3 research outputs found
Signalling by tips
New molecules, including protein kinases, lipids and molecules
that have neurotransmitter activities in animals have emerged
as important players in tip-growing cells. Transcriptomics
analysis reveals that the largest single class of genes
expressed in pollen tubes encode signal transducers,
reflecting the necessity to decode complex and diverse
pathways that are associated with tip growth. Many of
these pathways may use common intracellular second
messengers, with ions and reactive oxygen species emerging
as two major common denominators in many of the processes
involved in tip growth. These second messengers might
influence the actin cytoskeleton through known interactions
with actin-binding proteins. In turn, changes in the dynamic
properties of the cytoskeleton would define the basic polarity
events needed to shape and modify tip-growing cells