PL EN


Preferencje help
Widoczny [Schowaj] Abstrakt
Liczba wyników
2000 | 42 | 1 |

Tytuł artykułu

Immunocytochemical localization of calmodulin in fertile and sterile anther of Allium cepa L.

Warianty tytułu

Języki publikacji

EN

Abstrakty

EN
Calmodulin distribution was studied in the maturing male fertile and male sterile anther of Allium cepa L., using commercial monoclonal anti-CaM antibodies. The main sites of its occurrence were the tapetum and the generative cell lines. During microsporogenesis, calmodulin localization in the anthers of both onion lines was similar. Anti-CaM was localized in dividing microsporocytes, and low levels of it were found in the tapetum cytoplasm. Significant differences in calmodulin level and distribution between male fertile and male sterile anthers were observed after completion of meiosis. In the tapetum of the male fertile anther, throughout its existence, calmodulin level was higher than in the tapetum of the male sterile anther. The prematurely degenerating male sterile tapetum, starting from the free-microspore stage, did not bind anti-CaM. Differences in calmodulin localization between the functional and nonfunctional tapetum were found already in the tetrad stage, that is, before the start of degeneration of microspores. In functional tapetum cells, anti-CaM was concentrated in the cytoplasm on the loculus side; in the nonfunctional tapetum of the male sterile anther, calmodulin was evenly distributed over the cells. In the microspores of the male sterile line, calmodulin was dispersed in the cytoplasm. During pollen maturation, calmodulin was observed to undergo polarization - anti-CaM was localized mainly in the region of one of the pollen poles, near the plasma membrane. In the male sterile anther, progressive degeneration of microspores was associated with decreasing calmodulin level in the cytoplasm; microspores in the abortion stage did not bind anti-CaM.

Wydawca

-

Rocznik

Tom

42

Numer

1

Opis fizyczny

p.37-45,fig.

Twórcy

  • N.Copernicus University, Gagarina 9, 87-100 Torun, Poland
autor
autor

Bibliografia

  • Bachs O, Agell N, and Carafoli E. 1994. Calmodulin and calmodulin-binding proteins in the nucleus. Cell Calcium 16: 289-296.
  • Bednarska E, and Butowt R. 1994. Calcium in pollen-pistil interaction in Petunia hybrida Hort. I. Localization of Ca2+ ions in mature pollen grain using pyroantimonate and autoradiographic methods. Folia Histochemica et Cytobiologica 32: 265-269.
  • Bush DS. 1995. Calcium regulation in plant cells and its role in signaling. Annual Review of Plant Physiology and Plant Molecular Biology 46: 95-122.
  • Chapman GP. 1987. The tapetum. International Review of Cytology 107: 111-125.
  • Dauwalder M, Roux SJ, and Hardison L. 1986. Distribution of calmodulin in pea seedlings: immunocytochemical localization in plumules and root apices. Planta 168: 461-470.
  • Gong M, Yang ZH, and Tsao TH. 1993. Isolation and characterization of calmodulin and a novel calcium-binding protein calpollenin from Pinus yunnanensis pollen. Plant Science 89: 5-12.
  • Haußer I, Herth W, and Reiss DH. 1984. Calmodulin in tip-growing plant cells, visualised by fluorescing calmodulin-binding phenothiazines. Planta 162: 33-39.
  • Jończyk B, and Bednarska E. 1996. Subcellular Ca2+ localization in the tapetum male fertile and male sterile anther in Allium cepa L. Folia Histochemica et Cytobiologica 34 suppl. 2: 80.
  • Lenartowska M, Rogriguez-Garcia MI, and Bednarska E. 1998. Immunocytochemical localization of calmodulin in the unpollinated and pollinated style of Petunia hybrida Hort. XVth International Congress on Sexual Plant Reproduction, 16-21 August 1998, Congress Abstract 91. Wageningen.
  • Liu B, and Du JZ. 1989. Purification and some physicochemical properties of calmodulin in Brassica campestris pollen. Acta Biochimica et Biophysica Sinica 21: 477-483.
  • Matsumoto H, Tanigawa M, and Yamaya T. 1983. Calmodulin-like activity associated with chromatin from pea buds. Plant Cell Physiology 24: 593-602.
  • Moutinho A, Love J, Trewavas AJ, and Malhó R. 1998. Distribution of calmodulin protein and mRNA in growing pollen tubes. Sexual Plant Reproduction 11: 131-139.
  • Pacini E, Franchi GG, and Hesse M. 1985. The tapetum: its form, function and possible phylogeny in Embryophyta. Plant Systematic and Evolution 149: 155-185.
  • Poovaiah BW, and Reddy ASN. 1993. Calcium and signal transduction in plants. Critical Reviews in Plant Sciences 12: 185-211.
  • Roberts DM, and Harmon AC. 1992. Calcium-modulated proteins, targets of intracellular calcium signals in higher plants. Annual Review of Plant Physiology and Plant Molecular Biology 43: 375-414.
  • Scali M, Cai G, Del Casino C, Santucci A, Tirlapur UK, Moscatelli A, Cresti M, and Tiezzi A. 1994. Purification and biochemical characterization of calmodulin from Corylus avellana pollen. Plant Physiology and Biochemistry 32: 31- 838.
  • Szymański DB, Llao B, and Zieliński RE. 1996. Calmodulin isoforms differentially enhance the binding of cauliflower nuclear proteins and recombinant TGA3 to a region derived from the Arabidopsis Cam-3 promoter. The Plant Cell 8: 1069-1077.
  • Takuwa N, Zhou W, and Takuwa Y. 1995. Calcium, calmodulin and cell cycle progression. Cellular Signalling 7: 93-104.
  • Tian HQ, Kuang A, Musgrave ME, and Russel SD. 1998. Calcium distribution in fertile and sterile anthers of a photoperiod-sensitive gene male-sterile rice. Planta 204: 183-192.
  • Tirlapur UK, and Cresti M. 1992. Computer-assisted video image analysis of spatial variations in membrane-associated Ca2+ and calmodulin during pollen hydration, germination and tip growth in Nicotiana tabacum L. Annals of Botany 69: 503-508.
  • Tirlapur UK, and Shiggaon SV. 1988. Distribution of calcium and calmodulin in the papillate cells of stigma surface, visualized using chlortetracycline and fluorescing calmodulin binding phenothiazines. Annals of Botany 4: 49-53.
  • Tirlapur UK, Van Went JL, and Cresti M. 1993. Visualization of membrane calcium and calmodulin in embryo sac in situ and isolated from Petunia hybrida L. and Nicotiana tabacum L. Annals of Botany 71: 161-167
  • Tirlapur UK, and Willemse MTM. 1992. Changes in calcium and calmodulin levels during microsporogenesis, pollen development and germination in Gasteria verrucosa (Mill.) H. Duval. Sexual Plant Reproduction 5: 214—223.
  • Tirlapur UK, Scali M, Moscatelli A, Del Casino C, Cai G, Tiezzi A, Cresti M. 1994. Confocal image analysis of spatial variations in immunocytochemically identified calmodulin during pollen hydration, germination and pollen tube tip growth in Nicotiana tabacum L. Zygote 2: 63-68.
  • Vedel R, Pla M, Vitart V, Gutiers S, Chetrit P, and De Paepe R. 1994. Molecular basis of nuclear and cytoplasmic male sterility in higher plants. Plant Physiology and Biochemistry 32: 601-618.
  • Vogel HJ. 1994. Calmodulin: a versatile calcium mediator protein. Biochemical Cell Biology 72: 357-376.
  • Williams CM, Zhang G, Michalak M, and Cass DD. 1997. Calcium-induced protein phosphorylation and changes in levels of calmodulin and calreticulin in maize sperm cells. Sexual Plant Reproduction 10: 83-88.
  • Willemse MTM. 1993. Calcium and calmodulin distribution in the tapetum of Gasteria verrucosa during anther development. Plant Systematic and Evolution [Suppl.] 7: 107-116.
  • Zimprich F, Torok K, and Bolsover SR. 1995. Nuclear calmodulin responds rapidly to calcium influx at the plasmalemma. Cell Calcium 17: 233-238.

Typ dokumentu

Bibliografia

Identyfikatory

Identyfikator YADDA

bwmeta1.element.agro-article-ec596f27-be08-4ca8-93d4-28a3a11d653c
JavaScript jest wyłączony w Twojej przeglądarce internetowej. Włącz go, a następnie odśwież stronę, aby móc w pełni z niej korzystać.