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First published online October 24, 2008; 10.1105/tpc.108.201041 The Plant Cell 20:2549-2551 (2008) © 2008 American Society of Plant Biologists
Reply: On Three-Dimensional Models of Higher-Plant Thylakoid Networks: Elements of Consensus, Controversies, and Future Experiments z Garab
Biological Research Center
Resource for Visualization of Biological Complexity gyozo{at}brc.hu carmen{at}wadsworth.org
The rapid technical advancement of electron microscopy tomography (EMT), and of data acquisition and analysis, opened new vistas in revealing complex membrane structures (Frey and Mannella, 2000
EMT provided solid evidence that the attractive models, still often used in textbooks, which depict the stroma thylakoid membranes as long flat tubes interconnecting the grana, have no structural basis and thus should now be abandoned, as argued previously (Mustárdy and Garab, 2003
In particular, the observations from serial sections and EMTs that stroma thylakoids tend to step up and down (i.e., shift in opposite directions on opposite sides, as the helical thread on a screw) are consistent with the helical model(s), although do not strictly rule out the pairwise organization model. However, shifts (steps) of more than one level, as observed in serial section EM and EMT (cf. Mustárdy et al., 2008a
Another point of disagreement between the two models is the bifurcation of the membrane vesicles, as opposed to a mechanism governed mainly by fusion and overlapping of the thylakoid vesicles. This question is topological on the one hand, and on the other hand, is closely related to the possible mechanism of the self-assembly of the granum-stroma thylakoid membrane system. From a topological point of view, it would be essential to trace the continuity of the membranes and of the lumenal phases at the granum-stroma interface. Positing contiguity of the thylakoid vesicles is warranted by the openings (slits) in the margins of the granum. The precise determination of the topology of the junction between the stroma and granum thylakoid vesicles requires high-resolution EMT on thin samples with well-discernible lumenal phases. The required contrast can be achieved either by optimizing staining protocols (Austin et al., 2006
Regarding the mechanism of self-assembly, we need to learn more about the nature of structural reorganizations displayed by thylakoid membranes (Consoli et al., 2005 Footnotes www.plantcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1105/tpc.108.201041 REFERENCES
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