AtEXO70A1, a member of a family of putative exocyst subunits specifically expanded in land plants, is important for polar growth and plant development
Jazyk angličtina Země Anglie, Velká Británie Médium print-electronic
Typ dokumentu časopisecké články, práce podpořená grantem
Grantová podpora
P 16410
Austrian Science Fund FWF - Austria
PubMed
16942608
PubMed Central
PMC2865999
DOI
10.1111/j.1365-313x.2006.02854.x
PII: TPJ2854
Knihovny.cz E-zdroje
- MeSH
- Arabidopsis genetika růst a vývoj metabolismus MeSH
- fenotyp MeSH
- fylogeneze MeSH
- homozygot MeSH
- hypokotyl anatomie a histologie růst a vývoj metabolismus MeSH
- inzerční mutageneze MeSH
- kořeny rostlin anatomie a histologie růst a vývoj metabolismus MeSH
- květy anatomie a histologie růst a vývoj metabolismus MeSH
- multigenová rodina * MeSH
- mutace MeSH
- neplodnost rostlin genetika MeSH
- podjednotky proteinů genetika metabolismus fyziologie MeSH
- proteiny huseníčku klasifikace genetika fyziologie MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- práce podpořená grantem MeSH
- Názvy látek
- EXO70A1 protein, Arabidopsis MeSH Prohlížeč
- podjednotky proteinů MeSH
- proteiny huseníčku MeSH
The exocyst is a hetero-oligomeric protein complex involved in exocytosis and has been extensively studied in yeast and animal cells. Evidence is now accumulating that the exocyst is also present in plants. Bioinformatic analysis of genes encoding plant homologs of the exocyst subunit, Exo70, revealed that three Exo70 subgroups are evolutionarily conserved among angiosperms, lycophytes and mosses. Arabidopsis and rice contain 22 and approximately 39 EXO70 genes, respectively, which can be classified into nine clusters considered to be ancient in angiosperms (one has been lost in Arabidopsis). We characterized two independent T-DNA insertional mutants of the AtEXO70A1 gene (exo70A1-1 and exo70A1-2). Heterozygous EXO70A1/exo70A1 plants appear to be normal and segregate in a 1:2:1 ratio, suggesting that neither male nor female gametophytes are affected by the EXO70A1 disruption. However, both exo70A1-1 and exo70A1-2 homozygotes exhibit an array of phenotypic defects. The polar growth of root hairs and stigmatic papillae is disturbed. Organs are generally smaller, plants show a loss of apical dominance and indeterminate growth where instead of floral meristems new lateral inflorescences are initiated in a reiterative manner. Both exo70A1 mutants have dramatically reduced fertility. These results suggest that the putative exocyst subunit EXO70A1 is involved in cell and organ morphogenesis.
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