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1.
Ambrose C  Wasteneys GO 《Protoplasma》2012,249(Z1):S69-S76
The dynamic microtubule (MT) cytoskeleton found in the cell cortex of plants drives cell expansion via cell wall modifications. In the last decade, live cell imaging studies employing green fluorescent protein have helped unravel the mechanisms behind how cells arrange cortical MTs into complex arrays and shape cell expansion. In this review, we explore the reverse scenario: how cell geometry and organelles influence and constrain the organization and behavior of cortical MTs. This newly emerging principle explains how cells perceive local nanoscale structural input from MT-organizing centers, such as the nucleus, endomembranes, and cell edges, and translate this into global cell-wide order via MT self-organization. Studies primarily using the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana and tobacco BY-2 suspension cultures have broadened our understanding of how cells form not only elegant parallel arrays but also more complex MT configurations, including the prominent MT bundles found in preprophase bands, leaf epidermal cells, and developing xylem.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Microtubule (MT) arrays in stomatal complexes ofLolium have been studied using cryosectioning and immunofluorescence microscopy. This in situ analysis reveals that the arrangement of MTs in pairs of guard cells (GCs) or subsidiary cells (SCs) within a complex is very similar, indicating that MT deployment is closely coordinated during development. In premitotic guard mother cells (GMCs), MTs of the transverse interphase MT band (IMB) are reorganized into a longitudinal array via a transitory array in which the MTs appear to radiate from the cell edges towards the centre of the walls. Following the longitudinal division of GMCs, cortical MTs are reinstated in the GCs at the edge of the periclinal and ventral walls. The MTs become organized into arrays which radiate across the periclinal walls, initially from along the length of the ventral wall and later only from the pore site. As the GCs elongate, the organization of MTs and the patterns of wall expansion differ on the internal and external periclinal walls. A final reorientation of MTs from transverse to longitudinal is associated with the elongation and constriction of GCs to produce mature complexes. During cytokinesis in the subsidiary mother cells (SMCs), MTs appear around the reforming nucleus in the daughter epidermal cells but appear in the cortex of the SC once division is complete. Our results are thus consistent with the idea that interphase MTs are nucleated in the cell cortex in all cells of the stomatal complex but not in adjacent epidermal cells.Abbreviations GMC guard mother cell - GC guard cell - IMB interphase microtubule band - MT microtubule - PPB preprophase band - SMC subsidiary mother cell - SC subsidiary cell  相似文献   

3.
Microtubules, MAPs and plant directional cell expansion   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Plant microtubules (MTs) polymerize and depolymerize in a process termed dynamic instability. This allows the assembly, reorganization, and disassembly of at least four MT arrays throughout the cell cycle. The cortical MT array lines the plasma membrane during interphase and plays a central role in directional cell expansion. Microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) decorate cortical MTs with distinct patterns, regulating MT dynamic instability, MT severing, and other array-ordering processes. The Arabidopsis root has emerged as a highly useful system for identifying and studying cell-expansion-related MAPs. Here, we review how cortical MTs are thought to behave and become ordered in expanding root cells, and we discuss the emerging picture of how MAPs fundamentally govern MT ordering and directional growth processes.  相似文献   

4.
Inada  S.  Sato  S. 《Plant and Soil》2000,226(1):117-128
In actively growing cortical cells in the elongation zone of Lemna minor L. roots, both longitudinal (radial and tangential) and transverse walls expand in both length and width. The longitudinal walls of the three types of cortical cells in the root (i.e. outer, middle and inner) showed the largest expansion in the longitudinal axis. In contrast, the inner cortical cells exhibited the least expansion in width, whereas the middle cortical cells displayed the largest expansion in width. Thus, the profiles of the expansion of longitudinal walls were characteristic for the three types of cortical cells. In this study, both the orientation of cortical microtubule (MT) arrays and their dynamic reorientation, and the density of cortical MTs, were documented and correlated to the patterns of cell wall expansion. Significantly, transverse arrays of cortical MTs were most prominent in the radial walls of the inner cortical cells, and least so in those of the middle cortical cells. Toward the base of roots, beyond the elongation zone, the orientation of cortical MTs shifted continuously from transverse to oblique and then to longitudinal. In this case, the rate of shift in the orientation of cortical MTs along the root axis was appreciably faster in the middle cortical cells than in the other two types of cortical cells. Interestingly, the continuous change in cortical MT orientation was not confirmed in the transverse walls which showed much smaller two-dimensional expansion than the radial walls. Additionally, the presence of fragmented or shortened cortical MTs rapidly increased concomitantly with the decrease of transversely oriented cortical MTs. This relationship was especially prominent in the transverse walls of the inner cortical cells, which displayed the least expansion among the three types of cortical cells investigated. In the root elongation zone, the density of cortical MTs in the inner cortical cells was about three times higher than that in the other two cortical cell types. These results indicate that in the early stage of cell expansion, the orientation of cortical MTs determines a preferential direction of cell expansion and both the shifting orientation and density of cortical MTs affect the magnitude of expansion in width of the cell wall.  相似文献   

5.
Summary Cortical microtubules (MTs) were visualized in root cortex cells ofHyacinthus orientalis L. using immunofluorescence techniques. Cellular MT orientation was determined adjacent to radial longitudinal and transverse walls of root tip, uncontracted, contracting, and fully contracted regions. As seen in longitudinal views, MTs formed parallel, apparently helical arrays which were oriented transversely, axially or obliquely depending upon the region. Transverse sectional views showed that MTs adjacent to transverse cell walls formed a variety of patterns which varied with developmental stage and cell location. Microtubules were oriented in crisscross or parallel arrays. The parallel arrays were oriented either parallel, perpendicular or oblique to the radius of the root. There was an apparent temporal progression in MT reorientation from outer cortical to inner cortical cell layers. A resultant progression of reoriented cell growth could account for root contraction. These findings corroborate earlier electron microscopic observations of changing MT orientation accompanying root contraction, and provide cytological evidence to test mathematical and biophysical models of the mechanics of cell expansion.Abbreviations MT microtubule - MF microfibril - MTSB microtubule stabilizing buffer - PBS phosphate buffered saline  相似文献   

6.
By microinjecting rhodamine-labelled tubulin into living plant cells, it is possible to observe microtubules (MTs) directly and to see how the cortical array reorganizes itself. The validity of the conclusions drawn from such observations depends upon the assumption that most, if not all, of the native MTs are dynamic and incorporate labelled tubulin. However, if arrays also contain MTs that are not exchanging tubulin subunits, such MTs will remain unlabelled, and the labelled MT population will be under-representative of the whole array. To address this potential problem, we microinjected pea epidermal cells with rhodamine-labelled tubulin, then fixed the cells and used fluorescein-conjugated antibodies against tubulin to detect the entire MT array. The two fluorescent patterns corresponded well, confirming that the MTs labelled with exogenous tubulin were evenly distributed throughout the entire array. Also, by comparing the MT image before and after aldehyde fixation, we observed that, although some of the MTs were lost in the procedure, the fixation was able to preserve the arrangement of MTs seen in the living cell. We conclude that fluorescence analogue cytochemistry provides a valid representation of the entire cortical MT array.  相似文献   

7.
While microtubule (MT) arrays in cells are often focused at the centrosome, a variety of cell types contain a substantial number of non-centrosomal MTs. Epithelial cells, neurons, and muscle cells all contain arrays of non-centrosomal MTs that are critical for these cells' specialized functions. There are several routes by which non-centrosomal MTs can arise, including release from the centrosome, cytoplasmic assembly, breakage or severing, and stabilization from non-centrosomal sites. Once formed, MTs that are not tethered to the centrosome must be organized, which can be accomplished by means of self-organization or by capture and nucleation of MTs where they are needed. The presence of free MTs requires stabilization of minus ends, either by MT-associated proteins or by an end-capping complex. Although some of the basic elements of free MT formation and organization are beginning to be understood, a great deal of work is still necessary before we have a complete picture of how non-centrosomal MT arrays are assembled in specific cell types.  相似文献   

8.
The cortical microtubule (MT) array and its organization is important in defining the growth axes of plant cells. In roots, the MT array exhibits a net-like configuration in the division zone, and a densely-packed transverse alignment in the elongation zone. This transition is essential for anisotropic cell expansion and consequently has been the subject of intense study. Cotyledons exhibit a net-like array in pavement cells and a predominantly aligned array in the petioles, and provide an excellent system for determining the basis of plant MT organization. We show that in both kinds of MT array, growing MTs frequently encounter existing MTs. Although some steep-angled encounters result in catastrophes, the most frequent outcome of these encounters is successful negotiation of the existing MT by the growing MT to form an MT crossover. Surprisingly, the outcome of such encounters is similar in both aligned and net-like arrays. In contrast, aligned arrays exhibit a much higher frequency of MT severing events compared with net-like arrays. Severing events occur almost exclusively at sites where MTs cross over one another. This process of severing at sites of MT crossover results in the removal of unaligned MTs, and is likely to form the basis for the difference between a net-like and an aligned MT array.  相似文献   

9.
Bundling of microtubules (MTs) is critical for the formation of complex MT arrays. In land plants, the interphase cortical MTs form bundles specifically following shallow-angle encounters between them. To investigate how cells select particular MT contact angles for bundling, we used an in vitro reconstitution approach consisting of dynamic MTs and the MT-cross-linking protein MAP65-1. We found that MAP65-1 binds to MTs as monomers and inherently targets antiparallel MTs for bundling. Dwell-time analysis showed that the affinity of MAP65-1 for antiparallel overlapping MTs is about three times higher than its affinity for single MTs and parallel overlapping MTs. We also found that purified MAP65-1 exclusively selects shallow-angle MT encounters for bundling, indicating that this activity is an intrinsic property of MAP65-1. Reconstitution experiments with mutant MAP65-1 proteins with different numbers of spectrin repeats within the N-terminal rod domain showed that the length of the rod domain is a major determinant of the range of MT bundling angles. The length of the rod domain also determined the distance between MTs within a bundle. Together, our data show that the rod domain of MAP65-1 acts both as a spacer and as a structural element that specifies the MT encounter angles that are conducive for bundling.  相似文献   

10.
The morphogenesis of lobed plant cells has been considered to be controlled by microtubule (MT) and/or actin filament (AF) organization. In this article, a comprehensive mechanism is proposed, in which distinct roles are played by these cytoskeletal components. First, cortical MT bundles and, in the case of pavement cells, radial MT arrays combined with MT bundles determine the deposition of local cell wall thickenings, the cellulose microfibrils of which copy the orientation of underlying MTs. Cell growth is thus locally prevented and, consequently, lobes and constrictions are formed. Arch-like tangential expansion is locally imposed at the external periclinal wall of pavement cells by the radial arrangement of cellulose microfibrils at every wall thickening. Whenever further elongation of the original cell lobes occurs, AF patches assemble at the tips of growing lobes. Intercellular space formation is promoted or prevented by the opposite or alternate, respectively, arrangement of cortical MT arrays between neighboring cells. The genes that are possibly involved in the molecular regulation of the above morphogenetic procedure by MT and AF array organization are reviewed.  相似文献   

11.
The dynamics of microtubule (MT) disassembly and reassembly were studied in the green alga Ernodesmis verticillata, using indirect immunofluorescent localization of tubulin. This alga possesses two distinct MT arrays: highly-ordered, longitudinally-oriented cortical MTs, and shorter perinuclear MTs radiating from nuclear surfaces. Perinuclear MTs are very labile, completely disassembling in the cold (cells on ice) within 5–10 min or in 25 μM amiprophos-methyl (APM) within 15–30 min. Although cortical MTs are generally absent after 3 h in APM, it takes 45–60 min before any cold-induced depolymerization is apparent, and some cortical MTs persist after 6 h of cold treatment. The extent of immunofluorescence of cytoplasmic (depolymerized?) tubulin is inversely proportional to the abundance of cortical MTs. Recovery of MT arrays upon warming or upon removal of APM occurs within 30–60 min for the perinuclear MTs, but the cortical arrays take much longer to regain their normal patterns. The cortical MTs initially reappear in a random distribution with respect to the cell axis, but within 3–4 d of warming (or 24–36 h of removing APM) they are nearly parallel to each other and to the cell's longitudinal axis. Thus, although the timing differs, the actual patterns of depolymerization and recovery are similar, irrespective of whether physical or chemical agents are used. Longer-term treatments in 1 μM APM indicate that despite the rapid disappearance of perinuclear MTs, a loss of the uniform nuclear spacing occurs gradually over 1–6 d. Similar disorganization of nuclei is obtained with long-term treatment with 1 μM taxol, where a gradual loss of perinuclear MTs is accompanied by an increased abundance of mitotic spindles. This implies that perinuclear MTs can disassemble in vivo in the presence of taxol, and that they are not the sole components involved in maintaining nuclear spacing in these coenocytes. The results indicate that both nuclear and cortical sites of MT nucleation may exist in this organism, and that MT reassembly and re-organization are temporally distinct events in cells that have highly-ordered arrays of long MTs.  相似文献   

12.
The stability and ordered assembly of cytoskeletal microtubules(MTs) and the relationship between cell growth and MT cytoskeletonin the coenocytic green alga, Chaetomorpha moniligera Kjellmanwere examined. The cytoplasm of cylindrical growing cells ofChaetomorpha is covered with dense arrays of longitudinallyarranged cortical MTs which constitute the MT cytoskeleton.Seventy-five percent of MTs of the cytoskeleton disappearedwithin 4 h, with 25% remaining after 20 h following cold treatment.On terminating MT assembly with amiprophos-methyl (APM), thenumber of MTs decreased by 75% within 4 h. The remaining MTsdisappeared gradually within 24 h. The MT cytoskeleton of Chaetomorphawould thus appear to be composed of at least two kinds of MTsdiffering in stability. The MT cytoskeleton returned to normalafter treatment with APM for less than 48 h. However, this didnot occur after treatment with APM for more than 48 h, and theMT arrays became random. Cell elongation ceased completely within24 h after treatment with APM for less than 48 h but was restoredwithin 24 h after removing APM. The restoration of cell elongationwas no longer evident after removaI of APM for more than 48h. The results indicate that assembly of MTs into ordered arraysdepends on cell polarity and that in turn cell elongation isdependent on the polar-dependent arrays of MTs.Copyright 1994,1999 Academic Press Cell polarity, Chaetomorpha moniligera, coenocytic green alga, cold treatment, immunofluorescence, microtubule  相似文献   

13.
Highly organized interphase cortical microtubule (MT) arrays are essential for anisotropic growth of plant cells, yet little is known about the molecular mechanisms that establish and maintain the order of these arrays. The Arabidopsis thaliana spiral1 (spr1) mutant shows right-handed helical growth in roots and etiolated hypocotyls. Characterization of the mutant phenotypes suggested that SPR1 may control anisotropic cell expansion through MT-dependent processes. SPR1 was identified by map-based cloning and found to encode a small protein with unknown function. Proteins homologous to SPR1 occur specifically and ubiquitously in plants. Genetic complementation with green fluorescent protein fusion proteins indicated that the SPR1 protein colocalizes with cortical MTs and that both MT localization and cell expansion control are conferred by the conserved N- and C-terminal regions. Strong SPR1 expression was found in tissues undergoing rapid cell elongation. Plants overexpressing SPR1 showed enhanced resistance to an MT drug and increased hypocotyl elongation. These observations suggest that SPR1 is a plant-specific MT-localized protein required for the maintenance of growth anisotropy in rapidly elongating cells.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Overall cellular arrangement of cortical microtubules (MTs) is studied by reconstruction of MT images on serial thin sections. The mature root cortex ofHyacinthus orientalis L. cv. Delft blue is composed of elongate, highly vacuolate nondividing parenchyma cells. In longitudinal sections in these cells, MTs generally form parallel arrays at oblique angles to longitudinal cell axes. These MTs extend towards the transverse face of the cell where they appear in localized parallel arrays as well as in crisscross patterns. Repeated observations of oblique parallel arrays of MTs along the length of the cell and the continuity of MT bundles in serial sections suggest that MTs form a single helix in the cell. MTs in neighboring cells appear in sections either as parallel or as herringbone patterns, suggesting that the MT helices in these cells may spiral in the same or the opposite directions.Abbreviations MT Microtubule - MF microfibil - EM electron microscopy  相似文献   

15.
In the regeneration of a shoot from a leaf of the succulent, Graptopetalum paraguayense E. Walther the first new organs are leaf primordia. The original arrangement of cellulose microfibrils and of microtubules (MTs) in the epidermis of the leaf-forming site is one of parallel, straight lines. In the new primordium both structures still have a congruent arrangement but it is roughly in the form of concentric circles that surround the new cylindrical organ. The regions which undergo the greatest shift in orientation (90°) were studied in detail. Departures from the original cellulose alignment are detected in changes in the polarized-light image. Departures from the original cortical MT arrangement are detected using electron microscopy. The over-all reorganization of the MT pattern is followed by the tally of MT profiles, the various regions being studied in two perpendicular planes of section. This corrects for the difference in efficiency in counting transverse versus longitudinal profiles of MTs. Reorientation takes place sporadically, cell by cell, for both the cellulose microfibrils and the MTs, indicating a coordinated reorientation of the two structures. That MTs and cellulose microfibrils reorient jointly in individual cells was shown by reconstruction of the arrays of cortical MTs in paradermal sections of individual cells whose recent change in the orientation of cellulose deposition had been detected with polarized light. Closeness of the two alignments was also indicated by images where the MT and microfibril alignments co-varied within a single cell. The change-over in alignment of the MTs appears to involve stages where arrays of contrasting orientation co-exist to give a criss-cross image. During this critical reorganization, the frequency of the MTs is high. It falls during subsequent enlargement of the organ. It was found that the rearrangement of the cortical MTs to approximate a series of concentric circles on the residual meristem occurred before the emergence of leaf primordia. Through their apparent influence on microfibril alignments, the changes in MT disposition, described here, have the potential to generate major biophysical changes that accompany organogenesis.Abbreviation MT(s) microtubule(s)  相似文献   

16.
Summary In plant cell suspension cultures sensitive to the herbicide amiprophos-methyl (APM), 1 to 3 M APM completely depolymerized both cortical and mitotic microtubule (MT) arrays in 1 hour. In comparison, a 2 hour application of 3 mM colchicine had no effect on MT arrays. Recovery from APM treatment occurred as early as 5 minutes after removal of APM. Short, cortical MTs were visible in 3 hours and complete MT arrays were found within 22 hours after drug removal.Sensitivity to APM-induced MT depolymerization varied according to species but was increased or decreased by varying the mitotic rate in cultures. The results indicated APM sensitivity was related to lowered stability of MT arrays in rapidly cycling cells. APM treatment may help distinguish stabilized cortical MTs in elongating cells and nonstabilized cortical MTs in rapidly dividing cells.Abbreviations MT microtubule - APM amiprophos-methyl - DMSO dimethyl sulfoxide - PBS phosphate buffered saline  相似文献   

17.
Microtubule cytoskeleton in intact and wounded coenocytic green algae   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
J. W. La Claire II 《Planta》1987,171(1):30-42
Microtubule (MT) arrangements were investigated, with immunofluorescence and electron microscopy, in two related species of coenocytic green algae. Intact cells of both Ernodesmis verticillata (Kützing) Boergesen and Boergesenia forbesii (Harvey) Feldmann have two morphologically distinct populations of MTs: a highly regular cortical array consisting of a single layer of parallel, longitudinal MTs; and perinuclear MTs radiating from the surface of the envelope of each interphase nucleus. In both algae, mitotic figures lack perinuclear MTs around them. Pre-incubation with taxol does not alter the appearance of these arrays. The cortical and nuclear MTs appear to coexist throughout the nuclear cycle, unlike the condition in most plant cells. At the cut/contracting ends of wounded Ernodesmis cells, cortical MTs exhibit bundling and marked convolution, with some curvature and slight bundling of MTs throughout the cell cortices. In Boergesenia, wound-induced reticulation and separation of the protoplasm into numerous spheres also involves a fasciation of MTs within the attenuating regions of the cytoplasm. Although some cortical MTs are fairly resistant to cold and amiprophos-methyl-induced depolymerization, the perinuclear ones are very labile, depolymerizing in 5–10 min in the cold. The MT cytoskeleton is not believed to be directly involved in wound-induced motility in these plants because amiprophos-methyl and cold depolymerize most cortical MTs without inhibiting motility. Also, the identical MT distributions in intact cells of these two algae belie the very different patterns of cytoplasmic motility. Although certain roles of the MT arrays may be ruled out, their exact functions in these plants are not known.Abbreviations APM amiprophos-methyl - DIC differential interference contrast - EGTA ethylene glycol-bis(-aminoethyl ether)-N,N,N,N-tetraacetic acid - FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - MT(s) microtubule(s) - PBS phosphate-buffered saline  相似文献   

18.
Summary Placental cells in the ovarian transmitting tissue ofLilium spp. are organized as transfer cells with inbuddings facing the ovarian locule. A detailed analysis of microtubule (MT) organization during development of these polarized cells is reported here. Formation of wall projections occurs at the apical part of the cell starting on the day of anthesis, and a fully mature secretion zone is found four days after anthesis. MTs are organized into distinct cortical and central arrays. The cortical array undergoes a unique transition at anthesis. MTs in the basal half of the cell remain in longitudinal bundles while in the apical half of the cell their longitudinal orientation is replaced by a transverse alignment. One day after anthesis, these transverse bundles become a meshwork of short, randomly organized MTs, while MTs in the basal half of the cell retain their longitudinal alignment. The realignment of MTs in the apical half of the cell coincides with the deposition of the secondary cell wall. The central array is composed of short, randomly arranged strands of MTs in the cytoplasm between the nucleus and the apical and basal periclinal walls of the cell. This array first appears as solitary strands in the apical part of the cell one day before anthesis. The central array extends during development and is eventually seen in the basal half of the cell. We propose that MTs in the cortical region near the apical wall act as templates for the deposition of cellulose microfibrils in the secondary cell wall. MTs in the central array in these transfer cells may be involved in the trafficking of vesicles and/or positioning of organelles near the secretion zone.Abbreviations MT microtubule - daa day after anthesis - dba day before anthesis  相似文献   

19.
Summary Cortical microtubules (MTs) at indifferent zones in immatureNitella internodes were investigated by injection of fluorescently tagged sheep brain tubulin into living cells and by immunofluorescence on fixed material. Nearly identical MT patterns and numbers were detected with the two techniques, indicating that sheep brain tubulin incorporated into all cortical MTs. MTs were aligned transversely to the long axis of the cell and approximately one MT was present every micrometer of longitudinal cell distance. Treatment of internodes with propionic acid to acidify cytosolic pH caused depolymerization of MTs and an increase in the unpolymerized tubulin pool. Transfer of young, vigorously elongating cells to media inducing premature growth cessation resulted in a slight decrease in microtubule numbers but did not significantly alter microtubule orientation patterns or microtubule lifespans. MTs remained transverse for days following growth cessation before finally assuming a more random alignment characteristic of mature, non-growing internodes. No differences in MT numbers, orientation, or dynamics were detected between acid and alkaline bands in internodes incubated in a band-inducing medium. Thus, properties of cortical MT arrays were not closely coupled to growth status or to regional differences in cellular physiology associated with pH banding.Abbrevations BIM band-inducing medium - CCM Chara culture medium - CF carboxyfluorescein - FRAP fluorescence redistribution after photobleaching - MT microtubule  相似文献   

20.
Root contraction in hyacinth (Hyacinthus orientalis L.) is marked by reoriented cell growth in the cortex of the contractile region. Cellular volume of the inner cortex enlarges fourfold during root contraction. This is associated with large increases in the radial and tangential dimensions and decreases in the longitudinal dimension of the cells. In order to determine the possible role of microtubules (MTs) in these changes we compared tubulin levels and MT numbers and orientation in contracted and non-contracted regions of hyacinth roots. Tubulin content was analysed by a radioimmunoassay; MT numbers and orientation were analyzed by counting profiles in sectioned material using transmission electron microscopy. Contracted tissue was found to have significantly higher levels of tubulin on a per-cell basis than non-contracted tissue, and also increased tubulin levels relative to total protein. The spatial MT frequencies were the same in contracted and non-contracted tissues, indicating a proportional increase in MT numbers in the expanded cells. Although the absolute spatial frequency of MTs was constant, the orientation, as determined by morphometric analysis of MT profiles, was not. While in the longitudinal section plane 42% of the MTs in the non-contracted cells were oblique, in the contracted cells the percentage of MTs presenting oblique profiles increased to 87%. Additionally, a qualitative difference in MTs was observed in contracted cells; electron-opaque material was seen peripherally associated with the MTs of the inner cortex. The changes in tubulin levels and in MT numbers as well as the qualitative differences in the MTs of contracted and non-contracted root regions indicate that, in hyacinth, reoriented cellular enlargement associated with root contraction cannot be explained simply by shifts in the arrangement of preexisting cortical MT arrays, but involves more complex changes in the cytoskeleton.Abbreviations MT(s) microtubule(s) - TEM transmission electron microscopy - RIA radioimmunoassay - Mr apparent molecular mass I=Jernstedt (1984b)  相似文献   

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