4.1 Article

High Expression of Lifeact in Arabidopsis thaliana Reduces Dynamic Reorganization of Actin Filaments but does not Affect Plant Development

Journal

CYTOSKELETON
Volume 68, Issue 10, Pages 578-587

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cm.20534

Keywords

cytoskeleton; live cell imaging; GFP:FABD2; cytoarchitecture; root hair

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Lifeact is a novel probe that labels actin filaments in a wide range of organisms. We compared the localization and reorganization of Lifeact: Venus-labeled actin filaments in Arabidopsis root hairs and root epidermal cells of lines that express different levels of Lifeact: Venus with that of actin filaments labeled with GFP:FABD2, a commonly used probe in plants. Unlike GFP: FABD2, Lifeact: Venus labeled the highly dynamic fine F-actin in the subapical region of tip-growing root hairs. Lifeact: Venus expression at varying levels was not observed to affect plant development. However, at expression levels comparable to those of GFP: FABD2 in a well-characterized marker line, Lifeact: Venus reduced reorganization rates of bundles of actin filaments in root epidermal cells. Reorganization rates of cytoplasmic strands, which reflect the reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton, were also reduced in these lines. Moreover, in the same line, Lifeact: Venus-decorated actin filaments were more resistant to depolymerization by latrunculin B than those in an equivalent GFP:FABD2-expressing line. In lines where Lifeact: Venus is expressed at lower levels, these effects are less prominent or even absent. We conclude that Lifeact: Venus reduces remodeling of the actin cytoskeleton in Arabidopsis in a concentration-dependent manner. Since this reduction occurs at expression levels that do not cause defects in plant development, selection of normally growing plants is not sufficient to determine optimal Lifeact expression levels. When correct expression levels of Lifeact have been determined, it is a valuable probe that labels dynamic populations of actin filaments such as fine F-actin, better than FABD2 does. (C) 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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