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1.
Lentil root statocytes show a strict structural polarity of their organelles with respect to the g vector. These cells are involved in the perception of gravity and are responsible for the orientation of the root. Actin filaments take part in the positioning of their organelles and could also be involved in the transduction of the gravitropic signal. A pre-embedding immunogold silver technique was carried out with a monoclonal antibody in order to study the distribution of actin cytoskeleton in the statocytes at the electron microscopic level. Some areas were never labelled (cell wall, vacuole, nucleoplasm, mitochondria, starch grains of the amyloplasts) or very slightly labelled (stroma of the amyloplasts). The labelling was scattered in the cytoplasm always close to, or on the nuclear and amyloplast envelopes and the tonoplast. Associations of 2 to 6 dots in file were observed, but these short files were not oriented in one preferential direction. They corresponded to a maximum distance of 0.9 micron. This work demonstrated that each statocyte organelle was enmeshed in an actin web of short filaments arranged in different ways. The images obtained by rhodaminephalloidin staining were in accordance with those of immunogold labelling. The diffuse fluorescence of the cytoplasm could be explained by the fact that the meshes of the web should be narrow. The vicinity of actin and of the amyloplasts envelope could account for the movement of these organelles that was observed in spatial microgravity.  相似文献   

2.
Higher plants use the sedimentation of amyloplasts in statocytes as statolith to sense the direction of gravity during gravitropism. In Arabidopsis thaliana inflorescence stem statocyte, amyloplasts are in complex movement; some show jumping-like saltatory movement and some tend to sediment toward the gravity direction. Here, we report that a RING-type E3 ligase SHOOT GRAVITROPISM9 (SGR9) localized to amyloplasts modulates amyloplast dynamics. In the sgr9 mutant, which exhibits reduced gravitropism, amyloplasts did not sediment but exhibited increased saltatory movement. Amyloplasts sometimes formed a cluster that is abnormally entangled with actin filaments (AFs) in sgr9. By contrast, in the fiz1 mutant, an ACT8 semidominant mutant that induces fragmentation of AFs, amyloplasts, lost saltatory movement and sedimented with nearly statically. Both treatment with Latrunculin B, an inhibitor of AF polymerization, and the fiz1 mutation rescued the gravitropic defect of sgr9. In addition, fiz1 decreased saltatory movement and induced amyloplast sedimentation even in sgr9. Our results suggest that amyloplasts are in equilibrium between sedimentation and saltatory movement in wild-type endodermal cells. Furthermore, this equilibrium is the result of the interaction between amyloplasts and AFs modulated by the SGR9. SGR9 may promote detachment of amyloplasts from AFs, allowing the amyloplasts to sediment in the AFs-dependent equilibrium of amyloplast dynamics.  相似文献   

3.
The claim (Lawton, Juniper, and Hawes, 1986) that amyloplastssediment through the central vacuole of geostimulated shootstatocytes has been critically examined. As the result of ourTEM study of Taraxacum statocytes and from theoretical considerationsof amyloplast sedimentation, we conclude that it is possiblefor individual amyloplasts surrounded by a layer of tonoplast-boundedcytoplasm to travel occasionally through the vacuole, but unlikelythat the majority of the amyloplasts in a statocyte sedimentin this manner. We put forward a scheme for amyloplast movementin shoot statocytes which emphasizes the fluidity of the tonoplastmembrane. In this scheme, it is expected that most amyloplastssediment in peripheral cytoplasm down the statocyte cell wall,but amyloplasts may also, as they sediment, create or breaktransvacuolar strands, or move through already existing transvacuolarstrands, or fall through the vacuole while enclosed by somecytoplasm and tonoplast membrane. Finally, it is suggested thatthe tonoplast membrane may have been neglected as a membranesite for detection of the gravity stimulus through interactionwith sedimenting amyloplasts. Key words: Amyloplast sedimentation, statocytes, geotropism, Taraxacum officinale  相似文献   

4.
The F-actin cytoskeleton is hypothesized to play a role in signal transduction mechanisms of gravitropism by interacting with sedimenting amyloplasts as they traverse statocytes of gravistimulated plants. Previous studies have determined that pharmacological disruption of the F-actin cytoskeleton with latrunculin B (Lat-B) causes increased gravitropism in stem-like organs and roots, and results in a more rapid settling of amyloplasts in the columella cells of Arabidopsis roots. These results suggest that the actin cytoskeleton modulates amyloplast movement and also gravitropic signal transduction. To determine the effect of F-actin disruption on amyloplast sedimentation in stem-like organs, Arabidopsis hypocotyls were treated with Lat-B and a detailed analysis of amyloplast sedimentation kinetics was performed by determining amyloplast positions in endodermal cells at various time intervals following reorientation. Confocal microscopy was used to confirm that Lat-B effectively disrupts the actin cytoskeleton in these cells. The results indicate that amyloplasts in hypocotyl endodermal cells settle more quickly compared with amyloplasts in root columella cells. F-actin disruption with Lat-B severely reduces amyloplast mobility within Arabidopsis endodermal statocytes, and these results suggest that amyloplast sedimentation within the hypocotyl endodermal cell is F-actin-dependent. Thus, a model for gravitropism in stem-like organs is proposed in which F-actin modulates the gravity response by actively participating in statolith repositioning within the endodermal statocytes.  相似文献   

5.
The actin cytoskeleton is a crucial component in plant gravitropism, and studies confirm that alterations to actin filaments (F-actin) can have dramatic effects on gravitropic curvature in roots and shoots. Many models for gravisensing in higher plants suggest that the key to gravity perception and signal transduction lies in intimate interactions between F-actin and amyloplasts. In this study, we investigated gravitropism in hypocotyls by analyzing the effect of myosin inhibition on gravitropic curvature in order to clarify the role of the actomyosin system in shoot gravitropism. To study amyloplast movement in endodermal cells (i.e., gravity-perceiving statocytes) of living seedlings, we repositioned a confocal laser scanning microscope (CLSM) so that its rotatable stage was oriented vertically. Seedlings containing green fluorescent protein-labeled endodermal amyloplasts were incubated with the ATPase inhibitor 2,3-butanedione monoxime (BDM) and then mounted on the stage so that the hypocotyls were vertical. Using CLSM, we imaged the endodermal amyloplasts, while the hypocotyls were oriented vertically and also after they were reoriented by 90°. Our results show that BDM reduces gravitropic curvature in a concentration-dependent manner. In addition, BDM increases amyloplast movement in hypocotyls of vertical seedlings, but reduces amyloplast movement in hypocotyls of reoriented seedlings, suggesting that myosin may participate in the intracellular transport of amyloplasts in statocytes. These results can be explained in the context of amyloplasts as both noise indicators and gravity susceptors, with BDM producing less coherent amyloplast movement that results in an increased signal-to-noise ratio, which may account for at least part of the observed reduction in gravitopic curvature.  相似文献   

6.
Busch MB  Sievers A 《Planta》1990,181(3):358-364
Treatment of cress (Lepidium sativum L.) roots with phytohormones (4.3 x 10(-5) M gibberellic acid plus 4.3 x 10(-5) M kinetin, 30 h; T.H. Iversen, 1969, Physiol. Plant. 22, 1251-1262) caused not only complete destarching of amyloplasts but also destruction of the polar arrangement of cell organelles in statocytes. The nucleus was not positioned exclusively near the proximal cell pole as in the controls but was also found near the distal cell pole. The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) was no longer organized in parallel sheets at the distal cell pole but instead the ER-cisternae were randomly distributed. Additionally, the statocytes from hormone-treated roots contained a large central vacuole instead of numerous small ones as in the controls. The starch-free plastids had a reduced volume and an amoeboid shape. They did not sediment but were randomly distributed in the statocytes. The loss of structural polarity was accompanied by loss of graviresponsiveness although root growth still occurred. Twenty-two hours after removal of the hormones, structural polarity was restored and starch was resynthesized. The newly formed starch grains were smaller and more numerous per amyloplast compared to the controls. It is concluded that loss of gravisensitivity of roots after hormone treatment cannot be solely attributed to the loss of amyloplastic starch because there is a concomitant loss in the polar organisation of the statocyte.  相似文献   

7.
Mechanotransduction in root gravity sensing cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The analysis of the dose-response curve of the gravitropic reaction of lentil seedling roots has shown that these organs are more sensitive when they have been grown in microgravity than when they have been grown on a 1 g centrifuge in space before gravistimulation. This difference of gravisensitivity is not due to the volume or the density of starch grains of statoliths, which are about the same in both conditions (1 g or microgravity). However, the distribution of statoliths within the statocyte may be responsible for this differential sensitivity, since the dispersion of these organelles is greater in microgravity than in 1 g. When lentil roots grown in microgravity or in 1 g are stimulated at 0.93 g for 22 min, the amyloplasts sediment following two different trajectories. They move from the proximal half of the statocytes toward the lower longitudinal wall in the microgravity grown sample and from the distal half toward the longitudinal wall in the 1 g grown sample. At the end of the stimulation, they reach a similar position within the statocytes. If the roots of both samples are left in microgravity for 3 h, the amyloplasts move toward the cell centre in a direction that makes an average angle of 40 degrees with respect to the lower longitudinal wall. The actin filaments, which are responsible for this movement, may have an overall orientation of 40 degrees with respect to this wall. Thus, when roots grown in microgravity are stimulated on the minicentrifuge the amyloplasts slide on the actin filaments, whereas they move perpendicular to them in 1 g grown roots. Our results suggest that greater sensitivity of seedling roots grown in microgravity should be due to greater dispersion of statoliths, to better contacts between statoliths and the actin network and to greater number of activated mechanoreceptors. One can hypothesize that stretch activated ion channels (SACs) located in the plasma membrane are responsible for the transduction of gravistimulus. These SACs may be connected together by elements of the cytoskeleton lining the plasma membrane and to the actin filaments. They could be stimulated by the action of statoliths on the actin network and/or on these elements of the cytoskeleton which link the mechanoreceptors (SACs).  相似文献   

8.
Rhodamine-phalloidin was used to determine the distribution of actin microfilament bundles (mfb) in cells thought to be the site of gravity perception (statocytes) in coleoptiles and root caps of Zea mays and Hordeum vulgare. In coleoptile cells, amyloplasts were usually observed in close proximity to thick mfb, which often appeared to divide into finer mfb adjacent to individual amyloplasts. The nucleus in these cells was surrounded by an extensive network of mfb, which were connected to thicker transvacuolar mfb. Columella cells of the root cap contained an extensive reticulum of fine mfb throughout the protoplast, but lacked the much thicker mfb seen in coleoptile cells. The distribution and extent of mfb observed in fixed cells correlates with patterns of streaming and amyloplast movement seen in living cells. A possible role for actin mfb in the perception of gravity is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
The oil palm (Elaeis guineensis Jacq.) has a root system consisting of primary (or order 1) roots, which are either orthogravitropic (R1 VD, with positive gravitropism) or diagravitropic (R1 H). Their statenchyma have very similar characteristics (mainly vacuolated, large cells). However, their statoliths sediment along the longitudinal wall in R1 H and along the distal wall in R1 VD (furthest cell wall from the apical meristem, opposite the proximal wall). Order 2 roots may have vertical upward (R2 VU) or downward growth (R2 VD) or even horizontal growth (R2 H). In all cases, the statoliths are located near the lower wall of the statocyte (distal in R2 VD, proximal in R2 VU and longitudinal in R2 H). Order 3 roots are usually agravitropic. When they grow upwards, R3 VU, their amyloplasts are located near the proximal wall. Likewise, the growth direction of R4 varies, but they have little or no statolith sedimentation. Roots with marked gravitropism (positive or negative) have amyloplasts that can sediment along different walls. But, irrespective of amyloplast position in the statocytes, the direction of root growth may be stable. The relation between the different reactions of roots and different sensitivity to auxin or to a curvature-halting signal is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Andreas Sievers  Uta Schmitz 《Planta》1973,114(4):373-378
Summary The calyptra of plagiotropic lateral roots of Lepidium sativum L. is composed of three rows of cells. Movable amyloplates, possibly functioning as statoliths, are located only a few central cells of the ontogenetic youngest cell row. Beside the lateral root axis the two innermost statocytes contain a stable complex of rough endoplasmic reticulum, which is preferentially located in the central distal cell corner. In the statocytes lying above the lateral root axis the amyloplasts are sedimented on the ER-complex during growth in direction of the geotropic liminal angle. In the statocyte below the axis the ER-complex is free of amyloplasts. Thus a dorsiventrality exists in the statocytes located above and below the root axis in regard to the arrangement of their organelles.

Herrn Professor Dr. Maximilian Steiner zum 70. Geburtstag.  相似文献   

11.
Hensel W  Sievers A 《Planta》1980,150(4):338-346
Statocytes of vertically growing roots of Lepidium sativum L. exhibit a strict polarity: The nucleus is positioned near the proximal periclinal cell wall, amyloplasts are sedimented on a complex of rough endoplasmic reticulum (ER) consisting of parallel cisternae near the distal periclinal cell wall.When 24 h old, vertically grown roots are rotated for an additional 20 h on a horizontal clinostat, this polarity is destroyed. Furthermore, the prolonged omnilateral stimulation leads to a damage of the statocytes, which in some cases ends in the self-destruction of the sensitive cells. The different components of the ultrastructural respones of the statocytes are: Displacement of the nucleus; changes in amount and distribution of the ER; loss of amyloplast starch; confluence of lipid droplets to large aggregates: a considerable increase of the lytic compartment. In addition, even anticlinal cell walls may be lysed up to small stumps. As all these effects are clearly restricted to the statocytes, only these cells are able to respond to the continuously changing direction of the gravity vector, thus perceiving gravity as such.After being exposed horizontally, the graviresponse of rotated roots is delayed as compared to the controls. About 20% of the rotated roots do not respond (curve) at all, but grow perpendicular in relation to the gravity vector. Perception of gravity is inevitably correlated with the polarity and the integrity of the statocytes.Abbreviation ER endoplasmic reticulum A preliminary report was presented at the Fall Meeting of the German Society for Cell Biology in Salzburg, Austria, September 1979 (Hensel and Sievers 1979)This paper represents part of a dissertation (D 5) of W. H.  相似文献   

12.
A morphometric analysis of root statocytes was performed on seedlings of lentil ( Lens culinaris L., cv. Verte du Puy) in order to determine the effects of microgravity on the polarity of these cells. Seedlings were grown: (1) on the ground, (2) in microgravity, (3) on a 1 g centrifuge in space, (4) first in microgravity and then placed on a 1 g centrifuge for 3 h. Dry seeds were hydrated in space (except for the ground control) for 25 h in darkness at 22°C in the Biorack facility developed by the European Space Agency. At the end of the experiment, the seedlings were photographed and fixed in glutaraldehyde in the Biorack glove box. The average shape of the statocytes and the location of endoplasmic reticulum, amyloplasts and nucleus in the cells were analysed in the four samples. By considering the cell shape, it appears that the morphology of the statocytes on the ground was different from that observed in the space samples. Cell polarity was similar in microgravity and in the centrifuged samples except for the distribution of the amyloplasts. These organelles were not distributed at random in near zero gravity, and they were more numerous in the proximal than in the distal half. Moreover, the statoliths were more voluminous in microgravity than in the centrifuged samples. The nucleus was closer to the cell center in the statocytes of roots grown in microgravity than in statocytes of roots grown in microgravity and then placed on the 1 g centrifuge for 3 h. It is hypothesized that the nucleus is attached to the cell periphery and that its location is dependent upon gravity.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract The structural polarity of statocytes from cress roots is changed by centrifugation. Upon low- dose centrifugation (3000 g min), the extent of stratification depends on statocyte position, i.e., central statocytes are affected more than lateral ones. Upon higher doses of centrifugation (60,000 and 360,000 g min), a uniform density gradient is established in all statocytes. If, after centrifugation, the roots are exposed to gravity again, the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) cisternae are relocated parallel to the periclinal cell walls within a few minutes; this relocation is independent of the direction of gravity in relation to the root axis, and independent of the previously applied centrifugation dose. This supports the notion that polarity is determined genetically. Cytochalasin B treatment, before and during centrifugation, totally inhibits the relocation of ER. After removing the drug by rinsing the roots, the statocytes restore cell polarity and relocate ER. These results indicate that relocation of ER cisternae may be mediated by microfilaments. When centrifuged roots are exposed to 1 g in the horizontal position, the latent period of gravitropism increases by 8–10 min relative to controls, regardless of the previously applied centrifugation doses. The kinetics of curvature are virtually identical. Since the increase in the latent period coincides with the time needed for most statocytes to restore the distal cell pole, it is evident that perception of gravity is correlated to the integrity of the distal cell pole.  相似文献   

14.
In flowering plants, gravity perception appears to involve the sedimentation of starch-filled plastids, called amyloplasts, within specialized cells (the statocytes) of shoots (endodermal cells) and roots (columella cells). Unfortunately, how the physical information derived from amyloplast sedimentation is converted into a biochemical signal that promotes organ gravitropic curvature remains largely unknown. Recent results suggest an involvement of the Translocon of the Outer Envelope of (Chloro) plastids (TOC) in early phases of gravity signal transduction within the statocytes. This review summarizes our current knowledge of the molecular mechanisms that govern gravity signal transduction in flowering plants and summarizes models that attempt to explain the contribution of TOC proteins in this important behavioral plant growth response to its mechanical environment.Key words: gravitropism, root, amyloplast, TOC complex, TOC132, TOC75  相似文献   

15.
Saether N  Iversen TH 《Planta》1991,184(4):491-497
The mutant TC 7 of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. has been reported to be starch-free and still exhibit root gravitropism (T. Caspar and B. G. Pickard 1989, Planta 177, 185–197). This is not consistent with the hypothesis that plastid starch has a statolith function in gravity perception. In the present study, initial light microscopy using the same mutant showed apparently starch-free statocytes. However, ultrastructural examination detected residues of amyloplast starch grains in addition to the starch-depleted amyloplasts. Applying a point-counting morphometric method, the starch grains in the individual amyloplasts in the mutant were generally found to occupy more than 20% and in a few cases up to 60% of the amyloplast area. In the wild type (WT) the starch occupied on average 98 % of the amyloplast area and appeared as densely packed grains. The amyloplasts occupied 13.9% of the area of the statocyte in the mutant and 23.3% of the statocyte area in the WT. Sedimentation of starch-depleted amyloplasts in the mutant was not detected after 40 min of inversion while in the WT the amyloplasts sedimented at a speed of 6 m · h-1. The gravitropic reactivity and the curvature pattern were also examined in the WT and the mutant. The time-courses of root curvature in the WT and the mutant showed that when cultivated under standard conditions for 60 h in darkness, the curvatures were 83° and 44°, respectively, after 25 h of continuous stimulation in the horizontal position. The WT roots curved significantly more rapidly and with a more normal gravitropic pattern than those of the mutant. These results are discussed in relation to the results previously obtained with the mutant and with respect to the starch-statolith hypothesis.Abbreviation WT wild type This work was supported by grants from Norwegian Research Council for Science and the Humanities (NAVF) which we gratefully acknowledge. We would also like to thank Dr. Timothy Caspar, Michigan State University, East Lansing, USA, for providing us with the seeds of TC 75.  相似文献   

16.
We describe the features of the root system and the gravitropism of roots produced bySonneratia alba. The root system consists of four root types with different growth directions: (a) Pneumatophores, which are negatively orthogravitropic and their statocytes are very large (922 μm2) and the statolith is located near the proximal wall, (b) Cable roots and (c) Feeding roots which are both diagravitropic and their statoliths are settled along the longitudinal wall, and (d) Anchor roots which are positively orthogravitropic. The statocyte cells are the smallest (420 μm2) and statoliths settled at the distal wall. We found that all roots with marked gravitropism have statoliths that settle along different walls of the statocyte. This implies that the statoliths sensing of gravity is done by gravity on mass, and that they are denser than surrounding cytoplasm and this position is related to root growth direction. This finding matches the statoliths sediment under the effect of gravity. Irrespective of statolith, position and direction of growth may be stable.  相似文献   

17.
In higher plants, shoots and roots show negative and positive gravitropism, respectively. Data from surgical ablation experiments and analysis of starch deficient mutants have led to the suggestion that columella cells in the root cap function as gravity perception cells. On the other hand, endodermal cells are believed to be the statocytes (that is, gravity perceiving cells) of shoots. Statocytes in shoots and roots commonly contain amyloplasts which sediment under gravity. Through genetic research with Arabidopsis shoot gravitropism mutants, sgr1/scr and sgr7/shr, it was determined that endodermal cells are essential for shoot gravitropism. Moreover, some starch biosynthesis genes and EAL1 are important for the formation and maturation of amyloplasts in shoot endodermis. Thus, amyloplasts in the shoot endodermis would function as statoliths, just as in roots. The study of the sgr2 and zig/sgr4 mutants provides new insights into the early steps of shoot gravitropism, which still remains unclear. SGR2 and ZIG/SGR4 genes encode a phospholipase-like and a v-SNARE protein, respectively. Moreover, these genes are involved in vacuolar formation or function. Thus, the vacuole must play an important role in amyloplast sedimentation because the sgr2 and zig/sgr4 mutants display abnormal amyloplast sedimentation.  相似文献   

18.
ABSTRACT

Phaseolus vulgaris L. seed germination and seedling root anatomy were investigated on a slowly rotating clinostat in 1g. Clinostat rotating seeds were oriented as follows: the first group with the longer axis parallel to the rotation pole (horizontal), the other with the longer axis normal to the rotation pole with due attention to the position of the root apex primordium in the dry seeds (vertical). Germination time, percent germination and curvature of developing roots were monitored. Furthermore, the anatomy of the root apex was quantitatively analysed. Seeds placed on the clinostat germinated earlier than controls, and columella cells of roots developed while rotating lost the strict polarity with the nucleus positioned near the proximal periclinal cell wall and amyloplasts sedimented on the distal periclinal wall. Irrespective of seed orientation on the rotation axis, loss of cell polarity occurred as well as a decrease in starch content, modification in cell size, and damage to statocytes whose walls appeared partially digested. Cell size in the elongation zone was also larger in roots rotating on the clinostat than in controls, both in vertically and horizontally placed specimens. Our results demonstrate that prolonged rotation has an effect on the statocyte that continuously perceives gravity from ever-changing directions, although this effect is irrespective of seed position on the rotating axis in P. vulgaris.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Indirect immunofluorescence, using monoclonal antibodies to actin and tubulin, applied to sections of root tips ofLepidium, Lycopersicon, Phleum, andZea, revealed features of the cytoskeleton that were unique to the statocytes of their root caps. Although the cortical microtubules (CMTs) lay in dense arrays against the periphery of the statocytes, these same cells showed depleted complements of endoplasmic microtubules (EMTs) and of actin microfilament (AMF) bundles, both of which are characteristic of the cytoskeleton of other post-mitotic cells in the proximal portion of the root apex. The scarcity of the usual cytoskeletal components within the statocytes is considered responsible for the exclusion of the larger organelles (e.g., nucleus, plastids, ER elements) from the interior of the cell and for the absence of cytoplasmic streaming. Furthermore, the depletion of dense EMT networks and AMF bundles in statocyte cytoplasm is suggested as being closely related to the elevated cytoplasmic calcium content of these cells which, in turn, may also favour the formation of the large sedimentable amyloplasts by not permitting plastid divisions. These latter organelles are proposed to act as statoliths due to their dynamic interactions with very fine and highly unstable AMFs which enmesh the statoliths and merge into peripheral AMFs-CMTs-ER-plasma membrane complexes. Rather indirect evidence for these interactions was provided by showing enhanced rates of statolith sedimentation after chemically-induced disintegration of CMTs. All these unique properties of the root cap statocytes are supposed to effectively enhance the gravity-perceptive function of these highly specialized cells.Dedicated to Prof. Dr. Benno Parthier on the occasion of his retirement  相似文献   

20.
We investigated the involvement of the actomyosin network in the early events of the gravitropic response of cut snapdragon (Antirrhinum majus L.) spikes. The effects of the actin-modulating drug, cytochalasin D (CD) and/or the myosin inhibitor, 2,3-butanedione-2-monoxime (BDM) on amyloplast displacement, lateral auxin transport and consequently on stem bending were examined. The inhibitory effect on cytoskeleton integrity was studied by using indirect immunofluorescence double-labeling of actin and myosin. Our results demonstrate that no organizational changes in actin filaments occurred in cortical and endodermal cells of the stem bending zone during reorientation. These results suggest that actin depolymerization is not required for amyloplast sedimentation. Unlike the chloroplasts in the cortex, the amyloplasts in the endodermis were surrounded by actin and myosin, indicating that amyloplasts may be attached to the actin filaments via the motor protein, myosin. This suggests the involvement of myosin as part of the actomyosin complex in amyloplast movement in vertical as well as in reoriented stems. This suggestion was supported by the findings showing that: (a) BDM or CD disrupted the normal organization of actin either by altering characteristic distribution patterns of myosin-like protein in the cortex (BDM), or by causing actin fragmentation (CD); (b) both compounds inhibited the gravity-induced amyloplast displacement in the endodermis. Additionally, these compounds also inhibited lateral auxin transport across the stem and stem gravitropic bending. Our study suggests that during stem reorientation amyloplasts possibly remain attached to the actin filaments, using myosin as a motor protein. Thus, gravisensing and early transduction events in the gravitropic response of snapdragon spikes, manifested by amyloplast displacement and lateral auxin transport, are mediated by the actomyosin complex.  相似文献   

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