| Literature DB >> 26082793 |
René Schneider1, Staffan Persson2.
Abstract
The cytoskeleton of plant cells, consisting of actin filaments (AFs) and microtubules (MTs), is a central structure for various intracellular processes, such as cell division, isotropic and polar growth, vesicle transport, cell shape, and morphogenesis. Pharmaceutical and genetic studies have provided indications for interdependent cross-talk between the cytoskeletal components. Recent live-cell imaging studies have cemented this notion, in particular when the cytoskeleton rearranges. However, the proteins that directly mediate this cross-talk have remained largely elusive. Recent data indicate that certain proteins can interact with both cytoskeletal arrays at the same time, and hence connecting them. In this review, we summarize the recent literature of the AF- and MT-interactors, mainly focusing on a plant-specific mediator of cytoskeletal cross-talk: the calponin homology (CH) domain-containing kinesin-14 motor proteins (KCHs).Entities:
Keywords: actin filaments; calponin homology domain; dynein; kinesin-14; microtubules
Year: 2015 PMID: 26082793 PMCID: PMC4451249 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2015.00415
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
FIGURE 1Protein structure, intracellular localization, and putative function of KCHs. (A) Representative domain structure of KCHs. The N-terminal CH domain (red) is necessary but not sufficient for actin binding. The motor domain (green) contains the ATP and MT binding sites. It is situated between coiled-coil domains, which facilitate dimerization. (B) Schematic of two possible conformations of the KCH dimer with the MT- and AF-binding sites being freely accessible: a flexible dimeric stalk (left) and a stiffer tetrameric stalk configuration (right). (C) Intracellular localization of KCHs at the cell cortex (left) and in the cell midplane (right) of an idealized BY2 cell during interphase. (D) Two alternative working models of KCH functioning in pre-mitotic nuclear positioning: “Sliding model” (left) and “Pushing/pulling model” (right). The cortical cytoskeleton is depicted as dashed red-green frame. The small green arrows represent forces transmitted via MTs. The large green arrows represents the direction of the resulting net force. The red arrows (labeled with a question mark) indicate a speculative mechanism of force transmission via AFs. (E) One putative function of KCHs may be to transport AFs relative to MTs toward the minus-end.
Overview of tissue- and co-expression of the seven .
| Mature pollen, flower stage | ||||
| Mature pollen | ||||
| – | Mature pollen flower stage | – | ||
| – | Shoot apex flower stage | – | ||
| – | Mature pollen flower stage | – | ||
| – | Stem (Phloem), Hypocotyl, Siliques | |||
| – | Stem (Xylem) | – |
aCo-expression networks were obtained using PlaNet (Mutwil et al., 2011).
bTissue expression levels were analyzed using the eFP browser (Winter et al., 2007).