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1.
Polar auxin transport, mediated by two distinct plasma membrane-localized auxin influx and efflux carrier proteins/complexes, plays an important role in many plant growth and developmental processes including tropic responses to gravity and light, development of lateral roots and patterning in embryogenesis. We have previously shown that the Arabidopsis AGRAVITROPIC 1/PIN2 gene encodes an auxin efflux component regulating root gravitropism and basipetal auxin transport. However, the regulatory mechanism underlying the function of AGR1/PIN2 is largely unknown. Recently, protein phosphorylation and dephosphorylation mediated by protein kinases and phosphatases, respectively, have been implicated in regulating polar auxin transport and root gravitropism. Here, we examined the effects of chemical inhibitors of protein phosphatases on root gravitropism and basipetal auxin transport, as well as the expression pattern of AGR1/PIN2 gene and the localization of AGR1/PIN2 protein. We also examined the effects of inhibitors of vesicle trafficking and protein kinases. Our data suggest that protein phosphatases, sensitive to cantharidin and okadaic acid, are likely involved in regulating AGR1/PIN2-mediated root basipetal auxin transport and gravitropism, as well as auxin response in the root central elongation zone (CEZ). BFA-sensitive vesicle trafficking may be required for the cycling of AGR1/PIN2 between plasma membrane and the BFA compartment, but not for the AGR1/PIN2-mediated root basipetal auxin transport and auxin response in CEZ cells.  相似文献   

2.
Deposition of ammonium (NH4+) from the atmosphere is a substantial environmental problem. While toxicity resulting from root exposure to NH4+ is well studied, little is known about how shoot‐supplied ammonium (SSA) affects root growth. In this study, we show that SSA significantly affects lateral root (LR) development. We show that SSA inhibits lateral root primordium (LRP) emergence, but not LRP initiation, resulting in significantly impaired LR number. We show that the inhibition is independent of abscisic acid (ABA) signalling and sucrose uptake in shoots but relates to the auxin response in roots. Expression analyses of an auxin‐responsive reporter, DR5:GUS, and direct assays of auxin transport demonstrated that SSA inhibits root acropetal (rootward) auxin transport while not affecting basipetal (shootward) transport or auxin sensitivity of root cells. Mutant analyses indicated that the auxin influx carrier AUX1, but not the auxin efflux carriers PIN‐FORMED (PIN)1 or PIN2, is required for this inhibition of LRP emergence and the observed auxin response. We found that AUX1 expression was modulated by SSA in vascular tissues rather than LR cap cells in roots. Taken together, our results suggest that SSA inhibits LRP emergence in Arabidopsis by interfering with AUX1‐dependent auxin transport from shoot to root.  相似文献   

3.
Laxmi A  Pan J  Morsy M  Chen R 《PloS one》2008,3(1):e1510

Background

Light plays a key role in multiple plant developmental processes. It has been shown that root development is modulated by shoot-localized light signaling and requires shoot-derived transport of the plant hormone, auxin. However, the mechanism by which light regulates root development is not largely understood. In plants, the endogenous auxin, indole-3-acetic acid, is directionally transported by plasma-membrane (PM)-localized auxin influx and efflux carriers in transporting cells. Remarkably, the auxin efflux carrier PIN proteins exhibit asymmetric PM localization, determining the polarity of auxin transport. Similar to PM-resident receptors and transporters in animal and yeast cells, PIN proteins undergo constitutive cycling between the PM and endosomal compartments. Auxin plays multiple roles in PIN protein intracellular trafficking, inhibiting PIN2 endocytosis at some concentrations and promoting PIN2 degradation at others. However, how PIN proteins are turned over in plant cells is yet to be addressed.

Methodology and Principle Findings

Using laser confocal scanning microscopy, and physiological and molecular genetic approaches, here, we show that in dark-grown seedlings, the PM localization of auxin efflux carrier PIN2 was largely reduced, and, in addition, PIN2 signal was detected in vacuolar compartments. This is in contrast to light-grown seedlings where PIN2 was predominantly PM-localized. In light-grown plants after shift to dark or to continuous red or far-red light, PIN2 also accumulated in vacuolar compartments. We show that PIN2 vacuolar targeting was derived from the PM via endocytic trafficking and inhibited by HY5-dependent light signaling. In addition, the ubiquitin 26S proteasome is involved in the process, since its inhibition by mutations in COP9 and a proteasome inhibitor MG132 impaired the process.

Conclusions and Significance

Collectively, our data indicate that light plays an essential role in PIN2 intracellular trafficking, promoting PM-localization in the presence of light and, on the other hand, vacuolar targeting for protein degradation in the absence of light. Based on these results, we postulate that light regulation of root development is mediated at least in part by changes in the intracellular distribution of auxin efflux carriers, PIN proteins, in response to the light environment.  相似文献   

4.
Auxin transport is required for important growth and developmental processes in plants, including gravity response and lateral root growth. Several lines of evidence suggest that reversible protein phosphorylation regulates auxin transport. Arabidopsis rcn1 mutant seedlings exhibit reduced protein phosphatase 2A activity and defects in differential cell elongation. Here we report that reduced phosphatase activity alters auxin transport and dependent physiological processes in the seedling root. Root basipetal transport was increased in rcn1 or phosphatase inhibitor-treated seedlings but showed normal sensitivity to the auxin transport inhibitor naphthylphthalamic acid (NPA). Phosphatase inhibition reduced root gravity response and delayed the establishment of differential auxin-induced gene expression across a gravity-stimulated root tip. An NPA treatment that reduced basipetal transport in rcn1 and cantharidin-treated wild-type plants also restored a normal gravity response and asymmetric auxin-induced gene expression, indicating that increased basipetal auxin transport impedes gravitropism. Increased auxin transport in rcn1 or phosphatase inhibitor-treated seedlings did not require the AGR1/EIR1/PIN2/WAV6 or AUX1 gene products. In contrast to basipetal transport, root acropetal transport was normal in phosphatase-inhibited seedlings in the absence of NPA, although it showed reduced NPA sensitivity. Lateral root growth also exhibited reduced NPA sensitivity in rcn1 seedlings, consistent with acropetal transport controlling lateral root growth. These results support the role of protein phosphorylation in regulating auxin transport and suggest that the acropetal and basipetal auxin transport streams are differentially regulated.  相似文献   

5.
Plant-specific PIN-formed (PIN) efflux transporters for the plant hormone auxin are required for tissue-specific directional auxin transport and cellular auxin homeostasis. The Arabidopsis PIN protein family has been shown to play important roles in developmental processes such as embryogenesis, organogenesis, vascular tissue differentiation, root meristem patterning and tropic growth. Here we analyzed roles of the less characterised Arabidopsis PIN6 auxin transporter. PIN6 is auxin-inducible and is expressed during multiple auxin–regulated developmental processes. Loss of pin6 function interfered with primary root growth and lateral root development. Misexpression of PIN6 affected auxin transport and interfered with auxin homeostasis in other growth processes such as shoot apical dominance, lateral root primordia development, adventitious root formation, root hair outgrowth and root waving. These changes in auxin-regulated growth correlated with a reduction in total auxin transport as well as with an altered activity of DR5-GUS auxin response reporter. Overall, the data indicate that PIN6 regulates auxin homeostasis during plant development.  相似文献   

6.
In the root, the transport of auxin from the tip to the elongation zone, referred to here as shootward, governs gravitropic bending. Shootward polar auxin transport, and hence gravitropism, depends on the polar deployment of the PIN-FORMED auxin efflux carrier PIN2. In Arabidopsis thaliana, PIN2 has the expected shootward localization in epidermis and lateral root cap; however, this carrier is localized toward the root tip (rootward) in cortical cells of the meristem, a deployment whose function is enigmatic. We use pharmacological and genetic tools to cause a shootward relocation of PIN2 in meristematic cortical cells without detectably altering PIN2 polarization in other cell types or PIN1 polarization. This relocation of cortical PIN2 was negatively regulated by the membrane trafficking factor GNOM and by the regulatory A1 subunit of type 2-A protein phosphatase (PP2AA1) but did not require the PINOID protein kinase. When GNOM was inhibited, PINOID abundance increased and PP2AA1 was partially immobilized, indicating both proteins are subject to GNOM-dependent regulation. Shootward PIN2 specifically in the cortex was accompanied by enhanced shootward polar auxin transport and by diminished gravitropism. These results demonstrate that auxin flow in the root cortex is important for optimal gravitropic response.  相似文献   

7.
Reversible protein phosphorylation is a key regulatory mechanism governing polar auxin transport. We characterized the auxin transport and gravitropic phenotypes of the pinoid-9 (pid-9) mutant of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and tested the hypothesis that phosphorylation mediated by PID kinase and dephosphorylation regulated by the ROOTS CURL IN NAPHTHYLPHTHALAMIC ACID1 (RCN1) protein might antagonistically regulate root auxin transport and gravity response. Basipetal indole-3-acetic acid transport and gravitropism are reduced in pid-9 seedlings, while acropetal transport and lateral root development are unchanged. Treatment of wild-type seedlings with the protein kinase inhibitor staurosporine phenocopies the reduced auxin transport and gravity response of pid-9, while pid-9 is resistant to inhibition by staurosporine. Staurosporine and the phosphatase inhibitor, cantharidin, delay the asymmetric expression of DR5∷revGFP (green fluorescent protein) at the root tip after gravistimulation. Gravity response defects of rcn1 and pid-9 are partially rescued by treatment with staurosporine and cantharidin, respectively. The pid-9 rcn1 double mutant has a more rapid gravitropic response than rcn1. These data are consistent with a reciprocal regulation of gravitropism by RCN1 and PID. Furthermore, the effect of staurosporine is lost in pinformed2 (pin2). Our data suggest that reduced PID kinase function inhibits gravitropism and basipetal indole-3-acetic acid transport. However, in contrast to PID overexpression studies, we observed wild-type asymmetric membrane distribution of the PIN2 protein in both pid-9 and wild-type root tips, although PIN2 accumulates in endomembrane structures in pid-9 roots. Similarly, staurosporine-treated plants expressing a PIN2GFP fusion exhibit endomembrane accumulation of PIN2∷GFP, but no changes in membrane asymmetries were detected. Our data suggest that PID plays a limited role in root development; loss of PID activity alters auxin transport and gravitropism without causing an obvious change in cellular polarity.A variety of important growth and developmental processes, including gravity response, embryo and vascular development, and the branching of roots and shoots, are controlled by the directional and regulated transport of auxin in higher plants. Reversible protein phosphorylation is an important regulatory strategy that may modulate auxin transport and dependent processes such as root gravitropism, perhaps through action of the PINOID (PID) kinase (for review, see DeLong et al., 2002; Galvan-Ampudia and Offringa, 2007). PID is an AGC family Ser/Thr kinase (Christensen et al., 2000) and belongs to an AGC kinase clade containing WAG1, WAG2, AGC3-4, and D6PK/AGC1-1 (Santner and Watson, 2006; Galvan-Ampudia and Offringa, 2007; Zourelidou et al., 2009). PID activity has been demonstrated in vitro and in vivo (Christensen et al., 2000; Michniewicz et al., 2007), and several pid mutant alleles exhibit altered auxin transport in the inflorescence and a floral development defect resembling that of auxin transport mutants (Bennett et al., 1995). Overexpression of the PID gene results in profound alterations in root development and responses to auxin transport inhibitors, reduced gravitropism and auxin accumulation at the root tip (Christensen et al., 2000; Benjamins et al., 2001; Michniewicz et al., 2007), as well as enhanced indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) efflux in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) cell cultures (Lee and Cho, 2006) and altered PINFORMED1 (PIN1), PIN2, and PIN4 localization patterns (Friml et al., 2004; Michniewicz et al., 2007), consistent with PID being a positive regulator of IAA efflux. However, the effects of pid loss-of-function mutations on auxin transport activities and gravitropic responses in roots have not yet been reported (Robert and Offringa, 2008).In contrast, auxin transport and gravitropism defects of a mutant with reduced protein phosphatase activity have been characterized in detail. The roots curl in naphthylphthalamic acid1 (rcn1) mutation, which ablates the function of a protein phosphatase 2A regulatory subunit, causes reduced PP2A activity in vivo and in vitro (Deruère et al., 1999). Roots and hypocotyls of rcn1 seedlings have elevated basipetal auxin transport (Deruère et al., 1999; Rashotte et al., 2001; Muday et al., 2006), and rcn1 roots exhibit a significant delay in gravitropism, consistent with altered auxin transport (Rashotte et al., 2001; Shin et al., 2005). These data indicate that PP2A is a negative regulator of basipetal transport and suggest that if PID-dependent phosphorylation regulates root auxin transport and gravitropism, then it may act in opposition to PP2A-dependent dephosphorylation.In roots, auxin transport is complex, with distinct sets of influx and efflux carriers that define tissue-specific and opposing directional polarities (for review, see Leyser, 2006). IAA moves acropetally, from the shoot toward the root apex, through the central cylinder (Tsurumi and Ohwaki, 1978), and basipetally, from the root apex toward the base, through the outer layer of cells (for review, see Muday and DeLong, 2001). When plants are reoriented relative to the gravity vector, auxin becomes asymmetrically distributed across the root tip, as a result of a process termed lateral auxin transport (for review, see Muday and Rahman, 2008). Several carriers that mediate root basipetal IAA transport have been clearly defined and include the influx carrier AUXIN-INSENSITIVE1 (AUX1; Marchant et al., 1999; Swarup et al., 2004; Yang et al., 2006) and efflux carriers of two classes, PIN2 (Chen et al., 1998; Müller et al., 1998; Rashotte et al., 2000) and ATP-BINDING CASSETTE TYPE B TRANSPORTER4/MULTIDRUG-RESISTANT4/P-GLYCOPROTEIN4 (ABCB4/MDR4/PGP4; Geisler et al., 2005; Terasaka et al., 2005; Lewis et al., 2007). Lateral transport at the root tip may be mediated by PIN3, an efflux carrier with a gravity-dependent localization pattern (Friml et al., 2002; Harrison and Masson, 2007).Gravitropic curvature of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) roots requires changes in IAA transport at the root tip (for review, see Muday and Rahman, 2008). Auxin transport inhibitors (Rashotte et al., 2000) and mutations in genes encoding basipetal transporters, including aux1 (Bennett et al., 1996), pin2/agr1 (Chen et al., 1998; Müller et al., 1998), and abcb4/mdr4/pgp4 (Lin and Wang, 2005; Lewis et al., 2007), alter gravitropism. Auxin-inducible reporters exhibit asymmetric expression across the root tip prior to differential growth, and this asymmetry is abolished by treatment with auxin transport inhibitors that prevent gravitropic curvature (Rashotte et al., 2001; Ottenschläger et al., 2003). Additionally, the pin3 mutant exhibits slightly reduced rates of gravitropic curvature (Harrison and Masson, 2007), and PIN3 is expressed in the columella cells, which are the site of gravity perception (Blancaflor et al., 1998; Friml et al., 2002). The PIN3 protein relocates to membranes on the lower side of columella cells after gravitropic reorientation, consistent with a role in facilitating asymmetric IAA transport at the root tip (Friml et al., 2002; Harrison and Masson, 2007).The available data suggest a model in which PID and RCN1 antagonistically regulate basipetal transport and gravitropic response in root tips (Fig. 1). In this model, the regions with the highest IAA concentrations in the epidermal and cortical cell layers are indicated by shading, and the arrows indicate the direction and relative amounts of basipetal auxin transport. Our previous work suggests that elevated basipetal IAA transport in rcn1 roots impairs gravitropic response, presumably due to the inability of roots either to form or to perceive a lateral auxin gradient in the context of a stronger polar IAA transport stream (Rashotte et al., 2001). Enhanced basipetal transport may increase the initial auxin concentration along the upper side of the root, impeding the establishment or perception of a gradient in rcn1 and cantharidin-treated wild-type roots (Fig. 1, right). Based on the published pid inflorescence transport data (Bennett et al., 1995), we hypothesize that pid seedling roots and staurosporine-treated wild-type roots have reduced basipetal auxin transport (Fig. 1, left). Upon reorientation of roots relative to the gravity vector, the reduced basipetal IAA transport in pid may lead to slower establishment of an auxin gradient across the root. This model then predicts that cantharidin treatment of pid-9 or staurosporine treatment of rcn1 seedlings would enhance or restore gravitropism in these mutants. Similarly, a double mutant might be expected to exhibit a corrected gravitropic response relative to the single mutants.Open in a separate windowFigure 1.Auxin transport defects in pid-9 and rcn1 mutants alter auxin redistribution after reorientation relative to the gravity vector. This model predicts that differences in basipetal auxin transport activities of wild-type, pid-9, and rcn1 roots will affect the formation of lateral auxin gradients. The shaded area in each root represents the region of highest IAA concentration in epidermal and cortical cells, with darker shading in the central columella cells, believed to be the auxin maxima. The direction and amount of basipetal IAA transport are indicated by arrows. The region of differential growth during gravitropic bending is indicated by the shaded rectangle. If auxin transport is reduced (as shown in the pid-9 mutant or in staurosporine-treated seedlings), this would lead to a slower formation of an auxin gradient in root tips. The rcn1 mutation (or treatment with cantharidin) has already been shown to lead to increased basipetal transport and a reduced rate of gravitropic bending, consistent with altered formation or perception of an auxin gradient. The antagonistic effects of kinase and phosphatase inhibition are predicted to lead to normal gravity responses in the pid-9 rcn1 double mutant as well as in pid-9 and rcn1 single mutants treated with the “reciprocal” inhibitor.The experiments described here were designed to test this model by examining gravitropism and root basipetal IAA transport in pid and staurosporine-treated seedlings. We investigated the regulation of gravity response by PID kinase and RCN1-dependent PP2A activities and observed antagonistic interactions between the rcn1 and pid-9 loss-of-function phenotypes that are consistent with reciprocal kinase/phosphatase regulation. We found that loss of kinase activity in the pid mutant and in staurosporine-treated wild-type plants inhibits basipetal auxin transport and the dependent physiological process of root gravitropism. Our results suggest that staurosporine acts to regulate these processes through inhibition of PID kinase and that PID effects are PIN2 dependent. In both wild-type and pid-9 roots, we observed polar membrane distribution of the PIN2 protein; unlike wild-type roots, though, pid-9 roots exhibited modest accumulation of PIN2 in endomembrane structures. Similarly, we detected asymmetric distribution and endomembrane accumulation of PIN2∷GFP in staurosporine-treated roots. Our data suggest that PID plays a limited role in root development; loss of PID activity alters PIN2 trafficking, auxin transport, and gravitropism without causing an obvious loss of cellular polarity. Together, these experiments provide insight into phosphorylation-mediated control of the gravity response and auxin transport in Arabidopsis roots.  相似文献   

8.
The rate, polarity, and symmetry of the flow of the plant hormone auxin are determined by the polar cellular localization of PIN-FORMED (PIN) auxin efflux carriers. Flavonoids, a class of secondary plant metabolites, have been suspected to modulate auxin transport and tropic responses. Nevertheless, the identity of specific flavonoid compounds involved and their molecular function and targets in vivo are essentially unknown. Here we show that the root elongation zone of agravitropic pin2/eir1/wav6/agr1 has an altered pattern and amount of flavonol glycosides. Application of nanomolar concentrations of flavonols to pin2 roots is sufficient to partially restore root gravitropism. By employing a quantitative cell biological approach, we demonstrate that flavonoids partially restore the formation of lateral auxin gradients in the absence of PIN2. Chemical complementation by flavonoids correlates with an asymmetric distribution of the PIN1 protein. pin2 complementation probably does not result from inhibition of auxin efflux, as supply of the auxin transport inhibitor N-1-naphthylphthalamic acid failed to restore pin2 gravitropism. We propose that flavonoids promote asymmetric PIN shifts during gravity stimulation, thus redirecting basipetal auxin streams necessary for root bending.  相似文献   

9.
Development of xylem cells is affected by environmental stresses such as drought and oxidative stress, and recent findings suggested that jasmonic acid (JA) mediates this process through interaction with other phytohormones such as cytokinin. In this study, we showed that polar auxin transport regulated by PIN3 and PIN7 is involved in the JA-mediated xylem development in vascular tissues. The mutant plants that lack the activity of PIN3 and PIN7 responsible for the auxin transport developed extra xylems in vascular tissues such as the JA-treated wild-type plants. Visualization of auxin response and xylem development in the roots treated with NPA, an inhibitor of polar auxin transport, suggested that disruption of polar auxin transport is involved in the xylem phenotype of pin3 pin7 double mutants. We also found that cytokinin increases expressions of PIN3 and PIN7 responsible for the auxin transport while JA decreases only PIN7. These suggested that PIN7-mediated polar auxin transport system modulates xylem development in response to JA. The finding that JA affects auxin distribution in root vascular tissues further supported this. Collectively, these suggest that JA promotes xylem development by disrupting auxin transport in vascular tissues, and the auxin efflux genes, more especially PIN7 whose expression is suppressed by JA mediates this process.  相似文献   

10.
Phototropic hypocotyl bending in response to blue light excitation is an important adaptive process that helps plants to optimize their exposure to light. In Arabidopsis thaliana, phototropic hypocotyl bending is initiated by the blue light receptors and protein kinases phototropin1 (phot1) and phot2. Phototropic responses also require auxin transport and were shown to be partially compromised in mutants of the PIN-FORMED (PIN) auxin efflux facilitators. We previously described the D6 PROTEIN KINASE (D6PK) subfamily of AGCVIII kinases, which we proposed to directly regulate PIN-mediated auxin transport. Here, we show that phototropic hypocotyl bending is strongly dependent on the activity of D6PKs and the PIN proteins PIN3, PIN4, and PIN7. While early blue light and phot-dependent signaling events are not affected by the loss of D6PKs, we detect a gradual loss of PIN3 phosphorylation in d6pk mutants of increasing complexity that is most severe in the d6pk d6pkl1 d6pkl2 d6pkl3 quadruple mutant. This is accompanied by a reduction of basipetal auxin transport in the hypocotyls of d6pk as well as in pin mutants. Based on our data, we propose that D6PK-dependent PIN regulation promotes auxin transport and that auxin transport in the hypocotyl is a prerequisite for phot1-dependent hypocotyl bending.  相似文献   

11.
Plant development and physiology are widely determined by the polar transport of the signaling molecule auxin. This process is controlled on the cellular efflux level catalyzed by members of the PIN (pin-formed) and ABCB (ATP-binding cassette protein subfamily B)/P-glycoprotein family that can function independently and coordinately. In this study, we have identified by means of chemical genomics a novel auxin transport inhibitor (ATI), BUM (2-[4-(diethylamino)-2-hydroxybenzoyl]benzoic acid), that efficiently blocks auxin-regulated plant physiology and development. In many respects, BUM resembles the functionality of the diagnostic ATI, 1-N-naphtylphtalamic acid (NPA), but it has an IC50 value that is roughly a factor 30 lower. Physiological analysis and binding assays identified ABCBs, primarily ABCB1, as key targets of BUM and NPA, whereas PIN proteins are apparently not directly affected. BUM is complementary to NPA by having distinct ABCB target spectra and impacts on basipetal polar auxin transport in the shoot and root. In comparison with the recently identified ATI, gravacin, it lacks interference with ABCB membrane trafficking. Individual modes or targets of action compared with NPA are reflected by apically shifted root influx maxima that might be the result of altered BUM binding preferences or affinities to the ABCB nucleotide binding folds. This qualifies BUM as a valuable tool for auxin research, allowing differentiation between ABCB- and PIN-mediated efflux systems. Besides its obvious application as a powerful weed herbicide, BUM is a bona fide human ABCB inhibitor with the potential to restrict multidrug resistance during chemotherapy.  相似文献   

12.
Members of the B family of membrane-bound ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters represent key components of the auxin efflux machinery in plants. Over the last two decades, experimental studies have shown that modifying ATP-binding cassette sub-family B (ABCB) expression affects auxin distribution and plant phenotypes. However, precisely how ABCB proteins transport auxin in conjunction with the more widely studied family of PIN-formed (PIN) auxin efflux transporters is unclear, and studies using heterologous systems have produced conflicting results. Here, we integrate ABCB localization data into a multicellular model of auxin transport in the Arabidopsis thaliana root tip to predict how ABCB-mediated auxin transport impacts organ-scale auxin distribution. We use our model to test five potential ABCB–PIN regulatory interactions, simulating the auxin dynamics for each interaction and quantitatively comparing the predictions with experimental images of the DII-VENUS auxin reporter in wild-type and abcb single and double loss-of-function mutants. Only specific ABCB–PIN regulatory interactions result in predictions that recreate the experimentally observed DII-VENUS distributions and long-distance auxin transport. Our results suggest that ABCBs enable auxin efflux independently of PINs; however, PIN-mediated auxin efflux is predominantly through a co-dependent efflux where co-localized with ABCBs.

Predicting the experimentally observed root-tip auxin distribution requires ABCBs to efflux auxin independently, whereas PINs predominantly mediate auxin efflux where co-localized with ABCBs.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Lee SH  Cho HT 《The Plant cell》2006,18(7):1604-1616
Intercellular transport of auxin is mediated by influx and efflux carriers in the plasma membrane and subjected to developmental and environmental regulation. Here, using the auxin-sensitive Arabidopsis thaliana root hair cell system and the tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) suspension cell system, we demonstrate that the protein kinase PINOID (PID) positively regulates auxin efflux. Overexpression of PID (PIDox) or the auxin efflux carrier component PINFORMED3 (PIN3, PIN3ox), specifically in the root hair cell, greatly suppressed root hair growth. In both PIDox and PIN3ox transformants, root hair growth was nearly restored to wild-type levels by the addition of auxin, protein kinase inhibitors, or auxin efflux inhibitors. Localization of PID or PIN3 at the cell boundary was disrupted by brefeldin A and staurosporine. A mutation in the kinase domain abrogated the ability of PID to localize at the cell boundary and to inhibit root hair growth. These results suggest that PIDox- or PIN3ox-enhanced auxin efflux results in a shortage of intracellular auxin and a subsequent inhibition of root hair growth. In an auxin efflux assay using transgenic tobacco suspension cells, PIDox or PIN3ox also enhanced auxin efflux. Collectively, these results suggest that PID positively regulates cellular auxin efflux, most likely by modulating the trafficking of PIN and/or some other molecular partners involved in auxin efflux.  相似文献   

15.
Plants can be adapted to the changing environments through tropic responses, such as light and gravity. One of them is root negative phototropism, which is needed for root growth and nutrient absorption. Here, we show that the auxin efflux carrier PIN-FORMED (PIN) 1 is involved in asymmetric auxin distribution and root negative phototropism. In darkness, PIN1 is internalized and localized to intracellular compartments; upon blue light illumination, PIN1 relocalize to basal plasma membrane in root stele cells. The shift of PIN1 localization induced by blue light is involved in asymmetric auxin distribution and root negative phototropic response. Both blue-light-induced PIN1 redistribution and root negative phototropism is mediated by a BFA-sensitive trafficking pathway and the activity of PID/PP2A. Our results demonstrate that blue-light-induced PIN1 redistribution participate in asymmetric auxin distribution and root negative phototropism.  相似文献   

16.
Directional root expansion is governed by nutrient gradients, positive gravitropism and hydrotropism, negative phototropism and thigmotropism, as well as endogenous oscillations in the growth trajectory (circumnutation). Null mutations in phylogenetically related Arabidopsis thaliana genes MILDEW RESISTANCE LOCUS O 4 (MLO4) and MLO11, encoding heptahelical, plasma membrane–localized proteins predominantly expressed in the root tip, result in aberrant root thigmomorphogenesis. mlo4 and mlo11 mutant plants show anisotropic, chiral root expansion manifesting as tightly curled root patterns upon contact with solid surfaces. The defect in mlo4 and mlo11 mutants is nonadditive and dependent on light and nutrients. Genetic epistasis experiments demonstrate that the mutant phenotype is independently modulated by the Gβ subunit of the heterotrimeric G-protein complex. Analysis of expressed chimeric MLO4/MLO2 proteins revealed that the C-terminal domain of MLO4 is necessary but not sufficient for MLO4 action in root thigmomorphogenesis. The expression of the auxin efflux carrier fusion, PIN1-green fluorescent protein, the pattern of auxin-induced gene expression, and acropetal as well as basipetal auxin transport are altered at the root tip of mlo4 mutant seedlings. Moreover, addition of auxin transport inhibitors or the loss of EIR1/AGR1/PIN2 function abolishes root curling of mlo4, mlo11, and wild-type seedlings. These results demonstrate that the exaggerated root curling phenotypes of the mlo4 and mlo11 mutants depend on auxin gradients and suggest that MLO4 and MLO11 cofunction as modulators of touch-induced root tropism.  相似文献   

17.
Mei Y  Jia WJ  Chu YJ  Xue HW 《Cell research》2012,22(3):581-597
Phosphatidylinositol monophosphate 5-kinase (PIP5K) catalyzes the synthesis of PI-4,5-bisphosphate (PtdIns(4,5)P(2)) by phosphorylation of PI-4-phosphate at the 5 position of the inositol ring, and is involved in regulating multiple developmental processes and stress responses. We here report on the functional characterization of Arabidopsis PIP5K2, which is expressed during lateral root initiation and elongation, and whose expression is enhanced by exogenous auxin. The knockout mutant pip5k2 shows reduced lateral root formation, which could be recovered with exogenous auxin, and interestingly, delayed root gravity response that could not be recovered with exogenous auxin. Crossing with the DR5-GUS marker line and measurement of free IAA content confirmed the reduced auxin accumulation in pip5k2. In addition, analysis using the membrane-selective dye FM4-64 revealed the decelerated vesicle trafficking caused by PtdIns(4,5)P(2) reduction, which hence results in suppressed cycling of PIN proteins (PIN2 and 3), and delayed redistribution of PIN2 and auxin under gravistimulation in pip5k2 roots. On the contrary, PtdIns(4,5)P(2) significantly enhanced the vesicle trafficking and cycling of PIN proteins. These results demonstrate that PIP5K2 is involved in regulating lateral root formation and root gravity response, and reveal a critical role of PIP5K2/PtdIns(4,5)P(2) in root development through regulation of PIN proteins, providing direct evidence of crosstalk between the phosphatidylinositol signaling pathway and auxin response, and new insights into the control of polar auxin transport.  相似文献   

18.
We examined the influence of aluminum and calcium (and certain other cations) on hormone transport in corn roots. When aluminum was applied unilaterally to the caps of 15 mm apical root sections the roots curved strongly away from the aluminum. When aluminum was applied unilaterally to the cap and 3H-indole-3-acetic acid was applied to the basal cut surface twice as much radioactivity (assumed to be IAA) accumulated on the concave side of the curved root as on the convex side. Auxin transport in the apical region of intact roots was preferentially basipetal, with a polarity (basipetal transport divided by acropetal transport) of 6.3. In decapped 5 mm apical root segments, auxin transport was acropetally polar (polarity = 0.63). Application of aluminum to the root cap strongly promoted acropetal transport of auxin reducing polarity from 6.3 to 2.1. Application of calcium to the root cap enhanced basipetal movement of auxin, increasing polarity from 6.3 to 7.6. Application of the calcium chelator, ethylene-glycol-bis-(β-aminoethylether)-N,N,N′, N′-tetraacetic acid, greatly decreased basipetal auxin movement, reducing polarity from 6.3 to 3.7. Transport of label after application of tritiated abscisic acid showed no polarity and was not affected by calcium or aluminum. The results indicate that the root cap is particularly important in maintaining basipetal polarity of auxin transport in primary roots of corn. The induction of root curvature by unilateral application of aluminum or calcium to root caps is likely to result from localized effects of these ions on auxin transport. The findings are discussed relative to the possible role of calcium redistribution in the gravitropic curvature of roots and the possibility of calmodulin involvement in the action of calcium and aluminum on auxin transport.  相似文献   

19.
Root tip is capable of sensing and adjusting its growth direction in response to gravity, a phenomenon known as root gravitropism. Previously, we have shown that negative gravitropic response of roots (NGR) is essential for the positive gravitropic response of roots. Here, we show that NGR, a plasma membrane protein specifically expressed in root columella and lateral root cap cells, controls the positive root gravitropic response by regulating auxin efflux carrier localization in columella cells and the direction of lateral auxin flow in response to gravity. Pharmacological and genetic studies show that the negative root gravitropic response of the ngr mutants depends on polar auxin transport in the root elongation zone. Cell biology studies further demonstrate that polar localization of the auxin efflux carrier PIN3 in root columella cells and asymmetric lateral auxin flow in the root tip in response to gravistimulation is reversed in the atngr1;2;3 triple mutant. Furthermore, simultaneous mutations of three PIN genes expressed in root columella cells impaired the negative root gravitropic response of the atngr1;2;3 triple mutant. Our work revealed a critical role of NGR in root gravitropic response and provided an insight of the early events and molecular basis of the positive root gravitropism.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of a 180° displacement from the normal vertical orientation on longitudinal growth and on the acropetal and basipetal movement of 14C-IAA was investigated in Avena sativa L. and Zea mays L. coleoptile sections. Inversion inhibits growth in intact sections (apex not removed) and in decapitated sections supplied apically with donor blocks containing auxin. Under aerobic conditions, inversion inhibits basipetal auxin movement and promotes acropetal auxin movement, whereas under anaerobic conditions, it does not influence the movement of auxin in either direction. Inversion retards the basipetal movement of the peak of a 30-minute pulse of auxin in corn.

The inversion-induced inhibition of basipetal auxin movement is not explained by an effect of gravity on production, uptake, destruction, exit from sections, retention in tissue, or purely physical movement of auxin. It is concluded that inversion (a) inhibits basipetal transport, the component of auxin movement that is metabolically dependent, and as a result (b) inhibits growth and (c) promotes acropetal auxin movement.

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