Cortical microtubules contribute to division plane positioning during telophase in maize

Author:

Bellinger Marschal A1,Uyehara Aimee N1ORCID,Allsman Lindy1ORCID,Martinez Pablo2ORCID,McCarthy Michael C3ORCID,Rasmussen Carolyn G12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Botany and Plant Sciences, Center for Plant Cell Biology, Institute for Integrative Genome Biology, University of California , Riverside, CA 92521 , USA

2. Biochemistry Graduate Group, University of California , Riverside, CA 92508 , USA

3. Radical Research, LLC , Riverside, CA 92521 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Cell divisions are accurately positioned to generate cells of the correct size and shape. In plant cells, the new cell wall is built in the middle of the cell by vesicles trafficked along an antiparallel microtubule and a microfilament array called the phragmoplast. The phragmoplast expands toward a specific location at the cell cortex called the division site, but how it accurately reaches the division site is unclear. We observed microtubule arrays that accumulate at the cell cortex during the telophase transition in maize (Zea mays) leaf epidermal cells. Before the phragmoplast reaches the cell cortex, these cortical-telophase microtubules transiently interact with the division site. Increased microtubule plus end capture and pausing occur when microtubules contact the division site-localized protein TANGLED1 or other closely associated proteins. Microtubule capture and pausing align the cortical microtubules perpendicular to the division site during telophase. Once the phragmoplast reaches the cell cortex, cortical-telophase microtubules are incorporated into the phragmoplast primarily by parallel bundling. The addition of microtubules into the phragmoplast promotes fine-tuning of the positioning at the division site. Our hypothesis is that division site-localized proteins such as TANGLED1 organize cortical microtubules during telophase to mediate phragmoplast positioning at the final division plane.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Plant Science

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