Reprogramming cells to study vacuolar development.

Front Plant Sci

Department of Biology, University of Western Ontario London, ON, Canada ; Southern Crop Protection and Food Research Centre, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada London, ON, Canada.

Published: December 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Plant cells undergo significant reorganization during developmental transitions, making it challenging to study these changes in Arabidopsis thaliana embryo and seed tissues.
  • Cellular reprogramming can be employed as a complementary approach by genetically manipulating key factors to change cell fate, allowing researchers to observe these transitions in more accessible tissues.
  • The study focused on the transition from lytic vacuoles to protein storage vacuoles by overexpressing the LEAFY COTYLEDON2 regulator, revealing insights into this process and highlighting the potential for cellular reprogramming in developmental research.

Article Abstract

During vegetative and embryonic developmental transitions, plant cells are massively reorganized to support the activities that will take place during the subsequent developmental phase. Studying cellular and subcellular changes that occur during these short transitional periods can sometimes present challenges, especially when dealing with Arabidopsis thaliana embryo and seed tissues. As a complementary approach, cellular reprogramming can be used as a tool to study these cellular changes in another, more easily accessible, tissue type. To reprogram cells, genetic manipulation of particular regulatory factors that play critical roles in establishing or repressing the seed developmental program can be used to bring about a change of cell fate. During different developmental phases, vacuoles assume different functions and morphologies to respond to the changing needs of the cell. Lytic vacuoles (LVs) and protein storage vacuoles (PSVs) are the two main vacuole types found in flowering plants such as Arabidopsis. Although both are morphologically distinct and carry out unique functions, they also share some similar activities. As the co-existence of the two vacuole types is short-lived in plant cells, how they replace each other has been a long-standing curiosity. To study the LV to PSV transition, LEAFY COTYLEDON2, a key transcriptional regulator of seed development, was overexpressed in vegetative cells to activate the seed developmental program. At the cellular level, Arabidopsis leaf LVs were observed to convert to PSV-like organelles. This presents the opportunity for further research to elucidate the mechanism of LV to PSV transitions. Overall, this example demonstrates the potential usefulness of cellular reprogramming as a method to study cellular processes that occur during developmental transitions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3848493PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2013.00493DOI Listing

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