| Literature DB >> 29209346 |
Ivan Luptovčiak1, George Komis1, Tomáš Takáč1, Miroslav Ovečka1, Jozef Šamaj1.
Abstract
KATANIN is a well-studied microtubule severing protein affecting microtubule organization and dynamic properties in higher plants. By regulating mitotic and cytokinetic and cortical microtubule arrays it is involved in the progression of cell division and cell division plane orientation. KATANIN is also involved in cell elongation and morphogenesis during plant growth. In this way KATANIN plays critical roles in diverse plant developmental processes including the development of pollen, embryo, seed, meristem, root, hypocotyl, cotyledon, leaf, shoot, and silique. KATANIN-dependent microtubule regulation seems to be under the control of plant hormones. This minireview provides an overview on available KATANIN mutants and discusses advances in our understanding of KATANIN biological roles in plants.Entities:
Keywords: cell division; cell growth; cytoskeleton; hormone; katanin; microtubules; morphogenesis; plant development
Year: 2017 PMID: 29209346 PMCID: PMC5702333 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2017.01982
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Genetic characteristics of Arabidopsis KATANIN mutants and in silico prediction of modifications in amino acid sequences.
| Col-0 | EMS | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | Bichet et al., | |
| C-24 | Tnt1 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | Lucas et al., | |
| Col-0 | EMS | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | Bichet et al., | |
| Col-0 | EMS | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | Bichet et al., | |
| Ler-0 | EMS | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | Reed et al., | |
| Ws | T-DNA | 32–50 bp del | 32–50 bp del | 1. exon | TTA-TAG | L17-stop | p80 interacting domain | Bichet et al., | |
| Ws | T-DNA | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | Bichet et al., | |
| Col-0 | EMS | C1863T | C1057T | 5. exon | CAT-TAT | H353Y | AAA domain | Schneider et al., | |
| Col-0 | EMS | G1551A | G820A | 4. exon | GGA-AGA | G274R | AAA domain, close to Walker A | Webb et al., | |
| Col-0 | EMS | C1648T | C917T | 4. exon | GCT-GTT | A306V | AAA domain | Webb et al., | |
| Col-0 | EMS | A2329 del | A1349 del | 7. exon | CTG-TGA | L452-stop | Vps domain is missing | Burk et al., | |
| Col-0 | EMS | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | Luo and Oppenheimer, | |
| Col-0 | EMS | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | Luo and Oppenheimer, | |
| RLD | Fast neutrons | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | Luo and Oppenheimer, | |
| n.a. | n.a. | 1584A ins | 854A ins | 4. exon | GAG-TGA | E295-stop | AAA domain is missing | Nakamura et al., | |
| Col-0 | T-DNA | n.a. | n.a. | 5. exon | n.a. | n.a. | AAA domain | Nakamura et al., | |
| Col-0 | EMS | C1335T | C773T | 3. exon | CCT-CTT | P258L | rfcL domain | Lin et al., | |
| n.a. | EMS | C2359T | C1379T | 7. exon | TCA-TTA | S460L | between AAA and Vps domains | Lin et al., | |
| n.a. | T-DNA | n.a. | n.a. | 5. exon | n.a. | n.a. | AAA domain | Lin et al., | |
| Col-0 | EMS | C1657T | C926T | 4. exon | GCT-GTT | A309V | AAA domain is cut | Ren et al., | |
| Col-0 | n.a. | G1988A | G1182A | 5. exon | TGG-TGA | W394-stop | AAA domain, Vps domain is missing | Meier et al., | |
| n.a. | n.a. | G3A | G3A | 1. exon | ATG-ATA | M1I | n.a. | Brodersen et al., |
del, deletion; ins, insertion; EMS, ethyl methanesulfonate; Tnt1, retrotransposon Tnt1 mediated mutation. n.a., data not available; Domain characterization of AtKTN1 was predicted based on sequence homology with human katanin (Gosh et al., .
Overview of (sub)cellular and developmental defects in plant KATANIN mutants.
| Anisotropic growth in all non-tip-growing cell types, reduced cell length, short and thick cells, more compact organs | Round-shaped and thick leaves, inflorescence stems with short internodes, delayed senescence of mutant plants | Stubby flower organs, mechanically sterile flowers as a result of reduced anther length | Bichet et al., | |||
| Disturbed leaf blade morphology with short and round shaped leaves | Disturbed floral organ development | Komorisono et al., | ||||
| Disorganized cortical microtubules, abnormal positioning of cell walls | Ectopic root hairs and hairless cells, root radial swelling, stem and inflorescence stem fragility | Schneider et al., | ||||
| Disorganized cortical microtubules and reduced cellulose content, increased cell width, impaired cell elongation | Short and radially swollen roots, ectopic root hairs, round and compact leaves in the rosette with small blades, stem and inflorescence stem fragility, reduced size of inflorescence stem, disoriented cell divisions in the pro-embryo, abnormally shaped hypophysis, most trichomes on leaves with two branches instead of three branches | Short and thick sepals, petals, pistils and anthers; siliques with unfertilized ovules, reduced number of developing seeds, reduced carpel size and abnormal carpel junctions, malformed ovule development, anther lobes irregularly developed containing variable pollen viability | Burk et al., | |||
| Exhibit about 60% of the trichomes with two branches instead of three branches | Decreased fertility compared to wild-type, premature extension of the pistil from the unopened flower | Luo and Oppenheimer, | ||||
| Random orientation of perinuclear microtubules and multipolar bundling, disorganized microtubules during cytokinesis in root cells, deregulation of spindle positioning throughout mitosis, defects in cell division plane orientation | Disoriented cell divisions in the pro-embryo, abnormally shaped hypophysis | Short and thick siliques with unfertilized ovules and reduced number of developing seeds, large and misshaped seeds, reduced carpel size and abnormal carpel junctions, malformed ovule development, anther lobes irregularly developed containing variable pollen viability | Nakamura et al., | |||
| Disorganized cortical microtubules, increased cell width, impaired cell elongation | Short and radially swollen roots with ectopic root hairs, shorter leaves, short and fragile stems, reduced number of secondary shoots, disoriented cell divisions in the pro-embryo, abnormally shaped hypophysis | reduced carpel size and abnormal carpel junctions, malformed ovule development, anther lobes irregularly developed containing variable pollen viability, shorter, and thicker siliques with unfertilized ovules and reduced number of developing seeds, round-shaped seeds, increased seed size | Meier et al., |
Figure 1Morphological phenotypes of KATANIN mutants vs. Col-0 wild-type (7 days old seedlings). (A) Representative pictures of whole Col-0 seedlings and KATANIN mutants. Note much shorter roots in the mutants. (B) Detailed pictures of above ground seedling parts in Col-0 and KATANIN mutants. (C) Detailed pictures of primary root tips of Col-0 and KATANIN mutants. Note radial expansion of mutant roots. Scale bars = 5 mm (A); 1 mm (B); 250 μm (C).
Figure 2Differences in the microtubule organization and cell shape of Arabidopsis thaliana Col-0 and ktn1-2 petiole epidermal cells carrying a GFP-TUA6 microtubule marker after spinning disk microscopy imaging. In differentiated cells, most cortical microtubules are transversal to the cell axis in Col-0 showing parallel placement to each other (A) resulting in relatively narrow angular distribution (C) whereas they appear more disorganized and randomly oriented in ktn1-2 (B) exhibiting broader angular distribution pattern (D). Scale bar = 10 μm.