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First published online January 17, 2003; 10.1105/tpc.007237

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The Plant Cell, Vol. 15, 331-345, February 2003, Copyright © 2003,
American Society of Plant Biologists

Regulation of Actin-Dependent Cytoplasmic Motility by Type II Phytochrome Occurs within Seconds in Vallisneria gigantea Epidermal Cells

Shingo Takagi1,a, Sam-Geun Kong2,b, Yoshinobu Mineyukic and Masaki Furuyab

a Department of Biology, Graduate School of Science, Osaka University, Toyonaka, Osaka 560-0043, Japan
b Hitachi Advanced Research Laboratory, Hatoyama, Saitama 350-0395, Japan
c Department of Biological Science, Graduate School of Science, Hiroshima University, Higashi-Hiroshima, Hiroshima 739-8526, Japan

1 To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail shingot{at}bio.sci.osaka-u.ac.jp; fax 81-6-6850-5817

The effects of light on actin-dependent cytoplasmic motility in epidermal cells of green leaves of the aquatic angiosperm Vallisneria gigantea were investigated quantitatively using a custom-made dynamic image analyzer. Cytoplasmic motility was measured by monitoring changes in the brightness of individual pixels on digitized images taken sequentially under infrared light. Acceleration and deceleration of cytoplasmic motility were regulated photoreversibly by type II phytochrome(s). This phytochrome-dependent induction of cytoplasmic motility did not occur uniformly in cytoplasm but took place as scattered patches in which no particular organelles, including nucleus, existed. The induction became detectable at 2.5 s after the start of irradiation with pulsed red light. In cells exposed to microbeam irradiation, cytoplasmic motility was induced only in sites in the cytoplasm that were irradiated directly, whereas nonirradiated neighboring areas were unaffected. The effect was short-lived, disappearing within a few minutes, and no signal was transmitted from an irradiated cell to its neighbors. Anti-phytochrome antibody–responsive protein(s) was detectable in the leaf extract by immunoblot and zinc blot analyses and in cryosections of the epidermis by immunocytochemistry. Although the phytochrome-dependent cytoplasmic motility was blocked by exogenously applied latrunculin B or cytochalasins, treatment of the dark-adapted cells with Ca2+-chelating reagents induced the cytoplasmic motility. We have proposed a model for the phytochrome regulation of cytoplasmic motility as one of the earliest responses to a light stimulus.




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