Phospholipase Dδ negatively regulates plant thermotolerance by destabilizing cortical microtubules in Arabidopsis.
Qun ZhangPing SongYana QuPeipei WangQianru JiaLiang GuoChuanpeng ZhangTonglin MaoMing YuanXuemin WangWenhua ZhangPublished in: Plant, cell & environment (2017)
The pattern of cortical microtubule arrays plays an important role in plant growth and adaptation in response to hormonal and environmental changes. Cortical microtubules are connected with the plasma membrane (PM); however, how the membrane affects cortical microtubule organization is not well understood. Here, we showed that phospholipase Dδ (PLDδ) was associated with the PM and co-localized with microtubules in cells. In vitro analysis revealed that PLDδ bound to microtubules, resulting in microtubule disorganization. Site-specific mutations that decreased PLDδ enzymatic activity impaired its effects on destabilizing microtubule organization. Heat shock transiently activated PLDδ, without any change of its PM localization, triggering microtubule dissociation from PM and depolymerization and seedling death in Arabidopsis, but these effects were alleviated in pldδ knockout mutants. Complementation of pldδ with wild-type PLDδ, but not mutated PLDδ, restored the phenotypes of microtubules and seedling survival to those of wild-type Arabidopsis. Thus, we conclude that the PM-associated PLDδ negatively regulates plant thermotolerance via destabilizing cortical microtubules, in an activity-dependent manner, rather than its subcellular translocation.
Keyphrases
- wild type
- particulate matter
- heat shock
- plant growth
- air pollution
- polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
- heavy metals
- transcription factor
- water soluble
- cell wall
- type diabetes
- induced apoptosis
- risk assessment
- heat stress
- arabidopsis thaliana
- oxidative stress
- single cell
- cell proliferation
- climate change
- signaling pathway
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- high density
- cell death