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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(32): 11900-5, 2014 Aug 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25074908

ABSTRACT

Increasing evidence suggests that nuclear migration is important for eukaryotic development. Although nuclear migration is conserved in plants, its importance for plant development has not yet been established. The most extraordinary plant nuclear migration events involve plant fertilization, which is starkly different from that of animals. Instead of evolving self-propelled sperm cells (SCs), plants use pollen tubes to deliver SCs, in which the pollen vegetative nucleus (VN) and the SCs migrate as a unit toward the ovules, a fundamental but barely understood process. Here, we report that WPP domain-interacting proteins (WIPs) and their binding partners the WPP domain-interacting tail-anchored proteins (WITs) are essential for pollen nuclear migration. Loss-of-function mutations in WIT and/or WIP gene families resulted in impaired VN movement, inefficient SC delivery, and defects in pollen tube reception. WIPs are Klarsicht/ANC-1/Syne-1 Homology (KASH) analogs in plants. KASH proteins are key players in animal nuclear migration. Thus, this study not only reveals an important nuclear migration mechanism in plant fertilization but also, suggests that similar nuclear migration machinery is conserved between plants and animals.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Arabidopsis/physiology , Nuclear Proteins/metabolism , Arabidopsis/genetics , Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Fertility/genetics , Fertility/physiology , Genes, Plant , Mutation , Nuclear Envelope/metabolism , Nuclear Proteins/genetics , Plants, Genetically Modified , Pollen/genetics , Pollen/physiology
2.
J Exp Bot ; 57(1): 113-24, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16291799

ABSTRACT

MFP1 is a conserved plant coiled-coil protein located on the stroma side of the chloroplast thylakoids, as well as in the nuclear matrix. It displays species-specific variability in the number of genes, proteins, and expression. Allium cepa has two nuclear proteins antigenically related to MFP1 with different M(r), pI, distribution, and expression, but only the 90 kDa MFP1 protein is a nuclear matrix component that associates with both the nucleoskeletal filaments and a new category of nuclear bodies. The 90 kDa AcMFP1 migrates in two-dimensional blots as two sets of spots. The hypo-phosphorylated forms (pI approximately 9.5) are tightly bound to the nuclear matrix, while high ionic strength buffers release the more acidic hyper-phosphorylated ones (pI approximately 8.5), suggesting that the protein is post-translationally modified, and that these modifications control its attachment to the nuclear matrix. Dephosphorylation by exogenous alkaline phosphatase and phosphorylation by exogenous CK2, as well as specific inhibition and stimulation of endogenous CK2 with heparin and spermine and spermidine, respectively, revealed that the protein is an in vitro and in vivo substrate of this enzyme, and that CK2 phosphorylation weakens the strength of its binding to the nuclear matrix. In synchronized cells, the nuclear 90 kDa AcMFP1 phosphorylation levels vary during the cell cycle with a moderate peak in G2. These results provide the first evidence for AcMFP1 in vivo phosphorylation, and open up further research on its nuclear functions.


Subject(s)
Casein Kinase II/metabolism , Matrix Attachment Region Binding Proteins/metabolism , Nuclear Matrix/metabolism , Onions/metabolism , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Casein Kinase II/antagonists & inhibitors , Cell Proliferation , G2 Phase , Isoelectric Point , Matrix Attachment Region Binding Proteins/chemistry , Nuclear Matrix-Associated Proteins/metabolism , Phosphoproteins/metabolism , Phosphorylation , Plant Proteins/chemistry , Solubility
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