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Abstract
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Plasmodesmatal function is probed using transgenic tobacco plants that express a virus movement protein.

S Wolf, C M Deom, R Beachy, W J Lucas
S Wolf
Botany Department, University of California, Davis 95616-8537.
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C M Deom
Botany Department, University of California, Davis 95616-8537.
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R Beachy
Botany Department, University of California, Davis 95616-8537.
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W J Lucas
Botany Department, University of California, Davis 95616-8537.
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Published June 1991. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1105/tpc.3.6.593

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  • Copyright © 1991 by American Society of Plant Biologists

Abstract

A gene encoding a temperature-sensitive mutant (MPP154A) of the 30-kilodalton movement protein (MP) of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) was transformed into Nicotiana tabacum cv Xanthi. Transgenic plants expressing the MPP154A gene complemented local and systemic movement of an MP-defective mutant of TMV (U3/12MPfs) at the permissive temperature of 24 degrees C but not at 32 degrees C, the nonpermissive temperature. A microinjection procedure was used to investigate the effects of the modified TMV MP on plasmodesmatal size-exclusion limits. Movement of fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled dextran (F-dextran), with an average molecular mass of 9.4 kilodaltons, was detected between leaf mesophyll cells of the transgenic plants at 24 degrees C; however, no movement of either 3.9-kilodalton or 9.4-kilodalton F-dextrans was detected when the transgenic plants were held for 6 hours (or longer) at 32 degrees C. When these plants were shifted back to 24 degrees C for 6 hours, cell-to-cell movement of the F-dextrans was again observed. Accumulation of MPP154A was not affected by the temperature regime, nor was the subcellular distribution of the MP altered. These results are consistent with a change in the protein conformation of MPP154A at the nonpermissive temperature, which gives rise to a protein that fails to modify the molecular size-exclusion limits of plasmodesmata to the same extent as wild-type MP. Surprisingly, at 32 degrees C, movement of the F-dextrans was inhibited in transgenic plants expressing the wild-type MP gene; however, the inhibition was transient and was no longer detected after 48 hours at this elevated temperature. This transient inhibition of plasmodesmatal function was alleviated with Sirofluor, an inhibitor of callose ([1----3]-beta-D-glucan) synthesis. This result provides experimental evidence that callose deposition is involved in regulating the molecular size-exclusion limit of plasmodesmata in plants. Sirofluor had no effect on the inhibition of F-dextran movement at 32 degrees C in plants expressing the MPP154A gene, indicating that callose formation was not responsible for the failure of the temperature-sensitive mutant protein to alter the size-exclusion limit of plasmodesmata.

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Plasmodesmatal function is probed using transgenic tobacco plants that express a virus movement protein.
S Wolf, C M Deom, R Beachy, W J Lucas
The Plant Cell Jun 1991, 3 (6) 593-604; DOI: 10.1105/tpc.3.6.593

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Plasmodesmatal function is probed using transgenic tobacco plants that express a virus movement protein.
S Wolf, C M Deom, R Beachy, W J Lucas
The Plant Cell Jun 1991, 3 (6) 593-604; DOI: 10.1105/tpc.3.6.593
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The Plant Cell
Vol. 3, Issue 6
Jun 1991
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