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Pea Border Cell Maturation and Release Involve Complex Cell Wall Structural Dynamics

Authors :
Jozef Mravec
William G.T. Willats
Stjepan K. Kračun
Xiaoyuan Guo
Maria Dalgaard Mikkelsen
Peter Ulvskov
Julia Schückel
Aleksander Riise Hansen
Ida Elisabeth Johansen
Grégory Mouille
David S. Domozych
Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences
department of Plant
Institut Jean-Pierre Bourgin (IJPB)
Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-AgroParisTech
Skidmore College [Saratoga Springs]
Department of Biology and Skidmore Microscopy Imaging Center
Food and Rural Development
Newcastle University
European Union FP7 Marie Curie action project CeWalDyn [329830]
European Union FP7 Marie Curie action project ITN WallTraC [263916]
Innovation Funds Denmark project BioValue [0603-00522B]
Innovation Funds Denmark project B21st [001-2011-4]
Villum Foundation project PLANET [00009283]
U.S. National Science Foundation [NSF-MCB 0919925, NSF-DBI 0922805]
Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs
Skidmore College
Source :
Plant Physiology, Plant Physiology, American Society of Plant Biologists, 2017, 174 (2), pp.1051-1066. ⟨10.1104/pp.16.00097⟩
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
HAL CCSD, 2017.

Abstract

The adhesion of plant cells is vital for support and protection of the plant body and is maintained by a variety of molecular associations between cell wall components. In some specialized cases, though, plant cells are programmed to detach, and root cap-derived border cells are examples of this. Border cells (in some species known as border-like cells) provide an expendable barrier between roots and the environment. Their maturation and release is an important but poorly characterized cell separation event. To gain a deeper insight into the complex cellular dynamics underlying this process, we undertook a systematic, detailed analysis of pea (Pisum sativum) root tip cell walls. Our study included immunocarbohydrate microarray profiling, monosaccharide composition determination, Fourier-transformed infrared microspectroscopy, quantitative reverse transcription-PCR of cell wall biosynthetic genes, analysis of hydrolytic activities, transmission electron microscopy, and immunolocalization of cell wall components. Using this integrated glycobiology approach, we identified multiple novel modes of cell wall structural and compositional rearrangement during root cap growth and the release of border cells. Our findings provide a new level of detail about border cell maturation and enable us to develop a model of the separation process. We propose that loss of adhesion by the dissolution of homogalacturonan in the middle lamellae is augmented by an active biophysical process of cell curvature driven by the polarized distribution of xyloglucan and extensin epitopes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00320889 and 15322548
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plant Physiology, Plant Physiology, American Society of Plant Biologists, 2017, 174 (2), pp.1051-1066. ⟨10.1104/pp.16.00097⟩
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ab5dd4d3ccf014ca1c9c8334bfc387b0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.16.00097⟩