TY - THES AB - Self-organization is a hallmark of plant development manifested e.g. by intricate leaf vein patterns, flexible formation of vasculature during organogenesis or its regeneration following wounding. Spontaneously arising channels transporting the phytohormone auxin, created by coordinated polar localizations of PIN-FORMED 1 (PIN1) auxin exporter, provide positional cues for these as well as other plant patterning processes. To find regulators acting downstream of auxin and the TIR1/AFB auxin signaling pathway essential for PIN1 coordinated polarization during auxin canalization, we performed microarray experiments. Besides the known components of general PIN polarity maintenance, such as PID and PIP5K kinases, we identified and characterized a new regulator of auxin canalization, the transcription factor WRKY DNA-BINDING PROTEIN 23 (WRKY23). Next, we designed a subsequent microarray experiment to further uncover other molecular players, downstream of auxin-TIR1/AFB-WRKY23 involved in the regulation of auxin-mediated PIN repolarization. We identified a novel and crucial part of the molecular machinery underlying auxin canalization. The auxin-regulated malectin-type receptor-like kinase CAMEL and the associated leucine-rich repeat receptor-like kinase CANAR target and directly phosphorylate PIN auxin transporters. camel and canar mutants are impaired in PIN1 subcellular trafficking and auxin-mediated repolarization leading to defects in auxin transport, ultimately to leaf venation and vasculature regeneration defects. Our results describe the CAMEL-CANAR receptor complex, which is required for auxin feed-back on its own transport and thus for coordinated tissue polarization during auxin canalization. AU - Hajny, Jakub ID - 8822 SN - 2663-337X TI - Identification and characterization of the molecular machinery of auxin-dependent canalization during vasculature formation and regeneration ER - TY - JOUR AB - Flowering plants display the highest diversity among plant species and have notably shaped terrestrial landscapes. Nonetheless, the evolutionary origin of their unprecedented morphological complexity remains largely an enigma. Here, we show that the coevolution of cis-regulatory and coding regions of PIN-FORMED (PIN) auxin transporters confined their expression to certain cell types and directed their subcellular localization to particular cell sides, which together enabled dynamic auxin gradients across tissues critical to the complex architecture of flowering plants. Extensive intraspecies and interspecies genetic complementation experiments with PINs from green alga up to flowering plant lineages showed that PIN genes underwent three subsequent, critical evolutionary innovations and thus acquired a triple function to regulate the development of three essential components of the flowering plant Arabidopsis: shoot/root, inflorescence, and floral organ. Our work highlights the critical role of functional innovations within the PIN gene family as essential prerequisites for the origin of flowering plants. AU - Zhang, Yuzhou AU - Rodriguez Solovey, Lesia AU - Li, Lanxin AU - Zhang, Xixi AU - Friml, Jiří ID - 8986 IS - 50 JF - Science Advances TI - Functional innovations of PIN auxin transporters mark crucial evolutionary transitions during rise of flowering plants VL - 6 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Drought and salt stress are the main environmental cues affecting the survival, development, distribution, and yield of crops worldwide. MYB transcription factors play a crucial role in plants’ biological processes, but the function of pineapple MYB genes is still obscure. In this study, one of the pineapple MYB transcription factors, AcoMYB4, was isolated and characterized. The results showed that AcoMYB4 is localized in the cell nucleus, and its expression is induced by low temperature, drought, salt stress, and hormonal stimulation, especially by abscisic acid (ABA). Overexpression of AcoMYB4 in rice and Arabidopsis enhanced plant sensitivity to osmotic stress; it led to an increase in the number stomata on leaf surfaces and lower germination rate under salt and drought stress. Furthermore, in AcoMYB4 OE lines, the membrane oxidation index, free proline, and soluble sugar contents were decreased. In contrast, electrolyte leakage and malondialdehyde (MDA) content increased significantly due to membrane injury, indicating higher sensitivity to drought and salinity stresses. Besides the above, both the expression level and activities of several antioxidant enzymes were decreased, indicating lower antioxidant activity in AcoMYB4 transgenic plants. Moreover, under osmotic stress, overexpression of AcoMYB4 inhibited ABA biosynthesis through a decrease in the transcription of genes responsible for ABA synthesis (ABA1 and ABA2) and ABA signal transduction factor ABI5. These results suggest that AcoMYB4 negatively regulates osmotic stress by attenuating cellular ABA biosynthesis and signal transduction pathways. AU - Chen, Huihuang AU - Lai, Linyi AU - Li, Lanxin AU - Liu, Liping AU - Jakada, Bello Hassan AU - Huang, Youmei AU - He, Qing AU - Chai, Mengnan AU - Niu, Xiaoping AU - Qin, Yuan ID - 8283 IS - 16 JF - International Journal of Molecular Sciences SN - 16616596 TI - AcoMYB4, an Ananas comosus L. MYB transcription factor, functions in osmotic stress through negative regulation of ABA signaling VL - 21 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME) is a crucial cellular process implicated in many aspects of plant growth, development, intra- and inter-cellular signaling, nutrient uptake and pathogen defense. Despite these significant roles, little is known about the precise molecular details of how it functions in planta. In order to facilitate the direct quantitative study of plant CME, here we review current routinely used methods and present refined, standardized quantitative imaging protocols which allow the detailed characterization of CME at multiple scales in plant tissues. These include: (i) an efficient electron microscopy protocol for the imaging of Arabidopsis CME vesicles in situ, thus providing a method for the detailed characterization of the ultra-structure of clathrin-coated vesicles; (ii) a detailed protocol and analysis for quantitative live-cell fluorescence microscopy to precisely examine the temporal interplay of endocytosis components during single CME events; (iii) a semi-automated analysis to allow the quantitative characterization of global internalization of cargos in whole plant tissues; and (iv) an overview and validation of useful genetic and pharmacological tools to interrogate the molecular mechanisms and function of CME in intact plant samples. AU - Johnson, Alexander J AU - Gnyliukh, Nataliia AU - Kaufmann, Walter AU - Narasimhan, Madhumitha AU - Vert, G AU - Bednarek, SY AU - Friml, Jiří ID - 8139 IS - 15 JF - Journal of Cell Science SN - 0021-9533 TI - Experimental toolbox for quantitative evaluation of clathrin-mediated endocytosis in the plant model Arabidopsis VL - 133 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The interorganelle communication mediated by membrane contact sites (MCSs) is an evolutionary hallmark of eukaryotic cells. MCS connections enable the nonvesicular exchange of information between organelles and allow them to coordinate responses to changing cellular environments. In plants, the importance of MCS components in the responses to environmental stress has been widely established, but the molecular mechanisms regulating interorganelle connectivity during stress still remain opaque. In this report, we use the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana to show that ionic stress increases endoplasmic reticulum (ER)–plasma membrane (PM) connectivity by promoting the cortical expansion of synaptotagmin 1 (SYT1)-enriched ER–PM contact sites (S-EPCSs). We define differential roles for the cortical cytoskeleton in the regulation of S-EPCS dynamics and ER–PM connectivity, and we identify the accumulation of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate [PI(4,5)P2] at the PM as a molecular signal associated with the ER–PM connectivity changes. Our study highlights the functional conservation of EPCS components and PM phosphoinositides as modulators of ER–PM connectivity in eukaryotes, and uncovers unique aspects of the spatiotemporal regulation of ER–PM connectivity in plants. AU - Lee, Eunkyoung AU - Vanneste, Steffen AU - Pérez-Sancho, Jessica AU - Benitez-Fuente, Francisco AU - Strelau, Matthew AU - Macho, Alberto P. AU - Botella, Miguel A. AU - Friml, Jiří AU - Rosado, Abel ID - 5908 IS - 4 JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America TI - Ionic stress enhances ER–PM connectivity via phosphoinositide-associated SYT1 contact site expansion in Arabidopsis VL - 116 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Multicellular development requires coordinated cell polarization relative to body axes, and translation to oriented cell division 1–3 . In plants, it is unknown how cell polarities are connected to organismal axes and translated to division. Here, we identify Arabidopsis SOSEKI proteins that integrate apical–basal and radial organismal axes to localize to polar cell edges. Localization does not depend on tissue context, requires cell wall integrity and is defined by a transferrable, protein-specific motif. A Domain of Unknown Function in SOSEKI proteins resembles the DIX oligomerization domain in the animal Dishevelled polarity regulator. The DIX-like domain self-interacts and is required for edge localization and for influencing division orientation, together with a second domain that defines the polar membrane domain. Our work shows that SOSEKI proteins locally interpret global polarity cues and can influence cell division orientation. Furthermore, this work reveals that, despite fundamental differences, cell polarity mechanisms in plants and animals converge on a similar protein domain. AU - Yoshida, Saiko AU - Van Der Schuren, Alja AU - Van Dop, Maritza AU - Van Galen, Luc AU - Saiga, Shunsuke AU - Adibi, Milad AU - Möller, Barbara AU - Ten Hove, Colette A. AU - Marhavy, Peter AU - Smith, Richard AU - Friml, Jiří AU - Weijers, Dolf ID - 6023 IS - 2 JF - Nature Plants TI - A SOSEKI-based coordinate system interprets global polarity cues in arabidopsis VL - 5 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Abiotic stress poses constant challenges for plant survival and is a serious problem for global agricultural productivity. On a molecular level, stress conditions result in elevation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) production causing oxidative stress associated with oxidation of proteins and nucleic acids as well as impairment of membrane functions. Adaptation of root growth to ROS accumulation is facilitated through modification of auxin and cytokinin hormone homeostasis. Here, we report that in Arabidopsis root meristem, ROS-induced changes of auxin levels correspond to decreased abundance of PIN auxin efflux carriers at the plasma membrane (PM). Specifically, increase in H2O2 levels affects PIN2 endocytic recycling. We show that the PIN2 intracellular trafficking during adaptation to oxidative stress requires the function of the ADP-ribosylation factor (ARF)-guanine-nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) BEN1, an actin-associated regulator of the trafficking from the PM to early endosomes and, presumably, indirectly, trafficking to the vacuoles. We propose that H2O2 levels affect the actin dynamics thus modulating ARF-GEF-dependent trafficking of PIN2. This mechanism provides a way how root growth acclimates to stress and adapts to a changing environment. AU - Zwiewka, Marta AU - Bielach, Agnieszka AU - Tamizhselvan, Prashanth AU - Madhavan, Sharmila AU - Ryad, Eman Elrefaay AU - Tan, Shutang AU - Hrtyan, Mónika AU - Dobrev, Petre AU - Vanková, Radomira AU - Friml, Jiří AU - Tognetti, Vanesa B. ID - 6104 IS - 2 JF - Plant and Cell Physiology SN - 0032-0781 TI - Root adaptation to H2O2-induced oxidative stress by ARF-GEF BEN1- and cytoskeleton-mediated PIN2 trafficking VL - 60 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Gravitropism is an adaptive response that orients plant growth parallel to the gravity vector. Asymmetric distribution of the phytohormone auxin is a necessary prerequisite to the tropic bending both in roots and shoots. During hypocotyl gravitropic response, the PIN3 auxin transporter polarizes within gravity-sensing cells to redirect intercellular auxin fluxes. First gravity-induced PIN3 polarization to the bottom cell mem- branes leads to the auxin accumulation at the lower side of the organ, initiating bending and, later, auxin feedback-mediated repolarization restores symmetric auxin distribution to terminate bending. Here, we per- formed a forward genetic screen to identify regulators of both PIN3 polarization events during gravitropic response. We searched for mutants with defective PIN3 polarizations based on easy-to-score morphological outputs of decreased or increased gravity-induced hypocotyl bending. We identified the number of hypocotyl reduced bending (hrb) and hypocotyl hyperbending (hhb) mutants, revealing that reduced bending corre- lated typically with defective gravity-induced PIN3 relocation whereas all analyzed hhb mutants showed defects in the second, auxin-mediated PIN3 relocation. Next-generation sequencing-aided mutation map- ping identified several candidate genes, including SCARECROW and ACTIN2, revealing roles of endodermis specification and actin cytoskeleton in the respective gravity- and auxin-induced PIN polarization events. The hypocotyl gravitropism screen thus promises to provide novel insights into mechanisms underlying cell polarity and plant adaptive development. AU - Rakusová, Hana AU - Han, Huibin AU - Valošek, Petr AU - Friml, Jiří ID - 6262 IS - 6 JF - The Plant Journal SN - 0960-7412 TI - Genetic screen for factors mediating PIN polarization in gravistimulated Arabidopsis thaliana hypocotyls VL - 98 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Nitrate regulation of root stem cell activity is auxin-dependent. AU - Wang, Y AU - Gong, Z AU - Friml, Jiří AU - Zhang, J ID - 6261 IS - 1 JF - Plant Physiology SN - 0032-0889 TI - Nitrate modulates the differentiation of root distal stem cells VL - 180 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Root gravitropism is one of the most important processes allowing plant adaptation to the land environment. Auxin plays a central role in mediating root gravitropism, but how auxin contributes to gravitational perception and the subsequent response is still unclear. Here, we showed that the local auxin maximum/gradient within the root apex, which is generated by the PIN directional auxin transporters, regulates the expression of three key starch granule synthesis genes, SS4, PGM and ADG1, which in turn influence the accumulation of starch granules that serve as a statolith perceiving gravity. Moreover, using the cvxIAA‐ccvTIR1 system, we also showed that TIR1‐mediated auxin signaling is required for starch granule formation and gravitropic response within root tips. In addition, axr3 mutants showed reduced auxin‐mediated starch granule accumulation and disruption of gravitropism within the root apex. Our results indicate that auxin‐mediated statolith production relies on the TIR1/AFB‐AXR3‐mediated auxin signaling pathway. In summary, we propose a dual role for auxin in gravitropism: the regulation of both gravity perception and response. AU - Zhang, Yuzhou AU - He, P AU - Ma, X AU - Yang, Z AU - Pang, C AU - Yu, J AU - Wang, G AU - Friml, Jiří AU - Xiao, G ID - 6504 IS - 2 JF - New Phytologist SN - 0028-646x TI - Auxin-mediated statolith production for root gravitropism VL - 224 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Cell polarity is crucial for the coordinated development of all multicellular organisms. In plants, this is exemplified by the PIN-FORMED (PIN) efflux carriers of the phytohormone auxin: The polar subcellular localization of the PINs is instructive to the directional intercellular auxin transport, and thus to a plethora of auxin-regulated growth and developmental processes. Despite its importance, the regulation of PIN polar subcellular localization remains poorly understood. Here, we have employed advanced live-cell imaging techniques to study the roles of microtubules and actin microfilaments in the establishment of apical polar localization of PIN2 in the epidermis of the Arabidopsis root meristem. We report that apical PIN2 polarity requires neither intact actin microfilaments nor microtubules, suggesting that the primary spatial cue for polar PIN distribution is likely independent of cytoskeleton-guided endomembrane trafficking. AU - Glanc, Matous AU - Fendrych, Matyas AU - Friml, Jiří ID - 6611 IS - 6 JF - Biomolecules TI - PIN2 polarity establishment in arabidopsis in the absence of an intact cytoskeleton VL - 9 ER - TY - JOUR AB - An important adaptation during colonization of land by plants is gravitropic growth of roots, which enabled roots to reach water and nutrients, and firmly anchor plants in the ground. Here we provide insights into the evolution of an efficient root gravitropic mechanism in the seed plants. Architectural innovation, with gravity perception constrained in the root tips along with a shootward transport route for the phytohormone auxin, appeared only upon the emergence of seed plants. Interspecies complementation and protein domain swapping revealed functional innovations within the PIN family of auxin transporters leading to the evolution of gravitropism-specific PINs. The unique apical/shootward subcellular localization of PIN proteins is the major evolutionary innovation that connected the anatomically separated sites of gravity perception and growth response via the mobile auxin signal. We conclude that the crucial anatomical and functional components emerged hand-in-hand to facilitate the evolution of fast gravitropic response, which is one of the major adaptations of seed plants to dry land. AU - Zhang, Yuzhou AU - Xiao, G AU - Wang, X AU - Zhang, Xixi AU - Friml, Jiří ID - 6778 JF - Nature Communications SN - 2041-1723 TI - Evolution of fast root gravitropism in seed plants VL - 10 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Plants have a remarkable capacity to adjust their growth and development to elevated ambient temperatures. Increased elongation growth of roots, hypocotyls and petioles in warm temperatures are hallmarks of seedling thermomorphogenesis. In the last decade, significant progress has been made to identify the molecular signaling components regulating these growth responses. Increased ambient temperature utilizes diverse components of the light sensing and signal transduction network to trigger growth adjustments. However, it remains unknown whether temperature sensing and responses are universal processes that occur uniformly in all plant organs. Alternatively, temperature sensing may be confined to specific tissues or organs, which would require a systemic signal that mediates responses in distal parts of the plant. Here we show that Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) seedlings show organ-specific transcriptome responses to elevated temperatures, and that thermomorphogenesis involves both autonomous and organ-interdependent temperature sensing and signaling. Seedling roots can sense and respond to temperature in a shoot-independent manner, whereas shoot temperature responses require both local and systemic processes. The induction of cell elongation in hypocotyls requires temperature sensing in cotyledons, followed by generation of a mobile auxin signal. Subsequently, auxin travels to the hypocotyl where it triggers local brassinosteroid-induced cell elongation in seedling stems, which depends upon a distinct, permissive temperature sensor in the hypocotyl. AU - Bellstaedt, Julia AU - Trenner, Jana AU - Lippmann, Rebecca AU - Poeschl, Yvonne AU - Zhang, Xixi AU - Friml, Jiří AU - Quint, Marcel AU - Delker, Carolin ID - 6366 IS - 2 JF - Plant Physiology SN - 0032-0889 TI - A mobile auxin signal connects temperature sensing in cotyledons with growth responses in hypocotyls VL - 180 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The plant hormone auxin has crucial roles in almost all aspects of plant growth and development. Concentrations of auxin vary across different tissues, mediating distinct developmental outcomes and contributing to the functional diversity of auxin. However, the mechanisms that underlie these activities are poorly understood. Here we identify an auxin signalling mechanism, which acts in parallel to the canonical auxin pathway based on the transport inhibitor response1 (TIR1) and other auxin receptor F-box (AFB) family proteins (TIR1/AFB receptors)1,2, that translates levels of cellular auxin to mediate differential growth during apical-hook development. This signalling mechanism operates at the concave side of the apical hook, and involves auxin-mediated C-terminal cleavage of transmembrane kinase 1 (TMK1). The cytosolic and nucleus-translocated C terminus of TMK1 specifically interacts with and phosphorylates two non-canonical transcriptional repressors of the auxin or indole-3-acetic acid (Aux/IAA) family (IAA32 and IAA34), thereby regulating ARF transcription factors. In contrast to the degradation of Aux/IAA transcriptional repressors in the canonical pathway, the newly identified mechanism stabilizes the non-canonical IAA32 and IAA34 transcriptional repressors to regulate gene expression and ultimately inhibit growth. The auxin–TMK1 signalling pathway originates at the cell surface, is triggered by high levels of auxin and shares a partially overlapping set of transcription factors with the TIR1/AFB signalling pathway. This allows distinct interpretations of different concentrations of cellular auxin, and thus enables this versatile signalling molecule to mediate complex developmental outcomes. AU - Cao, Min AU - Chen, Rong AU - Li, Pan AU - Yu, Yongqiang AU - Zheng, Rui AU - Ge, Danfeng AU - Zheng, Wei AU - Wang, Xuhui AU - Gu, Yangtao AU - Gelová, Zuzana AU - Friml, Jiří AU - Zhang, Heng AU - Liu, Renyi AU - He, Jun AU - Xu, Tongda ID - 6259 JF - Nature SN - 0028-0836 TI - TMK1-mediated auxin signalling regulates differential growth of the apical hook VL - 568 ER - TY - JOUR AB - PIN-FORMED (PIN) transporters mediate directional, intercellular movement of the phytohormone auxin in land plants. To elucidate the evolutionary origins of this developmentally crucial mechanism, we analysed the single PIN homologue of a simple green alga Klebsormidium flaccidum. KfPIN functions as a plasma membrane-localized auxin exporter in land plants and heterologous models. While its role in algae remains unclear, PIN-driven auxin export is probably an ancient and conserved trait within streptophytes. AU - Skokan, Roman AU - Medvecká, Eva AU - Viaene, Tom AU - Vosolsobě, Stanislav AU - Zwiewka, Marta AU - Müller, Karel AU - Skůpa, Petr AU - Karady, Michal AU - Zhang, Yuzhou AU - Janacek, Dorina P. AU - Hammes, Ulrich Z. AU - Ljung, Karin AU - Nodzyński, Tomasz AU - Petrášek, Jan AU - Friml, Jiří ID - 7106 IS - 11 JF - Nature Plants SN - 2055-0278 TI - PIN-driven auxin transport emerged early in streptophyte evolution VL - 5 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Roots grow downwards parallel to the gravity vector, to anchor a plant in soil and acquire water and nutrients, using a gravitropic mechanism dependent on the asymmetric distribution of the phytohormone auxin. Recently, Chang et al. demonstrate that asymmetric distribution of another phytohormone, cytokinin, directs root growth towards higher water content. AU - Sinclair, Scott A AU - Friml, Jiří ID - 7143 JF - Cell Research SN - 1001-0602 TI - Defying gravity: a plant's quest for moisture VL - 29 ER - TY - JOUR AB - During infection pathogens secrete small molecules, termed effectors, to manipulate and control the interaction with their specific hosts. Both the pathogen and the plant are under high selective pressure to rapidly adapt and co-evolve in what is usually referred to as molecular arms race. Components of the host’s immune system form a network that processes information about molecules with a foreign origin and damage-associated signals, integrating them with developmental and abiotic cues to adapt the plant’s responses. Both in the case of nucleotide-binding leucine-rich repeat receptors and leucine-rich repeat receptor kinases interaction networks have been extensively characterized. However, little is known on whether pathogenic effectors form complexes to overcome plant immunity and promote disease. Ustilago maydis, a biotrophic fungal pathogen that infects maize plants, produces effectors that target hubs in the immune network of the host cell. Here we assess the capability of U. maydis effector candidates to interact with each other, which may play a crucial role during the infection process. Using a systematic yeast-two-hybrid approach and based on a preliminary pooled screen, we selected 63 putative effectors for one-on-one matings with a library of nearly 300 effector candidates. We found that 126 of these effector candidates interacted either with themselves or other predicted effectors. Although the functional relevance of the observed interactions remains elusive, we propose that the observed abundance in complex formation between effectors adds an additional level of complexity to effector research and should be taken into consideration when studying effector evolution and function. Based on this fundamental finding, we suggest various scenarios which could evolutionarily drive the formation and stabilization of an effector interactome. AU - Alcântara, André AU - Bosch, Jason AU - Nazari, Fahimeh AU - Hoffmann, Gesa AU - Gallei, Michelle C AU - Uhse, Simon AU - Darino, Martin A. AU - Olukayode, Toluwase AU - Reumann, Daniel AU - Baggaley, Laura AU - Djamei, Armin ID - 7182 IS - 11 JF - Frontiers in Plant Science TI - Systematic Y2H screening reveals extensive effector-complex formation VL - 10 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME) is a highly conserved and essential cellular process in eukaryotic cells, but its dynamic and vital nature makes it challenging to study using classical genetics tools. In contrast, although small molecules can acutely and reversibly perturb CME, the few chemical CME inhibitors that have been applied to plants are either ineffective or show undesirable side effects. Here, we identify the previously described endosidin9 (ES9) as an inhibitor of clathrin heavy chain (CHC) function in both Arabidopsis and human cells through affinity-based target isolation, in vitro binding studies and X-ray crystallography. Moreover, we present a chemically improved ES9 analog, ES9-17, which lacks the undesirable side effects of ES9 while retaining the ability to target CHC. ES9 and ES9-17 have expanded the chemical toolbox used to probe CHC function, and present chemical scaffolds for further design of more specific and potent CHC inhibitors across different systems. AU - Dejonghe, Wim AU - Sharma, Isha AU - Denoo, Bram AU - De Munck, Steven AU - Lu, Qing AU - Mishev, Kiril AU - Bulut, Haydar AU - Mylle, Evelien AU - De Rycke, Riet AU - Vasileva, Mina K AU - Savatin, Daniel V. AU - Nerinckx, Wim AU - Staes, An AU - Drozdzecki, Andrzej AU - Audenaert, Dominique AU - Yperman, Klaas AU - Madder, Annemieke AU - Friml, Jiří AU - Van Damme, Daniël AU - Gevaert, Kris AU - Haucke, Volker AU - Savvides, Savvas N. AU - Winne, Johan AU - Russinova, Eugenia ID - 6377 IS - 6 JF - Nature Chemical Biology SN - 15524450 TI - Disruption of endocytosis through chemical inhibition of clathrin heavy chain function VL - 15 ER - TY - THES AB - The development and growth of Arabidopsis thaliana is regulated by a combination of genetic programing and also by the environmental influences. An important role in these processes play the phytohormones and among them, auxin is crucial as it controls many important functions. It is transported through the whole plant body by creating local and temporal concentration maxima and minima, which have an impact on the cell status, tissue and organ identity. Auxin has the property to undergo a directional and finely regulated cell-to-cell transport, which is enabled by the transport proteins, localized on the plasma membrane. An important role in this process have the PIN auxin efflux proteins, which have an asymmetric/polar subcellular localization and determine the directionality of the auxin transport. During the last years, there were significant advances in understanding how the trafficking molecular machineries function, including studies on molecular interactions, function, subcellular localization and intracellular distribution. However, there is still a lack of detailed characterization on the steps of endocytosis, exocytosis, endocytic recycling and degradation. Due to this fact, I focused on the identification of novel trafficking factors and better characterization of the intracellular trafficking pathways. My PhD thesis consists of an introductory chapter, three experimental chapters, a chapter containing general discussion, conclusions and perspectives and also an appendix chapter with published collaborative papers. The first chapter is separated in two different parts: I start by a general introduction to auxin biology and then I introduce the trafficking pathways in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. Then, I explain also the phosphorylation-signals for polar targeting and also the roles of the phytohormone strigolactone. The second chapter includes the characterization of bar1/sacsin mutant, which was identified in a forward genetic screen for novel trafficking components in Arabidopsis thaliana, where by the implementation of an EMS-treated pPIN1::PIN1-GFP marker line and by using the established inhibitor of ARF-GEFs, Brefeldin A (BFA) as a tool to study trafficking processes, we identified a novel factor, which is mediating the adaptation of the plant cell to ARF-GEF inhibition. The mutation is in a previously uncharacterized gene, encoding a very big protein that we, based on its homologies, called SACSIN with domains suggesting roles as a molecular chaperon or as a component of the ubiquitin-proteasome system. Our physiology and imaging studies revealed that SACSIN is a crucial plant cell component of the adaptation to the ARF-GEF inhibition. The third chapter includes six subchapters, where I focus on the role of the phytohormone strigolactone, which interferes with auxin feedback on PIN internalization. Strigolactone moderates the polar auxin transport by increasing the internalization of the PIN auxin efflux carriers, which reduces the canalization related growth responses. In addition, I also studied the role of phosphorylation in the strigolactone regulation of auxin feedback on PIN internalization. In this chapter I also present my results on the MAX2-dependence of strigolactone-mediated root growth inhibition and I also share my results on the auxin metabolomics profiling after application of GR24. In the fourth chapter I studied the effect of two small molecules ES-9 and ES9-17, which were identified from a collection of small molecules with the property to impair the clathrin-mediated endocytosis. In the fifth chapter, I discuss all my observations and experimental findings and suggest alternative hypothesis to interpret my results. In the appendix there are three collaborative published projects. In the first, I participated in the characterization of the role of ES9 as a small molecule, which is inhibitor of clathrin- mediated endocytosis in different model organisms. In the second paper, I contributed to the characterization of another small molecule ES9-17, which is a non-protonophoric analog of ES9 and also impairs the clathrin-mediated endocytosis not only in plant cells, but also in mammalian HeLa cells. Last but not least, I also attach another paper, where I tried to establish the grafting method as a technique in our lab to study canalization related processes. AU - Vasileva, Mina K ID - 7172 TI - Molecular mechanisms of endomembrane trafficking in Arabidopsis thaliana ER - TY - JOUR AB - Plasmodesmata (PD) are plant-specific membrane-lined channels that create cytoplasmic and membrane continuities between adjacent cells, thereby facilitating cell–cell communication and virus movement. Plant cells have evolved diverse mechanisms to regulate PD plasticity in response to numerous environmental stimuli. In particular, during defense against plant pathogens, the defense hormone, salicylic acid (SA), plays a crucial role in the regulation of PD permeability in a callose-dependent manner. Here, we uncover a mechanism by which plants restrict the spreading of virus and PD cargoes using SA signaling by increasing lipid order and closure of PD. We showed that exogenous SA application triggered the compartmentalization of lipid raft nanodomains through a modulation of the lipid raft-regulatory protein, Remorin (REM). Genetic studies, superresolution imaging, and transmission electron microscopy observation together demonstrated that Arabidopsis REM1.2 and REM1.3 are crucial for plasma membrane nanodomain assembly to control PD aperture and functionality. In addition, we also found that a 14-3-3 epsilon protein modulates REM clustering and membrane nanodomain compartmentalization through its direct interaction with REM proteins. This study unveils a molecular mechanism by which the key plant defense hormone, SA, triggers membrane lipid nanodomain reorganization, thereby regulating PD closure to impede virus spreading. AU - Huang, D AU - Sun, Y AU - Ma, Z AU - Ke, M AU - Cui, Y AU - Chen, Z AU - Chen, C AU - Ji, C AU - Tran, TM AU - Yang, L AU - Lam, SM AU - Han, Y AU - Shu, G AU - Friml, Jiří AU - Miao, Y AU - Jiang, L AU - Chen, X ID - 6999 IS - 42 JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America SN - 0027-8424 TI - Salicylic acid-mediated plasmodesmal closure via Remorin-dependent lipid organization VL - 116 ER - TY - THES AB - Clathrin-Mediated Endocytosis (CME) is an aspect of cellular trafficking that is constantly regulated for mediating developmental and physiological responses. The main aim of my thesis is to decipher the basic mechanisms of CME and post-endocytic trafficking in the whole multicellular organ systems of Arabidopsis. The first chapter of my thesis describes the search for new components involved in CME. Tandem affinity purification was conducted using CLC and its interacting partners were identified. Amongst the identified proteins were the Auxilin-likes1 and 2 (Axl1/2), putative uncoating factors, for which we made a full functional analysis. Over-expression of Axl1/2 causes extreme modifications in the dynamics of the machinery proteins and inhibition of endocytosis altogether. However the loss of function of the axl1/2 did not present any cellular or physiological phenotype, meaning Auxilin-likes do not form the major uncoating machinery. The second chapter of my thesis describes the establishment/utilisation of techniques to capture the dynamicity and the complexity of CME and post-endocytic trafficking. We have studied the development of endocytic pits at the PM – specifically, the mode of membrane remodeling during pit development and the role of actin in it, given plant cells possess high turgor pressure. Utilizing the improved z-resolution of TIRF and VAEM techniques, we captured the time-lapse of the endocytic events at the plasma membrane; and using particle detection software, we quantitatively analysed all the endocytic trajectories in an unbiased way to obtain the endocytic rate of the system. This together with the direct analysis of cargo internalisation from the PM provided an estimate on the endocytic potential of the cell. We also developed a methodology for ultrastructural analysis of different populations of Clathrin-Coated Structures (CCSs) in both PM and endomembranes in unroofed protoplasts. Structural analysis, together with the intensity profile of CCSs at the PM show that the mode of CCP development at the PM follows ‘Constant curvature model’; meaning that clathrin polymerisation energy is a major contributing factor of membrane remodeling. In addition, other analyses clearly show that actin is not required for membrane remodeling during invagination or any other step of CCP development, despite the prevalent high turgor pressure. However, actin is essential in orchestrating the post-endocytic trafficking of CCVs facilitating the EE formation. We also observed that the uncoating process post-endocytosis is not immediate; an alternative mechanism of uncoating – Sequential multi-step process – functions in the cell. Finally we also looked at one of the important physiological stimuli modulating the process – hormone, auxin. auxin has been known to influence CME before. We have made a detailed study on the concentration-time based effect of auxin on the machinery proteins, CCP development, and the specificity of cargoes endocytosed. To this end, we saw no general effect of auxin on CME at earlier time points. However, very low concentration of IAA, such as 50nM, accelerates endocytosis of specifically PIN2 through CME. Such a tight regulatory control with high specificity to PIN2 could be essential in modulating its polarity. AU - Narasimhan, Madhumitha ID - 6269 SN - 2663-337X TI - Clathrin-Mediated endocytosis, post-endocytic trafficking and their regulatory controls in plants ER - TY - JOUR AB - A process of restorative patterning in plant roots correctly replaces eliminated cells to heal local injuries despite the absence of cell migration, which underpins wound healing in animals. Patterning in plants relies on oriented cell divisions and acquisition of specific cell identities. Plants regularly endure wounds caused by abiotic or biotic environmental stimuli and have developed extraordinary abilities to restore their tissues after injuries. Here, we provide insight into a mechanism of restorative patterning that repairs tissues after wounding. Laser-assisted elimination of different cells in Arabidopsis root combined with live-imaging tracking during vertical growth allowed analysis of the regeneration processes in vivo. Specifically, the cells adjacent to the inner side of the injury re-activated their stem cell transcriptional programs. They accelerated their progression through cell cycle, coordinately changed the cell division orientation, and ultimately acquired de novo the correct cell fates to replace missing cells. These observations highlight existence of unknown intercellular positional signaling and demonstrate the capability of specified cells to re-acquire stem cell programs as a crucial part of the plant-specific mechanism of wound healing. AU - Marhavá, Petra AU - Hörmayer, Lukas AU - Yoshida, Saiko AU - Marhavy, Peter AU - Benková, Eva AU - Friml, Jiří ID - 6351 IS - 4 JF - Cell SN - 00928674 TI - Re-activation of stem cell pathways for pattern restoration in plant wound healing VL - 177 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Plants as sessile organisms are constantly under attack by herbivores, rough environmental situations, or mechanical pressure. These challenges often lead to the induction of wounds or destruction of already specified and developed tissues. Additionally, wounding makes plants vulnerable to invasion by pathogens, which is why wound signalling often triggers specific defence responses. To stay competitive or, eventually, survive under these circumstances, plants need to regenerate efficiently, which in rigid, tissue migration-incompatible plant tissues requires post-embryonic patterning and organogenesis. Now, several studies used laser-assisted single cell ablation in the Arabidopsis root tip as a minimal wounding proxy. Here, we discuss their findings and put them into context of a broader spectrum of wound signalling, pathogen responses and tissue as well as organ regeneration. AU - Hörmayer, Lukas AU - Friml, Jiří ID - 6943 JF - Current Opinion in Plant Biology SN - 1369-5266 TI - Targeted cell ablation-based insights into wound healing and restorative patterning VL - 52 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Polar auxin transport plays a pivotal role in plant growth and development. PIN auxin efflux carriers regulate directional auxin movement by establishing local auxin maxima, minima, and gradients that drive multiple developmental processes and responses to environmental signals. Auxin has been proposed to modulate its own transport by regulating subcellular PIN trafficking via processes such as clathrin-mediated PIN endocytosis and constitutive recycling. Here, we further investigated the mechanisms by which auxin affects PIN trafficking by screening auxin analogs and identified pinstatic acid (PISA) as a positive modulator of polar auxin transport in Arabidopsis thaliana. PISA had an auxin-like effect on hypocotyl elongation and adventitious root formation via positive regulation of auxin transport. PISA did not activate SCFTIR1/AFB signaling and yet induced PIN accumulation at the cell surface by inhibiting PIN internalization from the plasma membrane. This work demonstrates PISA to be a promising chemical tool to dissect the regulatory mechanisms behind subcellular PIN trafficking and auxin transport. AU - Oochi, A AU - Hajny, Jakub AU - Fukui, K AU - Nakao, Y AU - Gallei, Michelle C AU - Quareshy, M AU - Takahashi, K AU - Kinoshita, T AU - Harborough, SR AU - Kepinski, S AU - Kasahara, H AU - Napier, RM AU - Friml, Jiří AU - Hayashi, KI ID - 6260 IS - 2 JF - Plant Physiology SN - 0032-0889 TI - Pinstatic acid promotes auxin transport by inhibiting PIN internalization VL - 180 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Cortical microtubule arrays in elongating epidermal cells in both the root and stem of plants have the propensity of dynamic reorientations that are correlated with the activation or inhibition of growth. Factors regulating plant growth, among them the hormone auxin, have been recognized as regulators of microtubule array orientations. Some previous work in the field has aimed at elucidating the causal relationship between cell growth, the signaling of auxin or other growth-regulating factors, and microtubule array reorientations, with various conclusions. Here, we revisit this problem of causality with a comprehensive set of experiments in Arabidopsis thaliana, using the now available pharmacological and genetic tools. We use isolated, auxin-depleted hypocotyls, an experimental system allowing for full control of both growth and auxin signaling. We demonstrate that reorientation of microtubules is not directly triggered by an auxin signal during growth activation. Instead, reorientation is triggered by the activation of the growth process itself and is auxin-independent in its nature. We discuss these findings in the context of previous relevant work, including that on the mechanical regulation of microtubule array orientation. AU - Adamowski, Maciek AU - Li, Lanxin AU - Friml, Jiří ID - 6627 IS - 13 JF - International Journal of Molecular Sciences TI - Reorientation of cortical microtubule arrays in the hypocotyl of arabidopsis thaliana is induced by the cell growth process and independent of auxin signaling VL - 20 ER - TY - CHAP AB - Adventitious roots (AR) are de novo formed roots that emerge from any part of the plant or from callus in tissue culture, except root tissue. The plant tissue origin and the method by which they are induced determine the physiological properties of emerged ARs. Hence, a standard method encompassing all types of AR does not exist. Here we describe a method for the induction and analysis of AR that emerge from the etiolated hypocotyl of dicot plants. The hypocotyl is formed during embryogenesis and shows a determined developmental pattern which usually does not involve AR formation. However, the hypocotyl shows propensity to form de novo roots under specific circumstances such as removal of the root system, high humidity or flooding, or during de-etiolation. The hypocotyl AR emerge from a pericycle-like cell layer surrounding the vascular tissue of the central cylinder, which is reminiscent to the developmental program of lateral roots. Here we propose an easy protocol for in vitro hypocotyl AR induction from etiolated Arabidopsis seedlings. AU - Trinh, Hoang AU - Verstraeten, Inge AU - Geelen, Danny ID - 408 SN - 1064-3745 T2 - Root Development TI - In vitro assay for induction of adventitious rooting on intact arabidopsis hypocotyls VL - 1761 ER - TY - CHAP AB - Immunolocalization is a valuable tool for cell biology research that allows to rapidly determine the localization and expression levels of endogenous proteins. In plants, whole-mount in situ immunolocalization remains a challenging method, especially in tissues protected by waxy layers and complex cell wall carbohydrates. Here, we present a robust method for whole-mount in situ immunolocalization in primary root meristems and lateral root primordia in Arabidopsis thaliana. For good epitope preservation, fixation is done in an alkaline paraformaldehyde/glutaraldehyde mixture. This fixative is suitable for detecting a wide range of proteins, including integral transmembrane proteins and proteins peripherally attached to the plasma membrane. From initiation until emergence from the primary root, lateral root primordia are surrounded by several layers of differentiated tissues with a complex cell wall composition that interferes with the efficient penetration of all buffers. Therefore, immunolocalization in early lateral root primordia requires a modified method, including a strong solvent treatment for removal of hydrophobic barriers and a specific cocktail of cell wall-degrading enzymes. The presented method allows for easy, reliable, and high-quality in situ detection of the subcellular localization of endogenous proteins in primary and lateral root meristems without the need of time-consuming crosses or making translational fusions to fluorescent proteins. AU - Karampelias, Michael AU - Tejos, Ricardo AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Vanneste, Steffen ED - Ristova, Daniela ED - Barbez, Elke ID - 411 T2 - Root Development. Methods and Protocols TI - Optimized whole mount in situ immunolocalization for Arabidopsis thaliana root meristems and lateral root primordia VL - 1761 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Asymmetric auxin distribution is instrumental for the differential growth that causes organ bending on tropic stimuli and curvatures during plant development. Local differences in auxin concentrations are achieved mainly by polarized cellular distribution of PIN auxin transporters, but whether other mechanisms involving auxin homeostasis are also relevant for the formation of auxin gradients is not clear. Here we show that auxin methylation is required for asymmetric auxin distribution across the hypocotyl, particularly during its response to gravity. We found that loss-of-function mutants in Arabidopsis IAA CARBOXYL METHYLTRANSFERASE1 (IAMT1) prematurely unfold the apical hook, and that their hypocotyls are impaired in gravitropic reorientation. This defect is linked to an auxin-dependent increase in PIN gene expression, leading to an increased polar auxin transport and lack of asymmetric distribution of PIN3 in the iamt1 mutant. Gravitropic reorientation in the iamt1 mutant could be restored with either endodermis-specific expression of IAMT1 or partial inhibition of polar auxin transport, which also results in normal PIN gene expression levels. We propose that IAA methylation is necessary in gravity-sensing cells to restrict polar auxin transport within the range of auxin levels that allow for differential responses. AU - Abbas, Mohamad AU - Hernández, García J AU - Pollmann, Stephan AU - Samodelov, Sophia L AU - Kolb, Martina AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Hammes, Ulrich Z AU - Zurbriggen, Matias D AU - Blázquez, Miguel AU - Alabadí, David ID - 203 IS - 26 JF - PNAS TI - Auxin methylation is required for differential growth in Arabidopsis VL - 115 ER - TY - JOUR AB - CLE peptides have been implicated in various developmental processes of plants and mediate their responses to environmental stimuli. However, the biological relevance of most CLE genes remains to be functionally characterized. Here, we report that CLE9, which is expressed in stomata, acts as an essential regulator in the induction of stomatal closure. Exogenous application of CLE9 peptides or overexpression of CLE9 effectively led to stomatal closure and enhanced drought tolerance, whereas CLE9 loss-of-function mutants were sensitivity to drought stress. CLE9-induced stomatal closure was impaired in abscisic acid (ABA)-deficient mutants, indicating that ABA is required for CLE9-medaited guard cell signalling. We further deciphered that two guard cell ABA-signalling components, OST1 and SLAC1, were responsible for CLE9-induced stomatal closure. MPK3 and MPK6 were activated by the CLE9 peptide, and CLE9 peptides failed to close stomata in mpk3 and mpk6 mutants. In addition, CLE9 peptides stimulated the induction of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and nitric oxide (NO) synthesis associated with stomatal closure, which was abolished in the NADPH oxidase-deficient mutants or nitric reductase mutants, respectively. Collectively, our results reveal a novel ABA-dependent function of CLE9 in the regulation of stomatal apertures, thereby suggesting a potential role of CLE9 in the stress acclimatization of plants. AU - Zhang, Luosha AU - Shi, Xiong AU - Zhang, Yutao AU - Wang, Jiajing AU - Yang, Jingwei AU - Ishida, Takashi AU - Jiang, Wenqian AU - Han, Xiangyu AU - Kang, Jingke AU - Wang, Xuening AU - Pan, Lixia AU - Lv, Shuo AU - Cao, Bing AU - Zhang, Yonghong AU - Wu, Jinbin AU - Han, Huibin AU - Hu, Zhubing AU - Cui, Langjun AU - Sawa, Shinichiro AU - He, Junmin AU - Wang, Guodong ID - 5830 JF - Plant Cell and Environment SN - 01407791 TI - CLE9 peptide-induced stomatal closure is mediated by abscisic acid, hydrogen peroxide, and nitric oxide in arabidopsis thaliana ER - TY - JOUR AB - The plant hormone gibberellic acid (GA) is a crucial regulator of growth and development. The main paradigm of GA signaling puts forward transcriptional regulation via the degradation of DELLA transcriptional repressors. GA has also been shown to regulate tropic responses by modulation of the plasma membrane incidence of PIN auxin transporters by an unclear mechanism. Here we uncovered the cellular and molecular mechanisms by which GA redirects protein trafficking and thus regulates cell surface functionality. Photoconvertible reporters revealed that GA balances the protein traffic between the vacuole degradation route and recycling back to the cell surface. Low GA levels promote vacuolar delivery and degradation of multiple cargos, including PIN proteins, whereas high GA levels promote their recycling to the plasma membrane. This GA effect requires components of the retromer complex, such as Sorting Nexin 1 (SNX1) and its interacting, microtubule (MT)-associated protein, the Cytoplasmic Linker-Associated Protein (CLASP1). Accordingly, GA regulates the subcellular distribution of SNX1 and CLASP1, and the intact MT cytoskeleton is essential for the GA effect on trafficking. This GA cellular action occurs through DELLA proteins that regulate the MT and retromer presumably via their interaction partners Prefoldins (PFDs). Our study identified a branching of the GA signaling pathway at the level of DELLA proteins, which, in parallel to regulating transcription, also target by a nontranscriptional mechanism the retromer complex acting at the intersection of the degradation and recycling trafficking routes. By this mechanism, GA can redirect receptors and transporters to the cell surface, thus coregulating multiple processes, including PIN-dependent auxin fluxes during tropic responses. AU - Salanenka, Yuliya AU - Verstraeten, Inge AU - Löfke, Christian AU - Tabata, Kaori AU - Naramoto, Satoshi AU - Glanc, Matous AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 428 IS - 14 JF - PNAS TI - Gibberellin DELLA signaling targets the retromer complex to redirect protein trafficking to the plasma membrane VL - 115 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Flowers have a species-specific functional life span that determines the time window in which pollination, fertilization and seed set can occur. The stigma tissue plays a key role in flower receptivity by intercepting pollen and initiating pollen tube growth toward the ovary. In this article, we show that a developmentally controlled cell death programme terminates the functional life span of stigma cells in Arabidopsis. We identified the leaf senescence regulator ORESARA1 (also known as ANAC092) and the previously uncharacterized KIRA1 (also known as ANAC074) as partially redundant transcription factors that modulate stigma longevity by controlling the expression of programmed cell death-associated genes. KIRA1 expression is sufficient to induce cell death and terminate floral receptivity, whereas lack of both KIRA1 and ORESARA1 substantially increases stigma life span. Surprisingly, the extension of stigma longevity is accompanied by only a moderate extension of flower receptivity, suggesting that additional processes participate in the control of the flower's receptive life span. AU - Gao, Zhen AU - Daneva, Anna AU - Salanenka, Yuliya AU - Van Durme, Matthias AU - Huysmans, Marlies AU - Lin, Zongcheng AU - De Winter, Freya AU - Vanneste, Steffen AU - Karimi, Mansour AU - Van De Velde, Jan AU - Vandepoele, Klaas AU - Van De Walle, Davy AU - Dewettinck, Koen AU - Lambrecht, Bart AU - Nowack, Moritz ID - 280 IS - 6 JF - Nature Plants TI - KIRA1 and ORESARA1 terminate flower receptivity by promoting cell death in the stigma of Arabidopsis VL - 4 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The angiosperm seed is composed of three genetically distinct tissues: the diploid embryo that originates from the fertilized egg cell, the triploid endosperm that is produced from the fertilized central cell, and the maternal sporophytic integuments that develop into the seed coat1. At the onset of embryo development in Arabidopsis thaliana, the zygote divides asymmetrically, producing a small apical embryonic cell and a larger basal cell that connects the embryo to the maternal tissue2. The coordinated and synchronous development of the embryo and the surrounding integuments, and the alignment of their growth axes, suggest communication between maternal tissues and the embryo. In contrast to animals, however, where a network of maternal factors that direct embryo patterning have been identified3,4, only a few maternal mutations have been described to affect embryo development in plants5–7. Early embryo patterning in Arabidopsis requires accumulation of the phytohormone auxin in the apical cell by directed transport from the suspensor8–10. However, the origin of this auxin has remained obscure. Here we investigate the source of auxin for early embryogenesis and provide evidence that the mother plant coordinates seed development by supplying auxin to the early embryo from the integuments of the ovule. We show that auxin response increases in ovules after fertilization, due to upregulated auxin biosynthesis in the integuments, and this maternally produced auxin is required for correct embryo development. AU - Robert, Hélène AU - Park, Chulmin AU - Gutièrrez, Carla AU - Wójcikowska, Barbara AU - Pěnčík, Aleš AU - Novák, Ondřej AU - Chen, Junyi AU - Grunewald, Wim AU - Dresselhaus, Thomas AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Laux, Thomas ID - 158 IS - 8 JF - Nature Plants TI - Maternal auxin supply contributes to early embryo patterning in Arabidopsis VL - 4 ER - TY - JOUR AB - AtNHX5 and AtNHX6 are endosomal Na+,K+/H+ antiporters that are critical for growth and development in Arabidopsis, but the mechanism behind their action remains unknown. Here, we report that AtNHX5 and AtNHX6, functioning as H+ leak, control auxin homeostasis and auxin-mediated development. We found that nhx5 nhx6 exhibited growth variations of auxin-related defects. We further showed that nhx5 nhx6 was affected in auxin homeostasis. Genetic analysis showed that AtNHX5 and AtNHX6 were required for the function of the ER-localized auxin transporter PIN5. Although AtNHX5 and AtNHX6 were co-localized with PIN5 at ER, they did not interact directly. Instead, the conserved acidic residues in AtNHX5 and AtNHX6, which are essential for exchange activity, were required for PIN5 function. AtNHX5 and AtNHX6 regulated the pH in ER. Overall, AtNHX5 and AtNHX6 may regulate auxin transport across the ER via the pH gradient created by their transport activity. H+-leak pathway provides a fine-tuning mechanism that controls cellular auxin fluxes. AU - Fan, Ligang AU - Zhao, Lei AU - Hu, Wei AU - Li, Weina AU - Novák, Ondřej AU - Strnad, Miroslav AU - Simon, Sibu AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Shen, Jinbo AU - Jiang, Liwen AU - Qiu, Quan ID - 462 JF - Plant, Cell and Environment TI - NHX antiporters regulate the pH of endoplasmic reticulum and auxin-mediated development VL - 41 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The phytohormone auxin is the information carrier in a plethora of developmental and physiological processes in plants(1). It has been firmly established that canonical, nuclear auxin signalling acts through regulation of gene transcription(2). Here, we combined microfluidics, live imaging, genetic engineering and computational modelling to reanalyse the classical case of root growth inhibition(3) by auxin. We show that Arabidopsis roots react to addition and removal of auxin by extremely rapid adaptation of growth rate. This process requires intracellular auxin perception but not transcriptional reprogramming. The formation of the canonical TIR1/AFB-Aux/IAA co-receptor complex is required for the growth regulation, hinting to a novel, non-transcriptional branch of this signalling pathway. Our results challenge the current understanding of root growth regulation by auxin and suggest another, presumably non-transcriptional, signalling output of the canonical auxin pathway. AU - Fendrych, Matyas AU - Akhmanova, Maria AU - Merrin, Jack AU - Glanc, Matous AU - Hagihara, Shinya AU - Takahashi, Koji AU - Uchida, Naoyuki AU - Torii, Keiko U AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 192 IS - 7 JF - Nature Plants TI - Rapid and reversible root growth inhibition by TIR1 auxin signalling VL - 4 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The intercellular transport of auxin is driven by PIN-formed (PIN) auxin efflux carriers. PINs are localized at the plasma membrane (PM) and on constitutively recycling endomembrane vesicles. Therefore, PINs can mediate auxin transport either by direct translocation across the PM or by pumping auxin into secretory vesicles (SVs), leading to its secretory release upon fusion with the PM. Which of these two mechanisms dominates is a matter of debate. Here, we addressed the issue with a mathematical modeling approach. We demonstrate that the efficiency of secretory transport depends on SV size, half-life of PINs on the PM, pH, exocytosis frequency and PIN density. 3D structured illumination microscopy (SIM) was used to determine PIN density on the PM. Combining this data with published values of the other parameters, we show that the transport activity of PINs in SVs would have to be at least 1000× greater than on the PM in order to produce a comparable macroscopic auxin transport. If both transport mechanisms operated simultaneously and PINs were equally active on SVs and PM, the contribution of secretion to the total auxin flux would be negligible. In conclusion, while secretory vesicle-mediated transport of auxin is an intriguing and theoretically possible model, it is unlikely to be a major mechanism of auxin transport inplanta. AU - Hille, Sander AU - Akhmanova, Maria AU - Glanc, Matous AU - Johnson, Alexander J AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 14 IS - 11 JF - International Journal of Molecular Sciences TI - Relative contribution of PIN-containing secretory vesicles and plasma membrane PINs to the directed auxin transport: Theoretical estimation VL - 19 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Wheat (Triticum ssp.) is one of the most important human food sources. However, this crop is very sensitive to temperature changes. Specifically, processes during wheat leaf, flower, and seed development and photosynthesis, which all contribute to the yield of this crop, are affected by high temperature. While this has to some extent been investigated on physiological, developmental, and molecular levels, very little is known about early signalling events associated with an increase in temperature. Phosphorylation-mediated signalling mechanisms, which are quick and dynamic, are associated with plant growth and development, also under abiotic stress conditions. Therefore, we probed the impact of a short-term and mild increase in temperature on the wheat leaf and spikelet phosphoproteome. In total, 3822 (containing 5178 phosphosites) and 5581 phosphopeptides (containing 7023 phosphosites) were identified in leaf and spikelet samples, respectively. Following statistical analysis, the resulting data set provides the scientific community with a first large-scale plant phosphoproteome under the control of higher ambient temperature. This community resource on the high temperature-mediated wheat phosphoproteome will be valuable for future studies. Our analyses also revealed a core set of common proteins between leaf and spikelet, suggesting some level of conserved regulatory mechanisms. Furthermore, we observed temperature-regulated interconversion of phosphoforms, which probably impacts protein activity. AU - Vu, Lam AU - Zhu, Tingting AU - Verstraeten, Inge AU - Van De Cotte, Brigitte AU - Gevaert, Kris AU - De Smet, Ive ID - 36 IS - 19 JF - Journal of Experimental Botany TI - Temperature-induced changes in the wheat phosphoproteome reveal temperature-regulated interconversion of phosphoforms VL - 69 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Land plants evolved from charophytic algae, among which Charophyceae possess the most complex body plans. We present the genome of Chara braunii; comparison of the genome to those of land plants identified evolutionary novelties for plant terrestrialization and land plant heritage genes. C. braunii employs unique xylan synthases for cell wall biosynthesis, a phragmoplast (cell separation) mechanism similar to that of land plants, and many phytohormones. C. braunii plastids are controlled via land-plant-like retrograde signaling, and transcriptional regulation is more elaborate than in other algae. The morphological complexity of this organism may result from expanded gene families, with three cases of particular note: genes effecting tolerance to reactive oxygen species (ROS), LysM receptor-like kinases, and transcription factors (TFs). Transcriptomic analysis of sexual reproductive structures reveals intricate control by TFs, activity of the ROS gene network, and the ancestral use of plant-like storage and stress protection proteins in the zygote. AU - Nishiyama, Tomoaki AU - Sakayama, Hidetoshi AU - De Vries, Jan AU - Buschmann, Henrik AU - Saint Marcoux, Denis AU - Ullrich, Kristian AU - Haas, Fabian AU - Vanderstraeten, Lisa AU - Becker, Dirk AU - Lang, Daniel AU - Vosolsobě, Stanislav AU - Rombauts, Stephane AU - Wilhelmsson, Per AU - Janitza, Philipp AU - Kern, Ramona AU - Heyl, Alexander AU - Rümpler, Florian AU - Calderón Villalobos, Luz AU - Clay, John AU - Skokan, Roman AU - Toyoda, Atsushi AU - Suzuki, Yutaka AU - Kagoshima, Hiroshi AU - Schijlen, Elio AU - Tajeshwar, Navindra AU - Catarino, Bruno AU - Hetherington, Alexander AU - Saltykova, Assia AU - Bonnot, Clemence AU - Breuninger, Holger AU - Symeonidi, Aikaterini AU - Radhakrishnan, Guru AU - Van Nieuwerburgh, Filip AU - Deforce, Dieter AU - Chang, Caren AU - Karol, Kenneth AU - Hedrich, Rainer AU - Ulvskov, Peter AU - Glöckner, Gernot AU - Delwiche, Charles AU - Petrášek, Jan AU - Van De Peer, Yves AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Beilby, Mary AU - Dolan, Liam AU - Kohara, Yuji AU - Sugano, Sumio AU - Fujiyama, Asao AU - Delaux, Pierre Marc AU - Quint, Marcel AU - Theissen, Gunter AU - Hagemann, Martin AU - Harholt, Jesper AU - Dunand, Christophe AU - Zachgo, Sabine AU - Langdale, Jane AU - Maumus, Florian AU - Van Der Straeten, Dominique AU - Gould, Sven B AU - Rensing, Stefan ID - 148 IS - 2 JF - Cell TI - The Chara genome: Secondary complexity and implications for plant terrestrialization VL - 174 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The trafficking of subcellular cargos in eukaryotic cells crucially depends on vesicle budding, a process mediated by ARF-GEFs (ADP-ribosylation factor guanine nucleotide exchange factors). In plants, ARF-GEFs play essential roles in endocytosis, vacuolar trafficking, recycling, secretion, and polar trafficking. Moreover, they are important for plant development, mainly through controlling the polar subcellular localization of PIN-FORMED (PIN) transporters of the plant hormone auxin. Here, using a chemical genetics screen in Arabidopsis thaliana, we identified Endosidin 4 (ES4), an inhibitor of eukaryotic ARF-GEFs. ES4 acts similarly to and synergistically with the established ARF-GEF inhibitor Brefeldin A and has broad effects on intracellular trafficking, including endocytosis, exocytosis, and vacuolar targeting. Additionally, Arabidopsis and yeast (Sacharomyces cerevisiae) mutants defective in ARF-GEF show altered sensitivity to ES4. ES4 interferes with the activation-based membrane association of the ARF1 GTPases, but not of their mutant variants that are activated independently of ARF-GEF activity. Biochemical approaches and docking simulations confirmed that ES4 specifically targets the SEC7 domain-containing ARF-GEFs. These observations collectively identify ES4 as a chemical tool enabling the study of ARF-GEF-mediated processes, including ARF-GEF-mediated plant development. AU - Kania, Urszula AU - Nodzyński, Tomasz AU - Lu, Qing AU - Hicks, Glenn R AU - Nerinckx, Wim AU - Mishev, Kiril AU - Peurois, Francois AU - Cherfils, Jacqueline AU - De, Rycke Riet Maria AU - Grones, Peter AU - Robert, Stéphanie AU - Russinova, Eugenia AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 147 IS - 10 JF - The Plant Cell SN - 1040-4651 TI - The inhibitor Endosidin 4 targets SEC7 domain-type ARF GTPase exchange factors and interferes with sub cellular trafficking in eukaryotes VL - 30 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The root cap protects the stem cell niche of angiosperm roots from damage. In Arabidopsis, lateral root cap (LRC) cells covering the meristematic zone are regularly lost through programmed cell death, while the outermost layer of the root cap covering the tip is repeatedly sloughed. Efficient coordination with stem cells producing new layers is needed to maintain a constant size of the cap. We present a signalling pair, the peptide IDA-LIKE1 (IDL1) and its receptor HAESA-LIKE2 (HSL2), mediating such communication. Live imaging over several days characterized this process from initial fractures in LRC cell files to full separation of a layer. Enhanced expression of IDL1 in the separating root cap layers resulted in increased frequency of sloughing, balanced with generation of new layers in a HSL2-dependent manner. Transcriptome analyses linked IDL1-HSL2 signalling to the transcription factors BEARSKIN1/2 and genes associated with programmed cell death. Mutations in either IDL1 or HSL2 slowed down cell division, maturation and separation. Thus, IDL1-HSL2 signalling potentiates dynamic regulation of the homeostatic balance between stem cell division and sloughing activity. AU - Shi, Chun Lin AU - Von Wangenheim, Daniel AU - Herrmann, Ullrich AU - Wildhagen, Mari AU - Kulik, Ivan AU - Kopf, Andreas AU - Ishida, Takashi AU - Olsson, Vilde AU - Anker, Mari Kristine AU - Albert, Markus AU - Butenko, Melinka A AU - Felix, Georg AU - Sawa, Shinichiro AU - Claassen, Manfred AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Aalen, Reidunn B ID - 146 IS - 8 JF - Nature Plants TI - The dynamics of root cap sloughing in Arabidopsis is regulated by peptide signalling VL - 4 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Strigolactones (SLs) are a relatively recent addition to the list of plant hormones that control different aspects of plant development. SL signalling is perceived by an α/β hydrolase, DWARF 14 (D14). A close homolog of D14, KARRIKIN INSENSTIVE2 (KAI2), is involved in perception of an uncharacterized molecule called karrikin (KAR). Recent studies in Arabidopsis identified the SUPPRESSOR OF MAX2 1 (SMAX1) and SMAX1-LIKE 7 (SMXL7) to be potential SCF–MAX2 complex-mediated proteasome targets of KAI2 and D14, respectively. Genetic studies on SMXL7 and SMAX1 demonstrated distinct developmental roles for each, but very little is known about these repressors in terms of their sequence features. In this study, we performed an extensive comparative analysis of SMXLs and determined their phylogenetic and evolutionary history in the plant lineage. Our results show that SMXL family members can be sub-divided into four distinct phylogenetic clades/classes, with an ancient SMAX1. Further, we identified the clade-specific motifs that have evolved and that might act as determinants of SL-KAR signalling specificity. These specificities resulted from functional diversities among the clades. Our results suggest that a gradual co-evolution of SMXL members with their upstream receptors D14/KAI2 provided an increased specificity to both the SL perception and response in land plants. AU - Moturu, Taraka Ramji AU - Thula, Sravankumar AU - Singh, Ravi Kumar AU - Nodzyński, Tomasz AU - Vařeková, Radka Svobodová AU - Friml, Jiří AU - Simon, Sibu ID - 10881 IS - 9 JF - Journal of Experimental Botany KW - Plant Science KW - Physiology SN - 0022-0957 TI - Molecular evolution and diversification of the SMXL gene family VL - 69 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Coordinated cell polarization in developing tissues is a recurrent theme in multicellular organisms. In plants, a directional distribution of the plant hormone auxin is at the core of many developmental programs. A feedback regulation of auxin on the polarized localization of PIN auxin transporters in individual cells has been proposed as a self-organizing mechanism for coordinated tissue polarization, but the molecular mechanisms linking auxin signalling to PIN-dependent auxin transport remain unknown. We performed a microarray-based approach to find regulators of the auxin-induced PIN relocation in the Arabidopsis thaliana root. We identified a subset of a family of phosphatidylinositol transfer proteins (PITP), the PATELLINs (PATL). Here, we show that PATLs are expressed in partially overlapping cells types in different tissues going through mitosis or initiating differentiation programs. PATLs are plasma membrane-associated proteins accumulated in Arabidopsis embryos, primary roots, lateral root primordia, and developing stomata. Higher order patl mutants display reduced PIN1 repolarization in response to auxin, shorter root apical meristem, and drastic defects in embryo and seedling development. This suggests PATLs redundantly play a crucial role in polarity and patterning in Arabidopsis. AU - Tejos, Ricardo AU - Rodríguez Furlán, Cecilia AU - Adamowski, Maciek AU - Sauer, Michael AU - Norambuena, Lorena AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 913 IS - 2 JF - Journal of Cell Science SN - 00219533 TI - PATELLINS are regulators of auxin mediated PIN1 relocation and plant development in Arabidopsis thaliana VL - 131 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Cell polarity, manifested by the localization of proteins to distinct polar plasma membrane domains, is a key prerequisite of multicellular life. In plants, PIN auxin transporters are prominent polarity markers crucial for a plethora of developmental processes. Cell polarity mechanisms in plants are distinct from other eukaryotes and still largely elusive. In particular, how the cell polarities are propagated and maintained following cell division remains unknown. Plant cytokinesis is orchestrated by the cell plate—a transient centrifugally growing endomembrane compartment ultimately forming the cross wall1. Trafficking of polar membrane proteins is typically redirected to the cell plate, and these will consequently have opposite polarity in at least one of the daughter cells2–5. Here, we provide mechanistic insights into post-cytokinetic re-establishment of cell polarity as manifested by the apical, polar localization of PIN2. We show that the apical domain is defined in a cell-intrinsic manner and that re-establishment of PIN2 localization to this domain requires de novo protein secretion and endocytosis, but not basal-to-apical transcytosis. Furthermore, we identify a PINOID-related kinase WAG1, which phosphorylates PIN2 in vitro6 and is transcriptionally upregulated specifically in dividing cells, as a crucial regulator of post-cytokinetic PIN2 polarity re-establishment. AU - Glanc, Matous AU - Fendrych, Matyas AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 5673 IS - 12 JF - Nature Plants SN - 2055-0278 TI - Mechanistic framework for cell-intrinsic re-establishment of PIN2 polarity after cell division VL - 4 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME) is a cellular trafficking process in which cargoes and lipids are internalized from the plasma membrane into vesicles coated with clathrin and adaptor proteins. CME is essential for many developmental and physiological processes in plants, but its underlying mechanism is not well characterised compared to that in yeast and animal systems. Here, we searched for new factors involved in CME in Arabidopsis thaliana by performing Tandem Affinity Purification of proteins that interact with clathrin light chain, a principal component of the clathrin coat. Among the confirmed interactors, we found two putative homologues of the clathrin-coat uncoating factor auxilin previously described in non-plant systems. Overexpression of AUXILIN-LIKE1 and AUXILIN-LIKE2 in A. thaliana caused an arrest of seedling growth and development. This was concomitant with inhibited endocytosis due to blocking of clathrin recruitment after the initial step of adaptor protein binding to the plasma membrane. By contrast, auxilin-like(1/2) loss-of-function lines did not present endocytosis-related developmental or cellular phenotypes under normal growth conditions. This work contributes to the on-going characterization of the endocytotic machinery in plants and provides a robust tool for conditionally and specifically interfering with CME in A. thaliana. AU - Adamowski, Maciek AU - Narasimhan, Madhumitha AU - Kania, Urszula AU - Glanc, Matous AU - De Jaeger, Geert AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 412 IS - 3 JF - The Plant Cell SN - 1040-4651 TI - A functional study of AUXILIN LIKE1 and 2 two putative clathrin uncoating factors in Arabidopsis VL - 30 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Auxin is unique among plant hormones due to its directional transport that is mediated by the polarly distributed PIN auxin transporters at the plasma membrane. The canalization hypothesis proposes that the auxin feedback on its polar flow is a crucial, plant-specific mechanism mediating multiple self-organizing developmental processes. Here, we used the auxin effect on the PIN polar localization in Arabidopsis thaliana roots as a proxy for the auxin feedback on the PIN polarity during canalization. We performed microarray experiments to find regulators of this process that act downstream of auxin. We identified genes that were transcriptionally regulated by auxin in an AXR3/IAA17- and ARF7/ARF19-dependent manner. Besides the known components of the PIN polarity, such as PID and PIP5K kinases, a number of potential new regulators were detected, among which the WRKY23 transcription factor, which was characterized in more detail. Gain- and loss-of-function mutants confirmed a role for WRKY23 in mediating the auxin effect on the PIN polarity. Accordingly, processes requiring auxin-mediated PIN polarity rearrangements, such as vascular tissue development during leaf venation, showed a higher WRKY23 expression and required the WRKY23 activity. Our results provide initial insights into the auxin transcriptional network acting upstream of PIN polarization and, potentially, canalization-mediated plant development. AU - Prat, Tomas AU - Hajny, Jakub AU - Grunewald, Wim AU - Vasileva, Mina K AU - Molnar, Gergely AU - Tejos, Ricardo AU - Schmid, Markus AU - Sauer, Michael AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 449 IS - 1 JF - PLoS Genetics TI - WRKY23 is a component of the transcriptional network mediating auxin feedback on PIN polarity VL - 14 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Intercellular distribution of the plant hormone auxin largely depends on the polar subcellular distribution of the plasma membrane PIN-FORMED (PIN) auxin transporters. PIN polarity switches in response to different developmental and environmental signals have been shown to redirect auxin fluxes mediating certain developmental responses. PIN phosphorylation at different sites and by different kinases is crucial for PIN function. Here we investigate the role of PIN phosphorylation during gravitropic response. Loss- and gain-of-function mutants in PINOID and related kinases but not in D6PK kinase as well as mutations mimicking constitutive dephosphorylated or phosphorylated status of two clusters of predicted phosphorylation sites partially disrupted PIN3 phosphorylation and caused defects in gravitropic bending in roots and hypocotyls. In particular, they impacted PIN3 polarity rearrangements in response to gravity and during feed-back regulation by auxin itself. Thus PIN phosphorylation, besides regulating transport activity and apical-basal targeting, is also important for the rapid polarity switches in response to environmental and endogenous signals. AU - Grones, Peter AU - Abas, Melinda F AU - Hajny, Jakub AU - Jones, Angharad AU - Waidmann, Sascha AU - Kleine Vehn, Jürgen AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 191 IS - 1 JF - Scientific Reports TI - PID/WAG-mediated phosphorylation of the Arabidopsis PIN3 auxin transporter mediates polarity switches during gravitropism VL - 8 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The rapid auxin-triggered growth of the Arabidopsis hypocotyls involves the nuclear TIR1/AFB-Aux/IAA signaling and is accompanied by acidification of the apoplast and cell walls (Fendrych et al., 2016). Here, we describe in detail the method for analysis of the elongation and the TIR1/AFB-Aux/IAA-dependent auxin response in hypocotyl segments as well as the determination of relative values of the cell wall pH. AU - Li, Lanxin AU - Krens, Gabriel AU - Fendrych, Matyas AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 442 IS - 1 JF - Bio-protocol TI - Real-time analysis of auxin response, cell wall pH and elongation in Arabidopsis thaliana Hypocotyls VL - 8 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In this review, we summarize the different biosynthesis-related pathways that contribute to the regulation of endogenous auxin in plants. We demonstrate that all known genes involved in auxin biosynthesis also have a role in root formation, from the initiation of a root meristem during embryogenesis to the generation of a functional root system with a primary root, secondary lateral root branches and adventitious roots. Furthermore, the versatile adaptation of root development in response to environmental challenges is mediated by both local and distant control of auxin biosynthesis. In conclusion, auxin homeostasis mediated by spatial and temporal regulation of auxin biosynthesis plays a central role in determining root architecture. AU - Olatunji, Damilola AU - Geelen, Danny AU - Verstraeten, Inge ID - 572 IS - 12 JF - International Journal of Molecular Sciences TI - Control of endogenous auxin levels in plant root development VL - 18 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Plant organs are typically organized into three main tissue layers. The middle ground tissue layer comprises the majority of the plant body and serves a wide range of functions, including photosynthesis, selective nutrient uptake and storage, and gravity sensing. Ground tissue patterning and maintenance in Arabidopsis are controlled by a well-established gene network revolving around the key regulator SHORT-ROOT (SHR). In contrast, it is completely unknown how ground tissue identity is first specified from totipotent precursor cells in the embryo. The plant signaling molecule auxin, acting through AUXIN RESPONSE FACTOR (ARF) transcription factors, is critical for embryo patterning. The auxin effector ARF5/MONOPTEROS (MP) acts both cell-autonomously and noncell-autonomously to control embryonic vascular tissue formation and root initiation, respectively. Here we show that auxin response and ARF activity cell-autonomously control the asymmetric division of the first ground tissue cells. By identifying embryonic target genes, we show that MP transcriptionally initiates the ground tissue lineage and acts upstream of the regulatory network that controls ground tissue patterning and maintenance. Strikingly, whereas the SHR network depends on MP, this MP function is, at least in part, SHR independent. Our study therefore identifies auxin response as a regulator of ground tissue specification in the embryonic root, and reveals that ground tissue initiation and maintenance use different regulators and mechanisms. Moreover, our data provide a framework for the simultaneous formation of multiple cell types by the same transcriptional regulator. AU - Möller, Barbara AU - Ten Hove, Colette AU - Xiang, Daoquan AU - Williams, Nerys AU - López, Lorena AU - Yoshida, Saiko AU - Smit, Margot AU - Datla, Raju AU - Weijers, Dolf ID - 657 IS - 12 JF - PNAS SN - 00278424 TI - Auxin response cell autonomously controls ground tissue initiation in the early arabidopsis embryo VL - 114 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The exocyst, a eukaryotic tethering complex, coregulates targeted exocytosis as an effector of small GTPases in polarized cell growth. In land plants, several exocyst subunits are encoded by double or triple paralogs, culminating in tens of EXO70 paralogs. Out of 23 Arabidopsis thaliana EXO70 isoforms, we analyzed seven isoforms expressed in pollen. Genetic and microscopic analyses of single mutants in EXO70A2, EXO70C1, EXO70C2, EXO70F1, EXO70H3, EXO70H5, and EXO70H6 genes revealed that only a loss-of-function EXO70C2 allele resulted in a significant male-specific transmission defect (segregation 40%:51%:9%) due to aberrant pollen tube growth. Mutant pollen tubes grown in vitro exhibited an enhanced growth rate and a decreased thickness of the tip cell wall, causing tip bursts. However, exo70C2 pollen tubes could frequently recover and restart their speedy elongation, resulting in a repetitive stop-and-go growth dynamics. A pollenspecific depletion of the closest paralog, EXO70C1, using artificial microRNA in the exo70C2 mutant background, resulted in a complete pollen-specific transmission defect, suggesting redundant functions of EXO70C1 and EXO70C2. Both EXO70C1 and EXO70C2, GFP tagged and expressed under the control of their native promoters, localized in the cytoplasm of pollen grains, pollen tubes, and also root trichoblast cells. The expression of EXO70C2-GFP complemented the aberrant growth of exo70C2 pollen tubes. The absent EXO70C2 interactions with core exocyst subunits in the yeast two-hybrid assay, cytoplasmic localization, and genetic effect suggest an unconventional EXO70 function possibly as a regulator of exocytosis outside the exocyst complex. In conclusion, EXO70C2 is a novel factor contributing to the regulation of optimal tip growth of Arabidopsis pollen tubes. AU - Synek, Lukáš AU - Vukašinović, Nemanja AU - Kulich, Ivan AU - Hála, Michal AU - Aldorfová, Klára AU - Fendrych, Matyas AU - Žárský, Viktor ID - 669 IS - 1 JF - Plant Physiology SN - 00320889 TI - EXO70C2 is a key regulatory factor for optimal tip growth of pollen VL - 174 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Plants are sessile organisms rooted in one place. The soil resources that plants require are often distributed in a highly heterogeneous pattern. To aid foraging, plants have evolved roots whose growth and development are highly responsive to soil signals. As a result, 3D root architecture is shaped by myriad environmental signals to ensure resource capture is optimised and unfavourable environments are avoided. The first signals sensed by newly germinating seeds — gravity and light — direct root growth into the soil to aid seedling establishment. Heterogeneous soil resources, such as water, nitrogen and phosphate, also act as signals that shape 3D root growth to optimise uptake. Root architecture is also modified through biotic interactions that include soil fungi and neighbouring plants. This developmental plasticity results in a ‘custom-made’ 3D root system that is best adapted to forage for resources in each soil environment that a plant colonises. AU - Morris, Emily AU - Griffiths, Marcus AU - Golebiowska, Agata AU - Mairhofer, Stefan AU - Burr Hersey, Jasmine AU - Goh, Tatsuaki AU - Von Wangenheim, Daniel AU - Atkinson, Brian AU - Sturrock, Craig AU - Lynch, Jonathan AU - Vissenberg, Kris AU - Ritz, Karl AU - Wells, Darren AU - Mooney, Sacha AU - Bennett, Malcolm ID - 722 IS - 17 JF - Current Biology SN - 09609822 TI - Shaping 3D root system architecture VL - 27 ER - TY - THES AB - The thesis encompasses several topics of plant cell biology which were studied in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. Chapter 1 concerns the plant hormone auxin and its polar transport through cells and tissues. The highly controlled, directional transport of auxin is facilitated by plasma membrane-localized transporters. Transporters from the PIN family direct auxin transport due to their polarized localizations at cell membranes. Substantial effort has been put into research on cellular trafficking of PIN proteins, which is thought to underlie their polar distribution. I participated in a forward genetic screen aimed at identifying novel regulators of PIN polarity. The screen yielded several genes which may be involved in PIN polarity regulation or participate in polar auxin transport by other means. Chapter 2 focuses on the endomembrane system, with particular attention to clathrin-mediated endocytosis. The project started with identification of several proteins that interact with clathrin light chains. Among them, I focused on two putative homologues of auxilin, which in non-plant systems is an endocytotic factor known for uncoating clathrin-coated vesicles in the final step of endocytosis. The body of my work consisted of an in-depth characterization of transgenic A. thaliana lines overexpressing these putative auxilins in an inducible manner. Overexpression of these proteins leads to an inhibition of endocytosis, as documented by imaging of cargoes and clathrin-related endocytic machinery. An extension of this work is an investigation into a concept of homeostatic regulation acting between distinct transport processes in the endomembrane system. With auxilin overexpressing lines, where endocytosis is blocked specifically, I made observations on the mutual relationship between two opposite trafficking processes of secretion and endocytosis. In Chapter 3, I analyze cortical microtubule arrays and their relationship to auxin signaling and polarized growth in elongating cells. In plants, microtubules are organized into arrays just below the plasma membrane, and it is thought that their function is to guide membrane-docked cellulose synthase complexes. These, in turn, influence cell wall structure and cell shape by directed deposition of cellulose fibres. In elongating cells, cortical microtubule arrays are able to reorient in relation to long cell axis, and these reorientations have been linked to cell growth and to signaling of growth-regulating factors such as auxin or light. In this chapter, I am addressing the causal relationship between microtubule array reorientation, growth, and auxin signaling. I arrive at a model where array reorientation is not guided by auxin directly, but instead is only controlled by growth, which, in turn, is regulated by auxin. AU - Adamowski, Maciek ID - 938 SN - 2663-337X TI - Investigations into cell polarity and trafficking in the plant model Arabidopsis thaliana ER - TY - THES AB - Plant hormone auxin and its transport between cells belong to the most important mechanisms controlling plant development. Auxin itself could change localization of PINs and thereby control direction of its own flow. We performed an expression profiling experiment in Arabidopsis roots to identify potential regulators of PIN polarity which are transcriptionally regulated by auxin signalling. We identified several novel regulators and performed a detailed characterization of the transcription factor WRKY23 (At2g47260) and its role in auxin feedback on PIN polarity. Gain-of-function and dominant-negative mutants revealed that WRKY23 plays a crucial role in mediating the auxin effect on PIN polarity. In concordance, typical polar auxin transport processes such as gravitropism and leaf vascular pattern formation were disturbed by interfering with WRKY23 function. In order to identify direct targets of WRKY23, we performed consequential expression profiling experiments using a WRKY23 inducible gain-of-function line and dominant-negative WRKY23 line that is defunct in PIN re-arrangement. Among several genes mostly related to the groups of cell wall and defense process regulators, we identified LYSINE-HISTIDINE TRANSPORTER 1 (LHT1; At5g40780), a small amino acid permease gene from the amino acid/auxin permease family (AAAP), we present its detailed characterisation in auxin feedback on PIN repolarization, identified its transcriptional regulation, we propose a potential mechanism of its action. Moreover, we identified also a member of receptor-like protein kinase LRR-RLK (LEUCINE-RICH REPEAT TRANSMEMBRANE PROTEIN KINASE PROTEIN 1; LRRK1; At1g05700), which also affects auxin-dependent PIN re-arrangement. We described its transcriptional behaviour, subcellular localization. Based on global expression data, we tried to identify ligand responsible for mechanism of signalling and suggest signalling partner and interactors. Additionally, we described role of novel phytohormone group, strigolactone, in auxin-dependent PIN re-arrangement, that could be a fundament for future studies in this field. Our results provide first insights into an auxin transcriptional network targeting PIN localization and thus regulating plant development. We highlighted WRKY23 transcriptional network and characterised its mediatory role in plant development. We identified direct effectors of this network, LHT1 and LRRK1, and describe their roles in PIN re-arrangement and PIN-dependent auxin transport processes. AU - Prat, Tomas ID - 1127 SN - 2663-337X TI - Identification of novel regulators of PIN polarity and development of novel auxin sensor ER - TY - JOUR AB - Auxin steers numerous physiological processes in plants, making the tight control of its endogenous levels and spatiotemporal distribution a necessity. This regulation is achieved by different mechanisms, including auxin biosynthesis, metabolic conversions, degradation, and transport. Here, we introduce cis-cinnamic acid (c-CA) as a novel and unique addition to a small group of endogenous molecules affecting in planta auxin concentrations. c-CA is the photo-isomerization product of the phenylpropanoid pathway intermediate trans-CA (t-CA). When grown on c-CA-containing medium, an evolutionary diverse set of plant species were shown to exhibit phenotypes characteristic for high auxin levels, including inhibition of primary root growth, induction of root hairs, and promotion of adventitious and lateral rooting. By molecular docking and receptor binding assays, we showed that c-CA itself is neither an auxin nor an anti-auxin, and auxin profiling data revealed that c-CA does not significantly interfere with auxin biosynthesis. Single cell-based auxin accumulation assays showed that c-CA, and not t-CA, is a potent inhibitor of auxin efflux. Auxin signaling reporters detected changes in spatiotemporal distribution of the auxin response along the root of c-CA-treated plants, and long-distance auxin transport assays showed no inhibition of rootward auxin transport. Overall, these results suggest that the phenotypes of c-CA-treated plants are the consequence of a local change in auxin accumulation, induced by the inhibition of auxin efflux. This work reveals a novel mechanism how plants may regulate auxin levels and adds a novel, naturally occurring molecule to the chemical toolbox for the studies of auxin homeostasis. AU - Steenackers, Ward AU - Klíma, Petr AU - Quareshy, Mussa AU - Cesarino, Igor AU - Kumpf, Robert AU - Corneillie, Sander AU - Araújo, Pedro AU - Viaene, Tom AU - Goeminne, Geert AU - Nowack, Moritz AU - Ljung, Karin AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Blakeslee, Joshua AU - Novák, Ondřej AU - Zažímalová, Eva AU - Napier, Richard AU - Boerjan, Wout AU - Vanholme, Bartel ID - 1159 IS - 1 JF - Plant Physiology SN - 0032-0889 TI - Cis-cinnamic acid is a novel natural auxin efflux inhibitor that promotes lateral root formation VL - 173 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The phytohormone auxin is a major determinant and regulatory component important for plant development. Auxin transport between cells is mediated by a complex system of transporters such as AUX1/LAX, PIN, and ABCB proteins, and their localization and activity is thought to be influenced by phosphatases and kinases. Flavonols have been shown to alter auxin transport activity and changes in flavonol accumulation in the Arabidopsis thaliana rol1-2 mutant cause defects in auxin transport and seedling development. A new mutation in ROOTS CURL IN NPA 1 (RCN1), encoding a regulatory subunit of the phosphatase PP2A, was found to suppress the growth defects of rol1-2 without changing the flavonol content. rol1-2 rcn1-3 double mutants show wild type-like auxin transport activity while levels of free auxin are not affected by rcn1-3. In the rol1-2 mutant, PIN2 shows a flavonol-induced basal-to-apical shift in polar localization which is reversed in the rol1-2 rcn1-3 to basal localization. In vivo analysis of PINOID action, a kinase known to influence PIN protein localization in a PP2A-antagonistic manner, revealed a negative impact of flavonols on PINOID activity. Together, these data suggest that flavonols affect auxin transport by modifying the antagonistic kinase/phosphatase equilibrium. AU - Kuhn, Benjamin AU - Nodzyński, Tomasz AU - Errafi, Sanae AU - Bucher, Rahel AU - Gupta, Shibu AU - Aryal, Bibek AU - Dobrev, Petre AU - Bigler, Laurent AU - Geisler, Markus AU - Zažímalová, Eva AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Ringli, Christoph ID - 1110 JF - Scientific Reports SN - 20452322 TI - Flavonol-induced changes in PIN2 polarity and auxin transport in the Arabidopsis thaliana rol1-2 mutant require phosphatase activity VL - 7 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Membrane traffic at the trans-Golgi network (TGN) is crucial for correctly distributing various membrane proteins to their destination. Polarly localized auxin efflux proteins, including PIN-FORMED1 (PIN1), are dynamically transported between the endosomes and the plasma membrane (PM) in the plant cells. The intracellular trafficking of PIN1 protein is sensitive to a fungal toxin brefeldin A (BFA), which is known to inhibit guanine-nucleotide exchange factors for ADP ribosylation factors (ARF GEFs) such as GNOM. However, the molecular details of the BFA-sensitive trafficking pathway have not been revealed fully. In a previous study, we have identified an Arabidopsis mutant BFA-visualized endocytic trafficking defective 3 (ben3) which exhibited reduced sensitivity to BFA in terms of BFA-induced intracellular PIN1 agglomeration. Here, we show that BEN3 encodes a member of BIG family ARF GEFs, BIG2. Fluorescent proteins tagged BEN3/BIG2 co-localized with markers for TGN / early endosome (EE). Inspection of conditionally induced de novo synthesized PIN1 confirmed that its secretion to the PM is BFA-sensitive and established BEN3/BIG2 as a crucial component of this BFA action at the level of TGN/EE. Furthermore, ben3 mutation alleviated BFA-induced agglomeration of another TGN-localized ARF GEF BEN1/MIN7. Taken together our results suggest that BEN3/BIG2 is an ARF GEF component, which confers BFA sensitivity to the TGN/EE in Arabidopsis. AU - Kitakura, Saeko AU - Adamowski, Maciek AU - Matsuura, Yuki AU - Santuari, Luca AU - Kouno, Hirotaka AU - Arima, Kohei AU - Hardtke, Christian AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Kakimoto, Tatsuo AU - Tanaka, Hirokazu ID - 799 IS - 10 JF - Plant and Cell Physiology SN - 00320781 TI - BEN3/BIG2 ARF GEF is involved in brefeldin a-sensitive trafficking at the trans-Golgi network/early endosome in Arabidopsis thaliana VL - 58 ER - TY - CHAP AB - Development of vascular tissue is a remarkable example of intercellular communication and coordinated development involving hormonal signaling and tissue polarity. Thus far, studies on vascular patterning and regeneration have been conducted mainly in trees—woody plants—with a well-developed layer of vascular cambium and secondary tissues. Trees are difficult to use as genetic models, i.e., due to long generation time, unstable environmental conditions, and lack of available mutants and transgenic lines. Therefore, the use of the main genetic model plant Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh., with a wealth of available marker and transgenic lines, provides a unique opportunity to address molecular mechanism of vascular tissue formation and regeneration. With specific treatments, the tiny weed Arabidopsis can serve as a model to understand the growth of mighty trees and interconnect a tree physiology with molecular genetics and cell biology of Arabidopsis. AU - Mazur, Ewa AU - Friml, Jirí ED - Jurić, Snježana ID - 545 T2 - Plant Engineering TI - Vascular tissue development and regeneration in the model plant arabidopsis ER - TY - JOUR AB - Roots navigate through soil integrating environmental signals to orient their growth. The Arabidopsis root is a widely used model for developmental, physiological and cell biological studies. Live imaging greatly aids these efforts, but the horizontal sample position and continuous root tip displacement present significant difficulties. Here, we develop a confocal microscope setup for vertical sample mounting and integrated directional illumination. We present TipTracker – a custom software for automatic tracking of diverse moving objects usable on various microscope setups. Combined, this enables observation of root tips growing along the natural gravity vector over prolonged periods of time, as well as the ability to induce rapid gravity or light stimulation. We also track migrating cells in the developing zebrafish embryo, demonstrating the utility of this system in the acquisition of high-resolution data sets of dynamic samples. We provide detailed descriptions of the tools enabling the easy implementation on other microscopes. AU - Von Wangenheim, Daniel AU - Hauschild, Robert AU - Fendrych, Matyas AU - Barone, Vanessa AU - Benková, Eva AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 946 JF - eLife TI - Live tracking of moving samples in confocal microscopy for vertically grown roots VL - 6 ER - TY - JOUR AB - One of the key questions in understanding plant development is how single cells behave in a larger context of the tissue. Therefore, it requires the observation of the whole organ with a high spatial- as well as temporal resolution over prolonged periods of time, which may cause photo-toxic effects. This protocol shows a plant sample preparation method for light-sheet microscopy, which is characterized by mounting the plant vertically on the surface of a gel. The plant is mounted in such a way that the roots are submerged in a liquid medium while the leaves remain in the air. In order to ensure photosynthetic activity of the plant, a custom-made lighting system illuminates the leaves. To keep the roots in darkness the water surface is covered with sheets of black plastic foil. This method allows long-term imaging of plant organ development in standardized conditions. AU - Von Wangenheim, Daniel AU - Hauschild, Robert AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 1078 IS - 119 JF - Journal of visualized experiments JoVE TI - Light sheet fluorescence microscopy of plant roots growing on the surface of a gel VL - 2017 ER - TY - DATA AB - One of the key questions in understanding plant development is how single cells behave in a larger context of the tissue. Therefore, it requires the observation of the whole organ with a high spatial- as well as temporal resolution over prolonged periods of time, which may cause photo-toxic effects. This protocol shows a plant sample preparation method for light-sheet microscopy, which is characterized by mounting the plant vertically on the surface of a gel. The plant is mounted in such a way that the roots are submerged in a liquid medium while the leaves remain in the air. In order to ensure photosynthetic activity of the plant, a custom-made lighting system illuminates the leaves. To keep the roots in darkness the water surface is covered with sheets of black plastic foil. This method allows long-term imaging of plant organ development in standardized conditions. The Video is licensed under a CC BY NC ND license. AU - Von Wangenheim, Daniel AU - Hauschild, Robert AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 5565 TI - Light Sheet Fluorescence microscopy of plant roots growing on the surface of a gel ER - TY - JOUR AB - The asymmetric localization of proteins in the plasma membrane domains of eukaryotic cells is a fundamental manifestation of cell polarity that is central to multicellular organization and developmental patterning. In plants, the mechanisms underlying the polar localization of cargo proteins are still largely unknown and appear to be fundamentally distinct from those operating in mammals. Here, we present a systematic, quantitative comparative analysis of the polar delivery and subcellular localization of proteins that characterize distinct polar plasma membrane domains in plant cells. The combination of microscopic analyses and computational modeling revealed a mechanistic framework common to diverse polar cargos and underlying the establishment and maintenance of apical, basal, and lateral polar domains in plant cells. This mechanism depends on the polar secretion, constitutive endocytic recycling, and restricted lateral diffusion of cargos within the plasma membrane. Moreover, our observations suggest that polar cargo distribution involves the individual protein potential to form clusters within the plasma membrane and interact with the extracellular matrix. Our observations provide insights into the shared cellular mechanisms of polar cargo delivery and polarity maintenance in plant cells. AU - Łangowski, Łukasz AU - Wabnik, Krzysztof T AU - Li, Hongjiang AU - Vanneste, Steffen AU - Naramoto, Satoshi AU - Tanaka, Hirokazu AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 1081 JF - Cell Discovery TI - Cellular mechanisms for cargo delivery and polarity maintenance at different polar domains in plant cells VL - 2 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Auxin directs plant ontogenesis via differential accumulation within tissues depending largely on the activity of PIN proteins that mediate auxin efflux from cells and its directional cell-to-cell transport. Regardless of the developmental importance of PINs, the structure of these transporters is poorly characterized. Here, we present experimental data concerning protein topology of plasma membrane-localized PINs. Utilizing approaches based on pH-dependent quenching of fluorescent reporters combined with immunolocalization techniques, we mapped the membrane topology of PINs and further cross-validated our results using available topology modeling software. We delineated the topology of PIN1 with two transmembrane (TM) bundles of five α-helices linked by a large intracellular loop and a C-terminus positioned outside the cytoplasm. Using constraints derived from our experimental data, we also provide an updated position of helical regions generating a verisimilitude model of PIN1. Since the canonical long PINs show a high degree of conservation in TM domains and auxin transport capacity has been demonstrated for Arabidopsis representatives of this group, this empirically enhanced topological model of PIN1 will be an important starting point for further studies on PIN structure–function relationships. In addition, we have established protocols that can be used to probe the topology of other plasma membrane proteins in plants. © 2016 The Authors AU - Nodzyński, Tomasz AU - Vanneste, Steffen AU - Zwiewka, Marta AU - Pernisová, Markéta AU - Hejátko, Jan AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 1145 IS - 11 JF - Molecular Plant TI - Enquiry into the topology of plasma membrane localized PIN auxin transport components VL - 9 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Apical dominance is one of the fundamental developmental phenomena in plant biology, which determines the overall architecture of aerial plant parts. Here we show apex decapitation activated competition for dominance in adjacent upper and lower axillary buds. A two-nodal-bud pea (Pisum sativum L.) was used as a model system to monitor and assess auxin flow, auxin transport channels, and dormancy and initiation status of axillary buds. Auxin flow was manipulated by lateral stem wounds or chemically by auxin efflux inhibitors 2,3,5-triiodobenzoic acid (TIBA), 1-N-naphtylphtalamic acid (NPA), or protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide (CHX) treatments, which served to interfere with axillary bud competition. Redirecting auxin flow to different points influenced which bud formed the outgrowing and dominant shoot. The obtained results proved that competition between upper and lower axillary buds as secondary auxin sources is based on the same auxin canalization principle that operates between the shoot apex and axillary bud. © The Author(s) 2016. AU - Balla, Jozef AU - Medved'Ová, Zuzana AU - Kalousek, Petr AU - Matiješčuková, Natálie AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Reinöhl, Vilém AU - Procházka, Stanislav ID - 1147 JF - Scientific Reports TI - Auxin flow mediated competition between axillary buds to restore apical dominance VL - 6 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Tissue patterning in multicellular organisms is the output of precise spatio–temporal regulation of gene expression coupled with changes in hormone dynamics. In plants, the hormone auxin regulates growth and development at every stage of a plant’s life cycle. Auxin signaling occurs through binding of the auxin molecule to a TIR1/AFB F-box ubiquitin ligase, allowing interaction with Aux/IAA transcriptional repressor proteins. These are subsequently ubiquitinated and degraded via the 26S proteasome, leading to derepression of auxin response factors (ARFs). How auxin is able to elicit such a diverse range of developmental responses through a single signaling module has not yet been resolved. Here we present an alternative auxin-sensing mechanism in which the ARF ARF3/ETTIN controls gene expression through interactions with process-specific transcription factors. This noncanonical hormonesensing mechanism exhibits strong preference for the naturally occurring auxin indole 3-acetic acid (IAA) and is important for coordinating growth and patterning in diverse developmental contexts such as gynoecium morphogenesis, lateral root emergence, ovule development, and primary branch formation. Disrupting this IAA-sensing ability induces morphological aberrations with consequences for plant fitness. Therefore, our findings introduce a novel transcription factor-based mechanism of hormone perception in plants. © 2016 Simonini et al. AU - Simonini, Sara AU - Deb, Joyita AU - Moubayidin, Laila AU - Stephenson, Pauline AU - Valluru, Manoj AU - Freire Rios, Alejandra AU - Sorefan, Karim AU - Weijers, Dolf AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Östergaard, Lars ID - 1151 IS - 20 JF - Genes and Development TI - A noncanonical auxin sensing mechanism is required for organ morphogenesis in arabidopsis VL - 30 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Differential cell growth enables flexible organ bending in the presence of environmental signals such as light or gravity. A prominent example of the developmental processes based on differential cell growth is the formation of the apical hook that protects the fragile shoot apical meristem when it breaks through the soil during germination. Here, we combined in silico and in vivo approaches to identify a minimal mechanism producing auxin gradient-guided differential growth during the establishment of the apical hook in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. Computer simulation models based on experimental data demonstrate that asymmetric expression of the PIN-FORMED auxin efflux carrier at the concave (inner) versus convex (outer) side of the hook suffices to establish an auxin maximum in the epidermis at the concave side of the apical hook. Furthermore, we propose a mechanism that translates this maximum into differential growth, and thus curvature, of the apical hook. Through a combination of experimental and in silico computational approaches, we have identified the individual contributions of differential cell elongation and proliferation to defining the apical hook and reveal the role of auxin-ethylene crosstalk in balancing these two processes. © 2016 American Society of Plant Biologists. All rights reserved. AU - Žádníková, Petra AU - Wabnik, Krzysztof T AU - Abuzeineh, Anas AU - Gallemí, Marçal AU - Van Der Straeten, Dominique AU - Smith, Richard AU - Inze, Dirk AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Prusinkiewicz, Przemysław AU - Benková, Eva ID - 1153 IS - 10 JF - Plant Cell TI - A model of differential growth guided apical hook formation in plants VL - 28 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Plants adjust their growth according to gravity. Gravitropism involves gravity perception, signal transduction, and asymmetric growth response, with organ bending as a consequence [1]. Asymmetric growth results from the asymmetric distribution of the plant-specific signaling molecule auxin [2] that is generated by lateral transport, mediated in the hypocotyl predominantly by the auxin transporter PIN-FORMED3 (PIN3) [3–5]. Gravity stimulation polarizes PIN3 to the bottom sides of endodermal cells, correlating with increased auxin accumulation in adjacent tissues at the lower side of the stimulated organ, where auxin induces cell elongation and, hence, organ bending. A curvature response allows the hypocotyl to resume straight growth at a defined angle [6], implying that at some point auxin symmetry is restored to prevent overbending. Here, we present initial insights into cellular and molecular mechanisms that lead to the termination of the tropic response. We identified an auxin feedback on PIN3 polarization as underlying mechanism that restores symmetry of the PIN3-dependent auxin flow. Thus, two mechanistically distinct PIN3 polarization events redirect auxin fluxes at different time points of the gravity response: first, gravity-mediated redirection of PIN3-mediated auxin flow toward the lower hypocotyl side, where auxin gradually accumulates and promotes growth, and later PIN3 polarization to the opposite cell side, depleting this auxin maximum to end the bending. Accordingly, genetic or pharmacological interference with the late PIN3 polarization prevents termination of the response and leads to hypocotyl overbending. This observation reveals a role of auxin feedback on PIN polarity in the termination of the tropic response. © 2016 Elsevier Ltd AU - Rakusová, Hana AU - Abbas, Mohamad AU - Han, Huibin AU - Song, Siyuan AU - Robert, Hélène AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 1212 IS - 22 JF - Current Biology TI - Termination of shoot gravitropic responses by auxin feedback on PIN3 polarity VL - 26 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The Auxin Binding Protein 1 (ABP1) is one of the most studied proteins in plants. Since decades ago, it has been the prime receptor candidate for the plant hormone auxin with a plethora of described functions in auxin signaling and development. The developmental importance of ABP1 has recently been questioned by identification of Arabidopsis thaliana abp1 knock-out alleles that show no obvious phenotypes under normal growth conditions. In this study, we examined the contradiction between the normal growth and development of the abp1 knock-outs and the strong morphological defects observed in three different ethanol-inducible abp1 knock-down mutants ( abp1-AS, SS12K, SS12S). By analyzing segregating populations of abp1 knock-out vs. abp1 knock-down crosses we show that the strong morphological defects that were believed to be the result of conditional down-regulation of ABP1 can be reproduced also in the absence of the functional ABP1 protein. This data suggests that the phenotypes in abp1 knock-down lines are due to the off-target effects and asks for further reflections on the biological function of ABP1 or alternative explanations for the missing phenotypic defects in the abp1 loss-of-function alleles. AU - Michalko, Jaroslav AU - Glanc, Matous AU - Perrot Rechenmann, Catherine AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 1221 JF - F1000 Research TI - Strong morphological defects in conditional Arabidopsis abp1 knock-down mutants generated in absence of functional ABP1 protein VL - 5 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The dynamic localization of endosomal compartments labeled with targeted fluorescent protein tags is routinely followed by time lapse fluorescence microscopy approaches and single particle tracking algorithms. In this way trajectories of individual endosomes can be mapped and linked to physiological processes as cell growth. However, other aspects of dynamic behavior including endosomal interactions are difficult to follow in this manner. Therefore, we characterized the localization and dynamic properties of early and late endosomes throughout the entire course of root hair formation by means of spinning disc time lapse imaging and post-acquisition automated multitracking and quantitative analysis. Our results show differential motile behavior of early and late endosomes and interactions of late endosomes that may be specified to particular root hair domains. Detailed data analysis revealed a particular transient interaction between late endosomes—termed herein as dancing-endosomes—which is not concluding to vesicular fusion. Endosomes preferentially located in the root hair tip interacted as dancing-endosomes and traveled short distances during this interaction. Finally, sizes of early and late endosomes were addressed by means of super-resolution structured illumination microscopy (SIM) to corroborate measurements on the spinning disc. This is a first study providing quantitative microscopic data on dynamic spatio-temporal interactions of endosomes during root hair tip growth. AU - Von Wangenheim, Daniel AU - Rosero, Amparo AU - Komis, George AU - Šamajová, Olga AU - Ovečka, Miroslav AU - Voigt, Boris AU - Šamaj, Jozef ID - 1238 IS - JAN2016 JF - Frontiers in Plant Science TI - Endosomal interactions during root hair growth VL - 6 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The shaping of organs in plants depends on the intercellular flow of the phytohormone auxin, of which the directional signaling is determined by the polar subcellular localization of PIN-FORMED (PIN) auxin transport proteins. Phosphorylation dynamics of PIN proteins are affected by the protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) and the PINOID kinase, which act antagonistically to mediate their apical-basal polar delivery. Here, we identified the ROTUNDA3 (RON3) protein as a regulator of the PP2A phosphatase activity in Arabidopsis thaliana. The RON3 gene was map-based cloned starting from the ron3-1 leaf mutant and found to be a unique, plant-specific gene coding for a protein with high and dispersed proline content. The ron3-1 and ron3-2 mutant phenotypes [i.e., reduced apical dominance, primary root length, lateral root emergence, and growth; increased ectopic stages II, IV, and V lateral root primordia; decreased auxin maxima in indole-3-acetic acid (IAA)-treated root apical meristems; hypergravitropic root growth and response; increased IAA levels in shoot apices; and reduced auxin accumulation in root meristems] support a role for RON3 in auxin biology. The affinity-purified PP2A complex with RON3 as bait suggested that RON3 might act in PIN transporter trafficking. Indeed, pharmacological interference with vesicle trafficking processes revealed that single ron3-2 and double ron3-2 rcn1 mutants have altered PIN polarity and endocytosis in specific cells. Our data indicate that RON3 contributes to auxin-mediated development by playing a role in PIN recycling and polarity establishment through regulation of the PP2A complex activity. AU - Karampelias, Michael AU - Neyt, Pia AU - De Groeve, Steven AU - Aesaert, Stijn AU - Coussens, Griet AU - Rolčík, Jakub AU - Bruno, Leonardo AU - De Winne, Nancy AU - Van Minnebruggen, Annemie AU - Van Montagu, Marc AU - Ponce, Maria AU - Micol, José AU - Friml, Jirí AU - De Jaeger, Geert AU - Van Lijsebettens, Mieke ID - 1247 IS - 10 JF - PNAS TI - ROTUNDA3 function in plant development by phosphatase 2A-mediated regulation of auxin transporter recycling VL - 113 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Plant growth and architecture is regulated by the polar distribution of the hormone auxin. Polarity and flexibility of this process is provided by constant cycling of auxin transporter vesicles along actin filaments, coordinated by a positive auxinactin feedback loop. Both polar auxin transport and vesicle cycling are inhibited by synthetic auxin transport inhibitors, such as 1-Nnaphthylphthalamic acid (NPA), counteracting the effect of auxin; however, underlying targets and mechanisms are unclear. Using NMR, we map the NPA binding surface on the Arabidopsis thaliana ABCB chaperone TWISTED DWARF1 (TWD1).We identify ACTIN7 as a relevant, although likely indirect, TWD1 interactor, and show TWD1-dependent regulation of actin filament organization and dynamics and that TWD1 is required for NPA-mediated actin cytoskeleton remodeling. The TWD1-ACTIN7 axis controls plasma membrane presence of efflux transporters, and as a consequence act7 and twd1 share developmental and physiological phenotypes indicative of defects in auxin transport. These can be phenocopied by NPA treatment or by chemical actin (de)stabilization. We provide evidence that TWD1 determines downstreamlocations of auxin efflux transporters by adjusting actin filament debundling and dynamizing processes and mediating NPA action on the latter. This function appears to be evolutionary conserved since TWD1 expression in budding yeast alters actin polarization and cell polarity and provides NPA sensitivity. AU - Zhu, Jinsheng AU - Bailly, Aurélien AU - Zwiewka, Marta AU - Sovero, Valpuri AU - Di Donato, Martin AU - Ge, Pei AU - Oehri, Jacqueline AU - Aryal, Bibek AU - Hao, Pengchao AU - Linnert, Miriam AU - Burgardt, Noelia AU - Lücke, Christian AU - Weiwad, Matthias AU - Michel, Max AU - Weiergräber, Oliver AU - Pollmann, Stephan AU - Azzarello, Elisa AU - Mancuso, Stefano AU - Ferro, Noel AU - Fukao, Yoichiro AU - Hoffmann, Céline AU - Wedlich Söldner, Roland AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Thomas, Clément AU - Geisler, Markus ID - 1251 IS - 4 JF - Plant Cell TI - TWISTED DWARF1 mediates the action of auxin transport inhibitors on actin cytoskeleton dynamics VL - 28 ER - TY - JOUR AB - n contrast with the wealth of recent reports about the function of μ-adaptins and clathrin adaptor protein (AP) complexes, there is very little information about the motifs that determine the sorting of membrane proteins within clathrin-coated vesicles in plants. Here, we investigated putative sorting signals in the large cytosolic loop of the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) PIN-FORMED1 (PIN1) auxin transporter, which are involved in binding μ-adaptins and thus in PIN1 trafficking and localization. We found that Phe-165 and Tyr-280, Tyr-328, and Tyr-394 are involved in the binding of different μ-adaptins in vitro. However, only Phe-165, which binds μA(μ2)- and μD(μ3)-adaptin, was found to be essential for PIN1 trafficking and localization in vivo. The PIN1:GFP-F165A mutant showed reduced endocytosis but also localized to intracellular structures containing several layers of membranes and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) markers, suggesting that they correspond to ER or ER-derived membranes. While PIN1:GFP localized normally in a μA (μ2)-adaptin mutant, it accumulated in big intracellular structures containing LysoTracker in a μD (μ3)-adaptin mutant, consistent with previous results obtained with mutants of other subunits of the AP-3 complex. Our data suggest that Phe-165, through the binding of μA (μ2)- and μD (μ3)-adaptin, is important for PIN1 endocytosis and for PIN1 trafficking along the secretory pathway, respectively. AU - Sancho Andrés, Gloria AU - Soriano Ortega, Esther AU - Gao, Caiji AU - Bernabé Orts, Joan AU - Narasimhan, Madhumitha AU - Müller, Anna AU - Tejos, Ricardo AU - Jiang, Liwen AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Aniento, Fernando AU - Marcote, Maria ID - 1264 IS - 3 JF - Plant Physiology TI - Sorting motifs involved in the trafficking and localization of the PIN1 auxin efflux carrier VL - 171 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The Arabidopsis thaliana endogenous elicitor peptides (AtPeps) are released into the apoplast after cellular damage caused by pathogens or wounding to induce innate immunity by direct binding to the membrane-localized leucine-rich repeat receptor kinases, PEP RECEPTOR1 (PEPR1) and PEPR2. Although the PEPR-mediated signaling components and responses have been studied extensively, the contributions of the subcellular localization and dynamics of the active PEPRs remain largely unknown. We used live-cell imaging of the fluorescently labeled and bioactive pep1 to visualize the intracellular behavior of the PEPRs in the Arabidopsis root meristem. We found that AtPep1 decorated the plasma membrane (PM) in a receptor-dependent manner and cointernalized with PEPRs. Trafficking of the AtPep1-PEPR1 complexes to the vacuole required neither the trans-Golgi network/early endosome (TGN/EE)-localized vacuolar H+ -ATPase activity nor the function of the brefeldin A-sensitive ADP-ribosylation factor-guanine exchange factors (ARF-GEFs). In addition, AtPep1 and different TGN/EE markers colocalized only rarely, implying that the intracellular route of this receptor-ligand pair is largely independent of the TGN/EE. Inducible overexpression of the Arabidopsis clathrin coat disassembly factor, Auxilin2, which inhibits clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME), impaired the AtPep1-PEPR1 internalization and compromised AtPep1-mediated responses. Our results show that clathrin function at the PM is required to induce plant defense responses, likely through CME of cell surface-located signaling components. AU - Ortiz Morea, Fausto AU - Savatin, Daniel AU - Dejonghe, Wim AU - Kumar, Rahul AU - Luo, Yu AU - Adamowski, Maciek AU - Van Begin, Jos AU - Dressano, Keini AU - De Oliveira, Guilherme AU - Zhao, Xiuyang AU - Lu, Qing AU - Madder, Annemieke AU - Friml, Jirí AU - De Moura, Daniel AU - Russinova, Eugenia ID - 1277 IS - 39 JF - PNAS TI - Danger-associated peptide signaling in Arabidopsis requires clathrin VL - 113 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Despite being composed of immobile cells, plants reorient along directional stimuli. The hormone auxin is redistributed in stimulated organs leading to differential growth and bending. Auxin application triggers rapid cell wall acidification and elongation of aerial organs of plants, but the molecular players mediating these effects are still controversial. Here we use genetically-encoded pH and auxin signaling sensors, pharmacological and genetic manipulations available for Arabidopsis etiolated hypocotyls to clarify how auxin is perceived and the downstream growth executed. We show that auxin-induced acidification occurs by local activation of H+-ATPases, which in the context of gravity response is restricted to the lower organ side. This auxin-stimulated acidification and growth require TIR1/AFB-Aux/IAA nuclear auxin perception. In addition, auxin-induced gene transcription and specifically SAUR proteins are crucial downstream mediators of this growth. Our study provides strong experimental support for the acid growth theory and clarified the contribution of the upstream auxin perception mechanisms. AU - Fendrych, Matyas AU - Leung, Jeffrey AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 1344 JF - eLife TI - TIR1 AFB Aux IAA auxin perception mediates rapid cell wall acidification and growth of Arabidopsis hypocotyls VL - 5 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The electrostatic charge at the inner surface of the plasma membrane is strongly negative in higher organisms. A new study shows that phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate plays a critical role in establishing plasma membrane surface charge in Arabidopsis, which regulates the correct localization of signalling components. AU - Molnar, Gergely AU - Fendrych, Matyas AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 1345 JF - Nature Plants TI - Plasma membrane: Negative attraction VL - 2 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Redirection of intercellular auxin fluxes via relocalization of the PIN-FORMED 3 (PIN3) and PIN7 auxin efflux carriers has been suggested to be necessary for the root gravitropic response. Cytokinins have also been proposed to play a role in controlling root gravitropism, but conclusive evidence is lacking. We present a detailed study of the dynamics of root bending early after gravistimulation, which revealed a delayed gravitropic response in transgenic lines with depleted endogenous cytokinins (Pro35S:AtCKX) and cytokinin signaling mutants. Pro35S:AtCKX lines, as well as a cytokinin receptor mutant ahk3, showed aberrations in the auxin response distribution in columella cells consistent with defects in the auxin transport machinery. Using in vivo real-time imaging of PIN3-GFP and PIN7-GFP in AtCKX3 overexpression and ahk3 backgrounds, we observed wild-type-like relocalization of PIN proteins in the columella early after gravistimulation, with gravity-induced relocalization of PIN7 faster than that of PIN3. Nonetheless, the cellular distribution of PIN3 and PIN7 and expression of PIN7 and the auxin influx carrier AUX1 was affected in AtCKX overexpression lines. Based on the retained cytokinin sensitivity in pin3 pin4 pin7 mutant, we propose the AUX1-mediated auxin transport rather than columella-located PIN proteins as a target of endogenous cytokinins in the control of root gravitropism. AU - Pernisová, Markéta AU - Prat, Tomas AU - Grones, Peter AU - Haruštiaková, Danka AU - Matonohova, Martina AU - Spíchal, Lukáš AU - Nodzyński, Tomasz AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Hejátko, Jan ID - 1372 IS - 2 JF - New Phytologist TI - Cytokinins influence root gravitropism via differential regulation of auxin transporter expression and localization in Arabidopsis VL - 212 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The pollen grains arise after meiosis of pollen mother cells within the anthers. A series of complex structural changes follows, generating mature pollen grains capable of performing the double fertilization of the female megasporophyte. Several signaling molecules, including hormones and lipids, have been involved in the regulation and appropriate control of pollen development. Phosphatidylinositol 4-phophate 5-kinases (PIP5K), which catalyze the biosynthesis of the phosphoinositide PtdIns(4,5)P2, are important for tip polar growth of root hairs and pollen tubes, embryo development, vegetative plant growth, and responses to the environment. Here, we report a role of PIP5Ks during microgametogenesis. PIP5K1 and PIP5K2 are expressed during early stages of pollen development and their transcriptional activity respond to auxin in pollen grains. Early male gametophytic lethality to certain grade was observed in both pip5k1-/- and pip5k2-/- single mutants. The number of pip5k mutant alleles is directly related to the frequency of aborted pollen grains suggesting the two genes are involved in the same function. Indeed PIP5K1 and PIP5K2 are functionally redundant since homozygous double mutants did not render viable pollen grains. The loss of function of PIP5K1 and PIP5K2results in defects in vacuole morphology in pollen at the later stages and epidermal root cells. Our results show that PIP5K1, PIP5K2 and phosphoinositide signaling are important cues for early developmental stages and vacuole formation during microgametogenesis. AU - Ugalde, José AU - Rodríguez Furlán, Cecilia AU - De Rycke, Riet AU - Norambuena, Lorena AU - Friml, Jirí AU - León, Gabriel AU - Tejos, Ricardo ID - 1410 JF - Plant Science TI - Phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate 5-kinases 1 and 2 are involved in the regulation of vacuole morphology during Arabidopsis thaliana pollen development VL - 250 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Plant development mediated by the phytohormone auxin depends on tightly controlled cellular auxin levels at its target tissue that are largely established by intercellular and intracellular auxin transport mediated by PIN auxin transporters. Among the eight members of the Arabidopsis PIN family, PIN6 is the least characterized candidate. In this study we generated functional, fluorescent protein-tagged PIN6 proteins and performed comprehensive analysis of their subcellular localization and also performed a detailed functional characterization of PIN6 and its developmental roles. The localization study of PIN6 revealed a dual localization at the plasma membrane (PM) and endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Transport and metabolic profiling assays in cultured cells and Arabidopsis strongly suggest that PIN6 mediates both auxin transport across the PM and intracellular auxin homeostasis, including the regulation of free auxin and auxin conjugates levels. As evidenced by the loss- and gain-of-function analysis, the complex function of PIN6 in auxin transport and homeostasis is required for auxin distribution during lateral and adventitious root organogenesis and for progression of these developmental processes. These results illustrate a unique position of PIN6 within the family of PIN auxin transporters and further add complexity to the developmentally crucial process of auxin transport. AU - Simon, Sibu AU - Skůpa, Petr AU - Viaene, Tom AU - Zwiewka, Marta AU - Tejos, Ricardo AU - Klíma, Petr AU - Čarná, Mária AU - Rolčík, Jakub AU - De Rycke, Riet AU - Moreno, Ignacio AU - Dobrev, Petre AU - Orellana, Ariel AU - Zažímalová, Eva AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 1417 IS - 1 JF - New Phytologist TI - PIN6 auxin transporter at endoplasmic reticulum and plasma membrane mediates auxin homeostasis and organogenesis in Arabidopsis VL - 211 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Plants have the ability to continously generate new organs by maintaining populations of stem cells throught their lives. The shoot apical meristem (SAM) provides a stable environment for the maintenance of stem cells. All cells inside the SAM divide, yet boundaries and patterns are maintained. Experimental evidence indicates that patterning is independent of cell lineage, thus a dynamic self-regulatory mechanism is required. A pivotal role in the organization of the SAM is played by the WUSCHEL gene (WUS). An important question in this regard is that how WUS expression is positioned in the SAM via a cell-lineage independent signaling mechanism. In this study we demonstrate via mathematical modeling that a combination of an inhibitor of the Cytokinin (CK) receptor, Arabidopsis histidine kinase 4 (AHK4) and two morphogens originating from the top cell layer, can plausibly account for the cell lineage-independent centering of WUS expression within SAM. Furthermore, our laser ablation and microsurgical experiments support the hypothesis that patterning in SAM occurs at the level of CK reception and signaling. The model suggests that the interplay between CK signaling, WUS/CLV feedback loop and boundary signals can account for positioning of the WUS expression, and provides directions for further experimental investigation. AU - Adibi, Milad AU - Yoshida, Saiko AU - Weijers, Dolf AU - Fleck, Christian ID - 1482 IS - 2 JF - PLoS One TI - Centering the organizing center in the Arabidopsis thaliana shoot apical meristem by a combination of cytokinin signaling and self-organization VL - 11 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Chen, Xu AU - Wu, Shuang AU - Liu, Zengyu AU - Friml, Jiřĺ ID - 1484 IS - 6 JF - Trends in Cell Biology TI - Environmental and endogenous control of cortical microtubule orientation VL - 26 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The plant hormone auxin (indole-3-acetic acid) is a major regulator of plant growth and development including embryo and root patterning, lateral organ formation and growth responses to environmental stimuli. Auxin is directionally transported from cell to cell by the action of specific auxin influx [AUXIN-RESISTANT1 (AUX1)] and efflux [PIN-FORMED (PIN)] transport regulators, whose polar, subcellular localizations are aligned with the direction of the auxin flow. Auxin itself regulates its own transport by modulation of the expression and subcellular localization of the auxin transporters. Increased auxin levels promote the transcription of PIN2 and AUX1 genes as well as stabilize PIN proteins at the plasma membrane, whereas prolonged auxin exposure increases the turnover of PIN proteins and their degradation in the vacuole. In this study, we applied a forward genetic approach, to identify molecular components playing a role in the auxin-mediated degradation. We generated EMS-mutagenized Arabidopsis PIN2::PIN2:GFP, AUX1::AUX1:YFP eir1aux1 populations and designed a screen for mutants with persistently strong fluorescent signals of the tagged PIN2 and AUX1 after prolonged treatment with the synthetic auxin 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D). This approach yielded novel auxin degradation mutants defective in trafficking and degradation of PIN2 and AUX1 proteins and established a role for auxin-mediated degradation in plant development. AU - Zemová, Radka AU - Zwiewka, Marta AU - Bielach, Agnieszka AU - Robert, Hélène AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 1641 IS - 2 JF - Journal of Plant Growth Regulation TI - A forward genetic screen for new regulators of auxin mediated degradation of auxin transport proteins in Arabidopsis thaliana VL - 35 ER - TY - JOUR AB - ATP production requires the establishment of an electrochemical proton gradient across the inner mitochondrial membrane. Mitochondrial uncouplers dissipate this proton gradient and disrupt numerous cellular processes, including vesicular trafficking, mainly through energy depletion. Here we show that Endosidin9 (ES9), a novel mitochondrial uncoupler, is a potent inhibitor of clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME) in different systems and that ES9 induces inhibition of CME not because of its effect on cellular ATP, but rather due to its protonophore activity that leads to cytoplasm acidification. We show that the known tyrosine kinase inhibitor tyrphostinA23, which is routinely used to block CME, displays similar properties, thus questioning its use as a specific inhibitor of cargo recognition by the AP-2 adaptor complex via tyrosine motif-based endocytosis signals. Furthermore, we show that cytoplasm acidification dramatically affects the dynamics and recruitment of clathrin and associated adaptors, and leads to reduction of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-biphosphate from the plasma membrane. AU - Dejonghe, Wim AU - Kuenen, Sabine AU - Mylle, Evelien AU - Vasileva, Mina K AU - Keech, Olivier AU - Viotti, Corrado AU - Swerts, Jef AU - Fendrych, Matyas AU - Ortiz Morea, Fausto AU - Mishev, Kiril AU - Delang, Simon AU - Scholl, Stefan AU - Zarza, Xavier AU - Heilmann, Mareike AU - Kourelis, Jiorgos AU - Kasprowicz, Jaroslaw AU - Nguyen, Le AU - Drozdzecki, Andrzej AU - Van Houtte, Isabelle AU - Szatmári, Anna AU - Majda, Mateusz AU - Baisa, Gary AU - Bednarek, Sebastian AU - Robert, Stéphanie AU - Audenaert, Dominique AU - Testerink, Christa AU - Munnik, Teun AU - Van Damme, Daniël AU - Heilmann, Ingo AU - Schumacher, Karin AU - Winne, Johan AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Verstreken, Patrik AU - Russinova, Eugenia ID - 1346 JF - Nature Communications TI - Mitochondrial uncouplers inhibit clathrin-mediated endocytosis largely through cytoplasmic acidification VL - 7 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The CLE (CLAVATA3/Embryo Surrounding Region-related) peptides are small secreted signaling peptides that are primarily involved in the regulation of stem cell homeostasis in different plant meristems. Particularly, the characterization of the CLE41-PXY/TDR signaling pathway has greatly advanced our understanding on the potential roles of CLE peptides in vascular development and wood formation. Nevertheless, our knowledge on this gene family in a tree species is limited. In a recent study, we reported on a systematically investigation of the CLE gene family in Populus trichocarpa . The potential roles of PtCLE genes were studied by comparative analysis and transcriptional pro fi ling. Among fi fty PtCLE members, many PtCLE proteins share identical CLE motifs or contain the same CLE motif as that of AtCLEs, while PtCLE genes exhibited either comparable or distinct expression patterns comparing to their Arabidopsis counterparts. These fi ndings indicate the existence of both functional conservation and functional divergence between PtCLEs and their AtCLE orthologues. Our results provide valuable resources for future functional investigations of these critical signaling molecules in woody plants. AU - Liu, Zhijun AU - Yang, Nan AU - Lv, Yanting AU - Pan, Lixia AU - Lv, Shuo AU - Han, Huibin AU - Wang, Guodong ID - 510 IS - 6 JF - Plant Signaling & Behavior TI - The CLE gene family in Populus trichocarpa VL - 11 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Synchronized tissue polarization during regeneration or de novo vascular tissue formation is a plant-specific example of intercellular communication and coordinated development. According to the canalization hypothesis, the plant hormone auxin serves as polarizing signal that mediates directional channel formation underlying the spatio-temporal vasculature patterning. A necessary part of canalization is a positive feedback between auxin signaling and polarity of the intercellular auxin flow. The cellular and molecular mechanisms of this process are still poorly understood, not the least, because of a lack of a suitable model system. We show that the main genetic model plant, Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) can be used to study the canalization during vascular cambium regeneration and new vasculature formation. We monitored localized auxin responses, directional auxin-transport channels formation, and establishment of new vascular cambium polarity during regenerative processes after stem wounding. The increased auxin response above and around the wound preceded the formation of PIN1 auxin transporter-marked channels from the primarily homogenous tissue and the transient, gradual changes in PIN1 localization preceded the polarity of newly formed vascular tissue. Thus, Arabidopsis is a useful model for studies of coordinated tissue polarization and vasculature formation after wounding allowing for genetic and mechanistic dissection of the canalization hypothesis. AU - Mazur, Ewa AU - Benková, Eva AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 1274 JF - Scientific Reports TI - Vascular cambium regeneration and vessel formation in wounded inflorescence stems of Arabidopsis VL - 6 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In plants, vacuolar H+-ATPase (V-ATPase) activity acidifies both the trans-Golgi network/early endosome (TGN/EE) and the vacuole. This dual V-ATPase function has impeded our understanding of how the pH homeostasis within the plant TGN/EE controls exo- and endocytosis. Here, we show that the weak V-ATPase mutant deetiolated3 (det3) displayed a pH increase in the TGN/EE, but not in the vacuole, strongly impairing secretion and recycling of the brassinosteroid receptor and the cellulose synthase complexes to the plasma membrane, in contrast to mutants lacking tonoplast-localized V-ATPase activity only. The brassinosteroid insensitivity and the cellulose deficiency defects in det3 were tightly correlated with reduced Golgi and TGN/EE motility. Thus, our results provide strong evidence that acidification of the TGN/EE, but not of the vacuole, is indispensable for functional secretion and recycling in plants. AU - Yu, Luo AU - Scholl, Stefan AU - Doering, Anett AU - Yi, Zhang AU - Irani, Niloufer AU - Di Rubbo, Simone AU - Neumetzler, Lutz AU - Krishnamoorthy, Praveen AU - Van Houtte, Isabelle AU - Mylle, Evelien AU - Bischoff, Volker AU - Vernhettes, Samantha AU - Winne, Johan AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Stierhof, York AU - Schumacher, Karin AU - Persson, Staffan AU - Russinova, Eugenia ID - 1383 IS - 7 JF - Nature Plants TI - V-ATPase activity in the TGN/EE is required for exocytosis and recycling in Arabidopsis VL - 1 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Ammonium is the major nitrogen source in some plant ecosystems but is toxic at high concentrations, especially when available as the exclusive nitrogen source. Ammonium stress rapidly leads to various metabolic and hormonal imbalances that ultimately inhibit root and shoot growth in many plant species, including Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. To identify molecular and genetic factors involved in seedling survival with prolonged exclusive NH4+ nutrition, a transcriptomic analysis with microarrays was used. Substantial transcriptional differences were most pronounced in (NH4)2SO4-grown seedlings, compared with plants grown on KNO3 or NH4NO3. Consistent with previous physiological analyses, major differences in the expression modules of photosynthesis-related genes, an altered mitochondrial metabolism, differential expression of the primary NH4+ assimilation, alteration of transporter gene expression and crucial changes in cell wall biosynthesis were found. A major difference in plant hormone responses, particularly of auxin but not cytokinin, was striking. The activity of the DR5::GUS reporter revealed a dramatically decreased auxin response in (NH4)2SO4-grown primary roots. The impaired root growth on (NH4)2SO4 was partially rescued by exogenous auxin or in specific mutants in the auxin pathway. The data suggest that NH4+-induced nutritional and metabolic imbalances can be partially overcome by elevated auxin levels. AU - Yang, Huaiyu AU - Von Der Fecht Bartenbach, Jenny AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Lohmann, Jan AU - Neuhäuser, Benjamin AU - Ludewig, Uwe ID - 1532 IS - 3 JF - Functional Plant Biology SN - 1445-4408 TI - Auxin-modulated root growth inhibition in Arabidopsis thaliana seedlings with ammonium as the sole nitrogen source VL - 42 ER - TY - JOUR AB - PIN proteins are auxin export carriers that direct intercellular auxin flow and in turn regulate many aspects of plant growth and development including responses to environmental changes. The Arabidopsis R2R3-MYB transcription factor FOUR LIPS (FLP) and its paralogue MYB88 regulate terminal divisions during stomatal development, as well as female reproductive development and stress responses. Here we show that FLP and MYB88 act redundantly but differentially in regulating the transcription of PIN3 and PIN7 in gravity-sensing cells of primary and lateral roots. On the one hand, FLP is involved in responses to gravity stimulation in primary roots, whereas on the other, FLP and MYB88 function complementarily in establishing the gravitropic set-point angles of lateral roots. Our results support a model in which FLP and MYB88 expression specifically determines the temporal-spatial patterns of PIN3 and PIN7 transcription that are closely associated with their preferential functions during root responses to gravity. AU - Wang, Hongzhe AU - Yang, Kezhen AU - Zou, Junjie AU - Zhu, Lingling AU - Xie, Zidian AU - Morita, Miyoterao AU - Tasaka, Masao AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Grotewold, Erich AU - Beeckman, Tom AU - Vanneste, Steffen AU - Sack, Fred AU - Le, Jie ID - 1534 JF - Nature Communications TI - Transcriptional regulation of PIN genes by FOUR LIPS and MYB88 during Arabidopsis root gravitropism VL - 6 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Strigolactones, first discovered as germination stimulants for parasitic weeds [1], are carotenoid-derived phytohormones that play major roles in inhibiting lateral bud outgrowth and promoting plant-mycorrhizal symbiosis [2-4]. Furthermore, strigolactones are involved in the regulation of lateral and adventitious root development, root cell division [5, 6], secondary growth [7], and leaf senescence [8]. Recently, we discovered the strigolactone transporter Petunia axillaris PLEIOTROPIC DRUG RESISTANCE 1 (PaPDR1), which is required for efficient mycorrhizal colonization and inhibition of lateral bud outgrowth [9]. However, how strigolactones are transported through the plant remained unknown. Here we show that PaPDR1 exhibits a cell-type-specific asymmetric localization in different root tissues. In root tips, PaPDR1 is co-expressed with the strigolactone biosynthetic gene DAD1 (CCD8), and it is localized at the apical membrane of root hypodermal cells, presumably mediating the shootward transport of strigolactone. Above the root tip, in the hypodermal passage cells that form gates for the entry of mycorrhizal fungi, PaPDR1 is present in the outer-lateral membrane, compatible with its postulated function as strigolactone exporter from root to soil. Transport studies are in line with our localization studies since (1) a papdr1 mutant displays impaired transport of strigolactones out of the root tip to the shoot as well as into the rhizosphere and (2) DAD1 expression and PIN1/PIN2 levels change in plants deregulated for PDR1 expression, suggestive of variations in endogenous strigolactone contents. In conclusion, our results indicate that the polar localizations of PaPDR1 mediate directional shootward strigolactone transport as well as localized exudation into the soil. AU - Sasse, Joëlle AU - Simon, Sibu AU - Gübeli, Christian AU - Liu, Guowei AU - Cheng, Xi AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Bouwmeester, Harro AU - Martinoia, Enrico AU - Borghi, Lorenzo ID - 1536 IS - 5 JF - Current Biology TI - Asymmetric localizations of the ABC transporter PaPDR1 trace paths of directional strigolactone transport VL - 25 ER - TY - JOUR AB - A plethora of diverse programmed cell death (PCD) processes has been described in living organisms. In animals and plants, different forms of PCD play crucial roles in development, immunity, and responses to the environment. While the molecular control of some animal PCD forms such as apoptosis is known in great detail, we still know comparatively little about the regulation of the diverse types of plant PCD. In part, this deficiency in molecular understanding is caused by the lack of reliable reporters to detect PCD processes. Here, we addressed this issue by using a combination of bioinformatics approaches to identify commonly regulated genes during diverse plant PCD processes in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). Our results indicate that the transcriptional signatures of developmentally controlled cell death are largely distinct from the ones associated with environmentally induced cell death. Moreover, different cases of developmental PCD share a set of cell death-associated genes. Most of these genes are evolutionary conserved within the green plant lineage, arguing for an evolutionary conserved core machinery of developmental PCD. Based on this information, we established an array of specific promoter-reporter lines for developmental PCD in Arabidopsis. These PCD indicators represent a powerful resource that can be used in addition to established morphological and biochemical methods to detect and analyze PCD processes in vivo and in planta. AU - Olvera Carrillo, Yadira AU - Van Bel, Michiel AU - Van Hautegem, Tom AU - Fendrych, Matyas AU - Huysmans, Marlies AU - Šimášková, Mária AU - Van Durme, Matthias AU - Buscaill, Pierre AU - Rivas, Susana AU - Coll, Núria AU - Coppens, Frederik AU - Maere, Steven AU - Nowack, Moritz ID - 1543 IS - 4 JF - Plant Physiology TI - A conserved core of programmed cell death indicator genes discriminates developmentally and environmentally induced programmed cell death in plants VL - 169 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The elongator complex subunit 2 (ELP2) protein, one subunit of an evolutionarily conserved histone acetyltransferase complex, has been shown to participate in leaf patterning, plant immune and abiotic stress responses in Arabidopsis thaliana. Here, its role in root development was explored. Compared to the wild type, the elp2 mutant exhibited an accelerated differentiation of its root stem cells and cell division was more active in its quiescent centre (QC). The key transcription factors responsible for maintaining root stem cell and QC identity, such as AP2 transcription factors PLT1 (PLETHORA1) and PLT2 (PLETHORA2), GRAS transcription factors such as SCR (SCARECROW) and SHR (SHORT ROOT) and WUSCHEL-RELATED HOMEOBOX5 transcription factor WOX5, were all strongly down-regulated in the mutant. On the other hand, expression of the G2/M transition activator CYCB1 was substantially induced in elp2. The auxin efflux transporters PIN1 and PIN2 showed decreased protein levels and PIN1 also displayed mild polarity alterations in elp2, which resulted in a reduced auxin content in the root tip. Either the acetylation or methylation level of each of these genes differed between the mutant and the wild type, suggesting that the ELP2 regulation of root development involves the epigenetic modification of a range of transcription factors and other developmental regulators. AU - Jia, Yuebin AU - Tian, Huiyu AU - Li, Hongjiang AU - Yu, Qianqian AU - Wang, Lei AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Ding, Zhaojun ID - 1556 IS - 15 JF - Journal of Experimental Botany TI - The Arabidopsis thaliana elongator complex subunit 2 epigenetically affects root development VL - 66 ER - TY - JOUR AB - CyclophilinAis a conserved peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase (PPIase) best known as the cellular receptor of the immunosuppressant cyclosporine A. Despite significant effort, evidence of developmental functions of cyclophilin A in non-plant systems has remained obscure. Mutations in a tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) cyclophilin A ortholog, DIAGEOTROPICA (DGT), have been shown to abolish the organogenesis of lateral roots; however, a mechanistic explanation of the phenotype is lacking. Here, we show that the dgt mutant lacks auxin maxima relevant to priming and specification of lateral root founder cells. DGT is expressed in shoot and root, and localizes to both the nucleus and cytoplasm during lateral root organogenesis. Mutation of ENTIRE/ IAA9, a member of the auxin-responsive Aux/IAA protein family of transcriptional repressors, partially restores the inability of dgt to initiate lateral root primordia but not the primordia outgrowth. By comparison, grafting of a wild-type scion restores the process of lateral root formation, consistent with participation of a mobile signal. Antibodies do not detect movement of the DGT protein into the dgt rootstock; however, experiments with radiolabeled auxin and an auxin-specific microelectrode demonstrate abnormal auxin fluxes. Functional studies of DGT in heterologous yeast and tobacco-leaf auxin-transport systems demonstrate that DGT negatively regulates PIN-FORMED (PIN) auxin efflux transporters by affecting their plasma membrane localization. Studies in tomato support complex effects of the dgt mutation on PIN expression level, expression domain and plasma membrane localization. Our data demonstrate that DGT regulates auxin transport in lateral root formation. AU - Ivanchenko, Maria AU - Zhu, Jinsheng AU - Wang, Bangjun AU - Medvecka, Eva AU - Du, Yunlong AU - Azzarello, Elisa AU - Mancuso, Stefano AU - Megraw, Molly AU - Filichkin, Sergei AU - Dubrovsky, Joseph AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Geisler, Markus ID - 1558 IS - 4 JF - Development TI - The cyclophilin a DIAGEOTROPICA gene affects auxin transport in both root and shoot to control lateral root formation VL - 142 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The visualization of hormonal signaling input and output is key to understanding how multicellular development is regulated. The plant signaling molecule auxin triggers many growth and developmental responses, but current tools lack the sensitivity or precision to visualize these. We developed a set of fluorescent reporters that allow sensitive and semiquantitative readout of auxin responses at cellular resolution in Arabidopsis thaliana. These generic tools are suitable for any transformable plant species. AU - Liao, Cheyang AU - Smet, Wouter AU - Brunoud, Géraldine AU - Yoshida, Saiko AU - Vernoux, Teva AU - Weijers, Dolf ID - 1554 IS - 3 JF - Nature Methods TI - Reporters for sensitive and quantitative measurement of auxin response VL - 12 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The plant hormone auxin is a key regulator of plant growth and development. Auxin levels are sensed and interpreted by distinct receptor systems that activate a broad range of cellular responses. The Auxin-Binding Protein1 (ABP1) that has been identified based on its ability to bind auxin with high affinity is a prime candidate for the extracellular receptor responsible for mediating a range of auxin effects, in particular, the fast non-transcriptional ones. Contradictory genetic studies suggested prominent or no importance of ABP1 in many developmental processes. However, how crucial the role of auxin binding to ABP1 is for its functions has not been addressed. Here, we show that the auxin-binding pocket of ABP1 is essential for its gain-of-function cellular and developmental roles. In total, 16 different abp1 mutants were prepared that possessed substitutions in the metal core or in the hydrophobic amino acids of the auxin-binding pocket as well as neutral mutations. Their analysis revealed that an intact auxin-binding pocket is a prerequisite for ABP1 to activate downstream components of the ABP1 signalling pathway, such as Rho of Plants (ROPs) and to mediate the clathrin association with membranes for endocytosis regulation. In planta analyses demonstrated the importance of the auxin binding pocket for all known ABP1-mediated postembryonic developmental processes, including morphology of leaf epidermal cells, root growth and root meristem activity, and vascular tissue differentiation. Taken together, these findings suggest that auxin binding to ABP1 is central to its function, supporting the role of ABP1 as auxin receptor. AU - Grones, Peter AU - Chen, Xu AU - Simon, Sibu AU - Kaufmann, Walter AU - De Rycke, Riet AU - Nodzyński, Tomasz AU - Zažímalová, Eva AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 1562 IS - 16 JF - Journal of Experimental Botany TI - Auxin-binding pocket of ABP1 is crucial for its gain-of-function cellular and developmental roles VL - 66 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Multiple plant developmental processes, such as lateral root development, depend on auxin distribution patterns that are in part generated by the PIN-formed family of auxin-efflux transporters. Here we propose that AUXIN RESPONSE FACTOR7 (ARF7) and the ARF7-regulated FOUR LIPS/MYB124 (FLP) transcription factors jointly form a coherent feed-forward motif that mediates the auxin-responsive PIN3 transcription in planta to steer the early steps of lateral root formation. This regulatory mechanism might endow the PIN3 circuitry with a temporal 'memory' of auxin stimuli, potentially maintaining and enhancing the robustness of the auxin flux directionality during lateral root development. The cooperative action between canonical auxin signalling and other transcription factors might constitute a general mechanism by which transcriptional auxin-sensitivity can be regulated at a tissue-specific level. AU - Chen, Qian AU - Liu, Yang AU - Maere, Steven AU - Lee, Eunkyoung AU - Van Isterdael, Gert AU - Xie, Zidian AU - Xuan, Wei AU - Lucas, Jessica AU - Vassileva, Valya AU - Kitakura, Saeko AU - Marhavy, Peter AU - Wabnik, Krzysztof T AU - Geldner, Niko AU - Benková, Eva AU - Le, Jie AU - Fukaki, Hidehiro AU - Grotewold, Erich AU - Li, Chuanyou AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Sack, Fred AU - Beeckman, Tom AU - Vanneste, Steffen ID - 1574 JF - Nature Communications TI - A coherent transcriptional feed-forward motif model for mediating auxin-sensitive PIN3 expression during lateral root development VL - 6 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Spatial regulation of the plant hormone indole-3-acetic acid (IAA, or auxin) is essential for plant development. Auxin gradient establishment is mediated by polarly localized auxin transporters, including PIN-FORMED (PIN) proteins. Their localization and abundance at the plasma membrane are tightly regulated by endomembrane machinery, especially the endocytic and recycling pathways mediated by the ADP ribosylation factor guanine nucleotide exchange factor (ARF-GEF) GNOM. We assessed the role of the early secretory pathway in establishing PIN1 polarity in Arabidopsis thaliana by pharmacological and genetic approaches. We identified the compound endosidin 8 (ES8), which selectively interferes with PIN1 basal polarity without altering the polarity of apical proteins. ES8 alters the auxin distribution pattern in the root and induces a strong developmental phenotype, including reduced root length. The ARF-GEF- defective mutants gnom-like 1 ( gnl1-1) and gnom ( van7) are significantly resistant to ES8. The compound does not affect recycling or vacuolar trafficking of PIN1 but leads to its intracellular accumulation, resulting in loss of PIN1 basal polarity at the plasma membrane. Our data confirm a role for GNOM in endoplasmic reticulum (ER) - Golgi trafficking and reveal that a GNL1/GNOM-mediated early secretory pathway selectively regulates PIN1 basal polarity establishment in a manner essential for normal plant development. AU - Doyle, Siamsa AU - Haegera, Ash AU - Vain, Thomas AU - Rigala, Adeline AU - Viotti, Corrado AU - Łangowskaa, Małgorzata AU - Maa, Qian AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Raikhel, Natasha AU - Hickse, Glenn AU - Robert, Stéphanie ID - 1569 IS - 7 JF - PNAS TI - An early secretory pathway mediated by gnom-like 1 and gnom is essential for basal polarity establishment in Arabidopsis thaliana VL - 112 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Auxin and cytokinin are key endogenous regulators of plant development. Although cytokinin-mediated modulation of auxin distribution is a developmentally crucial hormonal interaction, its molecular basis is largely unknown. Here we show a direct regulatory link between cytokinin signalling and the auxin transport machinery uncovering a mechanistic framework for cytokinin-auxin cross-talk. We show that the CYTOKININ RESPONSE FACTORS (CRFs), transcription factors downstream of cytokinin perception, transcriptionally control genes encoding PIN-FORMED (PIN) auxin transporters at a specific PIN CYTOKININ RESPONSE ELEMENT (PCRE) domain. Removal of this cis-regulatory element effectively uncouples PIN transcription from the CRF-mediated cytokinin regulation and attenuates plant cytokinin sensitivity. We propose that CRFs represent a missing cross-talk component that fine-tunes auxin transport capacity downstream of cytokinin signalling to control plant development. AU - Šimášková, Mária AU - O'Brien, José AU - Khan-Djamei, Mamoona AU - Van Noorden, Giel AU - Ötvös, Krisztina AU - Vieten, Anne AU - De Clercq, Inge AU - Van Haperen, Johanna AU - Cuesta, Candela AU - Hoyerová, Klára AU - Vanneste, Steffen AU - Marhavy, Peter AU - Wabnik, Krzysztof T AU - Van Breusegem, Frank AU - Nowack, Moritz AU - Murphy, Angus AU - Friml, Jiřĺ AU - Weijers, Dolf AU - Beeckman, Tom AU - Benková, Eva ID - 1640 JF - Nature Communications TI - Cytokinin response factors regulate PIN-FORMED auxin transporters VL - 6 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The sessile life style of plants creates the need to deal with an often adverse environment, in which water availability can change on a daily basis, challenging the cellular physiology and integrity. Changes in osmotic conditions disrupt the equilibrium of the plasma membrane: hypoosmotic conditions increase and hyperosmotic environment decrease the cell volume. Here, we show that short-term extracellular osmotic treatments are closely followed by a shift in the balance between endocytosis and exocytosis in root meristem cells. Acute hyperosmotic treatments (ionic and nonionic) enhance clathrin-mediated endocytosis simultaneously attenuating exocytosis, whereas hypoosmotic treatments have the opposite effects. In addition to clathrin recruitment to the plasma membrane, components of early endocytic trafficking are essential during hyperosmotic stress responses. Consequently, growth of seedlings defective in elements of clathrin or early endocytic machinery is more sensitive to hyperosmotic treatments. We also found that the endocytotic response to a change of osmotic status in the environment is dominant over the presumably evolutionary more recent regulatory effect of plant hormones, such as auxin. These results imply that osmotic perturbation influences the balance between endocytosis and exocytosis acting through clathrin-mediated endocytosis. We propose that tension on the plasma membrane determines the addition or removal of membranes at the cell surface, thus preserving cell integrity. AU - Zwiewka, Marta AU - Nodzyński, Tomasz AU - Robert, Stéphanie AU - Vanneste, Steffen AU - Friml, Jiřĺ ID - 1819 IS - 8 JF - Molecular Plant TI - Osmotic stress modulates the balance between exocytosis and clathrin mediated endocytosis in Arabidopsis thaliana VL - 8 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Cell polarity is a fundamental property of pro- and eukaryotic cells. It is necessary for coordination of cell division, cell morphogenesis and signaling processes. How polarity is generated and maintained is a complex issue governed by interconnected feed-back regulations between small GTPase signaling and membrane tension-based signaling that controls membrane trafficking, and cytoskeleton organization and dynamics. Here, we will review the potential role for calcium as a crucial signal that connects and coordinates the respective processes during polarization processes in plants. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: 13th European Symposium on Calcium. AU - Himschoot, Ellie AU - Beeckman, Tom AU - Friml, Jiřĺ AU - Vanneste, Steffen ID - 1849 IS - 9 JF - Biochimica et Biophysica Acta - Molecular Cell Research TI - Calcium is an organizer of cell polarity in plants VL - 1853 ER - TY - JOUR AU - Grones, Peter AU - Friml, Jiřĺ ID - 1847 IS - 3 JF - Molecular Plant TI - ABP1: Finally docking VL - 8 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The plant hormone auxin and its directional transport are known to play a crucial role in defining the embryonic axis and subsequent development of the body plan. Although the role of PIN auxin efflux transporters has been clearly assigned during embryonic shoot and root specification, the role of the auxin influx carriers AUX1 and LIKE-AUX1 (LAX) proteins is not well established. Here, we used chemical and genetic tools on Brassica napus microspore-derived embryos and Arabidopsis thaliana zygotic embryos, and demonstrate that AUX1, LAX1 and LAX2 are required for both shoot and root pole formation, in concert with PIN efflux carriers. Furthermore, we uncovered a positive-feedback loop betweenMONOPTEROS(ARF5)-dependent auxin signalling and auxin transport. ThisMONOPTEROSdependent transcriptional regulation of auxin influx (AUX1, LAX1 and LAX2) and auxin efflux (PIN1 and PIN4) carriers by MONOPTEROS helps to maintain proper auxin transport to the root tip. These results indicate that auxin-dependent cell specification during embryo development requires balanced auxin transport involving both influx and efflux mechanisms, and that this transport is maintained by a positive transcriptional feedback on auxin signalling. AU - Robert, Hélène AU - Grunewald, Wim AU - Sauer, Michael AU - Cannoot, Bernard AU - Soriano, Mercedes AU - Swarup, Ranjan AU - Weijers, Dolf AU - Bennett, Malcolm AU - Boutilier, Kim AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 1865 IS - 4 JF - Development TI - Plant embryogenesis requires AUX/LAX-mediated auxin influx VL - 142 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The plant hormone auxin is a key regulator of plant growth and development. Differences in auxin distribution within tissues are mediated by the polar auxin transport machinery, and cellular auxin responses occur depending on changes in cellular auxin levels. Multiple receptor systems at the cell surface and in the interior operate to sense and interpret fluctuations in auxin distribution that occur during plant development. Until now, three proteins or protein complexes that can bind auxin have been identified. SCFTIR1 [a SKP1-cullin-1-F-box complex that contains transport inhibitor response 1 (TIR1) as the F-box protein] and S-phase-kinaseassociated protein 2 (SKP2) localize to the nucleus, whereas auxinbinding protein 1 (ABP1), predominantly associates with the endoplasmic reticulum and cell surface. In this Cell Science at a Glance article, we summarize recent discoveries in the field of auxin transport and signaling that have led to the identification of new components of these pathways, as well as their mutual interaction. AU - Grones, Peter AU - Friml, Jirí ID - 1871 IS - 1 JF - Journal of Cell Science TI - Auxin transporters and binding proteins at a glance VL - 128 ER - TY - JOUR AB - When electron microscopy (EM) was introduced in the 1930s it gave scientists their first look into the nanoworld of cells. Over the last 80 years EM has vastly increased our understanding of the complex cellular structures that underlie the diverse functions that cells need to maintain life. One drawback that has been difficult to overcome was the inherent lack of volume information, mainly due to the limit on the thickness of sections that could be viewed in a transmission electron microscope (TEM). For many years scientists struggled to achieve three-dimensional (3D) EM using serial section reconstructions, TEM tomography, and scanning EM (SEM) techniques such as freeze-fracture. Although each technique yielded some special information, they required a significant amount of time and specialist expertise to obtain even a very small 3D EM dataset. Almost 20 years ago scientists began to exploit SEMs to image blocks of embedded tissues and perform serial sectioning of these tissues inside the SEM chamber. Using first focused ion beams (FIB) and subsequently robotic ultramicrotomes (serial block-face, SBF-SEM) microscopists were able to collect large volumes of 3D EM information at resolutions that could address many important biological questions, and do so in an efficient manner. We present here some examples of 3D EM taken from the many diverse specimens that have been imaged in our core facility. We propose that the next major step forward will be to efficiently correlate functional information obtained using light microscopy (LM) with 3D EM datasets to more completely investigate the important links between cell structures and their functions. AU - Kremer, A AU - Lippens, Stefaan AU - Bartunkova, Sonia AU - Asselbergh, Bob AU - Blanpain, Cendric AU - Fendrych, Matyas AU - Goossens, A AU - Holt, Matthew AU - Janssens, Sophie AU - Krols, Michiel AU - Larsimont, Jean AU - Mc Guire, Conor AU - Nowack, Moritz AU - Saelens, Xavier AU - Schertel, Andreas AU - Schepens, B AU - Slezak, M AU - Timmerman, Vincent AU - Theunis, Clara AU - Van Brempt, Ronald AU - Visser, Y AU - Guérin, Christophe ID - 1879 IS - 2 JF - Journal of Microscopy TI - Developing 3D SEM in a broad biological context VL - 259 ER -