|
|
||||||||
|
First published online November 19, 2004; 10.1104/pp.104.046326 Plant Physiology 136:3979-3989 (2004) © 2004 American Society of Plant Biologists Identification and Characterization of a Ca2+-Dependent Actin Filament-Severing Protein from Lily Pollen1College of Life Science, Beijing Normal University, Beijing 100875, People's Republic of China (X.F., J.H., X.C., H.R.); Department of Biological Sciences and the Purdue Motility Group, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 479072064 (F.C., C.J.S.); and The State Key Laboratory of Plant Physiology and Biochemistry, China Agricultural University, Beijing 100094, People's Republic of China (H.R.)
It is well known that a tip-focused intracellular Ca2+ gradient and the meshwork of short actin filaments at the tip region are necessary for pollen tube growth. However, little is known about the connections between the two factors. Here, a novel Ca2+-dependent actin-binding protein with molecular mass of 41 kD from lily (Lilium davidii) pollen (LdABP41) was isolated and purified with DNase I chromatography. Our purification procedure yielded about 0.6 mg of LdABP41 with >98% purity from 10 g of lily pollen. At least two isoforms with isoelectric points of 5.8 and 6.0 were detected on two-dimensional gels. The results of N-terminal sequencing and mass-spectrometry analysis of LdABP41 showed that both isoforms shared substantial similarity with trumpet lily (Lilium longiflorum) villin and other members of the gelsolin superfamily. Negative-stained electron microscope images showed that LdABP41 severed in vitro-polymerized lily pollen F-actin into short actin filaments in a Ca2+-sensitive manner. Microinjection of the anti-LdABP41 antibody into germinated lily pollen demonstrated that the protein was required for pollen tube growth. The results of immunolocalization of the protein showed that it existed in the cytoplasm of the pollen tube, especially focused in the tip region. Our results suggest that LdABP41 belongs to the gelsolin superfamily and may play an important role in controlling actin organization in the pollen tube tip by responding to the oscillatory, tip-focused Ca2+ gradient.
Pollen tube growth is a key process in the sexual reproduction of higher plants. It is highly polarized and requires both spatial and temporal coordination of many cellular functions, including ion fluxes, cytoskeleton organization and dynamics, vesicular trafficking, exocytosis, endocytosis, and cell wall synthesis (for review, see Taylor and Hepler, 1997
It has also been shown that there is a similar polarized organization of cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration [Ca2+]i in the form of a steep tip-focused intracellular gradient (Rathore et al., 1991
The gelsolin superfamily is the only known Ca2+-dependent actin filament-severing protein that has been well characterized in vertebrates and lower eukaryotic cells (for review, see Dos Remedios et al., 2003 In this study, we isolated and purified a 41-kD Ca2+-dependent actin-binding protein from lily pollen (LdABP41) with DNase I chromatography. This scheme is based on the association between actin and the protein in the presence of Ca2+ and dissociation in the absence of Ca2+. We also characterized the in vitro activities and in vivo function of LdABP41 in pollen tube growth.
Purification of 41-kD Ca2+-Dependent Actin-Binding Protein from Lily Pollen
To identify Ca2+-dependent actin-binding proteins from pollen, DNase I chromatography was employed. This purification is based on the ability of DNase I to bind with high affinity to G-actin even if the G-actin is associated with an actin-binding protein (Bretscher and Weber, 1980
N-Terminal Sequence and Tandem Mass Spectrometry Analysis of 41-kD Protein To further understand the relevance of the LdABP41 isoforms of pI 5.8 and pI 6.0 and gain insight about their identity, we analyzed the two protein spots obtained from 2-D PAGE. The individual proteins were excised from the gel, digested with trypsin, and subjected to mass spectrometry (MS). Peptide mass fingerprinting of the two proteins by matrix-assisted laser-desorption ionization time of flight (MALDI-TOF) yielded fragment profiles that gave best matches to an actin-bundling protein, 135-ABP, from trumpet lily. This analysis also identified other villin/gelsolin family members from plants (not shown). N-terminal sequence analysis by Edman degradation of the mixed protein yielded a sequence of PAFQGVGQRLGTEI, which is a perfect match with residues 9 to 23 of 135-ABP. To obtain additional sequence information, the tryptic digests of pI 6.0 and pI 5.8 spots were subjected to electrospray ionization-tandem MS (ESI-MS/MS). A total of 12 peptide fragments was analyzed and the de novo sequence results given in Table I. All 12 peptides shared greatest identity with 135-ABP from lily, with percent identities ranging from 54% to 91%. These sequences were less similar to 115-ABP, another trumpet lily villin (Table I) and to Arabidopsis VILLIN3 (Fig. 3). The sequence conservation with human plasma gelsolin was less than 50% identity for these polypeptides. Interestingly, all sequences aligned best with the first three gelsolin-homology domains (G1G3) of the different villin/gelsolin family members. This observation, along with the Mr of these polypeptides, suggested that LdABP41 isoforms are fragmin/severin/CapG-like proteins. Finally, four peptide masses and the sequences obtained from them were identical between the pI 6.0 and pI 5.8 proteins (peptide 2 = peptide 9, 3 = 10, 4 = 11, and 7 = 12). This is strong evidence suggesting that the protein primary sequences may be identical and that the mobility difference observed on 2-D gels may be due to posttranslational modification.
To investigate whether the 41-kD proteins might be proteolytic products from lily villin (135-ABP) generated during the extracting procedure, immunoblot analysis of the crude extracts from pollen grains with different extraction times was performed. The purified anti-LdABP41 antibody recognized only the 41-kD protein. Furthermore, the amount of the 41-kD protein slightly increased with increasing extraction time (Fig. 4). The 41-kD Ca2+-dependent actin-binding protein is referred to as LdABP41 hereafter.
LdABP41 Has a Severing Effect on Actin Filaments To examine the ability of LdABP41 protein to act on actin filaments, sedimentation assays were performed. Lily pollen actin filaments were incubated with or without substoichiometric amounts of purified LdABP41 for 60 min at 20°C in the presence of Ca2+ or EGTA. G-actin and short actin fragments were separated from F-actin through ultracentrifugation and were left in the supernatant, whereas F-actin was sedimented in the pellet. The supernatants and pellets were analyzed by SDS-PAGE (Fig. 5A). Compared to the control (Fig. 5A, lane 1), samples with LdABP41 contained less actin in the pellets (Fig. 5A, top, lanes 35) and more actin in the supernatant fractions (Fig. 5A, bottom, lanes 35) in the presence of 0.2 mM Ca2+. The higher the ratio of LdABP41 to actin, the more actin appeared in the supernatant and the less actin appeared in the pellets. Furthermore, no detectable LdABP41 was found to sediment with F-actin in the pellets. However, the effect of LdABP41 was minimized when Ca2+ was chelated with 2 mM EGTA (Fig. 5A, lane 6). Two millimolar EGTA alone had no effects on the amount of actin in pellet or supernatant compared to control (Fig. 5A, lane 2). These results are consistent with calcium-mediated severing of actin filaments by LdABP41.
Results from negative-stain electron microscopy lend further support to the argument that actin filaments are fragmented in the presence of LdABP41 (Fig. 5B). According to the average length measured from more than 50 actin filaments, the filament length was reduced with an increasing of the ratio of LdABP41 to actin. The average length of actin filaments in the control without LdABP41 was 1569.8 ± 111.2 nm (Fig. 5B, a); in the presence of 2% of LdABP41 it was 1253.5 ± 109.8 nm (Fig. 5B, b); in the presence of 5% of LdABP41 it was 384.9 ± 24.9 nm (Fig. 5B, c); and in the presence of 10% of LdABP41 it was 209.4 ± 15.8 nm (Fig. 5B, d). However, in the presence of both 5% of LdABP41 and EGTA, the average filament length increased to 932.2 ± 96.6 nm (Fig. 5B, e), indicating that the filament-severing activity of LdABP41 was partially abolished by the addition of EGTA. Therefore, our results demonstrate that the LdABP41 protein has a severing activity on plant actin filaments in a Ca2+-dependent manner.
To examine the effect of LdABP41 on the dynamics of actin polymerization, assays of actin assembly kinetics were performed. Actin polymerization was measured by 90° light scattering (Ren et al., 1997
The Effects of LdABP41 on the Growth Rate of Lily Pollen Tubes
To assess directly the function of LdABP41 in pollen tube growth, we microinjected purified anti-LdABP41 antibody, LdABP41 plus purified anti-LdABP41 antibody, LdABP41 and injection buffer, respectively, into lily pollen grains cultured in slowly flowing germination solution, and then measured the elongation rate of the pollen tubes. Because mechanical stimuli or damage could be caused by the injection during the first 10 min (Lin and Yang, 1997
Localization of LdABP41 in Lily Pollen Tubes To investigate the function of LdABP41 in vivo, we analyzed the subcellular distribution of the protein in germinated pollen using an affinity-purified, polyclonal anti-LdABP41 antibody that strongly cross-reacts with LdABP41 protein in western blots (Fig. 2). Confocal images of pollen at an early stage of germination showed dense labeling of LdABP41 at the tube tip (Fig. 8, C and C'). In germinated pollen tubes, LdABP41 was localized in a punctate pattern throughout the cytoplasm of the pollen tubes, but especially focused on the tip region (Fig. 8, D and D'). However, there was no obvious localization of LdABP41 in the pollen grain. Controls without the first antibody did not give any particular localization (Fig. 8, A and A') or with the anti-profilin antibody labeled uniformly along the length of tubes (Fig. 8, B and B').
LdABP41 from Lily Pollen Is a New Member of the Gelsolin Superfamily
The gelsolin superfamily, comprising the only known Ca2+-dependent actin filament-severing proteins, is a group of multifunctional actin-binding proteins that is well studied in vertebrates and lower eukaryotic cells (for review, see Dos Remedios et al., 2003 To examine further whether LdABP41 proteins derive from a proteolytic breakdown product of lily villin during the process of protein extraction, immunoblot analysis of crude extract of pollen grains at different extraction times was performed. If LdABP41 came from a protein of higher molecular mass, the anti-LdABP41 antibody should be able to recognize larger protein bands, and the amount of those proteins should decrease and LdABP41 should increase during extended extraction. However, our experiments demonstrate that purified anti-LdABP41 antibody does not recognize any other proteins in the crude extract, but only a 41-kD protein band, and the amount of LdABP41 does not significantly change with increasing extraction time. The slight increase in the amount of LdABP41 can be explained as more thorough extraction of proteins from the pollen. From the results, it can be concluded that the two bands are isovariants of a new member of gelsolin/villin superfamily.
In addition, our results show that LdABP41 protein has G-actin-binding, actin filament-severing, and actin filament-nucleating activities. All of these activities are Ca2+-sensitive. These results are consistent with the results obtained for gelsolin, severin, and fragmin (for review, see Dos Remedios et al., 2003
The role of the actin cytoskeleton in growing pollen tubes is always the focus of the study of actin dynamics, but the mechanism remains controversial. Extensive axial actin cables are found in the shank of pollen tubes, but in the tip region of pollen tubes, instead of actin cables, SABs have been observed (Fu et al., 2001
Results from the microinjection of purified antiserum of the protein into geminated lily pollen grain demonstrate that LdABP41 protein is required for pollen tube growth. In addition, the results of immunofluorescence localization show that LdABP41 appears to be localized on some kind of vesicles throughout the cytoplasm of the pollen tube, and the fact that it focused preferentially in the tip region of pollen tubes suggests that LdABP41 might localize to vesicles needed for the tip growth. In keeping with the tip-focused location of LdABP41, the short actin filaments therein, the high concentration of calcium at the tip of the tube, and the fact that the introduction of anti-LdABP41 antibody prevents pollen tube growth, it is strongly suggested that LdABP41 may play an important role in the pollen germination and pollen tube growth through regulating the dynamics of actin cytoskeleton. Identification of LdABP41 strongly supports the universal existence of the 40-kD actin-modulating protein previously found just in Dictyostelium amoebae (severin), Physarum slime molds (fragmin), and macrophages (CapG). Although bioinformatics of Arabidopsis and rice (Oryza sativa) shows no G1G3 genes in these organisms, there is a splice variant for Arabidopsis villin 1 (Huang et al., 2004
Plant Material Mature lily (Lilium davidii cv Duch.) pollen grains were collected from Lanzhou, Gansu Province in northwest China. After being air dried, the pollen was stored at 20°C before use.
Sixty milligrams of deoxyribonuclease (DNase I, Sigma, St. Louis, type IV) was coupled to 2.5 g of cyanogen bromide-activated Sepharose 4B (Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, NJ) according to Schafer et al. (1998)
Isolation of Ca2+-sensitive actin-binding protein from lily pollen was performed as described by Yamashiro et al. (2001)
Actin for polymerization experiments was prepared from lily pollen by the method of Ren et al. (1997)
A rabbit polyclonal antiserum raised against purified LdABP41 was obtained by injection of 250 µg protein in complete Freund's adjuvant at each of six dorsal sites and was followed by three times of equivalent challenge incubation at 2-week intervals. Positive sera were stored at 80°C. The polyclonal antibodies were affinity purified according to the method of Lin and Yang (1997)
Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis was carried out as described by Garrels (1979) To determine the N-terminal amino acid sequence, a single band with molecular mass of 41 kD obtained from SDS-PAGE of the lily pollen was transferred onto polyvinylidene difluoride membrane using a semidry blotting system (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA) and applied to a Beckman LF3000 amino acid sequence analyzer (Beckman Instruments, Fullerton, CA) for analysis.
For de novo sequence analysis by ESI-MS/MS, individual protein spots from 2-D gels were harvested and prepared as described previously (Huang et al., 2004
The purified LdABP41 at 0.5 and 1 µM, and lily F-actin (10 µM), were mixed and incubated for 30 min at 25°C in the presence of 0.5 mM CaCl2 or 2 mM EGTA. Samples were mounted on grids covered with carbon-coated collodion film and negatively stained with 1% uranyl acetate. Electron micrographs were taken at a direct magnification of x40,000 with a transmission electron microscope (Hitachi-H600; Tokyo). Negative staining of actin filaments without purified Ca2+-sensitive actin-binding protein was performed as a control.
LdABP41 was transferred to HEPES buffer as described above and mixed with F-actin of 0.4 mg/mL to a final concentration of 0.5 and 1 µM of LdABP41, respectively, at 25°C in the presence of 0.5 mM CaCl2 or 2 mM EGTA for 1 h. Finally the mixtures were centrifuged for 1 h at 100,000g and the supernatants (actin monomers or short fragments) and pellets (actin filaments) were analyzed by SDS-PAGE. The gel was stained with Coomassie Brilliant Blue and photographed by using a CCD camera. F-actin without the purified LdABP41 was used as control.
The purified LdABP41 was exchanged to HEPES buffer with a 10-kD-cutoff ultrafiltration tube (4206, Millipore, Bedford, MA) and was mixed with G-actin to final concentrations of 200, 100, 50 nM, and 10 µM, respectively. The actin was then polymerized by addition of KCl, MgCl2, and ATP to final concentrations of 50, 5, 0.5 mM, respectively, in the presence of 0.2 mM CaCl2 or 2 mM EGTA. Dynamic polymerization was monitored by 90° light scattering over a 10-min period at room temperature with a spectrophotometer (Fluoro Max-II; Beckman Instruments) set for excitation and emission wavelengths of 450 nm.
Immunoblot analysis of the crude extract from lily pollen grains was performed by the following procedure: 1 g of pollen was added to 10 mL protein isolation buffer (as mentioned above) and hand-drilled for about 5, 15, and 30 min, respectively. The grindate was centrifuged at 100,000g for 5 min and the supernatant transfered to SDS-PAGE. Western transfer was performed using the Hoefer western-blotting system (Pharmacia Biotech). Purified LdABP41 antibody (as mentioned above) was used at dilutions of 1:1,000 and horseradish peroxidase-labeled anti-rabbit IgG antibody (Pharmacia Biotech) was used at dilution of 1:3,000.
A total of 0.2 g of lily pollen, stored at 20°C, was stirred in 50 µL germination solution (15% Suc, 0.01% H3BO3, 0.01% KNO3, 0.02% MgSO4, 0.03% Ca[NO3]2) for 3 min to be degreased. Then it was suspended in 30 mL germination solution to germinate at room temperature. Approximately 45 min after germination, pollen tubes of about 50 µm long were chosen for microinjection. Microinjection was performed according to the method of Lin and Yang (1997
Lily pollen grains were germinated according to method mentioned above and fixed in 4% formaldehyde in PIPES buffer (pH 6.8) for 1 h with constant agitation. After rinsing in PIPES buffer three times, 15 min each, and digesting with 0.5% cellulase and 0.5% pectinase in PIPES, the pollen was permeabilized with 3% Triton X-100 solution for 30 min. Then, the pollen was blocked with 3% BSA in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) for 2 h and incubated in polyclonal affinity-purified anti-LdABP41 antibody diluted at 1:100 in PBS overnight at 4°C, washed in PBS, and incubated in fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated goat anti-rabbit secondary antibody, diluted at 1:500 for 2 h. After washing with PBS, the stained pollen grains were mounted in 50% glycerol and viewed by means of laser-scanning confocal microscope (Olympus FV300, Tokyo) mounted on an inverted microscope (Olympus IX-70) using x40 oil immersion objective. Samples were excited with the blue line (488 nm) of an argon laser beam, and the image was collected by Olympus Fluoview 4.0 software. Sample without primary antibody was used as control.
We thank Dr. Ming Yuan (China Agricultural University) and Noni Franklin-Tong (University of Birmingham, UK) for critical reading and comments on the manuscript. Received May 12, 2004; returned for revision August 22, 2004; accepted August 27, 2004.
1 This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation for Distinguished Young Scholars (grant no. 30325005 to H.R.) and by the Major State Basic Research Developmental Program of China (grant no. G1999011701 to H.R.). Work in the lab of C.J.S. was supported, in part, by the U.S. Department of Energy, Energy Biosciences Division (DEFG0204ER15526). Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.104.046326. * Corresponding author; e-mail hren{at}bnu.edu.cn; fax 861058807721.
Bradford MM (1976) A rapid and sensitive method for the quantitation of microgram quantities of protein utilizing the principle of protein-dye binding. Anal Biochem 72: 248254[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Bretscher A, Weber K (1980) Villin is a major protein of the microvillus cytoskeleton which binds both G and F actin in a calcium-dependent manner. Cell 20: 839847[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Burtnick LD, Koepf EK, Grimes J, Jones EY, Stuart DI, McLaughlin PJ, Robinson RC (1997) The crystal structure of plasma gelsolin: implications for actin severing, capping and nucleation. Cell 90: 661670[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Cai G, Moscatelli A, Cresti M (1997) Cytoskeletal organization and pollen tube growth. Trends Plant Sci 2: 8691
Chen CY, Wong EI, Vidali L, Estavillo A, Hepler PK, Wu H-M, Cheung AY (2002) The regulation of actin organization by actin depolymerizing factor (ADF) in elongating pollen tubes. Plant Cell 14: 21752190
Cheung AY, Wu H-M (2004) Overexpression of an Arabidopsis formin stimulates supernumerary actin cable formation from pollen tube cell membrane. Plant Cell 16: 257269 Derksen J, Rutten T, Van Amstel T, de Win A, Doris F, Steer M (1995) Regulation of pollen tube growth. Acta Bot Neerl 44: 93119 Doris FP, Steer MW (1996) Effects of fixatives and permeabilisation buffers on pollen tubes: implications for localisation of actin microfilaments using phalloidin staining. Protoplasma 195: 2536[CrossRef]
Dos Remedios CG, Chhabra D, Kekic M, Dedova IV, Tsubakihara M, Berry DA, Nosworthy NJ (2003) Actin binding proteins: regulation of cytoskeletal microfilaments. Physiol Rev 83: 433473
Folger PA, Berg WJ, DeJesus Z, Fong Y, Pardee JD (1999) A mammalian severin replaces gelsolin in transformed epithelial cells. Cancer Res 59: 53495355
Franklin-Tong VE (1999) Signaling and the modulation of pollen tube growth. Plant Cell 11: 727738 Friederich E, Louvard D (1999) Villin. In T Kries, R Vale, eds, Guidebook to the Cytoskeletal and Motor Proteins. Oxford University Press, New York, pp 175179
Fu Y, Wu G, Yang Z (2001) Rop GTPase-dependent dynamics of tip-localized F-actin controls tip growth in pollen tubes. J Cell Biol 152: 10191032
Garrels JI (1979) Two dimension gel electrophoresis and computer analysis of proteins synthesized by clonal cell lines. J Biol Chem 254: 79617977
Geitmann A, Snowman BN, Emons AMC, Franklin-Tong VE (2000) Alterations in the actin cytoskeleton of pollen tubes are induced by the self-incompatibility reaction in Papaver rhoeas. Plant Cell 12: 12391252
Gibbon BC, Kovar DR, Staiger CJ (1999) Latrunculin B has different effects on pollen germination and tube growth. Plant Cell 11: 23492363 Giebing T, Obermann WMJ, Fuerst D, D'Haese J (1997) C-terminal deleted fragments of 40-kDa earthworm actin modulator still show gelsolin activities. FEBS Lett 417: 191195[Medline] Harris HE, Gooch J (1981) An actin depolymerizing protein from pig plasma. FEBS Lett 123: 4953[CrossRef][Medline] Hellman U, Wernstedt C, Gonez J, Heldin CH (1995) Improvement of an "in-gel" digestion procedure for the micropreparation of intenal protein fragment for amino acid sequencing. Anal Biochem 224: 451455[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Hepler PK, Vidali L, Cheung AY (2001) Polarized cell growth in higher plants. Annu Rev Cell Dev Biol 17: 159187[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Holdaway-Clarke TL, Feijó JA, Hackett GR, Kunkel JG, Hepler PK (1997) Pollen tube growth and the intracellular cytosolic calcium gradient oscillate in phase while extracellular calcium influx is delayed. Plant Cell 9: 19992010[Abstract] Holdaway-Clarke TL, Hepler PK (2003) Control of pollen tube growth: role of ion gradients and fluxes. New Phytol 159: 539563[CrossRef]
Huang S, Blanchoin L, Chaudhry F, Franklin-Tong VE, Staiger CJ (2004) A gelsolin-like protein from Papaver rhoeas pollen (PrABP80) stimulates calcium-regulated severing and depolymerization of actin filaments. J Biol Chem 279: 2336423375
Klahre U, Friederich E, Kost B, Louvard D, Chua N-H (2000) Villin-like actin-binding proteins are expressed ubiquitously in Arabidopsis. Plant Physiol 122: 3547 Kohno T, Shimmen T (1987) Ca2+-induced fragmentation of actin filaments in pollen tubes. Protoplasma 141: 177179[CrossRef][Web of Science] Kost B, Spielhofer P, Chua N-H (1998) A GFP-mouse talin fusion protein labels plant actin filaments in vivo and visualizes the actin cytoskeleton in growing pollen tubes. Plant J 16: 393401[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Kurth MC, Wang L-L, Dingus J, Bryan J (1983) Purification and characterization of a gelsolin-actin complex from human platelets: evidence for Ca2+-insensitive functions. J Biol Chem 258: 1089510903 Lin Y, Yang Z (1997) Inhibition of pollen tube elongation by microinjected anti-Rop1Ps antibodies suggests a crucial role for rho-type GTPases in the control of tip growth. Plant Cell 9: 16471659[Abstract] McGough A, Staiger CJ, Min JK, Simonetti K (2003) The gelsolin family of actin regulatory proteins: Modular structures, versatile functions. FEBS Lett 552: 7581[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Miller DD, Callaham DA, Gross DJ, Hepler PK (1992) Free Ca2+ gradient in growing pollen tubes of Lilium. J Cell Sci 101: 712 Miller DD, Lancelle SA, Hepler PK (1996) Actin microfilament do not form a dense meshwork in Lilium longiflorum pollen tube tips. Protoplasma 195: 123132[CrossRef][Web of Science] Papayannopoulos IA (1995) Interpretation of collision-induced dissociation tandem mass spectra of peptides. Mass Spectrom Rev 14: 4971[CrossRef] Pierson ES (1988) Rhodamine-phalloidin staining of F-actin in pollen after dimethyl sulphoxide permeabilisation: a comparison with the conventional formaldehyde preparation. Sex Plant Reprod 1: 8387 Rathore KS, Cork RJ, Robinson KR (1991) A cytoplasmic gradient of Ca2+ is correlated with the growth of lily pollen tubes. Dev Biol 148: 612619[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Ren HY, Gibbon BC, Ashworth SL, Sherman DM, Yuan M, Staiger CJ (1997) Actin purified from maize pollen functions in living plant cells. Plant Cell 9: 14451457[Abstract] Schafer DA, Jennings PB, Cooper JA (1998) Rapid and efficient purification of actin from non-muscle sources. Cell Motil Cytoskeleton 39: 166171[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Snowman BN, Kovar DR, Shevchenko G, Franklin-Tong VE, Staiger CJ (2002) Signal-mediated depolymerization of actin in pollen during the self-incompatibility response. Plant Cell 14: 26132626
Spudich JA, Watt S (1971) The regulation of rabbit skeletal muscle contraction. J Biol Chem 246: 48664871 Staiger CJ (2000) Signaling to the actin cytoskeleton in plants. Annu Rev Plant Physiol Plant Mol Biol 51: 257288[CrossRef][Web of Science] Staiger CJ, Hussey PJ (2004) Actin and actin-modulating proteins. In PJ Hussey, ed, The Plant Cytoskeleton in Cell Differentiation and Development. Blackwell Scientific Publications, Oxford, pp 3280
Sun HQ, Yamamoto M, Mejillano M, Yin HL (1999) Gelsolin, a multifunctional actin regulatory protein. J Biol Chem 274: 3317933182 Tao Z, Ren H (2003) Regulation of gelsolin to plant actin filaments and its distribution on pollen. Sci China Ser C Life Sci 46: 379388[CrossRef] Taylor LP, Hepler PK (1997) Pollen germination and tube growth. Annu Rev Plant Physiol Plant Mol Biol 48: 461491[CrossRef][Web of Science] Vidali L, Hepler PK (2000) Actin in pollen and pollen tubes. In CJ Staiger, F Baluska, D Volkmann, PW Barlow, eds, Actin: A Dynamic Framework for Multiple Plant Cell Functions. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, The Netherlands, pp 323345 Vidali L, Hepler PK (2001) Actin and pollen tube growth. Protoplasma 215: 6476[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Vidali L, Holdaway-Clarke TL, Hepler PK (2001) The calcium/cytoskeleton connection in pollen tube growth. In A Geitmann, M Cresti, IB Heath, eds, Cell Biology of Plant and Fungal Tip Growth. IOS Press, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, pp 2735 Vidali L, Yokota E, Cheung AY, Shimmen T, Hepler PK (1999) The 135 kDa actin-bundling protein from Lilium longiflorum pollen is the plant homologue of villin. Protoplasma 209: 283291[CrossRef][Web of Science] Wu W, Yan LF (2000) Immunochemical identification of gelsolin by western blotting in maize pollen. Chinese Sci Bull 45: 256258
Yamashiro S, Kameyama K, Kanzawa N, Tamiya T, Mabuchi I, Tsuchiya T (2001) The gelsolin/fragmin family protein identified in the higher plant Mimosa pudica. J Biochem 130: 243249
Yokota E, Muto S, Shimmen T (2000) Ca2+-calmodulin suppresses the F-actin binding activity of a 135-kDa actin-bundling protein isolated from lily pollen tubes. Plant Physiol 123: 645654 Yokota E, Shimmen T (1999) The 135-kDa actin-bundling protein from lily pollen tubes arranges F-actin into bundles with uniform polarity. Planta 209: 264266[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Yokota E, Takahara K, Shimmen T (1998) Actin-bundling protein isolated from pollen tubes of lily: biochemical and immunocytochemical characterization. Plant Physiol 116: 14211429
Yokota E, Vidali L, Tominaga M, Tahara H, Orii H, Morizane Y, Hepler PK, Shimmen T (2003) Plant 115-kDa actin-filament bundling protein, P-115-ABP, is a homologue of plant villin and is widely distributed in cells. Plant Cell Physiol 44: 10881099 This article has been cited by other articles:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| ASPB Publications | PLANT PHYSIOLOGY® | THE PLANT CELL | |
|---|---|---|---|