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The M3 phosphorylation motif has been functionally conserved forintracellular trafficking of long-looped PIN-FORMEDs in the Arabidopsisroot hair cell
- Source :
- BMC PLANT BIOLOGY(13), BMC Plant Biology
- Publication Year :
- 2013
-
Abstract
- Background PIN-FORMED (PIN) efflux carriers contribute to polar auxin transport and plant development by exhibiting dynamic and diverse asymmetrical localization patterns in the plasma membrane (PM). Phosphorylation of the central hydrophilic loop (HL) of PINs has been implicated in the regulation of PIN trafficking. Recently, we reported that a phosphorylatable motif (M3) in the PIN3-HL is necessary for the polarity, intracellular trafficking, and biological functions of PIN3. In this study, using the root hair system for PIN activity assay, we investigated whether this motif has been functionally conserved among long-HL PINs. Results Root hair-specific overexpression of wild-type PIN1, 2, or 7 greatly inhibited root hair growth by depleting auxin levels in the root hair cell, whereas overexpression of M3 phosphorylation-defective PIN mutants failed to inhibit root hair growth. Consistent with this root hair phenotype, the PM localization of M3 phosphorylation-defective PIN1 and PIN7 was partially disrupted, resulting in less auxin efflux and restoration of root hair growth. Partial formation of brefeldin A-compartments in these phosphorylation-mutant PIN lines also suggested that their PM targeting was partially disrupted. On the other hand, compared with the PIN1 and PIN7 mutant proteins, M3-phosphorylation-defective PIN2 proteins were almost undetectable. However, the mutant PIN2 protein levels were restored by wortmannin treatment almost to the wild-type PIN2 level, indicating that the M3 motif of PIN2, unlike that of other PINs, is implicated in PIN2 trafficking to the vacuolar lytic pathway. Conclusions These results suggest that the M3 phosphorylation motif has been functionally conserved to modulate the intracellular trafficking of long-HL PINs, but its specific function in trafficking has diverged among PIN members.
- Subjects :
- Auxin efflux
Mutant
Protein trafficking
PIN-FORMED (PIN)
Arabidopsis
Plant Science
Root hair
Biology
Plant Roots
Wortmannin
chemistry.chemical_compound
Auxin
Phosphorylation
Auxin transport
Hydrophilic loop (of PINs)
Arabidopsis Proteins
Transport protein
Cell biology
Androstadienes
Protein Transport
chemistry
Polar auxin transport
Intracellular
Research Article
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- BMC PLANT BIOLOGY(13), BMC Plant Biology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....0a558fec8921f8a4cfc7055d41d58afa