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Article Dans Une Revue Plant, Cell and Environment Année : 2012

Soluble and filamentous proteins in Arabidopsis sieve elements

Résumé

Phloem sieve elements are highly differentiated cells involved in the long-distance transport of photoassimilates. These cells contain both aggregated phloem-proteins (P-proteins) and soluble proteins, which are also translocated by mass flow. We used liquid chromatographytandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) to carry out a proteomic survey of the phloem exudate of Arabidopsis thaliana, collected by the ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA)-facilitated method. We identified 287 proteins, a large proportion of which were enzymes involved in the metabolic precursor generation and amino acid synthesis, suggesting that sieve tubes display high levels of metabolic activity. RNA-binding proteins, defence proteins and lectins were also found. No putative P-proteins were detected in the EDTA-exudate fraction, indicating a lack of long-distance translocation of such proteins in Arabidopsis. In parallel, we investigated the organization of P-proteins, by high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, and the localization of the phloem lectin PP2, a putative P-protein component, by immunolocalization with antibodies against PP2-A1. Transmission electron microscopy observations of P-proteins revealed bundles of filaments resembling strings of beads. PP2-A1 was found weakly associated with these structures in the sieve elements and bound to plastids. These observations suggest that PP2-A1 is anchored to P-proteins and organelles rather than being a structural component of P-proteins.

Domaines

Botanique

Dates et versions

hal-01000336 , version 1 (04-06-2014)

Identifiants

Citer

Brigitte B. Batailler, Thomas T. Lemaitre, Francoise F. Vilaine, Christian C. Sanchez, Denis Renard, et al.. Soluble and filamentous proteins in Arabidopsis sieve elements. Plant, Cell and Environment, 2012, 35 (7), pp.1258-1273. ⟨10.1111/j.1365-3040.2012.02487.x⟩. ⟨hal-01000336⟩
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