Live cell imaging of cytoskeletal and organelle dynamics in gravity-sensing cells in plant gravitropism

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Abstract

Plants sense gravity and change their morphology/growth direction accordingly (gravitropism). The early process of gravitropism, gravity sensing, is supposed to be triggered by sedimentation of starch-filled plastids (amyloplasts) in statocytes such as root columella cells and shoot endodermal cells. For several decades, many scientists have focused on characterizing the role of the amyloplasts and observed their intracellular sedimentation in various plants. Recently, it has been discovered that the complex sedimentary movements of the amyloplasts are created not only by gravity but also by cytoskeletal/organelle dynamics, such as those of actin filaments and the vacuolar membrane. Thus, to understand how plants sense gravity, we need to analyze both amyloplast movements and their regulatory systems in statocytes. We have developed a vertical-stage confocal microscope that allows multicolor fluorescence imaging of amyloplasts, actin filaments and vacuolar membranes in vertically oriented plant tissues. We also developed a centrifuge microscope that allows bright-field imaging of amyloplasts during centrifugation. These microscope systems provide new insights into gravity-sensing mechanisms in Arabidopsis.

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Nakamura, M., Toyota, M., Tasaka, M., & Morita, M. T. (2015). Live cell imaging of cytoskeletal and organelle dynamics in gravity-sensing cells in plant gravitropism. Methods in Molecular Biology, 1309, 57–69. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-2697-8_6

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