Remodeling the Cytoskeleton for Growth and Form: An Overview with Some New Views
- 1 June 2003
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Plant Biology
- Vol. 54 (1) , 691-722
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.arplant.54.031902.134818
Abstract
The cytoskeleton coordinates all aspects of growth in plant cells, including exocytosis of membrane and wall components during cell expansion. This review seeks to integrate current information about cytoskeletal components in plants and the role they play in generating cell form. Advances in genome analysis have fundamentally changed the nature of research strategies and generated an explosion of new information on the cytoskeleton-associated proteins, their regulation, and their role in signaling to the cytoskeleton. Some of these proteins appear novel to plants, but many have close homologues in other eukaryotic systems. It is becoming clear that the mechanisms behind cell growth are essentially similar across the growth continuum, which ranges from tip growth to diffuse expansion. Remodeling of the actin cytoskeleton at sites of exocytosis is an especially critical feature of polarized and may also contribute to axial growth. We evaluate the most recent work on the signaling mechanisms that continually remodel the actin cytoskeleton via the activation of actin-binding proteins (ABPs) and consider the role the microtubule cytoskeleton plays in this process.This publication has 172 references indexed in Scilit:
- Unconventional Rac-GEF activity is mediated through the Dock180–ELMO complexNature Cell Biology, 2002
- Wall architecture in the cellulose-deficientrsw1 mutant ofArabidopsis thaliana: Microfibrils but not microtubules lose their transverse alignment before microfibrils become unrecognizable in the mitotic and elongation zones of rootsProtoplasma, 2001
- Actin and pollen tube growthProtoplasma, 2001
- Chance and necessity: the evolution of morphological complexity and diversityNature, 2001
- Microtubules and microfilaments are both responsible for pollen tube elongation in the coniferPicea abies (Norway spruce)Protoplasma, 2000
- Association between elongation factor-1? and microtubules in vivo is domain dependent and conditionalCell Motility, 2000
- Visualization of microtubules in living cells of transgenicArabidopsis thalianaProtoplasma, 1999
- Microtubule orientation and dynamics in elongating characean internodal cells following cytosolic acidification, induction of pH bands, or premature growth arrestProtoplasma, 1997
- A cytochalasin-sensitive actin filament meshwork is a prerequisite for local wound wall deposition inNitella internodal cellsProtoplasma, 1997
- Actin-microtubule interactions in the algaNitella: analysis of the mechanism by which microtubule depolymerization potentiates cytochalasin's effects on streamingProtoplasma, 1996