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COMMENTARY Actin in plants CLIVE LLOYD Department of Cell Biology, John Innes Institute, Colney Lane, Nonvich NR4 7UH, UK It has been known for some time that actin exists in lower plants, the most familiar examples being provided by certain algae in which actin constitutes the cytoplasmic cables along which particles and organelles stream. The choice of material was an important part of determining the identity of the filaments because these giant filamentous cells were capable of being broken open to expose cytoplasmic strands, which could then be decorated with heavy meromyosin (HMM) (reviewed by Williamson, 1986). This approach was effectively closed to higher plants where most cells occur in complex, non-filamentous tissue, which excludes the large HMM polypeptide. Nevertheless, by analogy with algal particle movement, it was assumed that cytoplasmic streaming in higher plant cells would be actin-dependent. The development of fluorescent phallotoxins (such as phalloidin and phallacidin) as diagnostic probes for filamentous actin has vindicated this view (Wulf et al. 1979; Barak el al. 1980). The very small size of phallotoxins (approx. \2Q0Mr) enables them to enter walled cells and tissues pre-treated with fixative or detergent, and there are now several examples that demonstrate that thick cytoplasmic cables in higher plants are composed of actin filaments (reviewed by Lloyd, 1987). Are actin filaments absent from dividing cells? These cables are detected during interphase but what is the function, if any, of actin in dividing plant cells? Cytoplasmic streaming appears to cease at the onset of prophase and so the absence of F-actin during mitosis and cytokinesis would be consistent with the idea that its sole function is to stir the cytoplasmic contents. The ability to isolate meristematic cells and label them with antibodies enabled the microtubule cycle to be followed, throughout division, by immunofluorescence microscopy (Wick et al. 1981). Subsequent staining of such cells by rhodamine-phalloidin indicated that Factin was not restricted to cells during interphase but also occurred in the cytokinetic apparatus (Clayton & Lloyd, 1985). This device, the phragmoplast, contains Journal of Cell Science 90, 185-188 (1988) Printed in Great Britain © The Company of Biologists Limited 1988 two circular opposing, picket fences of short microtubules, which (at their mid-line) mark the perimeter of the new, discoid, cell plate. Unlike the centripetal (purse-string) cytokinesis of animal cells, the cell plate expands centrifugally until it contacts the maternal side walls. It has been suggested that actin filaments amongst the double ring of phragmoplast microtubules propel to the mid-line those vesicles that coalesce to form the floating cell plate. In 1987 a succession of papers appeared that showed that F-actin is not absent between interphase and cytokinesis. A common underlying theme concerns the conditions necessary to preserve actin filaments during division, for it now seems that the thick interphase cables represent only the most stable class of dynamic arrays of actin. Using low (1-5%, w/v) formaldehyde concentrations in a phosphate buffer, fine arrays of actin could be seen at the cortex of alfalfa and Vicia cell suspensions, in addition to the thicker sub-cortical cables (Seagull et al. 1987). Although these interphase arrays seemed to disappear at prophase, actin filaments were seen in the mitotic spindle as well as in the phragmoplast. In another paper (Palevitz, 1987), rhodamine-phalloidin was used to stain fixed onion root-tip cells and to show a ring of fluorescence around the cortex at preprophase. This ring of actin was observed in formaldehyde-fixed cells whether Pipes or phosphate was used in the medium. Subdividing prophase with a prefix reflects the added importance attached to premitotic events by plant cell biologists. The term preprophase was applied to the period during which the evenly distributed cortical microtubules of interphase gave way to a narrow, dense microtubule band, which (still at the cortex) encircled the nucleus and predicted the future division plane (Pickett-Heaps & Northcote, 1966). Actin and microtubules therefore form a ring at the perimeter of the division plane. But the disappearance of this pre-prophase band (PPB) prior to mitosis makes it difficult to account for the way in which the cytokinetic apparatus will be directed out to that pre185 ordained ring (often for tens of micrometres) when the cytoskeletal components marking the boundary of the division plane have already depolymerized. Avoiding or minimizing the effects of aldehydes Mild extraction with detergent and dimethyl sulphoxide (DMSO) enables cytoplasm to be stained with rhodamine-phalloidin without the requirement for pre-fixation (Traas et al. 1987). This has shown that extremely fine filaments of actin run transversely around the cortex of carrot suspension cells, parallel to the interphase microtubules. It has also shown that Factin exists in the PPB, but more importantly it has revealed a class of actin that does not disappear with the onset of mitosis and may therefore be involved in the spatial control of division. These actin filaments cage the nucleus and, importantly for cellular morphogenesis, run between both mitotic and cytokinetic apparatus and the cortex. There is something comforting about the use of aldehyde for preserving cytoplasmic structure, so that its omission casts doubt on the view obtained by extraction methods alone. On the other hand, it is clear that fixation obliterates much of the fine cytoplasmic structure visible in living cells (Mersey & McCully, 1978). Electroporation is a technique that bypasses both aldehyde fixation and detergent extraction; pulses of direct current transiently open pores in the plasma membrane that allow rhodamine-phalloidin to label F-actin directly. This alternative method (Traas et al. 1987) confirms the view obtained by mild extraction: that there is a class of F-actin associated with the nucleus, connecting it to the cortex throughout division. Reflecting this concern that aldehyde has not revealed the true distribution of actin in plants, Kakimoto & Shibaoka (1987a) reported two methods for minimizing the harmful effects of fixation. In the first method, tobacco suspension cells were pre-labelled with rhodamine-phalloidin using 0-1 % Triton X-100 to permeabilize the cells. Lysine at 1-5 % was added to the extraction mixture. Subsequently fixed with formaldehyde, the cells could be processed for doublestaining with anti-tubulin, since the lysine treatment apparently protected the pre-labelled actin filaments during the rigours of antibody labelling. In this way, fine actin filaments were seen: at the cell cortex; paralleling the pre-prophase band microtubules; and lying between the cell cortex and the phragmoplast. Actin filaments within the phragmoplast itself were not well preserved by this method. Another report from these authors (Kakimoto & Shibaoka, 19876) outlines the use of heavy meromyosin/tropomyosin as a protectant during aldehyde fixation, although results are stated to be generally superior using lysine. 186 C. Uoyd Actin in the spindle A curious aspect of some of these studies is that F-actin is detected not only in the cytokinetic apparatus but also in the mitotic spindle (Seagull et al. 1987; Traas et al. 1987). The existence of F-actin in the spindle has long been debated for animal cells where, if it were present, it might represent an elastic element for chromatid separation. The recent demonstration (Koshland et al. 1988) that isolated chromosomes move towards the minus end of microtubules in vitiv, as the plus end disassembles, argues against the need for an external force (as might be supplied by actomyosin) during anaphase movement. So what is F-actin doing in the plant spindle? Whether cells are fixed prior to phallotoxin labelling (Seagull et al. 1987), or electroporated or extracted unfixed (Traas et al. 1987), the spindle of suspension cells can be stained. These combined observations argue against a single unusual set of circumstances causing actin oligomers to decorate spindle microtubules. That it is not due to some stabilizing property of labelled phallotoxin can be derived from the report that actin antibodies also decorate filaments, which not only cage the nucleus of Haemanthus endosperm cells, but pass between the spindle poles, parallel to microtubules (Schmit & Lambert, 1987). Fluorescent antiactin labelling coincided with rhodamine-phalloidin, and immunogold labelling identified thin filaments amongst the spindle microtubules. Despite the close proximity of these two elements, perfusion with cytochalasin B or D at 10/igmP 1 did not affect chromosome transport. Microtubules and actin filaments are now recognized as running parallel to one another during interphase, pre-prophase and cytokinesis. The parallelism at mitosis may simply reflect this propensity for interaction shown during other phases of the cell cycle; the ineffectiveness of cytochalasin and the cessation of streaming during mitosis tending to suggest that actinbased contractility might, anyway, be inhibited during this period. Another explanation for the existence of F-actin in the plant spindle is suggested by the manner in which the phragmoplast appears to be formed. Phragmoplast microtubules share the same polarity as spindle microtubules (Euteneuer & Mclntosh, 1980) and it often appears (although it is not proven) that the phragmoplast arises out of the post-anaphase spindle. As the double ring of phragmoplast microtubules expands outwards, actin filaments can clearly be seen parallel to the tubules and are likely to function in cell plate deposition. Actin filaments amongst the spindle microtubules may be an early indicator of a function expressed at cytokinesis. Animal cells relinquish shape control during division whereas plant cells do not: they retain their asymmetry and one of the key shaping processes (alignment and deposition of the cross wall) actually occurs over this period. Perhaps further clues for the basis of these differences between higher plants and animals can be found in organisms, such as the filamentous alga Spirogyra, in which cytokinesis occurs by a mixture of in-furrowing and cell plate deposition. As Pickett-Heaps (1975) has observed, cytokinesis initially occurs by the in-growth of an annular septum, but where this contacts the central cytoplasmic cylinder separating the telophase nuclei, a small phragmoplast develops and completes division by forming a cell plate. In the most recent paper, Gotto & Ueda (1988) have now used rhodamine-phalloidin to map the distribution of actin filaments in dividing Spirogyra. At prophase, actin bundles dispersed in the cytoplasm come together, just beneath the plasma membrane, to form a ring around the middle of the cell (cf. the preprophase band of actin in higher plant cells). The diameter of this ring narrows as in-furrowing proceeds - clearly inviting comparison with the contractile ring of animal cytokinesis. No specific mention is made of how the ring of actin relates to the central algal phragmoplast. However, since F-actin is reportedly present in a ring "until the cell is finally divided into two daughter cells" it is possible that actin is involved in both phases of cytokinesis. In view of the position Spirogyra may hold in the evolution of the phragmoplast/cell plate from a primitive mechanism of cytokinesis (cleavage) (PickettHeaps, 1975) it seems important to clarify the fine distribution of F-actin during the transition from furrowing to phragmoplast formation, and to correlate this with the microtubule staining pattern. The role of actin in establishing the division plane Apart from actin in the spindle, the actin filaments that connect the dividing nucleus to the side walls explain two features of division plane enactment not accounted for in microtubule-only models. The division plane can be pictured from above as two concentric rings: one, the pre-prophase band, which anticipates the perimeter of the plane in which the cell plate will be deposited; the other the phragmoplast, which will spread out within that plane, from an initially central location, until its perimeter contacts the former pre-prophase band site. Because these devices are separated in time, it has not been clear why they should occupy the same plane. Why doesn't the expanding edge of the phragmoplast wander off into another plane? What guides the expanding disc out to the former band site? The discovery that cytoplasmic actin filaments remain throughout division (Traas e/ al. 1987) and, in particular, bridge the leading edge of the phragmoplast to the cortex (Lloyd & Traas, 1988), offers an explanation. Sinnott & Bloch (1941) long ago drew attention to the fact that cytoplasm re-arranged itself prior to division. Working on large, vacuolated cells induced to divide as a result of tissue wounding, they reported that cytoplasmic strands that radiated from the nucleus during interphase adopted a much simpler arrangement at prophase. Instead of radiating to all points of the cell, these transvacuolar strands coalesced at this stage to form a transverse baffle across the cell, within which the nucleus migrated and division occurred. Apart from this transverse phragmosome, the only other cytoplasmic strands run from each spindle pole to the opposing end wall, thereby forming a Maltese cross. This pre-cytoskeletal image now appears to be reflected in the distribution of actin filaments, suggesting a mechanism in which F-actin and microtubules act in concert to set up the division plane (Lloyd & Traas, 1988). It is not known in detail how the pre-prophase band of microtubules forms (from old microtubules or from new tubulin) but one conclusion (Doonan et al. 1987) is that the interphase microtubules 'bunch up'. Concentrating microtubules in the PPB would not only sweep the parallel cortical F-actin into the band but also draw the thicker nucleus-to-cortex bundles into the plane circumscribed by the PPB. Even though the rim of this device (both PPB microtubules and circumferential F-actin) disappears by metaphase, radial spokes of actin remain connected to the nucleus at its hub (Lloyd & Traas, 1988). These spokes form a temporal and spatial connection between cortical division site and central division apparatus, remaining to guide the phragmoplast outwards within that pre-determined plane. What actually brings the PPB to a particular plane in the first instance is another question. Strain has often been suggested to be an epigenetic device for aligning division planes across tissues (Green, 1987). Nucleusassociated actin filaments would seem to be likely candidates for the tension strands. References BARAK, L. S., YOCUM, R. R., NOTHNAGEL, E. A. & WEBB, W. W. (1980). Fluorescence staining of the actin cytoskeleton in living cells with 7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-l,3diazole-phallacidin. Pmc. natn. Acad. Sci. U.SA. 77, 980-984. CLAYTON, L. & LLOYD, C. W. (1985). 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Immunofluorescence microscopy of organized microtubules in structurally stabilized meristematic plant cells. J. Cell Biol. 89, 685-690. WILLIAMSON, R. E. (1986). Organelle movements along actin filaments and microtubules. PI. Physiol. 82, 631-634. WULF, E., DEBODEN, A., BAUTZ, F. A., FAULSTICH, H. & WIELAND, T. (1979). Fluorescent phallotoxin, a tool for the visualization of cellular actin. Pivc. natn. Acad. Sci. U.SA. 76, 4498-4502.