INVESTIGADORES
RICARDI Martiniano Maria
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Complex posttranslational modifications in EXT proteins that control root hair tip-growth in Arabidopsis
Autor/es:
VELAZQUES SM; RICARDI MM; MANGANO S; DENITA JUAREZ SP; GLOAZZO DOROSZ J; SALGADO SALTER JD; BORASSI C; ESTEVEZ JM
Lugar:
Foz do Iguaçu
Reunión:
Congreso; XLIII Reunião Anual da Sociedade Brasileira de Bioquímica e Biologia Molecular - SBBq; 2014
Institución organizadora:
Sociedade Brasileira de Bioquímica e Biologia Molecular - SBBq
Resumen:
Root hairs are single cells, responsible for the absorption of water and
nutrients in the plant. Their cell walls are composed of polysaccharides and
hydroxyproline(Hyp)-rich glycoproteins that include collagen-like extensins
(EXTs) proteins that unlike collagen are highly O-glycosylated. Through
previous work we had demonstrated thatO-glycosylation on EXTs is essential for
cell-wall self-assembly and, hence, root hair elongation. We successfully determined
several players involved in this process that consists of sequential steps of
post-translational modifications (PMTs): proline hydroxilation and
Hyp-O-arabinosylation. We identified3 prolyl-4-hydroxilases (P4H2, 5 and 13)
out of the 13 present in Arabidopsis thaliana, 2 arabinosyltransferases
(XEG113-2 and RRA3) and several EXTs in the process of root hair growth. In our
current study we address the physiological significance of these PMTs present
in EXTs together with the characterization of the enzymes involved. We showed
that of the three P4Hs, P4H5 has a pivotal role in the determination of
Hyp-O-arabinosylation, being able to restore the wild type phenotype
ofp4h2andp4h13and also in vivo interacting with P4H2 and P4H13.We further show
that arabinosylation is required for proper EXT function in root hair growth
since our mutant lines presented lower levels of arabinose residues. We also identified,
by co-expression analysis and mutant phenotypes, two apoplastic
type-IIIperoxidases (PERs) related to EXTs that could involved in the assembly
of the EXT-extracellular network through the crosslinking of Tyr residues
present in EXTs. Finally, through a live imaging approach we were able to
determine the growth dynamics of our root mutants and therefore establish that
the root hairs are shorter through a combined effect of reduced growth rate and
reduced growth time. Together these data represent a major breakthrough in our
understanding of how PMTs affects EXTs function in tip-growing cells and how
complex they can be.