| Literature DB >> 35747879 |
Hao-Ran Liu1, Chao Shen1, Danial Hassani1, Wan-Qi Fang1, Zhi-Yi Wang1, Yi Lu1, Rui-Liang Zhu1, Qiong Zhao1,2.
Abstract
Vacuoles are the most conspicuous organelles in plants for their indispensable functions in cell expansion, solute storage, water balance, etc. Extensive studies on angiosperms have revealed that a set of conserved core molecular machineries orchestrate the formation of vacuoles from multiple pathways. Usually, vacuoles in seed plants are classified into protein storage vacuoles and lytic vacuoles for their distinctive morphology and physiology function. Bryophytes represent early diverged non-vascular land plants, and are of great value for a better understanding of plant science. However, knowledge about vacuole morphology and biogenesis is far less characterized in bryophytes. In this review, first we summarize known knowledge about the morphological and metabolic constitution properties of bryophytes' vacuoles. Then based on known genome information of representative bryophytes, we compared the conserved molecular machinery for vacuole biogenesis among different species including yeast, mammals, Arabidopsis and bryophytes and listed out significant changes in terms of the presence/absence of key machinery genes which participate in vacuole biogenesis. Finally, we propose the possible conserved and diverged mechanism for the biogenesis of vacuoles in bryophytes compared with seed plants.Entities:
Keywords: biogenesis; bryophyte; endomembrane system; evolution; regulator; vacuole
Year: 2022 PMID: 35747879 PMCID: PMC9209779 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2022.863389
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 6.627
Figure 1Gametophyte and leaves/thallus cells of bryophytes. (A) Light microscopy photos of young Sphagnum squarrosum gametophyte. Bar = 100 μm. (B) Photo of Physcomitrella patens's mature gametophyte (Koshimizu et al., 2018). Bar = 1 mm. (C) Photo of Marchantia polymorpha's mature gametophyte (Eklund et al., 2018). Bar = 1 mm. (D) Photo of Anthoceros agrestis gametophyte (the bottom area) and sporophytes (the top slender area). Bar = 3 mm. (E) Photo of a leaf with green and white cells in S. squarrosum (Li et al., 2019). Bar = 100 μm. (F) Light microscopy photo of a leaf in P. patens (Nishiyama et al., 2012). Bar = 100 μm. (G) Light microscopy photo of young thallus cells of M. polymorpha (Shimamura, 2016). Bar = 100 μm. (H) Confocal fluorescence microscopy image of A. agrestis gametophyte cells in which the plasma membrane is shown in green and the plastid is shown in red (Frangedakis et al., 2021). Bar = 100 μm. (I) Life cycle of bryophytes. The words in red denote single cell stages while the words in black denote multicellular stages. The light blue background indicates the haploid (N) stages, while the dark blue background indicates the diploid (2N) stages of bryophytes.
Figure 2(A) Vacuole trafficking pathway in plants. The blue arrows indicate the pathway mediated by RAB5 and RAB7. The green arrows indicate the vacuole trafficking pathway regulated by RAB5 but do not include RAB7. The orange arrows indicate the AP-3-dependent pathway. The purple arrows indicate the ER to vacuole trafficking pathway. ER, endoplasmic reticulum; Golgi, Golgi apparatus; TGN, trans-Golgi network; MVB, multivesicular body; PM, plasma membrane; CW, cell wall. (B) Some special regulator proteins in bryophytes and species genome databases are used in this article. The complete table was in the Supplementary Tables. The numbers represent the quantity of the ortholog proteins in this species. The genome database reference for Arabidopsis thaliana (Lamesch et al., 2011), P. patens (Lang et al., 2018), C. purpureus (Carey et al., 2021), M. polymorpha (Bowman et al., 2017), A. agrestis (Li et al., 2020), A. angustus (Zhang et al., 2020), A. punctatus (Li et al., 2020). The S. fallax and S. magellanicum databases were obtained from DOE-JGI, http://phytozome.jgi.doe.gov/.