Literature DB >> 30914498

Glycome and Proteome Components of Golgi Membranes Are Common between Two Angiosperms with Distinct Cell-Wall Structures.

Ikenna O Okekeogbu1,2, Sivakumar Pattathil3, Susana M González Fernández-Niño4, Uma K Aryal, Bryan W Penning5, Jeemeng Lao4, Joshua L Heazlewood4, Michael G Hahn3,6, Maureen C McCann2,7, Nicholas C Carpita8,2,7.   

Abstract

The plant endoplasmic reticulum-Golgi apparatus is the site of synthesis, assembly, and trafficking of all noncellulosic polysaccharides, proteoglycans, and proteins destined for the cell wall. As grass species make cell walls distinct from those of dicots and noncommelinid monocots, it has been assumed that the differences in cell-wall composition stem from differences in biosynthetic capacities of their respective Golgi. However, immunosorbence-based screens and carbohydrate linkage analysis of polysaccharides in Golgi membranes, enriched by flotation centrifugation from etiolated coleoptiles of maize (Zea mays) and leaves of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), showed that arabinogalactan-proteins and arabinans represent substantial portions of the Golgi-resident polysaccharides not typically found in high abundance in cell walls of either species. Further, hemicelluloses accumulated in Golgi at levels that contrasted with those found in their respective cell walls, with xyloglucans enriched in maize Golgi, and xylans enriched in Arabidopsis. Consistent with this finding, maize Golgi membranes isolated by flotation centrifugation and enriched further by free-flow electrophoresis, yielded >200 proteins known to function in the biosynthesis and metabolism of cell-wall polysaccharides common to all angiosperms, and not just those specific to cell-wall type. We propose that the distinctive compositions of grass primary cell walls compared with other angiosperms result from differential gating or metabolism of secreted polysaccharides post-Golgi by an as-yet unknown mechanism, and not necessarily by differential expression of genes encoding specific synthase complexes.
© 2019 American Society of Plant Biologists. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30914498      PMCID: PMC6533026          DOI: 10.1105/tpc.18.00755

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plant Cell        ISSN: 1040-4651            Impact factor:   11.277


  88 in total

Review 1.  Mobile factories: Golgi dynamics in plant cells.

Authors:  A Nebenführ; L A Staehelin
Journal:  Trends Plant Sci       Date:  2001-04       Impact factor: 18.313

2.  Cell wall proteins in apoplastic fluids of Arabidopsis thaliana rosettes: identification by mass spectrometry and bioinformatics.

Authors:  Georges Boudart; Elisabeth Jamet; Michel Rossignol; Claude Lafitte; Gisèle Borderies; Alain Jauneau; Marie-Thérèse Esquerré-Tugayé; Rafael Pont-Lezica
Journal:  Proteomics       Date:  2005-01       Impact factor: 3.984

3.  MaxQuant enables high peptide identification rates, individualized p.p.b.-range mass accuracies and proteome-wide protein quantification.

Authors:  Jürgen Cox; Matthias Mann
Journal:  Nat Biotechnol       Date:  2008-11-30       Impact factor: 54.908

4.  DGE-seq analysis of MUR3-related Arabidopsis mutants provides insight into how dysfunctional xyloglucan affects cell elongation.

Authors:  Zongchang Xu; Meng Wang; Dachuan Shi; Gongke Zhou; Tiantian Niu; Michael G Hahn; Malcolm A O'Neill; Yingzhen Kong
Journal:  Plant Sci       Date:  2017-01-30       Impact factor: 4.729

Review 5.  Hemicelluloses.

Authors:  Henrik Vibe Scheller; Peter Ulvskov
Journal:  Annu Rev Plant Biol       Date:  2010       Impact factor: 26.379

6.  An Arabidopsis cell wall proteoglycan consists of pectin and arabinoxylan covalently linked to an arabinogalactan protein.

Authors:  Li Tan; Stefan Eberhard; Sivakumar Pattathil; Clayton Warder; John Glushka; Chunhua Yuan; Zhangying Hao; Xiang Zhu; Utku Avci; Jeffrey S Miller; David Baldwin; Charles Pham; Ronald Orlando; Alan Darvill; Michael G Hahn; Marcia J Kieliszewski; Debra Mohnen
Journal:  Plant Cell       Date:  2013-01-31       Impact factor: 11.277

7.  A mobile secretory vesicle cluster involved in mass transport from the Golgi to the plant cell exterior.

Authors:  Kiminori Toyooka; Yumi Goto; Satoru Asatsuma; Masato Koizumi; Toshiaki Mitsui; Ken Matsuoka
Journal:  Plant Cell       Date:  2009-04-17       Impact factor: 11.277

8.  The Cell Wall Arabinose-Deficient Arabidopsis thaliana Mutant murus5 Encodes a Defective Allele of REVERSIBLY GLYCOSYLATED POLYPEPTIDE2.

Authors:  Christopher K Dugard; Rachel A Mertz; Catherine Rayon; Davide Mercadante; Christopher Hart; Matheus R Benatti; Anna T Olek; Phillip J SanMiguel; Bruce R Cooper; Wolf-Dieter Reiter; Maureen C McCann; Nicholas C Carpita
Journal:  Plant Physiol       Date:  2016-05-23       Impact factor: 8.340

9.  Brittle Culm1, a COBRA-like protein, functions in cellulose assembly through binding cellulose microfibrils.

Authors:  Lifeng Liu; Keke Shang-Guan; Baocai Zhang; Xiangling Liu; Meixian Yan; Lanjun Zhang; Yanyun Shi; Mu Zhang; Qian Qian; Jiayang Li; Yihua Zhou
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2013-08-22       Impact factor: 5.917

10.  Label-free protein quantification for plant Golgi protein localization and abundance.

Authors:  Nino Nikolovski; Pavel V Shliaha; Laurent Gatto; Paul Dupree; Kathryn S Lilley
Journal:  Plant Physiol       Date:  2014-08-13       Impact factor: 8.340

View more
  10 in total

1.  Differential distributions of trafficking and signaling proteins of the maize ER-Golgi apparatus.

Authors:  Ikenna O Okekeogbu; Uma K Aryal; Susana M González Fernández-Niño; Bryan W Penning; Joshua L Heazlewood; Maureen C McCann; Nicholas C Carpita
Journal:  Plant Signal Behav       Date:  2019-09-28

2.  Dynamics of cell wall polysaccharides during the elongation growth of rye primary roots.

Authors:  Anna Petrova; Gusel Sibgatullina; Tatyana Gorshkova; Liudmila Kozlova
Journal:  Planta       Date:  2022-04-21       Impact factor: 4.116

3.  Proteomic characterization of isolated Arabidopsis clathrin-coated vesicles reveals evolutionarily conserved and plant-specific components.

Authors:  Dana A Dahhan; Gregory D Reynolds; Jessica J Cárdenas; Dominique Eeckhout; Alexander Johnson; Klaas Yperman; Walter A Kaufmann; Nou Vang; Xu Yan; Inhwan Hwang; Antje Heese; Geert De Jaeger; Jiří Friml; Daniël Van Damme; Jianwei Pan; Sebastian Y Bednarek
Journal:  Plant Cell       Date:  2022-05-24       Impact factor: 12.085

4.  Separating Golgi Proteins from Cis to Trans Reveals Underlying Properties of Cisternal Localization.

Authors:  Harriet T Parsons; Tim J Stevens; Heather E McFarlane; Silvia Vidal-Melgosa; Johannes Griss; Nicola Lawrence; Richard Butler; Mirta M L Sousa; Michelle Salemi; William G T Willats; Christopher J Petzold; Joshua L Heazlewood; Kathryn S Lilley
Journal:  Plant Cell       Date:  2019-07-02       Impact factor: 11.277

5.  Elongating maize root: zone-specific combinations of polysaccharides from type I and type II primary cell walls.

Authors:  Liudmila V Kozlova; Alsu R Nazipova; Oleg V Gorshkov; Anna A Petrova; Tatyana A Gorshkova
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-07-02       Impact factor: 4.379

Review 6.  Co-evolution of Enzymes Involved in Plant Cell Wall Metabolism in the Grasses.

Authors:  Vincent Bulone; Julian G Schwerdt; Geoffrey B Fincher
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2019-08-09       Impact factor: 5.753

7.  Evolution of the Cell Wall Gene Families of Grasses.

Authors:  Bryan W Penning; Maureen C McCann; Nicholas C Carpita
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2019-10-04       Impact factor: 5.753

8.  Polysaccharide Biosynthesis: Glycosyltransferases and Their Complexes.

Authors:  Olga A Zabotina; Ning Zang; Richard Weerts
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2021-02-19       Impact factor: 5.753

9.  Golgi-localized cyclophilin 21 proteins negatively regulate ABA signalling via the peptidyl prolyl isomerase activity during early seedling development.

Authors:  Haemyeong Jung; Seung Hee Jo; Hyun Ji Park; Areum Lee; Hyun-Soon Kim; Hyo-Jun Lee; Hye Sun Cho
Journal:  Plant Mol Biol       Date:  2019-11-30       Impact factor: 4.076

10.  Expression profiles of cell-wall related genes vary broadly between two common maize inbreds during stem development.

Authors:  Bryan W Penning; Tânia M Shiga; John F Klimek; Philip J SanMiguel; Jacob Shreve; Jyothi Thimmapuram; Robert W Sykes; Mark F Davis; Maureen C McCann; Nicholas C Carpita
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2019-10-29       Impact factor: 3.969

  10 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.