simple, rapid, and sensitive immunoassay system could be developed by using KD instead of antibody or antibody fragments.  相似文献   

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