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1.
T. Kakimoto  H. Shibaoka 《Protoplasma》1987,140(2-3):151-156
Summary Treatment with lysine prior to fixation of tobacco BY-2 cells with formaldehyde improved the preservation of actin filaments in the cells and enabled us to observe both networks of actin filaments and microtubules in the same cells. By using this method, we observed that (1) actin filaments were present in the preprophase band; (2) the actin filaments in the preprophase band and phragmoplast were runnig in the same direction as the microtubules in their respective structures; (3) a cortical network of actin filaments was present throughout all stages of cell cycle.The present method did not preserve the cortical actin filaments in interphase cells. The procedure for staining microtubules destroyed them.Abbreviations EGTA Ethyleneglycol-bis(-aminoethyl ether)N,N,N,N-tetraacetic acid - PIPES Piperazine-N,N-bis(2-ethanesulfonic acid) - PMSF Phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride - TLCK Na-p-tosyl-L-lysine chloromethyl ketone  相似文献   

2.
Treatment with tropomyosin before fixation of tobacco BY-2 cellswith aldehydes improved the preservation of actin filamentsin the cells and enabled us to visualize fine networks of bothcortical actin filaments and cortical microtubules in the sameinterphase cells by the double staining technique using rhodaminephalloidin and antitubulin antibodies. (Received June 25, 1987; Accepted August 31, 1987)  相似文献   

3.
Localization of actin filaments on mitotic apparatus in tobacco BY-2 cells   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Yasuda H  Kanda K  Koiwa H  Suenaga K  Kidou S  Ejiri S 《Planta》2005,222(1):118-129
Actin filaments are among the major components of the cytoskeleton, and participate in various cellular dynamic processes. However, conflicting results had been obtained on the localization of actin filaments on the mitotic apparatus and their participation in the process of chromosome segregation. We demonstrated by using rhodamine-phalloidin staining, the localization of actin filaments on the mitotic spindles of tobacco BY-2 cells when the cells were treated with cytochalasin D. At prophase, several clear spots were observed at or near the kinetochores of the chromosomes. At anaphase, the actin filaments that appeared to be pulling chromosomes toward the division poles were demonstrated. However, as there was a slight possibility that these results might have been the artifacts of cytochalasin D treatment or the phalloidin staining, we analyzed the localization of actin filaments at the mitotic apparatus immunologically. We cloned a novel BY-2 -type actin cDNA and prepared a BY-2 actin antibody. The fluorescence of the anti-BY-2 actin antibody was clearly observed at the mitotic apparatus in both non-treated and cytochalasin D-treated BY-2 cells during mitosis. The facts that similar results were obtained in both actin staining with rhodamine-phalloidin and immunostaining with actin antibody strongly indicate the participation of actin in the organization of the spindle body or in the process of chromosome segregation. Furthermore, both filamentous actin and spindle bodies disappeared in the cells treated with propyzamide, which depolymerizes microtubules, supporting the notion that actin filaments are associated with microtubules organizing the spindle body.Hiroshi Yasuda and Katsuhiro Kanda contributed equally.  相似文献   

4.
T. L. M. Rutten  J. Derksen 《Protoplasma》1992,167(3-4):231-237
Summary Microtubules inNicotiana tabacum pollen tube subprotoplasts reassembled in wave-like to concentric cortical arrays. Crosslinks between microtubules were either 15 or 80 nm in length. Cortical actin filaments showed different distributions; no colocalization like that in pollen tubes was observed. Degradation of actin filaments by cytochalasin D had no influence on microtubule organization. Degradation of microtubules and/or actin filaments did not affect outgrowth of the subprotoplasts. Organization of the microtubules occurred independent of the presence of the generative cell and/or the vegetative nucleus. No relation of actin filament and microtubule organization with organelle distribution could be detected.Abbreviations AFs actin filaments - DAPI 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole - EGTA ethylene glycol bis (2-amino ethylether) N,N,N,N-tetraacetic acid - FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - MTs microtubules - SPPs subprotoplasts - TRITC tetramethyl rhodamine B isothiocyanate  相似文献   

5.
Summary Embryogenic cultures have been produced for a wide range of conifers and current methods developed for spruce permit the maturation of high quality embryos that can be desiccated and then germinated to form plantlets. Embryogenic suspensions consisting of immature embryos are an excellent source of regenerable protoplasts. This review considers examples of applications of embryogenic suspension cultures for basic studies in three areas of plant cell biology. a) Immunofluorescence studies of microtubules in mitotic spruce cells reveal focused spindle poles at prophase and anphase, suggesting the presence of microtubule organizing centers (MTOCs). Antibodies known to recognize animal MTOCs do not stain the polar regions but do stain developing kinetochores. b) Embryo-derived protoplasts regenerate directly to somatic embryos. Fluorescence studies of the cytoskeleton in freshly derived protoplasts reveal random cortical microtubules and a fine network of actin filaments. During culture, protoplasts change shape and develop transverse cortical microtubule arrays. Embryonal cells of newly formed embryos possess distinctive arrays of cortical microtubules and networks of fine actin filaments while suspensor cells are characterized by transverse cortical microtubules and longitudinal actin cables. c) Transmission electron microscope studies of endocytosis in spruce protoplasts reveal an endocytotic pathway similar to that described previously for soybean. Uptake results are confirmed using high pressure freeze fixation instead of conventional chemical fixation. Presented in the Session-in-Depth Morphogenesis: Plant Cell and Tissue Differentiation at the 1994 Congress on Cell and Tissue Culture, Research Triangle Park, NC, June 4–7, 1994.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Changes in F-actin organization following mechanical isolation ofZinnia mesophyll cells were documented by rhodamine-phalloidin staining. Immediately after isolation, most cells contained irregular cortical actin fragments of varying lengths, and less than 5% of cells contained intact cortical filaments. During the first 8 h of culture, filament fragments were replaced by actin rings, stellate actin aggregates, and bundled filament fragments. Some of these aggregates had no association with organelles (free actin aggregates). Other aggregates were associated with chloroplasts, which changed in shape and location at the same time actin aggregates appeared. F-actin was concentrated within or around the nucleus in a small percentage of cells. After 12 h in culture, the percentage of cells with free actin rings and chloroplast-associated actin aggregates began to decline and the percentage of cells having intact cortical actin filaments increased greatly. Intermediate images were recorded that strongly indicate that free actin rings, chloroplast-associated actin rings, and other actin aggregates self-assemble by successive bundling of actin filament fragments. The fragmentation and bundling of F-actin observed in mechanically isolatedZinnia cells resembles changes in F-actin distribution reported after diverse forms of cell disturbance and appears to be an example of a generalized response of the actin cytoskeleton to cell stress.Abbreviations FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - MBS m-maleimidobenzoic acid N-hydroxysuccinimide ester - RhPh tetramethylrhodamine isothiocyanate-phalloidin  相似文献   

7.
Summary Changes in the spatial relationship between actin filaments and microtubules during the differentiation of tracheary elements (TEs) was investigated by a double staining technique in isolatedZinnia mesophyll cells. Before thickening of the secondary wall began to occur, the actin filaments and microtubules were oriented parallel to the long axis of the cell. Reticulate bundles of microtubules and aggregates of actin filaments emerged beneath the plasma membrane almost simultaneously, immediately before the start of the deposition of the secondary wall. The aggregates of actin filaments were observed exclusively between the microtubule bundles. Subsequently, the aggregates of actin filaments extended preferentially in the direction transverse to the long axis of the cell, and the arrays of bundles of microtubules which were still present between the aggregates of actin filaments became transversely aligned. The deposition of the secondary walls then took place along the transversely aligned bundles of microtubules.Disruption of actin filaments by cytochalasin B produced TEs with longitudinal bands of secondary wall, along which bundles of microtubules were seen, while TEs produced in the absence of cytochalasin B had transverse bands of secondary wall. These results indicate that actin filaments play an important role in the change in the orientation of arrays of microtubules from longitudinal to transverse. Disruption of microtubules by colchicine resulted in dispersal of the regularly arranged aggregates of actin filaments, but did not inhibit the formation of the aggregates itself, suggesting that microtubules are involved in maintaining the arrangement of actin filaments but are not involved in inducing the formation of the regularly arranged aggregates of actin filaments.These findings demonstrate that actin filaments cooperate with microtubules in controlling the site of deposition of the secondary wall in developing TEs.Abbreviations DMSO dimethylsulfoxide - EGTA ethyleneglycolbis(-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N,N-tetraacetic acid - FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - MSB microtubule-stabilizing buffer - PBS phosphate buffered saline - PIPES piperazine-N,N-bis(2-ethanesulfonic acid) - TE tracheary element  相似文献   

8.
Summary The spatial organization of actin microfilaments during the asexual life cycle ofAchlya bisexualis has been examined by two methods. One is the standard procedure described by Heath [Eur J Cell Biol (1987) 44: 10–16], in which specimens are fixed with formaldehyde and then stained with rhodamine-phalloidin. In the other, introduced by Sonobe and Shibaoka [Protoplasma (1989) 148: 80–86], specimens are treated with the protein crosslinking agent MBS (m-maleimidobenzoyl-N-hydroxysuccinimide) before fixation and staining. Both methods display the actin-rich cleavage zones that outline the developing zoospores. However, in extending hyphae and young sporangia the images are significantly different. Specimens pretreated with MBS display more prominent axial microfilament cables than do standard specimens, while peripheral actin plaques are sparse or absent. The results suggest that actin microfilaments occur in several configurations, some of which may be obscured by the standard fixation procedure. Pretreatment with MBS, though probably subject to artefacts of its own, may help preserve some features that would otherwise be missed.Abbreviations Rh-Phal rhodamine phalloidin - MBS m-maleimidobenzoyl-N-hydroxysuccinimide - PIPES piperazine-N,N-bis [2-ethanesulfonic acid] - EGTA ethylene glycol-bis (-aminoethyl ether) N,N-tetraacetic acid - DMSO dimethyl sulfoxide  相似文献   

9.
Summary Double labeling with fluorescent probes showed that in the cortical cytoplasm of pollen tubes ofNicotiana tabacum andLilium longiflorum, the microtubules and actin filaments co-localize for the most part. They displayed complex net-axial or helical distributions. They structural association of microtubules and actin filaments implies a functional relationship with respect to organelle movement and/or the organization of the cortical cytoplasm and cell surface.Abbreviations EGTA ethyleneglycol-bis-(-aminoethylether)-N,N,N,N-tetra-acetic acid - FITC fluoresceine iso-thiocyanate  相似文献   

10.
H. Hashimoto 《Protoplasma》1992,167(1-2):88-96
Summary Studies have been made of whether actin filaments and microtubules are involved in the chloroplast division ofClosterium ehrenbergii (Conjugatae). Fluorostaining with rhodamine-phalloidin showed 5 types of localization of F-actin: (1) cables of actin filaments running in the cortical cytoplasm along the cell's long axis, (2) condensed actin filaments at the septum, (3) perinuclear distribution of actin filaments, (4) F-actins in a marking pin-like configuration adjacent to the nucleus of semicells just before completion of chloroplast kinesis, and (5) actin filaments girdling the isthmus of the constricted and dividing chloroplasts. Cytochalasin D (CD) at a concentration of 6 to 25 M caused significant disruption of actin filaments and the arrest of chloroplast kinesis, nuclear division, septum formation and cytoplasmic streaming within 3 to 6h. Chloroplast kinesis and cytoplasmic streaming recovered when cells were transferred to the medium without CD after CD treatment, or were subjected to prolonged contact with CD for more than 9h. In these cells there was a coincidental reappearance of actin filaments. A tubulin inhibitor, amiprophos-methyl at 330 M, did not inhibit chloroplast kinesis but did inhibit division and positioning of the nucleus. These results suggest that actin filaments do play a role in the mechanism of chloroplast kinesis but that microtubules do not appear to be involved in the process.Abbreviations APM amiprophos-methyl - CD cytochalasin D - DAPI 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole - DIC Nomarski differential interference contrast - DMSO dimethyl sulfoxide - Rh-Ph rhodamine-phalloidin  相似文献   

11.
Summary The organization of the submembrane cytoskeleton of non-photoreceptive, accessory cells in the honeybee compound eye was examined using light-microscopic (phallotoxin labeling, immunohistochemistry) and electron-microscopic (decoration with myosin fragments) techniques. The crystalline cone cells contain numerous peripheral actin filaments oriented longitudinally with antiparallel polarity. Bundles of microtubules lie under the plasma membrane of primary pigment cells, in close apposition to the crystalline cone; they are interspersed with only a few actin filaments. Pigmented glial cells (secondary pigment cells) contain a two-dimensional filament/particle web lining their entire plasma membranes. Both filamentous actin and -spectrin are localized within the cortex of these cells, indicating that they are web components. The results demonstrate that the three cell types contain different cortical cytoskeletons, implying different functional properties.  相似文献   

12.
The role of the cytoskeleton in the regulation of chloroplast motility and positioning has been investigated by studying: (1) structural relationship of actin microfilaments, microtubules, and chloroplasts in cryofixed and freeze-substituted leaf cells of Arabidopsis; and (2) the effects of anti-actin (Latrunculin B; LAT-B) and anti-microtubule (Oryzalin) drugs on intracellular distribution of chloroplasts. Immunolabeling of leaf cells with two plant-actin specific antibodies, which react equivalently with all the expressed Arabidopsis actins, revealed two arrangements of actin microfilaments: longitudinal arrays of thick actin bundles and randomly oriented thin actin filaments that extended from the bundles. Chloroplasts were either aligned along the actin bundles or closely associated with the fine filaments. Baskets of actin microfilaments were also observed around the chloroplasts. The leaf cells labeled with an anti-tubulin antibody showed dense transverse arrays of cortical microtubules that exhibited no apparent association with chloroplasts. The application of LAT-B severely disrupted actin filaments and their association with chloroplasts. In addition, LAT-B induced aberrant aggregation of chloroplasts in the mesophyll and bundle sheath cells. Double labeling of LAT-B treated cells with anti-actin and anti-tubulin antibodies revealed that the microtubules in these cells were unaffected. Moreover, depolymerization of microtubules with Oryzalin did not affect the distribution of chloroplasts. These results provide evidence for the involvement of actin, but not tubulin, in the movement and positioning of chloroplasts in leaf cells. We propose that using motor molecules, some chloroplasts migrate along the actin cables directly, while others are pulled along the cables by the fine actin filaments. The baskets of microfilaments may anchor the chloroplasts during streaming and allow control over proper three-dimensional orientation to light.  相似文献   

13.
Distribution of microtubules and F-actin in aerobically growing cells of Dipodascus magnusii, belonging to the class Saccharomycetes was analyzed using immunofluorescence microscopy and labeling with rhodamine-tagged phalloidin. A conspicuous system of permanent cytoplasmic microtubules was observed in association with multiple nuclei. In elongating cells, helices of cytoplasmic microtubules appeared at the cell cortex. In cells approaching cytokinesis transversely oriented microtubules were revealed at incipient division sites. Confocal laser scanning microscopy showed a continuity of these transverse microtubules with the remaining microtubule network. The actin system of D. magnusii consisted of patches and filaments. Patches were found to accumulate at the tips of growing cells. Bands of fine actin filaments were usually observed before F-actin rings were established. A close cortical association of microtubules with the F-actin ring was documented on individual optical sections of labeled cells. Cells with developing septa showed medial F-actin discs associated at both sides with microtubules. Colocalization of cytoplasmic microtubules with actin filaments at the cortex of dividing cells supports a role of both cytoskeletal components in controlling cell wall growth and septum formation in D. magnusii.  相似文献   

14.
The cortical cytoplasm of the alga Nitella contains reticulateactin that does not survive perfusion fixation with glutaraldehydeunless prestabilized with the cross-linker 3-maleimidobenzoyl-N-hydroxysuccinimidester (MBS). Cytochalasin D remodels thiscortical actin into short rods which are more stable, survivingaldehyde fixation without MBS pre-treatment. The overall alignmentof these actin rods correlates with that of cortical microtubules(transverse in young cells, random in old cells) but probablydoes not involve one-to-one correspondence. The time course,dose dependence and reversibility of these structural changesbroadly resemble those for streaming inhibition by cytochalasinbut the cortical actin responds to concentrations that do notslow streaming. Because the structural changes concern the corticaland not the subcortical actin, they seem unlikely to directlyinhibit streaming. Formation of cortical rods is not a responseto streaming inhibition per se since it does not occur whentwo other inhibitors of streaming (2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP) andNethyl maleimide (NEM)) are used. NEM, however, resembles MBSin stabilizing the reticulate form of cortical actin even thoughit cannot cross link. 1Address from July 1995; Department of Biology, Faculty of Science,Osaka University, Machikaneyama 1-1, Tayonaka, Osaka, 560 Japan.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The fine structural organization of a cortical filament layer in normal locomoting Amoeba proteus was demonstrated using improved fixation and embedding techniques. Best results were obtained after application of PIPES-buffered glutaraldehyde in connection with substances known to prevent the depolymerization of F-actin, followed by careful dehydration and freeze-substitution.The filament layer is continuous along the entire surface; it exhibits a varying thickness depending on the cell polarity, measuring several nm in advancing regions and 0.5–1 m in retracting ones. Two different types of filaments are responsible for the construction of the layer: randomly distributed thin (actin) filaments forming an unordered meshwork beneath the plasma membrane, and thick (myosin) filaments mostly restricted to the uroid region in close association with F-actin.The cortical filament layer generates the motive force for amoeboid movement by contraction at posterior cell regions and induces a pressure flow that continues between the uroid with a high hydrostatic pressure and advancing pseudopodia with a low one. The local destabilization of the cell surface as a precondition for the formation of pseudopodia is enabled by the detachment of the cortical filament layer from the plasma membrane. This results in morphological changes by the active separation of peripheral hyaloplasmic and central granuloplasmic regions.  相似文献   

16.
Summary To assess the relative roles of cortical actin and microtubule re-orientation in the establishment of new cell polarity, we have examined the kinetics of cortical actin re-orientation around a wedge-shaped wound in pea roots. Cortical actin re-orients from a transverse alignment to an approximately longitudinal orientation between 5 and 24h after wounding, that is, after the re-alignment of microtubules, which is known to occur before 5h post-wounding. F-actin in root cortical cells does not appear to be necessary for the establishment of new cell polarity around wounds, since normal MT re-alignment, and new planes of cell division are still established around a wound in cytochalasin treated roots. The cytochalasin treatment appeared to totally disrupt cortical and cytoplasmic F-actin in cells of the root cortex. However, in the apparent absence of F-actin in these cells, the rate of wound-induced cell division, but not cell expansion, is slower, and we suggest that an effect on the phragmosomal actin is involved. Finally, we demonstrate that new cell polarity around a wound is not established if microtubules are disrupted by the herbicide oryzalin, but after re-establishment of these arrays following a wash-out of the drug, the typical new planes of cell expansion are observed. We conclude that microtubules play a critical role in establishing and maintaining cell polarity in this system, and that cortical F-actin has a minor and presently unclear function in these processes.Abbreviations DAPI 4,6-diamidino-2-phenyl-indole - DMSO dimethylsulphoxide - EGTA ethyleneglycol-bis-(-aminoethyleter)-N,N,N,N-tetraacetic acid - FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - MBS m-maleido-benzoyl N-hydroxysuccinimide ester - MSB microtubule stabilizing buffer - MT microtubule - PIPES 1,4-piperazine-dietha-nesulphonic acid - PPB pre-prophase band - Rh-ph rhodamine phalloidin  相似文献   

17.
Summary Within the infected cells of root nodules there is evidence of stratification and organisation of symbiosomes and other organelles. This organisation is likely to be important for the efficient exchange of nutrients and metabolites during functioning of the nodules. Using immunocytochemical labelling and confocal microscopy we have determined the organisation of cytoskeletal elements, micro tubules and actin microfilaments in soybean nodule cells, with a view to assessing their possible role in organelle distribution. Most microtubule arrays occurred in the cell cortex where they formed disorganised arrays in both uninfected and infected cells from mature nodules. In infected cells from developing nodules, parallel arrays of microtubules, transverse to the long axis of the cell, were observed. In incipient nodules, before release of rhizobia into the plant cells, the cells also had an array of microtubules which radiated from the nucleus into the cytoplasm. Three actin arrays were identified in the infected cells of mature nodules: an aster-like array which emanated from the surface of the nucleus, a cortical array which had an arrangement similar to that of the cortical microtubules, and, throughout the cytoplasm, an array of fine filaments which had a honeycomb arrangement consistent with a distribution between adjacent symbiosomes. Uninfected cells from mature nodules had only a random cortical array of actin filaments. In incipient nodules, the density of actin microfilaments associated with the nucleus and radiating through the cytoplasm was much less than that seen in mature infected cells. The cortical array of actin also differed, being composed of swirling configurations of filaments. After invasion of nodule cells by the rhizobia, the number of actin filaments emanating from the nucleus increased markedly and formed a network through the cytoplasm. Conversely, the cytoplasmic array in uninfected cells of developing nodules was identical to that in the cells of incipient nodules. The cytoplasmic network in infected cells of developing nodules is likely to be the precursor of the honeycomb array seen in mature nodule cells. We propose that this actin array plays a role in the spatial organisation of symbiosomes and that the microtubules are involved in the localisation of mitochondria and plastids at the cell periphery in the infected cells of root nodules.  相似文献   

18.
Evidence is accumulating implicating cortical microtubules in the directional control of cell expansion. However, the role of actin filaments in this process is still uncertain. To determine the involvement of actin in cell elongation, the organization of actin filaments in primary roots of maize (Zea mays L.) was examined by use of an improved fluorochrome-conjugated phalloidin-labeling method. With this method, a previously undetected state of actin organization was revealed in the elongation and maturation zone of maize roots. Fine transversely oriented cortical actin was observed in all cells of the elongation zone, including the epidermis, cortex, and vascular tissues. The orientation of cortical actin shifted from a predominantly transverse orientation to oblique, longitudinal, and/or random arrangements as the cells matured. The reorientation of cortical actin in maturing root cells mimics the behavior of cortical microtubules reported in other studies. Furthermore, roots treated with the microtubule-stabilizing drug taxol improved the quality of actin preservation as evidenced by the thicker bundles of cortical actin. This suggested that taxol was also capable of stabilizing the cortical actin networks. The elongation of roots exposed to 1 micromole Latrunculin B, an actin-disrupting drug, was inhibited, and after 24 h the roots exhibited moderate swelling particularly along the elongation zone. Latrunculin B also caused microtubules to reorient from transverse to oblique arrays. The results from this study provide evidence that cortical microtubules and actin filaments respond in a coordinated way to environmental signals and may well depend on both elements of the cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

19.
Summary F-actin was localized inMougeotia interphase cells by rhodamine phalloidin (RLP) using an extended, formaldehyde-based fixation protocol, which included a minimal concentration of 0.05% (v/v) glutardialdehyde and stabilization of the calcium-binding vesicles by presaturation with neutral red. Staining revealed a low level of RLP-fluorescence throughout the cytoplasm. An enhanced level of RLP-fluorescence was found around the nucleus and in mostly two parallel fringes along each longitudinal chloroplast edge; also close to the chloroplast edge, quite regularly spaced patches of RLP-fluorescence were seen possibly associated with dictyosomes. The diffuse staining indicates lack of F-actin bundles inMougeotia filamentous cells, in contrast toSpirogyra interphase cells orMougeotia protoplasts. The observations upon staining with RLP confirm previous findings by electron microscopy and indicate seemingly single actin filaments throughout the entireMougeotia filamentous cell. Thus, a special F-actin organization is evident here which for the chloroplast movement is in support of the hypothesis of pigment regulated plasmalemma anchorage sites to actin filaments.Abbreviations CaBV calcium-binding vesicle - DIC differential interference contrast - EGTA ethyleneglycol-bis-(-aminoethyl ether) N, N, N, N tetraacetic acid - FA formaldehyde - GA glutardialdehyde - MFSB microfilament stabilizing buffer - PIPES piperazine-N, N-bis(2-ethanesulfonic acid) - RLP rhodamine (labeled) phalloidin Dedicated to the memory of Professor Oswald Kiermayer  相似文献   

20.
Peroxisomes were visualized in living plant cells using a yellow fluorescent protein tagged with a peroxisomal targeting signal consisting of the SKL motif. Simultaneous visualization of peroxisomes and microfilaments/microtubules was accomplished in onion (Allium cepa) epidermal cells transiently expressing the yellow fluorescent protein-peroxi construct, a green fluorescent protein-mTalin construct that labels filamentous-actin filaments, and a green fluorescent protein-microtubule-binding domain construct that labels microtubules. The covisualization of peroxisomes and cytoskeletal elements revealed that, contrary to the reports from animal cells, peroxisomes in plants appear to associate with actin filaments and not microtubules. That peroxisome movement is actin based was shown by pharmacological studies. For this analysis we used onion epidermal cells and various cell types of Arabidopsis including trichomes, root hairs, and root cortex cells exhibiting different modes of growth. In transient onion epidermis assay and in transgenic Arabidopsis plants, an interference with the actin cytoskeleton resulted in progressive loss of saltatory movement followed by the aggregation and a complete cessation of peroxisome motility within 30 min of drug application. Microtubule depolymerization or stabilization had no effect.  相似文献   

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