Dissection of Arabidopsis ADP-RIBOSYLATION FACTOR 1 function in epidermal cell polarity

被引:362
作者
Xu, J [1 ]
Scheres, B [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Utrecht, Dept Mol Cell Biol, NL-3584 CH Utrecht, Netherlands
关键词
D O I
10.1105/tpc.104.028449
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Vesicle trafficking is essential for the generation of asymmetries, which are central to multicellular development. Core components of the vesicle transport machinery, such as ADP-ribosylation factor (ARF) GTPases, have been studied primarily at the single-cell level. Here, we analyze developmental functions of the ARF1 subclass of the Arabidopsis thaliana multigene ARF family. Six virtually identical ARF1 genes are ubiquitously expressed, and single loss-of-function mutants in these genes reveal no obvious developmental phenotypes. Fluorescence colocalization studies reveal that ARF1 is localized to the Golgi apparatus and endocytic organelles in both onion (Allium cepa) and Arabidopsis cells. Apical-basal polarity of epidermal cells, reflected by the position of root hair outgrowth, is affected when ARF1 mutants are expressed at early stages of cell differentiation but after they exit mitosis. Genetic interactions during root hair tip growth and localization suggest that the ROP2 protein is a target of ARF1 action, but its localization is slowly affected upon ARF1 manipulation when compared with that of Golgi and endocytic markers. Localization of a second potential target of ARF1 action, PIN2, is also affected with slow kinetics. Although extreme redundancy precludes conventional genetic dissection of ARF1 functions, our approach separates different ARF1 downstream networks involved in local and specific aspects of cell polarity.
引用
收藏
页码:525 / 536
页数:12
相关论文
共 53 条
[1]   Genome-wide Insertional mutagenesis of Arabidopsis thaliana [J].
Alonso, JM ;
Stepanova, AN ;
Leisse, TJ ;
Kim, CJ ;
Chen, HM ;
Shinn, P ;
Stevenson, DK ;
Zimmerman, J ;
Barajas, P ;
Cheuk, R ;
Gadrinab, C ;
Heller, C ;
Jeske, A ;
Koesema, E ;
Meyers, CC ;
Parker, H ;
Prednis, L ;
Ansari, Y ;
Choy, N ;
Deen, H ;
Geralt, M ;
Hazari, N ;
Hom, E ;
Karnes, M ;
Mulholland, C ;
Ndubaku, R ;
Schmidt, I ;
Guzman, P ;
Aguilar-Henonin, L ;
Schmid, M ;
Weigel, D ;
Carter, DE ;
Marchand, T ;
Risseeuw, E ;
Brogden, D ;
Zeko, A ;
Crosby, WL ;
Berry, CC ;
Ecker, JR .
SCIENCE, 2003, 301 (5633) :653-657
[2]  
BALCH WE, 1992, J BIOL CHEM, V267, P13053
[3]   Expression of AtPRP3, a proline-rich structural cell wall protein from arabidopsis, is regulated by cell-type-specific developmental pathways involved in root hair formation [J].
Bernhardt, C ;
Tierney, ML .
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 2000, 122 (03) :705-714
[4]  
BRAND AH, 1993, DEVELOPMENT, V118, P401
[5]   Root-specific CLE19 overexpression and the sol1/2 suppressors implicate a CLV-like pathway in the control of Arabidopsis root meristem maintenance [J].
Casamitjana-Martínez, E ;
Hofhuis, HF ;
Xu, J ;
Liu, CM ;
Heidstra, R ;
Scheres, B .
CURRENT BIOLOGY, 2003, 13 (16) :1435-1441
[6]   Brefeldin A: The advantage of being uncompetitive [J].
Chardin, P ;
McCormick, F .
CELL, 1999, 97 (02) :153-155
[7]   Floral dip:: a simplified method for Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of Arabidopsis thaliana [J].
Clough, SJ ;
Bent, AF .
PLANT JOURNAL, 1998, 16 (06) :735-743
[8]  
DASCHER C, 1994, J BIOL CHEM, V269, P1437
[9]   Mammalian Cdc42 is a brefeldin A-sensitive component of the Golgi apparatus [J].
Erickson, JW ;
Zhang, CJ ;
Kahn, RA ;
Evans, T ;
Cerione, RA .
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 1996, 271 (43) :26850-26854
[10]   Rho GTPases in cell biology [J].
Etienne-Manneville, S ;
Hall, A .
NATURE, 2002, 420 (6916) :629-635