156 research outputs found

    Morphogenèse de compartiments membranaires (formation de l'autophagosome chez les plantes)

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    L'autophagie est un processus permettant la dégradation de constituants cytosoliques dans un compartiment lytique, par leur séquestration au sein d'une vésicule à double membrane : l'autophagosome. L'autophagie est, avec la voie ubiquitine-protéasome, l'une des deux grandes voies de dégradation présente de manière fortement conservée chez les cellules eucaryotes. Présente à un niveau basal, elle peut être stimulée afin de permettre la remobilisation de ressources cellulaires, ou d'assurer des fonctions cytoprotectrices et de détoxification. La formation d'autophagosomes traduit alors la capacité du système endomembranaire à s'adapter aux besoins cellulaires. Cependant, la mécanique membranaire et moléculaire de ce phénomène reste mal comprise. L'objectif de ce travail de thèse était de mieux comprendre la formation de ce compartiment dans la cellule végétale. Pour cela, nous avons tout d'abord mis au point les conditions propices à l'étude de l'autophagie dans la racine d Arabidopsis thaliana, puis nous avons entrepris l'identification de marqueurs des étapes de formation de l'autophagosome. L'étude par imagerie en temps réel et 3D de la protéine ATG5, impliquée dans l expansion membranaire, nous a permis de mettre en évidence son recrutement transitoire sur un domaine particulier de l'autophagosome en formation, son ouverture. De plus, l'étude de différents acteurs du système endomembranaire, nous a permis de mettre en évidence et de caractériser l'implication du réticulum endoplasmique et de ATG9, pour aboutir à un modèle de la formation de l'autophagosome chez les plantes.Autophagy is a catabolic process targeting cytosolic compounds to the lytic compartment after sequestration within a double membrane bound vesicle: the autophagosome. Along with the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway, autophagy is one of the main catabolic processes conserved among eukaryotic cells. Present at a basal level, it can be stimulated to allow: remobilization of cell resources, cytoprotective functions, and detoxification. Autophagosome formation demonstrates the capacity of the endomembrane system to adapt dynamically to the cell's environment. However, the membrane and molecular processes involved are still poorly understood. This work aimed to advance understanding of autophagosome formation in plant cells. First of all, we set up suitable conditions for the study of autophagy in the Arabidopsis root, then we identified markers of the autophagosome formation steps. Live and 3D imaging of the ATG5 protein, involved in membrane expansion, demonstrated its transient recruitment to a specific domain of the forming autophagosome, its aperture. Furthermore, studying different actors of the endomembrane system has allowed us to implicate the endoplasmic reticulum and ATG9, and to establish a model for autophagosome formation in plants.PARIS11-SCD-Bib. électronique (914719901) / SudocSudocFranceF

    Dual role for ubiquitin in plant steroid hormone receptor endocytosis

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    Brassinosteroids are plant steroid hormones that control many aspects of plant growth and development, and are perceived at the cell surface by the plasma membrane-localized receptor kinase BRI1. Here we show that BRI1 is post-translationally modified by K63 polyubiquitin chains in vivo. Using both artificial ubiquitination of BRI1 and generation of an ubiquitination-defective BRI1 mutant form, we demonstrate that ubiquitination promotes BRI1 internalization from the cell surface and is essential for its recognition at the trans-Golgi network/early endosomes (TGN/EE) for vacuolar targeting. Finally, we demonstrate that the control of BRI1 protein dynamics by ubiquitination is an important control mechanism for brassinosteroid responses in plants. Altogether, our results identify ubiquitination and K63-linked polyubiquitin chain formation as a dual targeting signal for BRI1 internalization and sorting along the endocytic pathway, and highlight its role in hormonally controlled plant development

    Subcellular distribution of the V-ATPase complex in plant cells, and in vivo localisation of the 100 kDa subunit VHA-a within the complex

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    BACKGROUND: Vacuolar H(+)-ATPases are large protein complexes of more than 700 kDa that acidify endomembrane compartments and are part of the secretory system of eukaryotic cells. They are built from 14 different (VHA)-subunits. The paper addresses the question of sub-cellular localisation and subunit composition of plant V-ATPase in vivo and in vitro mainly by using colocalization and fluorescence resonance energy transfer techniques (FRET). Focus is placed on the examination and function of the 95 kDa membrane spanning subunit VHA-a. Showing similarities to the already described Vph1 and Stv1 vacuolar ATPase subunits from yeast, VHA-a revealed a bipartite structure with (i) a less conserved cytoplasmically orientated N-terminus and (ii) a membrane-spanning C-terminus with a higher extent of conservation including all amino acids shown to be essential for proton translocation in the yeast. On the basis of sequence data VHA-a appears to be an essential structural and functional element of V-ATPase, although previously a sole function in assembly has been proposed. RESULTS: To elucidate the presence and function of VHA-a in the plant complex, three approaches were undertaken: (i) co-immunoprecipitation with antibodies directed to epitopes in the N- and C-terminal part of VHA-a, respectively, (ii) immunocytochemistry approach including co-localisation studies with known plant endomembrane markers, and (iii) in vivo-FRET between subunits fused to variants of green fluorescence protein (CFP, YFP) in transfected cells. CONCLUSIONS: All three sets of results show that V-ATPase contains VHA-a protein that interacts in a specific manner with other subunits. The genomes of plants encode three genes of the 95 kDa subunit (VHA-a) of the vacuolar type H(+)-ATPase. Immuno-localisation of VHA-a shows that the recognized subunit is exclusively located on the endoplasmic reticulum. This result is in agreement with the hypothesis that the different isoforms of VHA-a may localize on distinct endomembrane compartments, as it was shown for its yeast counterpart Vph1

    Clathrin-dependent and independent endocytic pathways in tobacco protoplasts revealed by labelling with charged nanogold

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    Positively charged nanogold was used as a probe to trace the internalization of plasma membrane (PM) domains carrying negatively charged residues at an ultrastructural level. The probe revealed distinct endocytic pathways within tobacco protoplasts and allowed the morphology of the organelles involved in endocytosis to be characterized in great detail. Putative early endosomes with a tubulo-vesicular structure, similar to that observed in animal cells, are described and a new compartment, characterized by interconnected vesicles, was identified as a late endosome using the Arabidopsis anti-syntaxin family Syp-21 antibody. Endocytosis dissection using Brefeldin A (BFA), pulse chase, temperature- and energy-dependent experiments combined with quantitative analysis of nanogold particles in different compartments, suggested that recycling to the PM predominated with respect to degradation. Further experiments using ikarugamycin (IKA), an inhibitor of clathrin-dependent endocytosis, and negatively charged nanogold confirmed that distinct endocytic pathways coexist in tobacco protoplasts

    Inducible expression of Pisum sativum xyloglucan fucosyltransferase in the pea root cap meristem, and effects of antisense mRNA expression on root cap cell wall structural integrity

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    Mitosis and cell wall synthesis in the legume root cap meristem can be induced and synchronized by the nondestructive removal of border cells from the cap periphery. Newly synthesized cells can be examined microscopically as they differentiate progressively during cap development, and ultimately detach as a new population of border cells. This system was used to demonstrate that Pisum sativum L. fucosyl transferase (PsFut1) mRNA expression is strongly expressed in root meristematic tissues, and is induced >2-fold during a 5-h period when mitosis in the root cap meristem is increased. Expression of PsFut1 antisense mRNA in pea hairy roots under the control of the CaMV35S promoter, which exhibits meristem localized expression in pea root caps, resulted in a 50–60% reduction in meristem localized endogenous PsFut1 mRNA expression measured using whole mount in situ hybridization. Changes in gross levels of cell wall fucosylated xyloglucan were not detected, but altered surface localization patterns were detected using whole mount immunolocalization with CCRC-M1, an antibody that recognizes fucosylated xyloglucan. Emerging hairy roots expressing antisense PsFut1 mRNA appeared normal macroscopically but scanning electron microscopy of tissues with altered CCRC-M1 localization patterns revealed wrinkled, collapsed cell surfaces. As individual border cells separated from the cap periphery, cell death occurred in correlation with extrusion of cellular contents through breaks in the wall

    Exploration of cell wall architecture with the rapid-freeze deep-etch technique

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    Brefeldin A affects the endomembrane system and vesicle trafficking in higher plants

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