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1.
This presentation will review the 1976 discovery of the enzyme complex in cellulose biosynthesis in Oocystis apiculata. A linear terminal complex (TC) was found to be associated with a microfibril, and from other freeze fracture applications, TCs have been found in many different algal genera. In fact, the algae have the most diverse and complex TCs among all organisms. TC diversity in terms of the evolution of cellulose biogenesis will be discussed. Combining the latest information from biochemistry and molecular genetics, the multiplicity of cellulose biogenesis will be reviewed. Cellulose molecular weight, crystalline structure, and mode of glycosylation for polymer formation all indicate that cellulose biogenesis is an extremely complex process. Major questions still remain, and the enzymes for cellulose biosynthesis have yet to be crystallized and their structure elucidated; however, the wealth of new information on cellulose structure and biosynthesis from algae to vascular plants, including bacteria and tunicates, all point to a very exciting and useful area of research. The algae have played key roles in our understanding of nature's most abundant macromolecule.  相似文献   

2.
Information on the sites of cellulose synthesis and the diversity and evolution of cellulose-synthesizing enzyme complexes (terminal complexes) in algae is reviewed. There is now ample evidence that cellulose synthesis occurs at the plasma membrane-bound cellulose synthase, with the exception of some algae that produce cellulosic scales in the Golgi apparatus. Freeze-fracture studies of the supramolecular organization of the plasma membrane support the view that the rosettes (a six-subunit complex) in higher plants and both the rosettes and the linear terminal complexes (TCs) in algae are the structures that synthesize cellulose and secrete cellulose microfibrils. In the Zygnemataceae, each single rosette forms a 5-nm or 3-nm single “elementary” microfibril (primary wall), whereas rosettes arranged in rows of hexagonal arrays synthesize criss-crossed bands of parallel cellulose microfibrils (secondary wall). In Spirogyra, it is proposed that each of the six subunits of a rosette might synthesize six β-1,4-glucan chains that cocrystallize into a 36-glucan chain “elementary” microfibril, as is the case in higher plants. One typical feature of the linear terminal complexes in red algae is the periodic arrangement of the particle rows transverse to the longitudinal axis of the TCs. In bangiophyte red algae and in Vaucheria hamata, cellulose microfibrils are thin, ribbon-shaped structures, 1–1.5 nm thick and 5–70 nm wide; details of their synthesis are reviewed. Terminal complexes appear to be made in the endoplasmic reticulum and are transferred to Golgi cisternae, where the cellulose synthases are activated and may be transported to the plasma membrane. In algae with linear TCs, deposition follows a precise pattern directed by the movement and the orientation of the TCs (membrane flow). A principal underlying theme is that the architecture of cellulose microfibrils (size, shape, crystallinity, and intramicrofibrillar associations) is directly related to the geometry of TCs. The effects of inhibitors on the structure of cellulose-synthetizing complexes and the relationship between the deposition of the cellulose microfibrils with cortical microtubules and with the membrane-embedded TCs is reviewed In Porphyra yezoensis, the frequency and distribution of TCs reflect polar tip growth in the apical shoot cell.The evolution of TCs in algae is reviewed. The evidence gathered to date illustrates the utility of terminal complex organization in addressing plant phylogenetic relationships.  相似文献   

3.
T. Itoh  R. M. Brown Jr. 《Protoplasma》1988,144(2-3):160-169
Summary The development of linear cellulose synthesizing complexes (=TCs) of two selected siphonocladalean algae,Boergesenia forbesii andValonia ventricosa was investigated by following the time course of the regeneration of cell walls with the freeze fracture technique after aplanospore induction. The following structural changes of TC development were examined: (1) TCs initiatede novo; (2) the first nucleation of TC subunits occurs within 2 hr inBoergesenia and 5 hr inValonia after aplanospore induction, immediately followed by the assembly of cellulose microfibrils; (3) TCs increase their length during the assembly of randomly oriented microfibrils; and, (4) TCs stop increasing in length after the assembly of ordered microfibrils begins, with some time lag. The data demonstrate that linear TCs are not artificial products but dynamic entities which are involved in the assembly of cellulose microfibrils.  相似文献   

4.
The intramembrane particles and cellulose synthesis of the brown alga Syringoderma phinneyi Henry et Müller were examined using replicas of freeze‐fractured apical cells. Like in other brown algae, linear terminal complexes (TCs) were found in the plasmatic fracture face (PF) of the plasmalemma, which are the putative cellulose synthases. Terminal complexes consist of a single row of particles, each particle composed of two sub‐units, and are found in close relationship with cellulose microfibril imprints. Examination of the distribution of TCs revealed a clear apico‐basal gradient, with a higher density of TCs in the apical part. This seems to reflect the tip growth of the apical cells. The rate of cellulose synthesis per TC subunit was calculated based on the dimensions of the TCs and cellulose microfibrils.  相似文献   

5.
S. Mizuta  R. M. Brown Jr. 《Protoplasma》1992,166(3-4):200-207
Summary The effects of 2,6-dichlorobenzonitrile (DCB, a known inhibitor of cellulose synthesis) and Tinopal LPW (TPL, an agent which disrupts glucan crystallization) on the structure of cellulose synthesizing complexes (terminal complexes, TCs) in the xanthophycean algaVaucheria hamata were investigated. DCB (10 M) inhibits nascent fibril formation from the TC subunit (based on the absence of impressions) although it does not alter the overall shape of the rectangular TC during the short treatment of 20 min. With a prolonged treatment (60 min), the arrangement of TC subunits becomes disordered, and particles generally exhibited as doublets of subunits are released from each other. DCB also interferes with the formation of the overall shape of the TC although it does not disturb the conversion into TC rows of the subunits (the zymogenic precursor of the TC) packed in the globules. A 15 min treatment with TPL (1 mM) destroys the TC integrity by reducing the subunits into small fragments or particulate aggregates. The particulate rows of the TC are interrupted at many points, and fragments and particulate aggregates are dispersed by prolonged treatment (45 min) with TPL. Unlike DCB, TPL inhibits the conversion of globule subunits into TC rows. New insights on the structural characteristics necessary for cellulose microfibril assembly and possible mechanisms for the biogenesis of theVaucheria TC come from these data.Abbreviations DCB 2,6-dichlorobenzonitrile - TPL Tinopal LPW - TC terminal complex  相似文献   

6.
Type III secretion systems are found in many Gram‐negative bacteria. They are activated by contact with eukaryotic cells and inject virulence proteins inside them. Host cell detection requires a protein complex located at the tip of the device's external injection needle. The Shigella tip complex (TC) is composed of IpaD, a hydrophilic protein, and IpaB, a hydrophobic protein, which later forms part of the injection pore in the host membrane. Here we used labelling and crosslinking methods to show that TCs from a ΔipaB strain contain five IpaD subunits while the TCs from wild‐type can also contain one IpaB and four IpaD subunits. Electron microscopy followed by single particle and helical image analysis was used to reconstruct three‐dimensional images of TCs at ~20 Å resolution. Docking of an IpaD crystal structure, constrained by the crosslinks observed, reveals that TC organisation is different from that of all previously proposed models. Our findings suggest new mechanisms for TC assembly and function. The TC is the only site within these secretion systems targeted by disease‐protecting antibodies. By suggesting how these act, our work will allow improvement of prophylactic and therapeutic strategies.  相似文献   

7.
The supramolecular organization of the plasma membrane of apical cells in shoot filaments of the marine red alga Porphyra yezoensis Ueda (conchocelis stage) was studied in replicas of rapidly frozen and fractured cells. The protoplasmic fracture (PF) face of the plasma membrane exhibited both randomly distributed single particles (with a mean diameter of 9.2 ± 0.2 nm) and distinct linear cellulose microfibril-synthesizing terminal complexes (TCs) consisting of two or three rows of linearly arranged particles (average diameter of TC particles 9.4 plusmn; 0.3 nm). The density of the single particles of the PF face of the plasma membrane was 3000 μm?2, whereas that of the exoplasmic fracture face was 325 μm?2. TCs were observed only on the PF face. The highest density of TCs was at the apex of the cell (mean density 23.0 plusmn; 7.4 TCs μm?2 within 5 μm from the tip) and decreased rapidly from the apex to the more basal regions of the cell, dropping to near zero at 20 μm. The number of particle subunits of TCs per μm2 of the plasma membrane also decreased from the tip to the basal regions following the same gradient as that of the TC density. The length of TCs increased gradually from the tip (mean length 46.0 plusmn; 1.4 nm in the area at 0–5 μm from the tip) to the cell base (mean length 60.0 plusmn; 7.0 μm in the area at 15–20 μm). In the very tip region (0–4 μm from the apex), randomly distributed TCs but no microfibril imprints were observed, while in the region 4–9 μm from the tip microfibril imprints and TCs, both randomly distributed, occurred. Many TCs involved in the synthesis of cellulose microfibrils were associated with the ends of microfibril imprints. Our results indicate that TCs are involved in the biosynthesis, assembly, and orientation of cellulose microfibrils and that the frequency and distribution of TCs reflect tip growth (polar growth) in the apical shoot cell of Porphyra yezoensis. Polar distribution of linear TCs as “cellulose synthase” complexes within the plasma membrane of a tip cell was recorded for the first time in plants.  相似文献   

8.
Summary The marine red algaErythrocladia subintegra synthesizes cellulose microfibrils as determined by CBH I-gold labelling, X-ray and electron diffraction analyses. The cellulose microfibrils are quite thin, ribbon-like structures, 1–1.5 nm in thickness (constant), and 10–33 nm in width (variable). Several laterally associated minicrystal components contribute to the variation in microfibrillar width. Electron diffraction analysis suggested a uniplanar orientation of the microfibrils with their (101) lattice planes parallel to the plasma membrane surface of the cell. The linear particle arrays bound in the plasma membrane and associated with microfibril impressions recently demonstrated inErythrocladia have been shown in this study to be the cellulose-synthesizing terminal complexes (TCs). The TCs appear to be organized by a repetition of transverse rows consisting of four TC subunits, rather than by four rows of longitudinallyarranged TC subunits. The number of transverse rows varied between 8–26, corresponding with variation in the length of the TCs and the width of the microfibrils. The spacings between the neighboring transverse rows are almost constant being 10.5–11.5 nm. Based on the knowledge thatAcetobacter, Vaucheria, andErythrocladia synthesize similar thin, ribbon-like cellulose microfibrils, the structural characteristics common to the organization of distinctive TCs occurring in these three organisms has been discussed, so that the mode of cellulose microfibril assembly patterns may be deciphered.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Cells of the charophycean alga,Coleochaete scutata active in cell wall formation were freeze fractured in the search for cellulose synthesizing complexes (TCs) since this alga is considered to be among the most advanced and a progenitor to land plant evolution. We have found a new TC which consists of two geometrically distinctive particle complexes complementary to one another in the plasma membrane and occasionally associated with microfibril impressions. In the E-fracture face is found a cluster of 8–50 closely packed particles, each with a diameter of 5–17 nm. Most of these particles are confined within an 80 nm circle. In the P-fracture face is found an 8-fold symmetrical arrangement of 10 nm particles circumferentially arranged around a 28 nm central particle. The TCs ofC. scutata are quite distinctive from the rosette/globule TCs of land plants. The 5.5×3.1 nm microfibril inC. scutata is also distinctive from the 3.5×3.5 nm microfibril typical of land plants. The phylogenetic implications of this unique TC in land plant evolution are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
The catalytic subunit of cellulose synthase is shown to be associated with the putative cellulose-synthesizing complex (rosette terminal complex [TC]) in vascular plants. The catalytic subunit domain of cotton cellulose synthase was cloned using a primer based on a rice expressed sequence tag (D41261) from which a specific primer was constructed to run a polymerase chain reaction that used a cDNA library from 24 days postanthesis cotton fibers as a template. The catalytic region of cotton cellulose synthase was expressed in Escherichia coli, and polyclonal antisera were produced. Colloidal gold coupled to goat anti-rabbit secondary antibodies provided a tag for visualization of the catalytic region of cellulose synthase during transmission electron microscopy. With a freeze-fracture replica labeling technique, the antibodies specifically localized to rosette TCs in the plasma membrane on the P-fracture face. Antibodies did not specifically label any structures on the E-fracture face. Significantly, a greater number of immune probes labeled the rosette TCs (i.e., gold particles were 20 nm or closer to the edge of the rosette TC) than did preimmune probes. These experiments confirm the long-held hypothesis that cellulose synthase is a component of the rosette TC in vascular plants, proving that the enzyme complex resides within the structure first described by freeze fracture in 1980. In addition, this study provides independent proof that the CelA gene is in fact one of the genes for cellulose synthase in vascular plants.  相似文献   

11.
The assembly of cellulose microfibrils was investigated in artificially induced protoplasts of the alga, Valonia macrophysa (Siphonocladales). Primary-wall microfibrills, formed within 72 h of protoplast induction, are randomly oriented. Secondary-wall lamellae, which are produced within 96 h after protoplast induction, have more than three orientations of highly ordered microfibrils. The innermost, recently deposited micofibrils are not parallel with the cortical microtubules, thus indicating a more indirect role of microtubules in the orientation of microfibrils. Fine filamentous structures with a periodicity of 5.0–5.5 nm and the dimensions of actin were observed adjacent to the plasma membrane. Linear cellulose-terminal synthesizing complexes (TCs) consisting of three rows, each with 30–40 particles, were observed not only on the E fracture (EF) but also on P fracture (PF) faces of the plasma membrane. The TC appears to span both faces of the bimolecular leaflet. The average length of the TC is 350 nm, and the number of TCs per unit area during primary-wall synthesis is 1 per m2. Neither paired TCs nor granule bands characteristic of Oocystis were observed. Changes in TC structure and distribution during the conversion from primary- to secondary-wall formation have been described. Cellulose microfibril assembly in Valonia is discussed in relation to the process among other eukaryotic systems.Abbreviations TC terminal complex - EF E (outer leaflet) fracture face of the plasma membrane - PF P (inner leaflet) fracture face of the plasma membrane - MT microtubule - PS protoplasmic surface of the membrane  相似文献   

12.
Telocytes (TCs) were recently described as interstitial cells with very long prolongations named telopodes (Tps; www.telocytes.com ). Establishing the TC proteome is a priority to show that TCs are a distinct type of cells. Therefore, we examined the molecular aspects of lung TCs by comparison with fibroblasts (FBs). Proteins extracted from primary cultures of these cells were analysed by automated 2‐dimensional nano‐electrospray ionization liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (2D Nano‐ESI LC‐MS/MS). Differentially expressed proteins were screened by two‐sample t‐test (P < 0.05) and fold change (>2), based on the bioinformatics analysis. We identified hundreds of proteins up‐ or down‐regulated, respectively, in TCs as compared with FBs. TC proteins with known identities are localized in the cytoskeleton (87%) and plasma membrane (13%), while FB up‐regulated proteins are in the cytoskeleton (75%) and destined to extracellular matrix (25%). These identified proteins were classified into different categories based on their molecular functions and biological processes. While the proteins identified in TCs are mainly involved in catalytic activity (43%) and as structural molecular activity (25%), the proteins in FBs are involved in catalytic activity (24%) and in structural molecular activity, particularly synthesis of collagen and other extracellular matrix components (25%). Anyway, our data show that TCs are completely different from FBs. In conclusion, we report here the first extensive identification of proteins from TCs using a quantitative proteomics approach. Protein expression profile shows many up‐regulated proteins e.g. myosin‐14, periplakin, suggesting that TCs might play specific roles in mechanical sensing and mechanochemical conversion task, tissue homoeostasis and remodelling/renewal. Furthermore, up‐regulated proteins matching those found in extracellular vesicles emphasize TCs roles in intercellular signalling and stem cell niche modulation. The novel proteins identified in TCs will be an important resource for further proteomic research and it will possibly allow biomarker identification for TCs. It also creates the premises for understanding the pathogenesis of some lung diseases involving TCs.  相似文献   

13.
S. Mizuta  R. M. Brown Jr. 《Protoplasma》1992,166(3-4):187-199
Summary Ultrastructure and assembly of cellulose terminal synthesizing complexes (terminal complexes, TCs) in the algaVaucheria hamata (Waltz) were investigated by high resolution analytical techniques for freeze-fracture replication.Vaucheria TCs consist of many diagonal rows of subunits located on the inner leaflet of the plasma membrane. Each row contains about 10–18 subunits. The subunits themselves are rectangular, approx. 7×3.5 nm, and each has a single elliptical hole which may be the site of a single glucan chain polymerization. The subunits are connected with extremely small filaments (0.3–0.5 nm). Connections are more extensive in a direction parallel to the subunit rows and less extensive perpendicular to them. Nascent TC subunits are found to be packed within globules (15–20 nm in diameter) which are larger than typical intramembranous particles (IMPS are 10–11 nm in diameter) distributed in the plasma membrane. The subunits in the globule, which may be a zymogenic precursor of the TC, are generally exhibited in the form of doublets. Approximately 6 doublets are connected to a center core with small filaments. The globules are inserted into the plasma membrane together with IMPS by the fusion of cytoplasmic (Golgi derived) vesicles. Two or three globules attach to each other, unfold, and expand to form the first subunit rows of the TC on the inner leaflet of the plasma membrane. More globules attach to the structure and unfold until the nascent TC consists of a few rows of subunits. These rows are arranged almost parallel to each other. Two formation centers of subunits appear at both ends of an elongating TC. New subunits carried by the globules are added at each of these centers to create new rows until the elongating TC structure is completed. On the basis of this study, a model of TC assembly and early initiation of microfibril formation inVaucheria is proposed.Abbreviations IMPS intramembranous particles - MF microfibril - TC terminal complex  相似文献   

14.
Summary The formation and development of linear terminal complexes (TCs), the putative cellulose synthesizing units of the red algaErythrocladia subintegra Rosenv., were investigated by a freeze etching technique using both rotary and unidirectional shadowing. The ribbon-like cellulose fibrils ofE. subintegra are 27.6 ± 0.8 nm wide and only 1–1.5 nm thick. They are synthesized by TCs which are composed of repeating transverse rows formed of four particles, the TC subunits. About 50.4 ± 1.7 subunits constitute a TC. They are apparently more strongly interconnected in transverse than in longitudinal directions. Some TC subunits can be resolved as doublets by Fourier analysis. Large globular particles (globules) seem to function as precursor units in the assembly and maturation of the TCs. They are composed of a central hole (the core) with small subunits forming a peripheral ridge and seem to represent zymogenic precursors. TC assembly is initiated after two or three gobules come into close contact with each other, swell and unfold to a nucleation unit resembling the first 2–3 transverse rows of a TC. Longitudinal elongation of the TC occurs by the unfolding of globules attached to both ends of the TC nucleation unit until the TC is completed. The typical intramembranous particles observed inErythrocladia (unidirectional shadowing) are 9.15 ± 0.13 nm in diameter, whereas those of a TC have an average diameter of 8.77 ± 0.11 nm. During cell wall synthesis membranes of vesicles originating from the Golgi apparatus and which seem to fuse with the plasma membrane contain large globules, 15–22 nm in diameter, as well as tetrads with a particle diameter of about 8 nm. The latter are assumed to be involved in the synthesis of the amorphous extracellular matrix cell wall polysaccharides. The following working model for cellulose fibril assembly inE. subintegra is suggested: (1) the ribbon-like cellulose fibril is synthesized by a single linear TC; (2) the number of glucan chains per microfibril correlates with the number of TC subunits; (3) a single subunit synthesizes 3 glucan chains which appear to stack along the 0.6 nm lattice plane; (4) lateral aggregation of the 3-mer stacks leads to the crystalline microfibril.Dedicated to Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Eberhard Schnepf on the occasion of his retirement  相似文献   

15.
This study provides an updated review of the current status on cellulose biosynthesis. The centerpiece of this work is the presentation of a new model of cellulose biogenesis. This model and its parts are presented to better understand the mechanisms of polymerization and crystallization leading to biopolymer formation. The new information has been derived largely from sequence analysis, biochemistry and ultrastructural data relating to cellulose, Nature's most abundant macromolecule.  相似文献   

16.
The brown alga Sphacelaria rigidula Kützing synthesizes cellulose microfibrils as determined by CBH I-gold labeling. The cellulose microfibrils are thin, ribbon-like structures with a uniform thickness of about 2.6 nm and a variable width in the range of 2.6-30 nm. Some striations appear along the longitudinal axis of the microfibrils. The developed cell wall in Sphacelaria is composed of three to four layers, and cellulose micro-fibrils are deposited in the third layer from the outside of the wall. A freeze fracture investigation of this alga revealed cellulose-synthesizing terminal complexes (TCs), which are associated with the tip of microfibril impressions in the plasmatic fracture face of the plasma membrane. The TCs consist of subunits arranged in a single linear row. The average diameter of the sub-units is about 6 nm, and the intervals between the neighboring subunits, about 9 nm, are relatively constant. The number of subunits constituting the TC varies between 10 and 100, so that the length of the whole TC varies widely. A model that has been proposed for the assembly of thin, ribbon-like microfibrils was applied to microfibril assembly in Sphacelaria.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Wounding cells ofBoergesenia forbesii (Harvey) Feldmann induces the synchronous formation of numerous protoplasts which synthesize large cellulose microfibrils within 2–3 hours after wounding. The microfibrils appear to be assembled by linear terminal synthesizing complexes (TCs). TC subunits appear on both E- and P-faces of the plasma membrane, thus suggesting the occurrence of a transmembrane complex. The direction of microfibril synthesis is random during primary wall assembly and becomes ordered during secondary wall assembly. The average density of TCs during secondary wall deposition is 1.7/m2, and the average length of the TC is 510 nm. TC organization is similar to that ofValonia macrophysa; however, the larger TCs ofBoergesenia (510 nm vs. 350 nm) produce correspondingly larger microfibrils (30 nm vs. 20 nm).The effects of a fluorescent brightening agent (FBA), Tinopal LPW, on cell wall regeneration ofBoergesenia protoplasts was investigated. The threshold level of Tinopal LPW for interfering with microfibril assembly is 1.5 M. At 95 M Tinopal (for short periods up to 15 minutes), microfibril impressions have atypical spherical impressions at their termini. At longer incubations (24 hours), TCs and microfibril impressions are absent. When washed free of Tinopal, the protoplasts eventually resume normal wall assembly; however, TCs do not reappear until at least 30 minutes after the removal of Tinopal. In consideration of the presence of ordered TCs before FBA treatment, their random distribution upon recovery implies an intermediate stage of assembly or possiblyde novo synthesis.  相似文献   

18.
Crystalline features of cellulose microfibrils in the cell walls of Glaucocystis (Glaucophyta) were studied by combined spectroscopy and diffraction techniques, and the results were compared with those of Oocystis (Chlorophyta). Although these algae are grouped into two different classes, by the composition of their chloroplasts for instance, their cell walls are quite similar in size and morphology. The most striking features of their cellulose crystallites are that they have the highest cellulose Iα contents reported to date. In particular, the Iα fraction of cellulose from Glaucocystis was found to be as high as 90% from 13C NMR analysis. The mode of preferential orientation of cellulose crystallites in their cell walls is also interesting; equatorial 0.53-nm lattice planes were oriented parallel to the cell surface in the case of Glaucocystis, while the 0.62-nm planes were parallel to the Oocystis cell surface. Such a structural variation provides another link to the evolution of cellulose structure, biosynthesis, and its biocrystallization mechanism.  相似文献   

19.
Tunicates are the only animal group known to synthesize cellulose. The current hypothesis is that a horizontally acquired cellulose synthase gene of bacterial origin might have contributed to the establishment of this unique trait. Cellulose biosynthesis in tunicates thus provides an opportunity to understand how a foreign gene was assimilated into a new genome to establish a new trait. Because little is known of the molecular mechanisms underlying cellulose biosynthesis, we set up a practical assessment of cellulose in the ascidian tunicate Ciona intestinalis. We first demonstrated and characterized cellulose in the tunic of adult specimens by chemical purification and by subsequent scanning electron microscopic observation and X-ray diffractometry. Next, we showed that Fourier transform infrared spectroscopic microscopy (FTIR microscopy) can be used to assess cellulose in the small tunic of individual larval specimens without chemical purification. Using FTIR microscopy together with a blastomere isolation technique, we demonstrated that cellulose biosynthesis occurred cell-autonomously in the animal hemisphere of an embryo where the future epidermis, the known site of cellulose biosynthesis, will arise. We combined FTIR microscopy with morpholino antisense oligonucleotide-mediated gene knockdown technology to generate a reverse genetic system to identify genes involved in cellulose biosynthesis. FTIR microscopy was thus able, in combination with current research resources, to contribute to cellular and molecular investigations of animal cellulose biosynthesis.  相似文献   

20.
The inter-cellular translocation of nutrients in plant is mediated by highly specialized transfer cells(TCs).TCs share similar functional and structural features across a wide range of plant species, including location at plant exchange surfaces, rich in secondary wall ingrowths, facilitation of nutrient flow, and passage of select molecules. The fate of endosperm TCs is determined in the TC fate acquisition stage(TCF), before the structure features are formed in the TC differentiation stage(TCD). At present, the molecular basis of TC development in plants remains largely unknown. In this review, we summarize the important roles of the signaling molecules in different development phases, such as sugars in TCF and phytohormones in TCD, and discuss the genetic and epigenetic factors, including TC-specific genes and endogenous plant peptides, and their crosstalk with these signaling molecules as a complex regulatory network in regulation of TC development in plants.  相似文献   

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