| Literature DB >> 25081480 |
Kaori Miyashima Furuta1, Shri Ram Yadav1, Satu Lehesranta1, Ilya Belevich1, Shunsuke Miyashima1, Jung-ok Heo1, Anne Vatén1, Ove Lindgren1, Bert De Rybel2, Gert Van Isterdael2, Panu Somervuo1, Raffael Lichtenberger1, Raquel Rocha1, Siripong Thitamadee1, Sari Tähtiharju1, Petri Auvinen1, Tom Beeckman2, Eija Jokitalo3, Ykä Helariutta4.
Abstract
Photoassimilates such as sugars are transported through phloem sieve element cells in plants. Adapted for effective transport, sieve elements develop as enucleated living cells. We used electron microscope imaging and three-dimensional reconstruction to follow sieve element morphogenesis in Arabidopsis. We show that sieve element differentiation involves enucleation, in which the nuclear contents are released and degraded in the cytoplasm at the same time as other organelles are rearranged and the cytosol is degraded. These cellular reorganizations are orchestrated by the genetically redundant NAC domain-containing transcription factors, NAC45 and NAC86 (NAC45/86). Among the NAC45/86 targets, we identified a family of genes required for enucleation that encode proteins with nuclease domains. Thus, sieve elements differentiate through a specialized autolysis mechanism.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25081480 DOI: 10.1126/science.1253736
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728