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Query: UMLS:C0282612 (
PIN
)
2,291
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The flexible development of plants is characterized by a high capacity for post-embryonic organ formation and tissue regeneration, processes, which require tightly regulated intercellular communication and coordinated tissue (re-)polarization. The phytohormone auxin, the main driver for these processes, is able to establish polarized auxin transport channels, which are characterized by the expression and polar, subcellular localization of the
PIN1
auxin transport proteins. These channels are demarcating the position of future vascular strands necessary for organ formation and tissue regeneration. Major progress has been made in the last years to understand how PINs can change their polarity in different contexts and thus guide auxin flow through the plant. However, it still remains elusive how auxin mediates the establishment of auxin conducting channels and the formation of vascular tissue and which cellular processes are involved. By the means of sophisticated regeneration experiments combined with local auxin applications in Arabidopsis thaliana inflorescence stems we show that (i)
PIN
subcellular dynamics, (ii)
PIN
internalization by clathrin-mediated trafficking and (iii) an intact actin cytoskeleton required for post-endocytic trafficking are indispensable for auxin channel formation, de novo vascular formation and vascular regeneration after wounding. These observations provide novel insights into cellular mechanism of coordinated tissue polarization during auxin canalization.
...
PMID:Clathrin-mediated trafficking and PIN trafficking are required for auxin canalization and vascular tissue formation in Arabidopsis. 3208 Dec 63
Cell polarity is a fundamental feature of all multicellular organisms.
PIN
auxin transporters are important cell polarity markers that play crucial roles in a plethora of developmental processes in plants. Here, to identify components involved in cell polarity establishment and maintenance in plants, we performed a forward genetic screening of
PIN2
:
PIN1
-
HA
;
pin2
Arabidopsis (
Arabidopsis thaliana
) plants, which ectopically express predominantly basally localized
PIN1
in root epidermal cells, leading to agravitropic root growth. We identified the
regulator of
PIN
polarity 12
(
repp12
) mutation, which restored gravitropic root growth and caused a switch in
PIN1
-HA polarity from the basal to apical side of root epidermal cells. Next Generation Sequencing and complementation experiments established the causative mutation of
repp12
as a single amino acid exchange in Aminophospholipid ATPase3 (ALA3), a phospholipid flippase predicted to function in vesicle formation.
repp12
and
ala3
T-DNA mutants show defects in many auxin-regulated processes, asymmetric auxin distribution, and
PIN
trafficking. Analysis of quintuple and sextuple mutants confirmed the crucial roles of ALA proteins in regulating plant development as well as
PIN
trafficking and polarity. Genetic and physical interaction studies revealed that ALA3 functions together with the ADP ribosylation factor GTPase exchange factors GNOM and BIG3 in regulating
PIN
polarity, trafficking, and auxin-mediated development.
...
PMID:Arabidopsis Flippases Cooperate with ARF GTPase Exchange Factors to Regulate the Trafficking and Polarity of PIN Auxin Transporters. 3221 33
As an important functional organ of plants, leaves alter their shapes in response to a changing environment. The variation of leaf shape has long been an important evolutionary and developmental force in plants. Despite an increasing amount of investigations into the genetic controls of leaf morphology, few have systematically studied the genetic architecture controlling shape differences among distinct altitudes. Altitude denotes a comprehensive complex of environmental factors affecting plant growth in many aspects,
e.g.
, UV-light radiation, temperature, and humidity. To reveal how plants alter ecological adaptation to altitude through genes, we used
Populus szechuanica
var.
tibetica
growing on the Qinghai-Tibetan plateau.
F
ST
between the low- and high- altitude population was 0.00748,
Q
ST
for leaf width, length and area were 0.00924, 0.1108, 0.00964 respectively. With the Elliptic Fourier-based morphometric model, association study of leaf shape was allowed, the dissection of the pleiotropic expression of genes mediating altitude-derived leaf shape variation was performed. For high and low altitudes, 130 and 131 significant single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were identified. QTLs that affected leaf axis length and leaf width were expressed in both-altitude population, while QTLs regulating "leaf tip" and "leaf base" were expressed in low-altitude population.
Pkinase and PRR2
were common significant genes in both types of populations. Auxin-related and differentiation-related genes included
PIN1
, CDK-like
, and
CAK1AT
at high altitude, whereas they included
NAP5,
PIN
-LIKES
, and
SCL1
at low altitude. The presence of S
tress-antifung
gene,
CIPK3
and
CRPK1
in high-altitude population suggested an interaction between genes and harsh environment in mediating leaf shape, while the senescence repression-related genes (
EIN2
and
JMJ18
) and
JMT
in jasmonic acid pathway in low-altitude population suggested their crucial roles in ecological adaptability. These data provide new information that strengthens the understanding of genetic control with respect to leaf shape and constitute an entirely novel perspective regarding leaf adaptation and development in plants.
...
PMID:Identification of Quantitative Trait Loci for Altitude Adaptation of Tree Leaf Shape With
Populus szechuanica
in the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau. 3253 31
Spontaneously arising channels that transport the phytohormone auxin provide positional cues for self-organizing aspects of plant development such as flexible vasculature regeneration or its patterning during leaf venation. The auxin canalization hypothesis proposes a feedback between auxin signaling and transport as the underlying mechanism, but molecular players await discovery. We identified part of the machinery that routes auxin transport. The auxin-regulated receptor CAMEL (Canalization-related Auxin-regulated Malectin-type RLK) together with CANAR (Canalization-related Receptor-like kinase) interact with and phosphorylate
PIN
auxin transporters.
camel
and
canar
mutants are impaired in
PIN1
subcellular trafficking and auxin-mediated
PIN
polarization, which macroscopically manifests as defects in leaf venation and vasculature regeneration after wounding. The CAMEL-CANAR receptor complex is part of the auxin feedback that coordinates polarization of individual cells during auxin canalization.
...
PMID:Receptor kinase module targets PIN-dependent auxin transport during canalization. 3312 78
The transport of auxin controls the rate, direction and localization of plant growth and development. The course of auxin transport is defined by the polar subcellular localization of the
PIN
proteins, a family of auxin efflux transporters. However, little is known about the composition and regulation of the
PIN
protein complex. Here, using blue-native PAGE and quantitative mass spectrometry, we identify native
PIN
core transport units as homo- and heteromers assembled from
PIN1
, PIN2, PIN3, PIN4 and PIN7 subunits only. Furthermore, we show that endogenous flavonols stabilize
PIN
dimers to regulate auxin efflux in the same way as does the auxin transport inhibitor 1-naphthylphthalamic acid (NPA). This inhibitory mechanism is counteracted both by the natural auxin indole-3-acetic acid and by phosphomimetic amino acids introduced into the
PIN1
cytoplasmic domain. Our results lend mechanistic insights into an endogenous control mechanism which regulates
PIN
function and opens the way for a deeper understanding of the protein environment and regulation of the polar auxin transport complex.
...
PMID:Flavonol-mediated stabilization of PIN efflux complexes regulates polar auxin transport. 3318 77
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