Abstract
Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology
Vol. 17:
159-187
(Volume publication date November 2001)
(doi:10.1146/annurev.cellbio.17.1.159)
POLARIZED CELL GROWTH IN HIGHER PLANTS Peter K. Hepler,1 Luis Vidali,1 and Alice Y. Cheung2Department of Biology, 1 University of Massachusetts, Morrill Science Center III, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003; e-mail: hepler@bio.umass.edu lvidali@bio.umass.edu Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 2 University of Massachusetts, Morrill Science Center III, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003; e-mail: acheung@biochem.umass.edu ▪ Abstract Pollen tubes and root hairs are highly elongated, cylindrically shaped cells whose polarized growth permits them to explore the environment for the benefit of the entire plant. Root hairs create an enormous surface area for the uptake of water and nutrients, whereas pollen tubes deliver the sperm cells to the ovule for fertilization. These cells grow exclusively at the apex and at prodigious rates (in excess of 200 nm/s for pollen tubes). Underlying this rapid growth are polarized ion gradients and fluxes, turnover of cytoskeletal elements (actin microfilaments), and exocytosis and endocytosis of membrane vesicles. Intracellular gradients of calcium and protons are spatially localized at the growing apex; inward fluxes of these ions are apically directed. These gradients and fluxes oscillate with the same frequency as the oscillations in growth rate but not with the same phase. Actin microfilaments, which together with myosin generate reverse fountain streaming, undergo rapid turnover in the apical domain, possibly being regulated by key actin-binding proteins, e.g., profilin, villin, and ADF/cofilin, in concert with the ion gradients. Exocytosis of vesicles at the apex, also dependent on the ion gradients, provides precursor material for the continuously expanding cell wall of the growing cell. Elucidation of the interactions and of the dynamics of these different components is providing unique insight into the mechanisms of polarized growth. Most recent citing papers (via CrossRef)Plasmolysis and cell wall deposition in wheat root hairs under osmotic stress Ca2+ influx and phosphoinositide signalling are essential for the establishment and maintenance of cell polarity in monospores from the red alga Porphyra yezoensis Journal of Experimental Botany (2009) Plant Rabs: Characterization, Functional Diversity, and Role in Stress Tolerance Plant Molecular Biology Reporter (2009) Nitric oxide modulates the influx of extracellular Ca
2+
and actin filament organization during cell wall construction in
Pinus bungeana
pollen tubes New Phytologist 182(4):851-862 (2009) Expression profile of calcium-dependent protein kinase (CDPKs) genes during the whole lifespan and under phytohormone treatment conditions in rice (Oryza sativa L. ssp. indica) Plant Molecular Biology 70(3):311-325 (2009)
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