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Vacuole development in cultured evacuolated oat mesophyll protoplasts
16
Citations
29
References
1998
Year
BiologyDevelopmental BiologyVacuole DevelopmentBotanyNatural SciencesAcridine OrangePlant Cell CultureMorphogenesisMembrane BiologyCell WallTubular NetworkMedicineCell BiologyPlant CytologyPlant PhysiologyAcidic VacuolesPlant Development
Oat leaf mesophyll protoplasts were evacuolated and shown to develop acidic vacuoles when cultured for 3 d. Vacuole development was followed by cell wall formation. Developing vacuoles, stained with acridine orange, took the form of a tubular network when viewed by confocal laser scanning microscopy. The tubules expanded and fused to form a series of interconnected vacuoles. When thin sectioned material was examined by transmission electron microscopy, the tubular network appeared as a number of small, expanding vesicles. The vacuolar H+-ATPase, H+-PPase and a membrane integral protein of 23 kDa (VM23) were shown, by Western blotting, to be removed from protoplasts following evacuolation. After 5 d culture the H+-ATPase and H+-PPase, but not VM23, were detectable in microsomal fractions. This study describes, for the first time, successful vacuole regeneration in a monocotyledenous plant. This regeneration follows a similar pattern to that seen in non-cereal protoplasts.
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