Cell polarity linked to gravity sensing is generated by LZY translocation from statoliths to the plasma membrane.
Takeshi NishimuraShogo MoriHiromasa ShikataMoritaka NakamuraYasuko HashiguchiYoshinori AbeTakuma HagiharaHiroshi Y YoshikawaMasatsugu ToyotaTakumi HigakiMiyo Terao MoritaPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2023)
Organisms have evolved under gravitational force and many sense the direction of gravity via statoliths in specialized cells. In flowering plants, starch-accumulating plastids, known as amyloplasts, act as statoliths to facilitate downstream gravitropism. The gravity sensing mechanism has long been considered a mechanosensing process by which amyloplasts transmit forces to intracellular structures, but the molecular mechanism underlying this has not been elucidated. We show here that LAZY1-LIKE (LZY) family proteins involved in statocyte gravity signaling associate with amyloplasts and its proximal plasma membrane. This results in polar localization according to the direction of gravity. We propose a gravity sensing mechanism by which LZY translocation to the plasma membrane signals the direction of gravity by transmitting information on the position of amyloplasts.