| Literature DB >> 24714500 |
Abstract
When a plant cell divides, four related proteins control the trafficking of vesicles and ensure that cargo that is normally recycled to the plasma membrane is instead re-routed to the plane of cell division.Entities:
Keywords: ARF-GEF; cell division; post-Golgi trafficking; recycling, endocytosis; regulation of vesicle traffic; secretion
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24714500 PMCID: PMC3979141 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.02747
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140
Figure 1.Cytokinesis: past and present.
(A) Eduard Strasburger’s drawings (from 1884) of a plant cell at different stages of division show a cell plate forming. Drawings are courtesy of Dieter Volkmann, and the complete figure can be seen in Volkmann et al., 2012. (B) After arrival at the trans-Golgi network (TGN), newly synthesized proteins from the Golgi or previously endocytosed cargo proteins are sorted or recycled back to the plasma membrane, respectively, or trafficked to the vacuole (via late endosomal trafficking). Richter et al. have shown that, in non-dividing cells, four proteins (BIG1-4) belonging to the ARF-GEF family control secretory trafficking and transport to the vacuole. Another ARF-GEF, GNOM, regulates endocytic recycling of proteins, such as PIN1. In dividing cells, a plant-specific transient membrane compartment, the cell plate, is formed via BIG1-4-mediated trafficking of vesicles along the secretory pathway, but also via BIG1-4-mediated re-routing of endocytic recycling cargo to the cell-division plane. Interestingly, GNOM-dependent polar relocalisation of PIN1 is maintained despite BIG1-4 re-routing the endocytic recycling cargo.