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Plant Physiology 136:3855-3863 (2004) © 2004 American Society of Plant Biologists +TIPs and Microtubule Regulation. The Beginning of the Plus End in Plants1Department of Biology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 841120840 (S.R.B., D.L.K.); and Department of Biology, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, North Dartmouth, Massachusetts 027472300 (W.E.H.)
Plants have evolved novel microtubule (MT) arrays to regulate cell division and cell expansion. How these MT arrangements are managed has been a question of long-standing interest to plant cell biologists. Do plants have unique ways of regulating MTs or have they co-opted mechanisms that are familiar to us from studies in animal and fungal cells? This Update focuses on the MT plus-end-tracking proteins (+TIPs), a relatively recent addition to the repertoire of MT regulatory proteins. Although the study of +TIPs in plants is just beginning, the emerging data indicate that some, but not all, +TIPs are conserved in the green lineage and that plants have at least one family of +TIPs that is unique. Plants, it seems, organize their MT arrays via a combination of novel and phylogenetically conserved mechanisms.
Although the structure of an individual MT is highly conserved in all eukaryotes, higher order MT arrays vary widely, from spindles to flagella, and during a single cell cycle MTs rearrange in a precise and predictable sequence that is characteristic of the phylogenetic lineage. In many eukaryotic lineages, cells contain centrosomes that serve as MT-organizing centers. During interphase, MTs emanating from the centrosome extend outward to the cell cortex, forming radial structures that function in intracellular transport and cytoplasmic organization. In mitosis, MTs reassemble into a spindle that mechanically segregates chromosomes to daughter nuclei and participates in division plane specification.
MT arrays are organized quite differently in plants (Wasteneys, 2002
MT assembly and organization are regulated by the inherent dynamics of the tubule and by an array of regulatory proteins termed MAPs (MT-associated proteins). The inherent dynamics, or dynamic instability, of MTs is governed by their ends, which exhibit rapid transitions between growing and shrinking states (Desai and Mitchison, 1997
MT dynamics are also regulated by MAPs. Many MAPs bind to the sides of MTs and stabilize, destabilize, or bundle the tubules. In 1999, a new family of MAPs that preferentially accumulate at the plus ends of MTs was discovered by observing the movements of CYTOPLASMIC LINKER PROTEIN 170 (CLIP-170)-green fluorescent protein (GFP) in living mammalian cells. The fusion protein formed a comet that tracked the plus ends of growing MTs (Perez et al., 1999
Although detailed mechanisms have not been worked out, there are three general pathways by which +TIPs are thought to accumulate at plus ends: treadmilling, hitchhiking, and motor-driven transport (Fig. 1; Carvalho et al., 2003
Plus-end tracking can also be accomplished by hitchhiking. Hitchhiking +TIPs bind the MT plus end indirectly through a treadmilling protein and, like treadmilling proteins, appear to surf the plus end but are not transported through the cytoplasm with the growing MT (Carvalho et al., 2003
In motor-driven transport, the +TIP is cargo on a kinesin that walks toward the plus end (Fig. 1C). This mechanism of plus-end accumulation differs from hitchhiking and treadmilling in several regards. First, motors allow proteins loaded onto MTs to be translocated through the cytoplasm and unloaded at target sites. Second, +TIPs using motor-driven transport are found along the MT length, whereas treadmilling/hitchhiking proteins localize preferentially at plus ends with little or no protein associated with MT walls. Third, motors with their +TIP cargos stay attached to shrinking MTs (Galjart and Perez, 2003
Recent evidence indicates that plus-end accumulation may be considerably more complicated. A +TIP may associate with plus ends using two or even all three mechanisms, and different organisms may use distinct pathways to localize the same +TIP family member (Carvalho et al., 2003
What is the nature of the plus ends of plant MTs? One might expect many of the proteins found in fungal and metazoan cells to be conserved in plants; kinetochore MTs, for instance, capture chromosomes in all eukaryotic cells. On the other hand, the phragmoplast, PPB, and cortical array are unique to plant cells, and their regulation may require plant-specific +TIPs. An increase in MT dynamics has been measured during PPB formation (Dhonukshe and Gadella, 2003
To date, data documenting plus-end tracking have been published for two plant proteins, phylogenetically conserved EB1, (Chan et al., 2003
END BINDING 1
END BINDING 1 (EB1) proteins were the first plant molecules identified as +TIPs (Chan et al., 2003
GFP fusions with two of the Arabidopsis proteins, AtEB1a and AtEB1b, label the faster-growing ends of MTs in a characteristic comet shape in living cells (Chan et al., 2003
Both AtEB1 fusions also label along the lengths of MTs, a pattern that has been reported in cells overexpressing EB1 (Schwartz et al., 1997
The Arabidopsis database contains two sequences that may represent EB1-binding partners of the Moe1p (MTs overextended) family (Table I). In fission yeast, Moe1p binds the EB1 family member Mal3p, and genetic and physical interaction studies indicate that Mal3p and Moe1p may act as a complex that regulates MT dynamics (Chen et al., 2000
MAP215/DIS1 is a phylogenetically conserved family of proteins that includes XMAP215 in frogs, DIS1 in fission yeast, TOG in mammals, and MOR1/GEM1 in plants. These proteins regulate MT dynamics (for review, see Hussey et al., 2002
Additional proteins known to interact with EB1 include the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) protein from humans and Kar9p from budding yeast (Su et al., 1995
Formins are a family of conserved proteins thought to provide a link between MTs and actin, perhaps via EB1. At the cell cortex, formins nucleate actin filaments and regulate the rate of polymerization by capping the fast-growing barbed ends (Evangelista et al., 2003
CLIPs
As the first protein shown to track the plus ends of MTs, CLIP-170 is the prototype +TIP (Perez et al., 1999
CLIP-associated proteins, or CLASPs, bind both CLIPs and MTs; they colocalize with CLIPs at MT plus ends, where they have a stabilizing effect (Akhmanova et al., 2001
In animals and yeast, CLIP-170 may function through interacting with the dynactin complex and cytoplasmic dynein. Dynactin is a multisubunit complex that activates the minus-end-directed MT motor, cytoplasmic dynein, also a protein complex. Dynactin also binds to MT plus ends, and mutational and overexpression studies suggest that it is targeted to plus ends via p150Glued and CLIP-170 (Goodson et al., 2003
Humans carrying mutations in the LISSENCEPHALY 1 (LIS1) gene have a severe developmental brain deformity known as lissencephaly ("smooth brain") type 1 that is thought to reflect a defect in neuronal migration (Reiner, 2000
The Arabidopsis database contains several predicted proteins with the same domain structures as LIS1 family members, and three of them score well when compared with D. discoideum LIS1 sequences (Table I). Fourteen additional Arabidopsis genes are predicted to encode proteins with a LisH domain but no WD repeats. One of these, At3g55000, is the TONNEAU1b (TON1) gene. Curiously, ton1 mutants have disorganized cortical MTs and cannot make PPBs (Traas et al., 1995
LIS1 has been linked genetically and biochemically with dynein/dynactin and CLIP-170 (Willins et al., 1997
The Arabidopsis genome has 61 kinesins (Reddy and Day, 2001b
SPR1 is the only plant protein thus far identified as a +TIP serendipitously rather than by genome analysis. SPR1 was identified because roots and hypocotyls of mutant plants have a right-handed helical twist that is thought to result from abnormal cell expansion. Cortical MT orientation is also abnormal in spr1; instead of a transverse orientation, cortical MTs form helical arrays with a left-handed pitch (Furutani et al., 2000
The SPR1 gene appears to encode a plant-specific +TIP. The predicted protein is a small (12-kD), novel polypeptide that belongs to a plant-specific family of proteins. The Arabidopsis genome contains five other SPR1-like genes that share high sequence identity in their amino- and carboxy-terminal regions and have variable sequences in the intervening regions (Nakajima et al., 2004
The study of +TIPs in plants has an exciting beginning. Initial GFP fusion analyses confirm their presence on the plus ends of dynamic MTs, and genome gazing suggests that several more putative +TIPs await investigation. Interestingly, it appears that some complexes of +TIPs and their interacting proteins identified in protists and metazoans are also present in plants, while others are absent. Genes coding for the CLIP/dynein/dynactin complex are lacking in Arabidopsis, whereas a yeast pathway using EB1 and actin to deliver MT ends to cortical sites may be conserved (Fig. 2). Analyses of SPR1 and ATK5 demonstrate that plants also have novel +TIPs, perhaps to organize unique plant MT arrays. Undoubtedly, the next few years will provide explosive progress in this field. Putative +TIPs will be confirmed or rejected by analysis of GFP fusions in vivo, and biochemical studies will identify interacting proteins as well as novel +TIPs. Analyses of mutants and overexpressing lines will help unravel the function of these proteins in regulating MT dynamics and MT search and capture in plant cells. We are beginning to take large strides toward understanding how plants organize their MTs.
We thank Nick Peters for critically reading the manuscript and David Gard for drawing the MTs shown in Figure 1. Received August 6, 2004; returned for revision September 30, 2004; accepted October 12, 2004.
1 This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (award nos. IBN 0110113 and IBN 0414089). www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.104.051037. * Corresponding author; email bisgrove{at}biology.utah.edu; fax 8015814668.
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