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Boron (B) is an essential micronutrient for vascular plants. Boron plays a structural role in cell walls through binding to pectic polysaccharides. It still remains unclear how B deficiency, and hence probably alterations in cell wall structure, leads to various metabolic disorders and cell death. To understand the process, we analyzed the physiological changes in suspension- cultured tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) BY-2 cells under B deficiency. The results indicated that the cells deprived of B did not undergo a typical programmed cell death process. Oxidative damage was proven to be the direct and major cause of cell death. We discuss possible mechanisms for the generation and accumulation of reactive oxygen species under B deprivation.Key words: boron deficiency, cell death, cell wall, oxidative damage, pectic polysaccharides, rhamnogalacturonan II, tobaccoBoron (B) deficiency is the most widespread micronutrient deficiency around the world and causes large losses in crop production both quantitatively and qualitatively.1 Boron deficiency affects vegetative and reproductive growth of plants resulting in inhibition of cell expansion, death of meristem and reduced fertility.2Plants contain B both in a water-soluble and insoluble form. In intact plants, the amount of water-soluble B fluctuates with the quantity of B supplied, while insoluble B does not.3 The appearance of B deficiency symptoms coincides with the decrease of water-insoluble B, from which it is concluded that the insoluble B is the functional form while the soluble B represents the surplus. We found at least 98% of the insoluble B in tobacco cells bound to the cell wall,4 and identified their molecular entity as the borate diester with rhamnogalacturonan II (RG-II) regions of pectic polysaccharides.5 The diester crosslinks pectic polysaccharides to form a network and thereby contributes to construction of a supramolecular cell wall structure.6 Mutant plants with altered RG-II structures are dwarf and sterile, indicating that the B-RG-II complex is essential for normal plant growth and development.7 Increasing evidence indicates that B is also essential for animals.8 The requirement for B in organisms lacking cell walls implies that B may also have additional roles in plants. To date, however, no molecule other than apiosyl residues in pectic polysaccharides has been demonstrated to form a borate ester which could be stable enough under physiological conditions. Thus it is reasonable to consider that B functions primarily, if not exclusively, as a structural component of the cell wall, and B deficiency symptoms arise from disturbance of the cell wall structure. How, then, does the disturbed cell wall structure lead to the damage and cell death that are observed under B deficiency? To understand the linkage, we have analyzed physiological changes of suspension-cultured tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) BY-2 cells under B deficiency.When cells at the log phase of growth were transferred to B-free media, cell death was detectable as early as 12 h after the treatment. As cell walls play pivotal roles in plant development and growth, we assumed that the B deprivation, which probably causes aberrant cell wall structure, might induce programmed cell death (PCD) as an active response to eliminate damaged cells. Then we examined if the known biochemical hallmark of PCD could be observed in cells deprived of B (hereafter referred to as -B cells). However, internucleosomal DNA fragmentation, decrease in antioxidant content and antioxidant enzyme expression,9 or protection from death by cycloheximide, were not detected in these cells, suggesting that the cell death is necrosis. We found oxidative damage to be the direct and major cause of cell death, because -B cells contained more reactive oxygen species (ROS) than control cells, and because cell death was effectively suppressed by supplementing the media with lipophilic antioxidants. The deprivation treatment did not induce an oxidative burst, as the extracellular H2O2 concentration was not significantly different between -B and control cells at all time points examined. Resupply of B immediately suppressed cell death. Collectively, these results suggest that low but persistent ROS production occurred under the -B condition.In the study described above, we demonstrated that B deprivation, and hence probably a defective cell wall structure, leads to oxidative damage. How and why B deprivation induces ROS overproduction remains to be clarified. We hypothesize that ROS are originally produced as a signal for disturbance of the cell wall structure, and build up to a toxic level unless B is resupplied and the cell wall structure is restored. It has been reported that the mechanical strength of the squash root cell wall decreases within minutes after B deprivation.10,11 The mechanical change could be brought about by insufficient crosslinking of pectic polysaccharides at RG-II regions, as the B-RG-II complex significantly contributes to the wall tensile strength.12 If the cell wall becomes weaker and less resistant to turgor, then the plasma membrane would stretch. The change may lead to opening of mechanosensitive channels13 and generation of signals for the altered cell wall structure. To test this hypothesis, we are now analyzing the immediate and early responses of tobacco BY-2 cells to B deprivation, and preliminary results do indicate the involvement of Ca2+ influx in the responses. Identification of the mechanism by which cells sense the external B status will greatly contribute to our understanding of the cell wall-symplast interaction in plants.14  相似文献   

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Increasing evidence has revealed that membrane trafficking is highly associated with cell wall metabolism. Factors involved in vesicle delivery, e.g., cytoskeleton and motor proteins, have showed regulatory effects on cell wall structure and components. However, little is known about the involvement of other trafficking components in distribution of cell wall-related compartments. Dynamins are important proteins functioning in membrane tubulation and vesiculation. Recently, we have reported characterization of the rice dynamin-related protein 2B (OsDRP2B). Mutation in OsDRP2B causes a significant reduction in cellulose content. Its association with the trans-Golgi network (TGN) and clathrin-coated vesicles and the reduced CESA4 abundance at the bc3 plasma membrane suggest that BC3/OsDRP2B is involved in the transport of essential elements for cellulose synthesis. Here, we provide additional evidence for BC3 subcellular localization via observing OsDRP2B-GFP in living root hairs of transgenic plants. Uronic acid and fractional composition analyses further confirm that the amount of arabinoxylan and other noncellulosic polysaccharides is increased in bc3. However, three putative xylan synthesis genes are downregulated in mutant plant revealed by real-time PCR analysis. These results imply that compartments delivered by OsDRP2B are specifically responsible for cellulose biosynthesis.Key words: OsDRP2B, cellulose biosynthesis, membrane trafficking, brittleness, ricePlant cell wall is an extracellular matrix enriched in polysaccharides. Except for cellulose that is produced at the plasma membrane by cellulose synthase (CESA) complexes, most of the cell wall products are assumed being synthesized inside cells, e.g., in the Golgi apparatus and secreted outside through complex membrane trafficking. Besides the cell wall-localized products, some proteins essential for cellulose biosynthesis need to be translocated onto the plasma membrane to facilitate cellulose formation.1,2 Intracellular trafficking is therefore a key level for regulating cell wall composition and architecture, which are highly dynamic during cellular development.3 This notion is substantiated by the fact that wall architecture within the same cell is heterogeneity, indicating the presence of cell wall specific deposition domains.4,5 For example, pectins are often located at the cell corners.3 Different de-esterified homogalacturonan (HG) are present along the growing pollen tubes or root hairs: tips have highly esterified HG; the de-esterified degree is increased after tips.6 Although it is believed that these specific patterns could be the result of the targeted secretion of polysaccharides,3 our knowledge about the polysaccharide secretion is still very few. Currently, in vivo viewing CESA-containing compartments and the movement inside living cells have provided direct evidence for the trafficking action of CESA compartments.2,7,8 The delivery and removal of CESA complexes to/from the plasma membrane are very complicated, which require the involvement of many components, such as cytoskeleton and syntaxins.7,9,10 Syntaxins, part of SNARE complexes, function as docking factor of cell wall-related compartments during cell plate formation.10 Dynamin and dynamin-related proteins (DRPs) are involved in diverse events of cellular membrane remodeling.11 It remains unknown about whether DRPs are responsible for CESA trafficking. Recently, we have reported that BC3, the rice DRP2B protein, plays a role in complex membrane trafficking and affects the biosynthesis of secondary walls. Here, we provide additional cellular and wall chemical data to confirm that BC3/OsDRP2B is specifically involved in the secondary cell wall cellulose synthesis.  相似文献   

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Piriformospora indica is an endophytic fungus that colonized monocot as well as dicot. P. indica has been termed as plant probiotic because of its plant growth promoting activity and its role in enhancement of the tolerance of the host plants against abiotic and biotic stresses. In our recent study, we have characterized a high affinity phosphate transporter (PiPT) and by using RNAi approach, we have demonstrated the involvement of PiPT in P transfer to the host plant. When knockdown strains of PiPT-P. indica was colonized with the host plant, it resulted in the impaired growth of the host plants. Here we have analyzed and discussed whether the growth promoting activity of P. indica is its intrinsic property or it is dependent on P availability. Our data explain the correlation between the availability of P and growth-promoting activity of P. indica.Key words: Piriformospora indica, phosphate transport, plant growth promotionPhosphorous (P) is one of the most essential mineral nutrients for plant growth and development. In the soil P is present mainly in the form of sparingly soluble complexes that are not directly accessible to plants. Thus, it is the nutrient that limits crop production throughout the world.1 Plants have therefore evolved a range of strategies to increase the availability of soil P, which include both morphological and biochemical changes at the soil-root interface. For example, increased root growth and branching, proliferation of root hairs, and release of root exudates can increase plant access to inorganic phosphate (Pi) from otherwise poorly available sources.2,3 Plant root possess two distinct modes of phosphate uptake, direct uptake by its own transporters and indirect uptake through mycorrhizal associations. In plants several high affinity P transporters specifically associated with the uptake of Pi from soil solution. Expression of these transporters is induced in response to P deficiency and enables Pi to be effectively taken up against the large concentration gradient that occurs between the soil solution and internal plant tissues.4 However, in arbuscular mycorrhizal associations (indirect uptake), plants acquire Pi from the extensive network of fine extra radical hyphae of fungus, that extend beyond root depletion zones to mine new regions of the soil.5 In the case of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF), including Glomus versiforme and G. intraradices, the regulation of phosphate transporters that are expressed, typically upregulated under P deficiency but their role in P transfer to the host plant have not been characterized.5,6P. indica was reported to be involved in high salt tolerance, disease resistance and strong growth-promoting activities leading to enhancement of host plant yield.79 Recently, we have shown the role of PiPT in the P transport to the host plant.10 Here we discuss the performance of P. indica (grown under P-rich and -deprived conditions and colonized with the host plant) and its involvement in the P transportation to, and the growth of the host plant.  相似文献   

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This review highlights a potential signaling pathway of CO2-dependent stimulation in root hair development. Elevated CO2 firstly increases the carbohydrates production, which triggers the auxin or ethylene responsive signal transduction pathways and subsequently stimulates the generation of intracellular nitric oxide (NO). The NO acts on target Ca2+ and ion channels and induces activation of MAPK. Meanwhile, reactive oxygen species (ROS) activates cytoplasmic Ca2+ channels at the plasma membrane in the apex of the root tip. This complex pathway involves transduction cascades of multiple signals that lead to the fine tuning of epidermal cell initiation and elongation. The results suggest that elevated CO2 plays an important role in cell differentiation processes at the root epidermis.Key words: elevated CO2, root hairs, carbohydrate, auxin, ethylene, NO, ROS, Ca2+, genetic elementsIncreasing concentration of atmospheric CO2 in the 21st century will impact many aspects of the human and natural world. Elevated CO2 has some beneficial physiological effects on plants but nutrient limitation has generally been found to suppress these beneficial effects.1 Therefore, under conditions of suboptimal supply of nutrients and elevated CO2, the plants need to develop adaptive mechanisms to enhance nutrient acquisition, among which the plasticity of root development is of crucial importance.Root hairs make a significant contribution to increasing root surface area and facilitating physical anchorage to a substrate and providing a large interface for nutrient uptake.2 Root-hair cells are highly polarized cellular structures resulting from tip growth of specific epidermal cells, which are controlled by multiple cellular factors and genetic processes.3,4 Previous studies have shown that root hair development can influenced by various environmental factors, such as nutritional status,5 mycorrhizal infection and water stress,6 salinity7 and light intensity.8 Our current research has demonstrated a profound effect of elevated CO2 on development of root hairs in Arabidopsis, which works through the well-characterized auxin signal transduction pathway.9 Since root hairs are an efficient strategy to alleviate the limitation of nutrients, one promising area of future research will be to discover the pathway that control root hair differentiation in crops under elevated CO2. In this paper, we discussed a layer pathway in the interaction between CO2 and some classical signals on regulating gene regulatory network to control development of root hairs.  相似文献   

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Callose in polypodiaceous ferns performs multiple roles during stomatal development and function. This highly dynamic (1→3)-β-D-glucan, in cooperation with the cytoskeleton, is involved in: (a) stomatal pore formation, (b) deposition of local GC wall thickenings and (c) the mechanism of stomatal pore opening and closure. This behavior of callose, among others, probably relies on the particular mechanical properties as well as on the ability to form and degrade rapidly, to create a scaffold or to serve as a matrix for deposition of other cell wall materials and to produce fibrillar deposits in the periclinal GC walls, radially arranged around the stomatal pore. The local callose deposition in closing stomata is an immediate response of the external periclinal GC walls experiencing strong mechanical forces induced by the neighboring cells. The radial callose fibrils transiently co-exist with radial cellulose microfibrils and, like the latter, seem to be oriented via cortical MTs.Key words: callose, cytoskeleton, fern stomata, guard cell wall thickening, stomatal function, stomatal pore formationCallose represents a hemicellulosic matrix cell wall component, usually of temporal appearance, which is synthesized by callose synthases, enzymes localized in the plasmalemma and degraded by (1→3)-β-glucanases.14 It consists of triple helices of a linear homopolymer of (1→3)-β-glucose residues.57 The plant cell is able to form and degrade callose in a short time. On the surface of the plasmolyzed protoplast a thin callose surface film may arise within seconds.8 Callose is the only cell wall component that is implicated in a great variety of developmental plant processes, like cell plate formation,911 microspore development,1214 trafficking through plasmodesmata,15,16 formation and closure of sieve pores,16 response of the plant cells to multiple biotic and abiotic stresses,4,5 establishment of distinct “cell cortex domains”,17 etc.Despite the widespread occurrence of callose, its general function(s) is (are) not well understood (reviewed in refs. 4 and 5). It may serve as: a matrix for deposition of other cell wall materials, as in developing cell plates;9 a cell wall-strengthening material, as in cotton seed hairs and growing pollen tubes;18 a sealing or plugging material at the plasma membrane of pit fields, plasmodesmata and sieve plate pores;16 a mechanical obstruction to growth of fungal hyphae or a special permeability barrier, as in pollen mother cell walls and muskmelon endosperm envelopes.4,19,20 The degree of polymerization, age and thickness of callose deposits may cause variation in its physical properties.5Evidence accumulated so far showed that a significant number of ferns belonging to Polypodiales and some other fern classes forms intense callose deposits in the developing GC wall thickenings.2128 This phenomenon has not been observed in angiosperm stomata, although callose is deposited along the whole surface of the young VW and in the VW ends of differentiating and mature stomata (our unpublished data; reviewed in refs 29 and 30).Stomata are specialized epidermal bicellular structures (Fig. 1A) regulating gas exchange between the aerial plant organs and the external environment. Their appearance in the first land plants was crucial for their adaptation and survival in the terrestrial environment. The constituent GCs have the ability to undergo reversible changes in shape, leading to opening and closure of the stomatal pore (stomatal movement). The mechanism by which GCs change shape is based on: (a) the particular mechanical properties of GC walls owed to their particular shape, thickening, fine structure and chemical composition and (b) the reversible changes in vacuole volume, in response to environmental factors, through fairly complicated biochemical pathways.3033Open in a separate windowFigure 1(A) Diagrammatic representation of an elliptical stoma. (B–E) Diagram to show the process of stomatal pore formation in angiosperms (B and C) and Polypodiales ferns (D and E). The arrows in (B) indicate the forming stomatal pore. DW, dorsal wall; EPW, external periclinal wall; GC, guard cell; IPW, internal periclinal wall; ISP, internal stomatal pore; PE polar ventral wall end; VW, ventral wall.The present review is focused on the multiple-role of callose in differentiating and functioning fern stomata, as they are substantiated by the available information, including some unpublished data, and in particular in: stomatal pore formation, deposition of GC wall thickenings and opening and closure of the stomatal pore. The mode of deposition of fibrillar callose deposits in GC walls and the mechanism of their alignment are also considered.  相似文献   

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Phosphate (Pi) deficiency induces a multitude of responses aimed at improving the acquisition of Pi, including an increased density of root hairs. To understand the mechanisms involved in Pi deficiency-induced alterations of the root hair phenotype in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), we analyzed the patterning and length of root epidermal cells under control and Pi-deficient conditions in wild-type plants and in four mutants defective in the expression of master regulators of cell fate, CAPRICE (CPC), ENHANCER OF TRY AND CPC 1 (ETC1), WEREWOLF (WER) and SCRAMBLED (SCM). From this analysis we deduced that the longitudinal cell length of root epidermal cells is dependent on the correct perception of a positional signal (‘cortical bias’) in both control and Pi-deficient plants; mutants defective in the receptor of the signal, SCM, produced short cells characteristic of root hair-forming cells (trichoblasts). Simulating the effect of cortical bias on the time-evolving probability of cell fate supports a scenario in which a compromised positional signal delays the time point at which non-hair cells opt out the default trichoblast pathway, resulting in short, trichoblast-like non-hair cells. Collectively, our data show that Pi-deficient plants increase root hair density by the formation of shorter cells, resulting in a higher frequency of hairs per unit root length, and additional trichoblast cell fate assignment via increased expression of ETC1.  相似文献   

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Arabinogalactan-proteins (AGPs) are a class of hyperglycosylated, hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins that are widely distributed in the plant kingdom. AtAGP17, 18 and 19 are homologous genes encoding three classical lysine-rich AGPs in Arabidopsis. We observed subcellular localization of AtAGP18 at the plasma membrane by expressing a translational fusion gene construction of AtAGP18 attached to a green fluorescent protein (GFP) tag in Arabidopsis plants. We also overexpressed AtAGP18 without the GFP tag in Arabidopsis plants, and the resulting transgenic plants had a short, bushy phenotype. Here we discuss putative roles of AtAGP18 as a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored protein involved in a signal transduction pathway regulating plant growth and development.Key words: Arabidopsis thaliana, arabinogalactan-proteins, co-receptor, glycosylphosphatidylinositol, lipid rafts, overexpressionArabinogalactan-proteins (AGPs) are plant cell surface glycoproteins or proteoglycans which are thought to play important roles in various aspects of plant growth and development, such as somatic embryogenesis, cell proliferation and elongation, pattern formation and hormone signaling.1 The lysine-rich classical AGP subfamily in Arabidopsis contains three members: AtAGP17, 18 and 19. The subcellular localization of AtAGP17 and AtAGP18 was previously studied in our laboratory by expressing GFP-AtAGP17/18 fusion proteins in tobacco cell cultures.2,3 In a recent report, we used Arabidopsis plants to overexpress GFP-AtAGP17/18/19 fusion proteins to observe subcellular localization of the lysine-rich AGPs in planta, in contrast to our previous plant cell culture work.4 Moreover, the lysine-rich AGPs alone (i.e., AtAGP17/18/19 without the GFP tag) were overexpressed in Arabidopsis plants, and only AtAGP18 overexpressors had a distinctive phenotype. This phenotype included shorter stems, more branches and less seeds, indicating a role for AtAGP18 in plant growth and development.4 In this addendum, we further discuss the putative biological role of AtAGP18 on a molecular level and its possible mode of action in cellular signaling.Classical AGPs are frequently predicted to have a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor, which would allow for the localization of such AGPs to the outer surface of the plasma membrane. Biochemical analyses were carried out to support this hypothesis in tobacco, pear,5 rose6 and Arabidopsis.7 The lysine-rich classical AGPs, AtAGP17 and 18, were predicted to have a GPI anchor.8 To test this idea, tobacco cell cultures expressing GFP-AtAGP17/18 fusion proteins were plasmolyzed and GFP fluorescence was observed on the plasma membrane.2,3 To corroborate this finding in planta, GFP-AtAGP17/18 were expressed in Arabidopsis plants and leaf trichome cells were plasmolyzed. Enhanced GFP fluorescence was observed at the plasma membrane of these transgenic trichome cells, indicating the presence of GFP-AtAGP17/18 at the plasma membrane.4 The localization of these lysine-rich classical AGPs at the plasma membrane suggests possible biological roles in sensing extracellular signals. They are likely associated with lipid rafts involved in cell signaling for the following reasons. In plants as well as animals, there are sterol-enriched, detergent-resistant plasma membrane microdomains called lipid rafts. Lipid rafts are known to be involved in signal transduction and are enriched in transmembrane receptors and GPI-anchored proteins, including AGPs.911 The accumulation of these proteins in such microdomains may allow for interactions between these proteins in sensing extracellular signals which lead to various intracellular events. Interestingly, a recent study shows that lipid rafts from hybrid aspen cells contain callose synthase and cellulose synthase, and these enzymes are active since in vitro polysaccharide synthesis by the isolated detergent-resistant membranes was observed. These results demonstrate that lipid rafts are involved in cell wall polysaccharide biosynthesis.12 In addition, an Arabidopsis pnt mutant study shows GPI-anchored proteins are required in cell wall synthesis and morphogenesis.13 These observations, coupled with previous observations that cellulose synthases as well as AGPs interact with microtubules, suggest that AGPs in lipid rafts may have a role in signal events, including those regulating cellulose and/or callose biosynthesis or deposition.14,15To examine the role of LeAGP-1, a lysine-rich AGP in tomato, transgenic tomato plants were produced which expressed GFP-LeAGP-1 under the control of the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter.16 The tomato LeAGP-1 overexpressors and Arabidopsis AtAGP18 overexpressors both have a bushy phenotype similar to transgenic tobacco plants overproducing cytokinins.4,16,17 Cytokinins are an important class of plant hormones involved in many plant growth and development processes, such as cell growth and division, differentiation and other physiological processes.18 Therefore, Sun et al. proposed that LeAGP-1 might function in concert with the cytokinin signal transduction pathway.16 Since the overexpression phenotypes of AtAGP18 are similar to those of LeAGP-1, AtAGP18 is also likely associated with the cytokinin signal transduction pathway. The prevailing model for cytokinin signaling in Arabidopsis is similar to the two-component system in bacteria and yeast. In this model, the cytokinin receptor contains an extracellular domain, a kinase domain and a receiver domain. When the cytokinin receptor senses cytokinin signals, it auto-phosphorylates at a His residue in the kinase domain. The phosphoryl group is then transferred to an Asp residue in the receiver domain. Subsequently, the phosphoryl group is transferred to a His residue in the histidine phosphotransfer protein (Hpt) and the Hpt translocates to the nucleus and transfers the phosphoryl group to an Asp residue in a downstream response regulator to activate it.19 This model is consistent with our hypothesis since the cytokinin receptor in this model is a receptor kinase located in the plasma membrane with an extra-cellular domain that can potentially interact with AtAGP18. AtAGP18 may function as a co-receptor that first binds to cytokinins, then either directly interacts with cytokinin receptors or brings the cytokinins to cytokinin receptors in the plasma membrane. The first scenario is analogous to the interaction of contactin and contactin-associated protein (Caspr) in neurons. In this model, contactin is a GPI-anchored protein on the cell surface that binds to signal molecules and interacts with the transmembrane receptor Caspr to transmit signals to the cell interior.20 The second scenario is analogous to fibroblast growth factor (FGF) signal activation in which heparan sulfate proteoglycans bind to FGF molecules and bring them to the FGF receptor.21Based on all the above observations and findings, a hypothetical model for AtAGP18 function is proposed in Figure 1. The model shows AtAGP18 located on the outer surface of the plasma membrane in lipid rafts where it could act as a co-receptor to sense extracellular signals (such as cytokinin) and interact with transmembrane proteins, possibly receptor kinases or ion channels, in the lipid rafts to initiate signaling by triggering various intracellular events. Interestingly, receptor tyrosine kinases and ion channels are known to be present in lipid rafts.9,22 Moreover, AGPs are likely associated with ion channels since addition of the AGP-binding reagent Yariv phenylglycoside resulted in elevated cytoplasmic calcium concentrations in tobacco cells and lily pollen tubes.15,23,24 Clearly, additional work will be required to verify such a model, and to better understand how AtAGP18 might sense extracellular signals and interact with the transmembrane proteins in the lipid rafts.Open in a separate windowFigure 1Model for atAGP18 functioning in cellular signaling to control plant growth and development. In this model, lipid rafts are enriched in glycosphingolipids, sterols, transmembrane proteins (such as receptors, receptor kinases and ion channel proteins) and GPI-anchored proteins including AtAGP18. (a) AtAGP18 acts as a co-receptor by binding to signaling molecules and directly interacting with transmembrane proteins in the lipid rafts. (B) AtAGP18 acts as a co-receptor by binding to signaling molecules and bringing the signaling molecules to transmembrane proteins in the lipid rafts. Upon activation by the extracellular signals, the transmembrane proteins initiate signaling and lead to various intracellular events (e.g., phosphorylation similar to the two-component signaling system, influx of calcium ions). The different components of the AtAGP18 molecule and the various lipid components of lipid rafts and plasma membrane are shown in the boxed inset. Hpt, histidine phosphotransfer protein.  相似文献   

11.
Growth of plant cells involves tight regulation of the cytoskeleton and vesicle trafficking by processes including the action of the ROP small G proteins together with pH-modulated cell wall modifications. Yet, little is known on how these systems are coordinated. In a paper recently published in Plant Cell and Environment1 we show that ROPs/RACs function synergistically with NH4NO3-modulated pH fluctuations to regulate root hair growth. Root hairs expand exclusively at their apical end in a strictly polarized manner by a process known as tip growth. The highly polarized secretion at the apex is maintained by a complex network of factors including the spatial organization of the actin cytoskeleton, tip-focused ion gradients and by small G proteins. Expression of constitutively active ROP mutants disrupts polar growth, inducing the formation of swollen root hairs. Root hairs are also known to elongate in an oscillating manner, which is correlated with oscillatory H+ fluxes at the tip. Our analysis shows that root hair elongation in wild type plants and swelling in transgenic plants expressing a constitutively active ROP11 (rop11CA) is sensitive to the presence of NH4+ at concentrations higher than 1 mM and on NO3. The NH4+ and NO3 ions did not affect the localization of ROP in the membrane but modulated pH fluctuations at the root hair tip. Actin organization and reactive oxygen species distribution were abnormal in rop11CA root hairs but were similar to wild-type root hairs when seedlings were grown on medium lacking NH4+ and/or NO3. These observations suggest that the nitrogen source-modulated pH fluctuations may function synergistically with ROP regulated signaling during root hair tip growth. Interestingly, under certain growth conditions, expression of rop11CA suppressed ammonium toxicity, similar to auxin resistant mutants. In this short review we discuss these findings and their implications.Key words: ROP, RAC, nitrogen, root hair, cell polarity, ammoniumIn Arabidopsis, root hairs grow out at the basal, rootward region (closer to root tip) of specialized root epidermal cells and expand exclusively at their apical end in a strictly polarized manner by a process known as tip growth. Tip growth is facilitated by Rho of Plants (ROP)-regulated processes such as maintenance of longitudinally-oriented actin cables in the shank of the root hair that are required for myosin-mediated organelle transport through the cytoplasm. ROPs also play a role in sustaining fine F-actin structures at the root hair tip, which promote the transport of secretory vesicles to sites of their fusion with the plasma membrane.2,3 In addition, the polar growth of root hairs involves an oscillatory tip-focused Ca2+ gradient4 and tip-localized reactive oxygen species (ROS).5 Tip growth is also associated with oscillatory fluxes of H+ at the apex that correlate with the periodicity of growth.6,7 These oscillations in extracellular pH and ROS have been shown to modulate tip growth and are predicted to act in a coordinated and complementary mode to regulate root hair elongation. Growth accelerates following reduction of apoplastic pH and slows upon apoplastic ROS increase and a coincident pH increase.7ROPs are small G proteins that localize to the plasma membrane at the apex of growing root hairs, where they activate a range of downstream pathways required for tip growth.8,9 ROP activity is regulated by its cycling between a GTP-bound, active and GDP-bound, inactive state. Ectopic expression of constitutively active mutants of ROPs (dominant mutations in conserved residues that abolish the GTPase activity) depolarizes the growth of root hairs.810 Downstream pathways activated by such ROP GTPases include the regulation of cytoskeletal dynamics and vesicular trafficking, production of ROS, maintenance of intracellular Ca2+ gradients and accumulation of signaling lipids, features all related to the regulation of apical growth.11,12 For example, ectopic expression of constitutively active ROP11 (Atrop11CA) depolarizes root hair growth, leading to the formation of swollen root hairs. This bulging root hair phenotype was associated with altered actin organization and inhibition of endocytosis.10It is well known that root hair development is highly plastic and regulated by environmental signals.13,14 Yet, despite the known function of ROP GTPases and their regulatory proteins in root hair growth there is no data in the literature describing the relationship between ROP signaling and environmental factors in this process. Our results1 show that induction of root hair swelling by rop11CA occurs only under specific growth conditions, indicating that there is an interplay between ROP activity and the external environment, particularly nitrogen supply. We demonstrated that high external concentrations of ammonium are essential for the induction of depolarized root hair growth and activation of downstream pathways by rop11CA. Depletion of ammonium did not affect the membrane localization and expression of GFP-rop11CA, implying that NH4+ was required in addition to ROP activity to cause root hair swelling. In agreement with this idea, normal actin organization and ROS localization were detected in rop11CA root hairs when NH4+ was depleted, suggesting that ammonium functions downstream of, or in parallel to ROP signaling (Fig. 1).Open in a separate windowFigure 1A model for regulation of root hair tip growth by ROP GTPases and pH oscillations dependent on nitrogen supply. GTP bound ROPs activate downstream effectors which directly affect actin organization, vesicular trafficking and localized ROS production as well as indirectly affecting the localization of membrane proteins involved in ion/proton fluxes. High concentrations of nitrogen ions in the growth medium increase pH oscillations at the apex of growing root hairs. In turn downstream ROP effectors sense the changes in pH and adjust their function accordingly. pH oscillations affect tip growth independent of ROPs via changes of wall pH and possibly through additional unknown factors. Dashed lines indicate that these effects were not confirmed experimentally.Plants can absorb and use various forms of nitrogen from soils, primarily the inorganic ions ammonium and nitrate. The concentrations of these ions are highly heterogeneous around the plant and can vary across several orders of magnitude among different soils and as a result of seasonal changes.15 Thus, plants would be expected to display highly plastic, N-regulated developmental responses and to employ a range of nitrogen uptake transport systems to optimize exploitation of local N resources. Transport systems that mediate NH4 fluxes across the plasma membrane of root cells are divided into two categories: high affinity transport systems (HATS) that mediate uptake from relatively dilute solutions at relatively low rates and low affinity transport systems (LATS) that operate at high rates and higher external concentrations.16 The HATS are plasma membrane localized NH4+-specific transporters (AMTs) that are most likely proton-coupled and their expression and function are repressed at external ammonium concentrations of 1 mM or higher.1719 In contrast, ammonium uptake by LATS is believed to take place through non-specific cation channels.17,20 The NH4+ concentration in the 0.5× Murashige Skoog (MS) medium is 10.3 mM, exceeding by an order of magnitude the concentration at which the high affinity NH4+ uptake system is repressed. The root hair swelling in Atrop11CA plants and inhibition of root hair elongation in wild type plants occurred primarily at external ammonium concentrations greater than 1 mM, and thus is most likely associated with uptake by the LATS.As noted above, root hair elongation is associated with oscillations of cytoplasmic and apoplastic pH that have been linked to growth control. Simultaneous fluorescence ratio imaging of internal and external pH revealed that application of 10 mM NH4NO3 enhanced the amplitude of these pH oscillations at the extreme apex of wild type root hairs1 and Figure 2. These oscillations are thought to modulate tip growth through altering the extensibility of the wall.4 Additional measurements (Fig. 2) show that similar to the effects of NH4NO3, addition of NH4Cl induced increase in the apoplastic pH fluctuations and reduced the pH. However, the effects of NH4Cl on cytoplasmic pH fluctuations seem subtler compared to the effects of NH4NO3. Thus, one possible explanation for the observed swelling of the root hair apex in rop11CA expressing plants in media containing NH4NO3 is that rop11CA root hairs are affected in their ability to re-establish the normal proton gradient across the plasma membrane in response to ammonium transport. The altered proton gradient would then prevent the normal localized oscillatory changes in pH-dependent wall properties required to restrict expansion to the very tip of the elongating root hair.Open in a separate windowFigure 2Changes in apoplastic and cytoplasmic pH fluctuations, following application of NH4NO3, NH4Cl or KNO3. (A) Apolplastic pH (pHex) following treatments with either NH4NO3, NH4Cl or KNO3. Note the increase pH fluctuations induced by either NH4NO3 and NH4Cl but not by KNO3. (B) Cytoplasmic pH (pHcyt) following treatments as above. Note the changes in pH fluctuations induced by NH4NO3 and the subtler effects of NH4Cl.Concurrent absorption of NH4+ and NO3- maintains the cation-anion balance within both the rooting medium and the root, and thus potentially has an important function in maintaining intracellular and extracellular pH.21,22 In agreement, application of these ions affected the amplitude of pH oscillations1 and Figure 2. Interestingly, treatments of WT seedlings with 10 mM NH4NO3 causes increase in root hair pH oscillations and often tip bursting. Yet, prolonged exposure of WT root hairs to NH4NO3 is accompanied by adaptation (our unpublished data). This adaptation does not occur in rop11CA mutants, suggesting that cycling of ROPs between active and inactive states maybe important in adaptation to changing environment. These data strongly suggest that NH4+-dependent root hair swelling in the plants expressing activated ROP resulted from physiological changes in ion balance rather than a direct effect of ammonium on enzymatic activities required for root hair growth (Fig. 1). Application of NH4+ and NO3, in the absence of other ions, induced formation of additional growth tips, in which the membrane localized GFP-rop11CA was concentrated. This observation suggests that interplay between the regulation of ROP localization and activity and the regulation of nitrogen fluxes may have an important function in the maintenance of unidirectional growth. As root hair elongation is coupled to spatially distinct regulation of extracellular pH oscillations and ROS production,7 it seems likely that there is a mechanism that can adjust the fluxes of nitrogen ions relative to these pH fluxes. This system would then maintain the oscillations in pH such that polarized growth is continued. One possible mechanism for this coordination is through the highly localized ROP cycling between active and inactive states that has an important role in the spatial activation of cell polarization machinery.2327 Due to the function of ROP GTPases in vesicle trafficking, actin organization and maintenance of ROS and Ca2+ gradients,2,8,9,23,24,2833 expression of activated ROP11 may indirectly influence cell wall properties by altering the localization and/or recycling of cation and anion transporters/channels or plasma membrane H+-ATPases delivered to the growing tip of the hair and in this way affect the maintenance of the proton gradients. In agreement with a possible effect of activated ROPs on localization and/or recycling of membrane transporters we discovered that rop11CA plants were resistant to ammonium toxicity when grown in the presence of NH4NO3 and several micronutrients.1We propose a model (Fig. 1) in which spatial regulation of ROP activity creates a positive feedback loop with pH oscillations around the growing apex of root hairs. According to this model ROP cycling between active and inactive states spatially and temporally activates the downstream signaling cascades essential for the tip-growth of root hairs. At the same time, localization of membrane proteins involved in maintenance of normal nitrogen fluxes across the plasma membrane is indirectly affected by ROP signaling. Alternatively, ROP signaling is modulated to adapt to altered nitrogen fluxes. NH4+ fluxes increase the amplitude of pH oscillations at the root hair apex and in turn affect cell-wall properties. Thus, when the ROP activity is upregulated by dominant mutations, the synergistic effects of pH changes and constant activation of ROP downstream effectors result in the uncontrolled cell expansion seen as root hair bulging. Previous studies have suggested that feedback between oscillatory pH change and ROS distribution is required to support tip growth.7 However, the factors that may integrate these processes are unknown. Our results suggest that spatial regulation of ROP activity in response to changing environments is one of the key elements that may coordinate the pH and ROS oscillations during the root hair tip growth.It will be interesting to examine whether ROP function is coordinated with apoplastic pH fluctuation in other cell types. Recently, it has been suggested that the effects of auxin on pavement cell structure in leaf epidermis require Auxin Binding Protein 1 (ABP1) dependent ROP activation.34 It is well known that auxin induces changes in apoplastic pH. Possibly, like nitrogen source in root hairs, auxin dependent apolplastic pH fluctuations in the leaf epidermis may function coordinately with ROP in the regulation of cell growth. Consistent with this idea, it has been shown that auxin inhibits clathrin-dependent endocytosis through ABP1 reinforcing a possible role in modulating membrane flux/membrane properties.35 Some auxin resistant mutants also display resistance to ammonium toxicity36 further suggesting a link between auxin and membrane transport. Hence, auxin and ROPs may indeed function synergistically to modulate plasma membrane properties, in turn affecting ion balance in the apoplast and so modulating cell wall properties and growth.  相似文献   

12.
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) fulfil many functions in plants. They have a signaling role in several physiological mechanisms, but they are also directly involved as substrates in important reactions, especially in the apoplast. Two ROS, superoxide and hydrogen peroxide, were shown to exhibit a typical accumulation pattern in the Arabidopsis root apex. While hydrogen peroxide is mainly present in the cell wall of fully elongated cells in the region of root hair formation, superoxide accumulation roughly coincides with the transition zone, between the meristem and the fast elongating zone. Developing lateral roots also exhibit a strong superoxide labeling with the same localization.Key Words: superoxide, hydrogen peroxide, cell elongation, transition zone, nitroblue tetrazoliumIn a recent work,1 we have shown that superoxide radical and hydrogen peroxide have different accumulation sites in Arabidopsis root tip. Hydrogen peroxide is mainly present in a region identified as “differentiation zone”, according to the nomenclature used by Scheres et al.2 This localization fits well with the role that was assigned to this ROS in the formation of root hairs.3 This hypothesis was strengthened by the fact that umbelliferone, which promotes the in vitro and in vivo formation of hydrogen peroxide by peroxidases, induces the formation and the elongation of root hairs. In contrast, potassium iodide, a H2O2 scavenger, prevents the formation of root hairs, but does not completely abolished their initiation.As for superoxide radical, it accumulates mainly in apoplast of cells ranging from the proximal part of root meristem to the point where cells initiate their fast elongation. This localization is in agreement with a role of superoxide in the cell elongation process.1 This conclusion can be refined, taking into account the work of Baluška and coll.4,5 Using various functional and structural criteria, these authors identified four distinct zones in the root apex of Arabidopsis. They introduced an additional zone, between the meristem and the fast elongating cells, named “transition zone”. This region comprises cells which do not divide any more and are preparing their elongation. A reappraisal of the localization of superoxide accumulation in the light of this classification could suggest that this ROS is actually mainly associated with this transition zone, rather than with the beginning of the elongation zone. Figure 1 shows an Arabidopsis root stained for the presence of superoxide with nitroblue tetrazolium. It appears that the strong superoxide staining ranges from about 80 to 250 µm away from the root tip. The respective sizes of the various zones somewhat differ from the sizes reported (in ref. 5). It is difficult to precisely determine the border between the meristem and the transition zone, which should be around 120 µm. The fast elongation zone begins at about 240 µm. Fast elongating cells exhibit only a slight superoxide staining in their cell wall. Therefore, it appears that superoxide accumulates mainly in the wall of cells preparing their rapid elongation. It has been reported that cells in the transition zone undergo several modifications to prepare their growth. This includes reactions leading to cell wall loosening.6,7 The presence of superoxide in the cell wall of those cells could participate in the onset of the loosening process, for example by interacting with peroxidases to produce hydroxyl radicals.8Open in a separate windowFigure 1Distribution of superoxide radical in the root of a 7-day old Arabidopsis seedling stained with nitroblue tetrazolium. Growth conditions and staining procedure were as described (in ref. 1). The scale indicates µm, starting from the root cap junction. The picture was taken with a MZ 16 Leica stereomicroscope. Arrowheads point to root hairs in formation. Black arrow, basal limit of meristem. White arrow, onset of the fast elongation zone.When roots get older, the intensity of superoxide staining in the main root tip decreases, while the apex of the newly formed lateral roots exhibits a stronger reaction (Fig. 2). This could be related to the important growth potential of young lateral roots. The emerging root primordium is usually clearly positive (Fig. 2A) and in a fully formed lateral root, superoxide staining is concentrated in a zone between the meristem and elongated cells, most likely corresponding to the transition zone (Fig. 2B). In conclusion, superoxide radical seems to accumulate in the wall of cells preparing their elongation in the transition zone of Arabidopsis root apex.Open in a separate windowFigure 2Detection of superoxide radical by nitroblue tetrazolium in a lateral root primordium marked by an arrow (A) and in a developing lateral root (B). mr, main root. Scale bar: 100 µm.  相似文献   

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14.
Xylem vessels are cells that develop a specifically ornamented secondary cell wall to ensure their vascular function, conferring both structural strength and impermeability. Further plasticity is given to these vascular cells by a range of different patterns described by their secondary cell walls that—as for the growth of all plant organs—are developmentally regulated. Microtubules and their associated proteins, named MAPs, are essential to define the shape, the orientation, the position and the overall pattern of these secondary cell walls. Key actors in this process are the land-plant specific MAP70 proteins which not only allow the secondary cell wall to be positioned at the cell cortex but also determine the overall pattern described by xylem vessel secondary cell walls.Key words: xylem/wood vessels, tracheary elements, secondary cell wall, cell wall patterning, microtubules, microtubule-associated proteins, MAP70Xylem formation has been one of the key steps of plant evolution. These physically strong tube cells allowed plants to colonize land by reinforcing their upright position against gravity and resisting desiccation by permitting water conduction throughout the plant body. This double role is fulfilled by specific conducting wood cells—the tracheary elements (TEs). These cells represent the cellular units of the adjustable plant vasculature, which relies on the three structural characteristics of TEs: (1) these cells develop a secondary cell wall to resist pressure exerted by the sap they will conducted, (2) these cells undergo programmed cell death (PCD) to hollow out their entire cytoplasmic content to form a conduit for the sap and (3) these cells will undergo a terminal perforation at their basal end (with respect to the corresponding meristem) to form a complete functional vascular cylinder which will connect with the underlying vascular vessels once terminally differentiated.1,2 TEs are further characterized by a diversity of organizational pattern described by their secondary cell wall, which can be annular or spiral (referred to as protoxylem-type ornamentations) reticulate or pitted (referred to as metaxylem-type ornamentations).3,4 These differently ornamented TEs are developmentally regulated and for protoxylemtype TEs appear during the development of early primary tissues (annular TEs are mostly observed in developing embryos) while metaxylem-type TEs appear in the later development of primary and secondary tissues (they represent the TEs present in wood). Annular and spiral TEs are first formed in organs undergoing primary growth and are considered to be “extendable” (their pattern in rings and spirals does not oppose further extension of the TE cell) during the growth of this organ. Once the growing organ has attained a certain size these TEs will be crushed by the surrounding tissue whilst the more heavily reinforced reticulate and pitted TEs will form to insure the vascular flow and strengthen the entire organ. In short, the modularity and plasticity of this plant vascular system is directly dependant on the differentiation and the type of cell wall ornamentation of its constituent TEs. The establishment of such regular patterning of secondary cell walls has been attributed to the underlying cortical microtubule array that predefines the cell wall depositions (reviewed in ref. 2). Pharmacological modulation of microtubule properties in both whole plants and in vitro TE differentiating systems leads to severe defects in the patterning, orientation, smoothness and deposition of TE secondary cell walls (reviewed in ref. 2).  相似文献   

15.
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) have been recognized as important regulators in plant response to nutrient deficiencies. Of particular interest is the discovery that miR399 functions systemically in the maintenance of phosphate (Pi) homeostasis in response to external Pi fluctuation. Recent studies have further implicated both miR399 and sugars (mainly sucrose) as potential signal molecules in the shoot-to-root communication of phosphorus (P) status. Given that both miR399 and sucrose are transported via the phloem, their potential interaction (or cross-talk) along the signaling pathway is especially appealing for further exploration. In this mini-review, we highlight recent progress in unraveling crucial roles of both sucrose and miR399 in P-deficiency signaling. In particular, we further discuss recent findings that photosynthetic carbon (C) assimilation and subsequent partitioning, by overriding signaling of low external Pi, act as checkpoints upstream of miR399 for the onset of a systemic P-deficiency status.Key words: sucrose, microRNA399, systemic signaling, P deficiencyPhosphorus (P) is an essential macronutrient for plant growth and development. Phosphate (Pi) availability is a limiting factor for crop productivity in many parts of the world''s arable land.1 Because P fertilizer is a non-renewable resource and its mining is becoming ever more expensive, P has been recently highlighted as “the disappearing nutrient” of strategic importance in a recent NEWS FEATURE in the Nature.2Plant acclimation to P deficiency is a highly coordinated process with an extensive re-programming of biochemical and metabolic pathways. Altered carbon allocation between shoots and roots is a hallmark of most P-deficient plants resulting in a higher root-to-shoot ratio. In this process, sucrose, the main form of carbon (C) source from shoots to roots, has also been implicated to act as a secondary messenger for shoot-to-root signaling of P status to regulate gene expression and Pi uptake in roots.3 Sucrose has been found to be either required for or to enhance P deficiency-regulated gene expression in several plant species.46 In recent years, microRNAs (miRNAs) have been recognized as crucial regulators in plant response to P deficiency. The mode of miRNA action is strictly based on the degree of sequence complementarity with target gene(s). It has been demonstrated that miR399 serves as a systemic signaling molecule in regulating systemic Pi homeostasis.79 Both sucrose and miR399 are phloemmobile.1014 Several excellent reviews have been published recently to elucidate the roles of sucrose, miR399 and other aspects of P signaling.3,1418 However, a paradox arises between the seemingly ubiquitous role of sucrose in signaling various nutrient deficiencies, including those of nitrogen (N) and P, and the stringent specificity of plant responses to a particular nutrient deficiency. Here, we summarize recent advances in understanding the roles of both sucrose and miR399, as modulated by light regime and phloem transport, and discuss how plants may adopt C as a “common currency”, primarily in the form of sucrose, to initiate specific responses to P deficiency by regulating miRNA399 expression.  相似文献   

16.
One of the main components of pectin, a primary constituent of higher plant cell walls, is rhamnogalacturonan I. This polymer comprised of linked alternating rhamnose and galacturonic acid residues is decorated with side chains composed of arabinose and galactose residues. At present, the function of these side chains is not fully understood. Our research on Southern African resurrection plants, plants that are capable of surviving severe dehydration (desiccation), has revealed that their cell walls are capable of extreme flexibility in response to water loss. One species, Myrothamnus flabellifolia, has evolved a constitutively protected leaf cell wall, composed of an abundance of arabinose polymer side chains, suggested to be arabinans and/or arabinogalactans, associated with the pectin matrix. In this article, we propose a hypothetical model that explains how the arabinan rich pectin found in the leaves of this desiccation-tolerant plant permits almost complete water loss without deleterious consequences, such as irreversible polymer adhesion, from occurring. Recent evidence suggesting a role for pectin-associated arabinose polymers in relation to water dependent processes in other plant species is also discussed.Key words: arabinans, cell wall, desiccation, resurrection, rehydration, rhamnogalacturonan IThe flowering plant cell wall is a composite structure consisting of a skeletal framework of cellulose and hemicellulose embedded within a matrix of pectin polysaccharides and cell wall glycoproteins.1,2 The pectin matrix, in turn, is composed of three primary types of polysaccharides, these being rhamnogalacturonan I (RGI), rhamnogalacturonan II (RGII) and homogalacturonan (HG).1 RGII is a complex polysaccharide, consisting of many unusual sugar moieties, and is not present in large amounts in the wall.3 HG is effectively a linear homopolymer of galacturonic acid and is believed to facilitate the formation of tight junctions, ‘egg boxes’, by complexing with calcium ions present in the cell wall.1 RGI is a polymer composed of a backbone of alternating glycosidically linked rhamnose and galacturonic acid residues.1 Side chains, consisting of either arabinogalactan polymers or linear chains of arabinans and/or galactans, are then attached to the rhamnose residues of the RGI backbone.1 The manner with which these polymers are attached or become entangled with each other and cellulosic polymers to form the pectin matrix has been a matter of debate. The classical theory is that the RGI and HG polymers alternate with each other as block polymers and that the side chains interact with neighbouring polysaccharide chains. Recently, this standard theory has been questioned and an argument whereby the HG polymers are actually side chains of a RGI backbone polymer has been advanced.4 Nevertheless, the complexity of pectin polysaccharides is such that ascribing definitive functions to this matrix of polysaccharides has proven quite difficult. The physical properties of the pectin matrix suggest a number of possible functions. The water binding properties of the galacturonic acid residues indicate that polymers containing these groups have the capacity to hydrate and swell and so possibly help maintain polymer separation in the wall.5 The side chains of RGI include arabinan and galactan polymers which have been shown to be highly mobile6,7,8 with the potential to interact with each other forming a temporally entangled matrix.9 It is also believed that arabinan chains, which have been shown to contain ferulate residues attached to terminal arabinose groups, are able to oxidatively cross-link via the formation of diferulate bridges between arabinan chains that originate on separate RGI polysaccharides.10 The pectin matrix is now believed to contain sub-domains of RGI, HG and RGII which may interact with different polysaccharide components of the cell wall such as cellulose or xyloglucan.11,12 Hence, it is possible that the pectin matrix may form these associations with other polysaccharides via covalent9 and/or non-covalent11 (e.g., H-bonding) interactions and in so doing ensure the integrity of the wall and its polymer organisation. Although a number of general functions, such as hydration and ion binding, have been proposed for the pectin matrix, in particular the RGI polymer and its neutral side chains, there has been difficulty in elucidating specific functions for these polysaccharides. A number of molecular genetic studies have been performed with the aim of establishing specific functions for the RGI side chains. A recent study showed that genetic removal of the arabinan side chains in the cell walls of Nicotiana plumbaginfolia results in the formation of a non-organogenic callus culture with loosely attached cells.13 Furthermore, it has been shown that ‘in muro’ fragmentation of the RG1 backbone in Solanum tuberosum results in abnormal development of the periderm.14 This suggests that these side chains may play at least some role in normal cell attachment and cell development. However, the real problem is that no obvious phenotypic differences between wild type and mutant plants (in which neutral side chains have been modified) have been observed.15,16,17 It may be that the conditions under which phenotypic differences between wild type and mutant plants would arise have not yet been investigated. We believe the water binding and attachment properties of the pectin matrix are particularly important. This is especially so given the role pectin plays in the middle lamella ensuring attachment of cells to each other and in the formation of the apoplast where water mediated transport of solutes occurs.1 Our research has focused on a group of Southern African plants termed ‘Resurrection plants’ because of their unique ability to survive severe dehydration (desiccation) to an almost air-dry state.18 We have been interested in how the cell walls of angiosperm resurrection plants such as Craterostigma wilmsii19,20 and Myrothamnus flabellifolia21,22 may have become adapted to survive this extreme water deficit stress (desiccation). We have shown that in the case of the Myrothamnus flabellifolia leaf cell wall, which becomes considerably folded when dried, does not undergo dramatic changes in composition or polymer location in response to desiccation.21 Rather we propose that this plant has evolved a constitutively protected cell wall which is able to undergo repeated cycles of desiccation and rehydration.21,22 We have observed that the pectin component of the leaf cell wall in this species was unusually rich in arabinose polymers, most likely arabinan and arabinogalactan in nature, which we advanced was the reason that the cell wall of this species was able to tolerate desiccation.21 Here we provide a simple model (Fig. 1) whereby the arabinan side chains of the pectin polysaccharides are responsible for possibly buffering/replacing the lost water during desiccation and in so doing prevent the formation of tight junctions (e.g., egg boxes) or strong H-bonding interactions between the normally separate ‘skeletal’ polysaccharides (e.g., cellulose microfibrils and xyloglucan tethers) embedded in the pectin matrix. Our model is supported by the observation that cell wall arabinans play a crucial role in the response of guard cells to turgor pressure.23 It was shown that removal of arabinans by enzymatic digestion of leaf strips of Commelina communis resulted in locking of the guard cell walls in either the open or closed position.23 Additional roles for arabinan polymers in cell walls have recently been implied with respect to the salt tolerance of Mesembryanthemum crystallinum,24 ensuring hydration of the seed endosperm of Gleditsia triacanthos during germination25 and the tolerance of tropical legume seeds to dehydration.26 We believe that the arabinan side chains of RGI play a critical role in the ability of cell walls to remain flexible during plant growth and may have important functions in relation to the water content of the cell. Further studies aimed at determining the relationship between wall water content, RGI side chains and cell wall flexibility may reveal hitherto unsuspected functions for these polysaccharides in the life of the plant.Open in a separate windowFigure 1A model proposing the role of arabinose rich pectin polymers in stabilising the cell wall against water loss. (A) Pectin consisting of short arabinan chains in the hydrated state, (B) pectin consisting of short arabinan chains in the dehydrated state; (C) pectin consisting of long arabinan chains in the hydrated state; (D) pectin consisting of long arabinan chains in the dehydrated state. The likelihood of irreversible tight junctions (e.g., egg boxes) forming in arabinan poor cell walls during dehydration is demonstrated in (B) while the reversible buffering effect of arabinan rich cell walls is proposed in (D) as would possibly occur in Myrothamnus flabellifolia. For simplicity arabinan chains not participating in the buffering interactions between the RGI backbone chains have been shortened to two arabinose residues in length. Note in (A) and (B) all arabinan chains are two arabinose residues in length.  相似文献   

17.
The development of Casparian strips (CSs) on the endo- and exodermis and their chemical components in roots of three cultivars of rice (Oryza sativa) with different salt tolerance were compared using histochemistry and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. The development and deposition of suberin lamellae of CSs on the endo- and exodermis in the salt-tolerant cultivar Liaohan 109 was earlier than in the moderately tolerant cultivar Tianfeng 202 and the sensitive cultivar Nipponbare. The detection of chemical components indicated major contributions to the structure of the outer part from aliphatic suberin, lignin and cell wall proteins and carbohydrates to the rhizodermis, exodermis, sclerenchyma and one layer of cortical cells in series (OPR) and the endodermal Casparian strip. Moreover, the amounts of these major chemical components in the outer part of the Liaohan 109 root were higher than in Tianfeng 202 and Nipponbare, but there was no distinct difference in endodermal CSs among the three rice cultivars. The results suggest that the exodermis of the salt-tolerant cultivar Liaohan 109 functions as a barrier for resisting salt stress.Key words: casparian strip, chemical components, development, rice, rootPlant roots are in direct contact with the soil environment and thus particularly affected by unfavorable conditions. To withstand the surrounding environment, roots have developed anatomical and physiological adaptations. The development of Casparian strips (CSs) in the root endo- and exodermis is one such strategy.13 In roots of most species, the sequence of development of the endo- and exodermis is roughly the same and involves two consecutive developmental stages: (1) formation of CSs in radial and transverse walls impregnating the primary cell wall pores with lipophilic and aromatic substances and (2) deposition of suberin lamellae to the inner surface of anticlinal and tangential cell walls.46A major function of the CS is to block the non-selective apoplastic bypass flow of water and ions into the stele.3 Therefore, the structure,79 chemical nature,1012 and physiological function13,14 of endo- and exdodermal CSs in roots have been the focus of many investigations. Although oxygen loss, drought and salinity can influence the development and chemical nature of CSs in different rice cultivars,1519 few investigations have considered the development and formation of endo- and exdodermal CSs in the roots of rice cultivars with different salt tolerance under normal growing conditions.In the present paper, light microscopy and Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy were used to examine the cytochemistry and root anatomy of isolated CSs. The aim was to compare anatomical development and chemical characteristics of the endoand exdodermal CSs of three rice (Oryza sativa L.) cultivars having different salt tolerance in north China: the salt-tolerant Liaohan 109 and two widely grown cultivars, Tianfeng 202 and Nipponbare.  相似文献   

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OsPHR2, the homolog of AtPHR1, is a central Pi-signaling regulator. The Pi-signaling pathway downstream of AtPHR1, similarly of OsPHR2,1,2 involves a noncoding RNA which targets mimicry of miR399. miRNA399 mediates cleavage of PHO2.3,4 The regulating pathway downstream of OsPHR2 is negatively regulated by the Pi-signaling responsive gene OsSPX1.5,6 Overexpression of AtPHR1 and OsPHR2 leads to an increased concentration of Pi in the shoot tissues with leaf toxic symptom and growth retardation similar as the phenotype of pho2 mutant, especially under Pi abundant conditions.2,6,7 It has been known that the low affinity Pi transporter OsPT2 mainly contributes to the shoot Pi accumulation mediated by OsPHR2, and overexpression of OsPT2 results in shoot Pi accumulation and leaf toxic symptom and growth retardation under Pi abundant conditions.6 Two curious questions are emerging from the reported results: How Os SPX1 functions on the negative regulation of the pathway and what mechanism of the growth retardation mediated by OsPHR2. For the second question, our favored hypothesis is that the growth inhibition mediated by overexpression of OsPHR2 is caused by toxic physiological effects due to excessive Pi accumulation in shoots (Pi toxicity). In fact, the toxic symptoms become diminished with decreased Pi levels in growth medium. However, the plant growth retardation mediated by overexpression of OsPHR2 may be caused by some unknown genetic factor(s) regulated by OsPHR2.Key words: Oryza Sativa L, OsPHR2, OsSPX1, pi-signaling, plant growth  相似文献   

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