Acid-Growth Response and α-Expansins in Suspension Cultures of Bright Yellow 2 Tobacco
- 1 November 1998
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Plant Physiology
- Vol. 118 (3) , 907-916
- https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.118.3.907
Abstract
The possibility that Bright Yellow 2 (BY2) tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) suspension-cultured cells possess an expansin-mediated acid-growth mechanism was examined by multiple approaches. BY2 cells grew three times faster upon treatment with fusicoccin, which induces an acidification of the cell wall. Exogenous expansins likewise stimulated BY2 cell growth 3-fold. Protein extracted from BY2 cell walls possessed the expansin-like ability to induce extension of isolated walls. In western-blot analysis of BY2 wall protein, one band of 29 kD was recognized by anti-expansin antibody. Six different classes of α-expansin mRNA were identified in a BY2 cDNA library. Northern-blot analysis indicated moderate to low abundance of multiple α-expansin mRNAs in BY2 cells. From these results we conclude that BY2 suspension-cultured cells have the necessary components for expansin-mediated cell wall enlargement.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Expression of expansin genes is correlated with growth in deepwater rice.Plant Cell, 1997
- Plant cell enlargement and the action of expansinsBioEssays, 1996
- Expansins in growing tomato leavesThe Plant Journal, 1995
- The current status of the acid‐growth hypothesisNew Phytologist, 1994
- Structural models of primary cell walls in flowering plants: consistency of molecular structure with the physical properties of the walls during growthThe Plant Journal, 1993
- Low external pH prevents cell elongation but not multiplication of embryogenic carrot cellsPhysiologia Plantarum, 1992
- Simultaneous editing of multiple nucleic acid and protein sequences with ESEEBioinformatics, 1989
- Wall Relaxation and the Driving Forces for Cell Expansive GrowthPlant Physiology, 1987
- Fusicoccin: A Tool in Plant PhysiologyAnnual Review of Plant Physiology, 1979
- Carbon Dioxide and pH Requirements of Non-Photosynthetic Tissue Culture CellsPhysiologia Plantarum, 1973