ECHIDNA mediated post Golgi trafficking of auxin carriers for differential cell elongation

Boutté Y, Jonsson K, Mcfarlane H, Johnson E, Gendre D, Swarup R, Friml J, Samuels L, Robert S, Bhalerao R. 2013. ECHIDNA mediated post Golgi trafficking of auxin carriers for differential cell elongation. PNAS. 110(40), 16259–16264.

Download (ext.)

Journal Article | Published | English

Scopus indexed
Author
Boutté, Yohann; Jonsson, Kristoffer; Mcfarlane, Heather; Johnson, Errin; Gendre, Delphine; Swarup, Ranjan; Friml, JiríISTA ; Samuels, Lacey; Robert, Stéphanie; Bhalerao, Rishikesh
Department
Abstract
The plant hormone indole-acetic acid (auxin) is essential for many aspects of plant development. Auxin-mediated growth regulation typically involves the establishment of an auxin concentration gradient mediated by polarly localized auxin transporters. The localization of auxin carriers and their amount at the plasma membrane are controlled by membrane trafficking processes such as secretion, endocytosis, and recycling. In contrast to endocytosis or recycling, how the secretory pathway mediates the localization of auxin carriers is not well understood. In this study we have used the differential cell elongation process during apical hook development to elucidate the mechanisms underlying the post-Golgi trafficking of auxin carriers in Arabidopsis. We show that differential cell elongation during apical hook development is defective in Arabidopsis mutant echidna (ech). ECH protein is required for the trans-Golgi network (TGN)-mediated trafficking of the auxin influx carrier AUX1 to the plasma membrane. In contrast, ech mutation only marginally perturbs the trafficking of the highly related auxin influx carrier LIKE-AUX1-3 or the auxin efflux carrier PIN-FORMED-3, both also involved in hook development. Electron tomography reveals that the trafficking defects in ech mutant are associated with the perturbation of secretory vesicle genesis from the TGN. Our results identify differential mechanisms for the post-Golgi trafficking of de novo-synthesized auxin carriers to plasma membrane from the TGN and reveal how trafficking of auxin influx carriers mediates the control of differential cell elongation in apical hook development.
Publishing Year
Date Published
2013-10-01
Journal Title
PNAS
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Volume
110
Issue
40
Page
16259 - 16264
IST-REx-ID

Cite this

Boutté Y, Jonsson K, Mcfarlane H, et al. ECHIDNA mediated post Golgi trafficking of auxin carriers for differential cell elongation. PNAS. 2013;110(40):16259-16264. doi:10.1073/pnas.1309057110
Boutté, Y., Jonsson, K., Mcfarlane, H., Johnson, E., Gendre, D., Swarup, R., … Bhalerao, R. (2013). ECHIDNA mediated post Golgi trafficking of auxin carriers for differential cell elongation. PNAS. National Academy of Sciences. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1309057110
Boutté, Yohann, Kristoffer Jonsson, Heather Mcfarlane, Errin Johnson, Delphine Gendre, Ranjan Swarup, Jiří Friml, Lacey Samuels, Stéphanie Robert, and Rishikesh Bhalerao. “ECHIDNA Mediated Post Golgi Trafficking of Auxin Carriers for Differential Cell Elongation.” PNAS. National Academy of Sciences, 2013. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1309057110.
Y. Boutté et al., “ECHIDNA mediated post Golgi trafficking of auxin carriers for differential cell elongation,” PNAS, vol. 110, no. 40. National Academy of Sciences, pp. 16259–16264, 2013.
Boutté Y, Jonsson K, Mcfarlane H, Johnson E, Gendre D, Swarup R, Friml J, Samuels L, Robert S, Bhalerao R. 2013. ECHIDNA mediated post Golgi trafficking of auxin carriers for differential cell elongation. PNAS. 110(40), 16259–16264.
Boutté, Yohann, et al. “ECHIDNA Mediated Post Golgi Trafficking of Auxin Carriers for Differential Cell Elongation.” PNAS, vol. 110, no. 40, National Academy of Sciences, 2013, pp. 16259–64, doi:10.1073/pnas.1309057110.
All files available under the following license(s):
Copyright Statement:
This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. [...]

Link(s) to Main File(s)
Access Level
OA Open Access

Export

Marked Publications

Open Data ISTA Research Explorer

Sources

PMID: 24043780
PubMed | Europe PMC

Search this title in

Google Scholar