latrunculin-b and dichlobanil

latrunculin-b has been researched along with dichlobanil* in 3 studies

Other Studies

3 other study(ies) available for latrunculin-b and dichlobanil

ArticleYear
Aphidicolin-induced nuclear elongation in tobacco BY-2 cells.
    Plant & cell physiology, 2014, Volume: 55, Issue:5

    Plant nuclei are known to differentiate into various shapes within a single plant. However, little is known about the mechanisms of nuclear morphogenesis. We found that nuclei of tobacco BY-2 cells were highly elongated on long-term treatment with 5 mg l⁻¹ aphidicolin, an inhibitor of DNA polymerase α. In aphidicolin-treated cells, the nuclear length was correlated with the cell length. During culture in the presence of aphidicolin, the nuclei were elongated in parallel with cell elongation. Nuclear elongation was inhibited by the inhibition of cell elongation with 2,6-dichlorobenzonitrile, a cellulose synthesis inhibitor. However, cell elongation induced in the auxin-depleted medium in the absence of aphidicolin did not cause nuclear elongation, indicating that cell elongation alone is not sufficient for nuclear elongation. Treatment with either latrunculin B or propyzamide inhibited the aphidicolin-induced nuclear elongation, indicating that both actin filaments and microtubules (MTs) are required for nuclear elongation. Observations using BY-YTHCLR2 cells, in which actin filaments, MTs and nuclei were simultaneously visualized, revealed that the longitudinally arranged MT bundles associated with the nucleus play an important role in nuclear elongation, and that actin filaments affect the formation of these MT bundles. In aphidicolin-treated cells, the nuclear DNA contents of the elongated nuclei exceeded 4C, and the nuclear length was highly correlated with the nuclear DNA content. In cells treated with 50 mg l⁻¹ aphidicolin, cells were elongated and nucleus-associated longitudinal MT bundles were formed, but the nuclear DNA contents did not exceed 4C and the nuclei did not elongate. These results indicate that an increase in the nuclear DNA content above 4C is also required for nuclear elongation.

    Topics: Actin Cytoskeleton; Aphidicolin; Benzamides; Bridged Bicyclo Compounds, Heterocyclic; Cell Line; Cell Nucleus; Cell Size; Cytoskeleton; DNA, Plant; Enzyme Inhibitors; G1 Phase Cell Cycle Checkpoints; Luminescent Proteins; Microscopy, Fluorescence; Microtubules; Mimosine; Nicotiana; Nitriles; Purines; Roscovitine; Thiazolidines

2014
Cortical microtubule arrays undergo rotary movements in Arabidopsis hypocotyl epidermal cells.
    Nature cell biology, 2007, Volume: 9, Issue:2

    Plant-cell expansion is controlled by cellulose microfibrils in the wall with microtubules providing tracks for cellulose synthesizing enzymes. Microtubules can be reoriented experimentally and are hypothesized to reorient cyclically in aerial organs, but the mechanism is unclear. Here, Arabidopsis hypocotyl microtubules were labelled with AtEB1a-GFP (Arabidopsis microtubule end-binding protein 1a) or GFP-TUA6 (Arabidopsis alpha-tubulin 6) to record long cycles of reorientation. This revealed microtubules undergoing previously unseen clockwise or counter-clockwise rotations. Existing models emphasize selective shrinkage and regrowth or the outcome of individual microtubule encounters to explain realignment. Our higher-order view emphasizes microtubule group behaviour over time. Successive microtubules move in the same direction along self-sustaining tracks. Significantly, the tracks themselves migrate, always in the direction of the individual fast-growing ends, but twentyfold slower. Spontaneous sorting of tracks into groups with common polarities generates a mosaic of domains. Domains slowly migrate around the cell in skewed paths, generating rotations whose progressive nature is interrupted when one domain is displaced by collision with another. Rotary movements could explain how the angle of cellulose microfibrils can change from layer to layer in the polylamellate cell wall.

    Topics: Arabidopsis; Arabidopsis Proteins; Basic-Leucine Zipper Transcription Factors; Bridged Bicyclo Compounds, Heterocyclic; Cell Surface Extensions; Green Fluorescent Proteins; Hypocotyl; Microtubules; Nitriles; Paclitaxel; Plant Epidermis; Rotation; Species Specificity; Thiazolidines; Time Factors; Tubulin

2007
XTH acts at the microfibril-matrix interface during cell elongation.
    Journal of experimental botany, 2005, Volume: 56, Issue:412

    Sulphorhodamine-labelled oligosaccharides of xyloglucan are incorporated into the cell wall of Arabidopsis and tobacco roots, and of cultured Nicotiana tabacum cells by the transglucosylase (XET) action of XTHs. In the cell wall of diffusely growing cells, the subcellular pattern of XET action revealed a 'fibrillar' pattern, different from the xyloglucan localization. The fibrillar fluorescence pattern had no net orientation in spherical cultured cells. It changed to transverse to the long axis when the cells started to elongate, a feature mirroring the rearrangements of cortical microtubules and the accompanying cellulose deposition. Interference with the polymerization of microtubules and with cellulose deposition inhibited this strong and 'fibrillar'-organized XET-action, whereas interference with actin-polymerization only decreased the intensity of enzyme action. Epidermal cells of a mutant with reduced cellulose synthesis also had low XET action. Root hairs (tip-growing cells) exhibited high XET-action over all their length, but lacked the specific parallel pattern. In both diffuse- and tip-growing cell types extraction of the incorporated fluorescent xyloglucans by a xyloglucan-specific endoglucanase reduced the fluorescence, but the 'fibrillar' appearance in diffuse growing cells was not eliminated. These results show that XTHs act on the xyloglucans attached to cellulose microfibrils. After incorporation of the fluorescent oligosaccharides, the xyloglucans decorate the cellulose microfibrils and become inaccessible to hydrolytic enzymes.

    Topics: Arabidopsis; Bridged Bicyclo Compounds, Heterocyclic; Cell Size; Cell Wall; Dinitrobenzenes; Glucans; Glycosyltransferases; Microfibrils; Nicotiana; Nitriles; Plant Roots; Sulfanilamides; Thiazoles; Thiazolidines

2005