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eXtra Botany Commentary Polar auxin transport in relation to long-distance transport of nutrients in the Charales John A. Raven*,† Division of Plant Sciences, University of Dundee at the James Hutton Institute, Invergowrie, Dundee DD2 5DA, UK (permanent address) and Plant Functional Biology and Climate Change Cluster, University of Technology Sydney, PO Box 123, NSW 2007, Australia * To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: [email protected] Journal of Experimental Botany Vol. 64, No. 1, pp. 1–9, 2013 doi:10.1093/jxb/ers358 Abstract This paper examines the significance of the recent demonstration of polar auxin transport (PAT) in the green macroalga Chara (Charophyceae: Charales) and, especially, options for explaining some features of PAT in the Charales. The occurrence of PAT in the Charales shows that PAT originated in the algal ancestors of the embryophytes (liverworts, mosses, hornworts, and vascular plants), although it is not yet known if PAT occurs elsewhere in the Charophyceae or in other algae. While in the embryophytes PAT occurs in parenchymatously constructed structures which commonly also have xylem and phloem (or their bryophyte analogues) as long-distance transport processes in parallel to PAT, in Chara corallina PAT shares the pathway for long-distance transport of nutrients though the parenchymatously constructed nodal complexes and the single giant cells of the internode. The speed of auxin movement of PAT is much more rapid than that attributable to diffusion and of the same order as the rate of cytoplasmic streaming in the giant internodal cells, yet complete inhibition of streaming by the inhibitor cytochalasin H does not slow down auxin transport. Explanations for this phenomenon are sought in the operation of other mechanochemical motors, dynein–tubulin and kinesin–tubulin, as alternatives to the myosin–actin system which powers cytoplasmic streaming. Experiments in which microtubules are disrupted, for example by colchicine, could show if one of the tubulin-based motors is involved. If these motors are involved, some mechanism is needed to amplify the speeds known for the motors to explain the order of magnitude higher speeds seen for auxin transport. Key words: Chara, Charophyceae, colchicine, cytochalasin, cytoplasmic streaming, Nitella, nutrient transport, polar auxin transport, rhizoids. Introduction Darwin and Darwin (1880) performed experiments on flowering plant tropisms from which they inferred the occurrence and differential concentrations of an endogenous compound, now known to be indoleacetic acid (auxin) (see Ayres, 2008; Leyser, 2010). The functioning of auxin relates in part to its polar transport and, for tropisms, to its lateral transport. A widely accepted mechanism for polar auxin transport (PAT) is the chemiosmotic hypothesis (Rubery and Sheldrake, 1973, 1974; Raven, 1975; Goldsmith, 1977; Hošek et al., 2012). PAT has been identified in the sporophyte phase of vascular plants and mosses (Fujita et al., 2008); Boot et al. (2012) have now shown that PAT also occurs in the Charales, as exemplified by Chara corallina Klein ex C.J. Wildenow and Chara vulgaris var. longibracteata (Kützing) J Grives & Bullock-Webster. The significance of this work is that the Charales are an order of the algal division Charophyta which, with the Embryophyta (extant liverworts, hornworts, mosses, and vascular plants, and many extinct taxa), comprise the Streptobionta, with the Charales among the closest living relatives of the ancestors of the embryophytes (Graham et al., 2009; Taylor et al., 2009; Raven and Edwards, 2013). As Boot et al. (2012) point out, the Charales have a morphology superficially resembling that of the sporophytes of vascular plants, although the ‘plant’ of the Charales is, in life cycle terms, the equivalent of the gametophyte phase of the embryophyte life cycle. Furthermore, the shoot of the Charales is made up of giant cylindrical internodal cells (with or without corticating cells) separated by nodes which bear whorls of ‘leaves’, again composed of giant cells, and branches. Growth is apical. In this paper we consider several aspects of the findings of Boot et al. (2012). Special attention is given to the phylogenetic occurrence of PAT, the functioning of rhizoids in relation to PAT, and particularly to explaining the speed of auxin movement in PAT in the context of the cytochalasin insensitivity of PAT at concentrations of cytochalasin which completely inhibit cytoplasmic streaming. Phylogenetic considerations of polar auxin transport in the Charales Plants of the Charales are haploid, although the giant internodal cells are multinucleate and/or have several large nuclei © The Author [2012]. Published by Oxford University Press [on behalf of the Society for Experimental Biology]. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: [email protected] 2 | Raven et al. with many copies of the haploid set of chromosomes (Shen, 1967). Our present, incomplete, understanding suggests that PAT in embryophytes is restricted to the sporophyte phase and does not occur in free-living gametophyte phases of non-seed plants (Fujita et al., 2008; Boot et al., 2012). This is of interest because the morphology of the gametophytes of many mosses resembles that of vascular plant sporophytes, though with very different anatomy (e.g. no intercellular gas spaces or stomata, hydrome rather than xylem, and leptome rather than phloem). Long-distance nutrient transport in the Charales, apparently involving cytoplasmic streaming (Raven, 2003), is the functional equivalent of nutrient transport in the xylem and phloem in the parenchymatously constructed sporophytes of vascular embryophytes. Apoplasmic xylem transport, driven by transpiration and root pressure, and symplasmic phloem transport, using the Münch mechanism (Pickard, 2012), comprise the long-distance water nutrient transport pathways of terrestrial vascular plant sporophytes. Phloem transport occurs in secondarily submerged aquatic vascular plants, as can xylem transport, at least to the extent that xylem flow driven by root pressure occurs (Raven, 1984). PAT in the vascular plants and moss sporophytes occurs in parenchymatous tissue independent of the xylem and phloem. Xylem-like (hydrome) and phloem-like (leptome) also occur in some moss sporophytes, as well as in some moss gametophytes (Raven, 2003), and again PAT occurs in sporophytes through files of parenchyma cells. In contrast, PAT in the Charales involves the same cells as are involved in axial nutrient transport; the internodal cells in this pathway show rapid cytoplasmic streaming. Further analysis of PAT and its relationship to long-distance nutrient transport, and the role of rhizoids, in the Characeae is considered in detail after brief discussions of the phylogeny of PAT and the relationship of PAT to rhizoids of the Charales. Phylogeny of polar auxin transport There are several independent lines of evolution of multicellular (not just colonial: Beardall et al., 2009) algae with varying degrees of differentiation (Graham et al., 2009). Among the green algae, as well as the Charophyta (as exemplified by the Charales which are probably the closest living relatives of the ancestors of the embryophytes), there are variously differentiated multicellular members of the Chlorophyceae (Draparnaldia, Fritschiella), Trebouxiophyceae (Prasiola). and Ulvophyceae (Trentepholia) (Graham et al., 2009; Raven and Edwards, 2013). In the Rhodophyta, multicellularity evolved in both the Bangiophyceae (e.g. Bangiales) and the Floridiophyceae (all species), while in the Heterokontophyta all of the species of the Fucophyceae (= Phaeophyceae) are multicellular. The involvement of auxin, and its (polar?) transport in the morphogenesis of these multicellular algae is still uncertain, for example the work on the Fucophyceae of Sun et al. (2004) and Le Bail et al. (2010). The best prospects for rapid progress probably occur for the fucophycean Ectocarpus siliculosus (Dillwyn) Lyngbe whose genome has been fully sequences and annotated (Sun et al., 2010). If PAT of the kind found in the Streptobionta occurs in algal clades other than the Charophyceae, it would presumably have arisen from horizontal gene transfer, since the Charophyceae and other multicellular green algae, and non-green multicellular algae, all arose independently from unicellular ancestors (Graham et al., 2009). There would be no opportunity for PAT in the differentiated but unicellular (otherwise known as acellular) macrophytic members of the Ulvophyceae such as Caulerpa (Raven, 1981, 1984; Graham et al., 2009). The absence of genes encoding auxin influx carriers in the charophyceans Coleochaete and Spirogyra is discussed by Boot et al. (2012) in terms of the role of the carriers in recovering leaked auxin and preventing leakage to surrounding cells (Reinhardt. 2003); this is part of their proposed role in the symplasm–apoplasm–symplasm transfer which underlies PAT (fig. 1 of Blakeslee et al., 2005; Kramer et al., 2006). Boot et al. (2012) suggest that an auxin influx carrier may not be involved in PAT in the characeans, based on observations of auxin efflux. While all tissues in which PAT has been characterized (embryophyte sporophytes; Chara) or may occur (some complex brown algae: Sun et al., 2004; Le Bail et al., 2010) have plasmodesmata, PAT does not involve plasmodesmata. Movement of auxin into the phloem, where transport is by mass flow and is not part of the PAT process, also seems to involve the auxin influx transporters (Blakeslee et al., 2005; Hošek et al., 2012). Rhizoids of Chara in relation to polar auxin transport The Charales are rhizophytes (i.e. they are attached to a substrate with small particle size relative to the size of the attachment organs; Raven, 1981, 1984). In the case of the Charales, attachment is via rhizoids which serve in nutrient uptake from the sediment, discussed below in the context of axial nutrient transport. In some cases, mature stands of characeans, specifically Chara hispida var. major (Hartm.) RD Wood, produce very few rhizoids and so are not attached to the substratum but are supported by their neighbours and rely largely on internal recycling of nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorus, with apical growth and basal decay (Andrews et al., 1984a). Both decay and growth are faster in the summer, so the biomass is essentially constant throughout the year in this perennial organism (Andrews et al., 1984a). However, rhizoids are needed for both attachment and nutrient uptake in the establishment and net growth phases of the Charales. Rhizoids of the Charales are multicellular; in this they differ from the rhizoids of the free-living gametophytes and the root hairs of the free-living sporophytes of embryophytes. The characean rhizoids are unbranched, resembling embryophyte rhizoids and root hairs, but differing from the branched mycorrhizal fungi (Smith and Read, 2008). Rhizoid cells of the Charales, like the shoot cells, have cytoplasmic streaming (Ackers et al., 2000). The multicellularity of the characean Commentary | 3 rhizoid only extends to the occurrence of cross-walls rather than the parenchymatous structure of the nodes of characean shoots or the cortication of the giant internodal cells of some species of Chara, for example the corticate C. vulgaris var. longibracteata used by Boot et al. (2012) for comparison with the ecorticate C. corallina. The rhizoids of the characeans grow apically, as, for mechanical reasons, do all plant or algal organs growing through soil or sediments, or growing over solid substrata (Raven and Edwards, 2001). The growth of characean rhizoids requires, or is at least stimulated by, auxin: while the growth of rhizoids of intact algae is not influenced by exogenously supplied auxin, decapitated (shoot removed) algae show significant stimulation of rhizoid growth by exogenous auxin (Klämbt et al., 1992). An inhibitor (α-naphthylphthalamic acid) of the efflux of the auxin anion through the PIN transporters inhibits rhizoid growth in intact plants, and increases the retention of labelled auxin by explants, although it not clear whether these effects are direct effects on the rhizoids or a consequence of inhibition of PAT down the shoot (Klämbt et al., 1992). Charalean rhizoids are gravitropic, using BaSO4 crystals as the particles which move relative to the rest of the cell (Raven and Knoll, 2010). In roots of vascular plants, the cells which execute the tropic response to the gravitational stimulus are not the cells which perceive the stimulus, and lateral (polar) auxin transport is a component of the signalling chain. Does a similar system operate in characean rhizoids? While there is no direct evidence, this seems unlikely because in the Charales the BaSO4 particles are in the same cell (and the same part of the cell) in which the tropic differential growth occurs. Gravisensing seems to involve contact of the statoliths with membrane-bound receptor molecules (Limbach et al., 2005). In any case, the maintenance of a lateral gradient of auxin across a cell of the diameter of the rhizoid would be next to impossible (see Nobel, 2009). The role of cytoplasmic streaming in the polar transport of auxin and the axial transport of nutrient solutes in the Charales Absence of inhibition of polar auxin transport by cytochalasin H at concentrations which inhibit cytoplasmic streaming Boot et al. (2012) showed that the speed of PAT in Chara was much greater than could be accounted for by diffusive intracellular movement and was of a similar magnitude to the speed of cytoplasmic streaming. The minimum estimate of the speed of auxin transport along C. corallina axes of 11–14 µm s–1 are about a third of the measured speed of cytoplasmic streaming in the same cells, namely 33–56 µm s–1 (Boot et al., 2012), which is similar to values of 50–60 µm s–1, and sometimes up to 100 µm s–1 in C. corallina and other characeans at 20–25 °C (Hope and Walker, 1975; Raven and Smith, 1978, Pickard, 2003; Raven, 2003; Shimmen and Yokota, 2004; Verchot-Lubicz and Goldman, 2010). However, Boot et al. (2012) point out that their measurements of the speed of auxin transport are likely to be underestimates. While there is substantial agreement among different methods on the speed of cytoplasmic streaming (Pickard, 2003; Verchot-Lubicz and Goldman, 2010; van de Meent et al., 2010), it is difficult to measure the speed of transport or movement of a solute within plants (Pickard, 2003; Boot et al., 2012) Despite cytoplasmic streaming in giant internodal cells being the obvious explanation for the speed of PAT in Chara, PAT was not inhibited by cytochalasin H at concentrations which completely inhibited cytoplasmic streaming. There is some inhibition of PAT in flowering plants by cytochalasin at concentrations which completely inhibit cytoplasmic streaming (Cande et al., 1973; Butler et al., 1998; Muday et al., 2000). However, it is possible that this inhibition relates to the dependence on actin filaments of the production and maintenance of the polar arrangement of auxin efflux carriers rather than to the intracellular flux of auxin (Butler et al., 1998; Muday et al., 2000). To put the independence of very rapid (by comparison with diffusion) PAT in Chara from cytoplasmic streaming into context, the evidence on the axial transport of nutrients is now considered. Cytoplasmic streaming in the long-distance (axial) transport of nutrient solutes in the Charales Axial transport of nutrients in characeans is commonly thought to involve cytoplasmic streaming for intracellular movement and diffusion through plasmodesmata for intercellular transport (Hope and Walker, 1975; Bostrom and Walker, 1976; Raven, 1981; Ding and Tazawa, 1989; Raven, 2003). Bostrom and Walker (1976) studied the movement of 36Cl– between adjacent cells of C. corallina as influenced by the rate of cytoplasmic streaming which was varied by the addition of a range of concentrations of the inhibitor cytochalasin B. Their work showed that cytochalasin B had no effect on the active influx of 36Cl– into the internodal cells, but decreased the transfer of 36Cl– from the cell to which the isotope had been supplied into the adjacent internodal cell in direct proportion to the decrease in the speed of cytoplasmic streaming. Bostrom and Walker (1976) used the most economical hypothesis to explain these data, namely that the rate at which 36Cl– arrives at the plasmodesmata linking the nodal cell to the nodal complex of small cells in parenchymatous tissue determines the rate of symplasmic diffusion of the anion through the nodal complex, and that this rate of delivery is proportional to the speed of cytoplasmic streaming. A less economical hypothesis considered by Bostrom and Walker (1976) is that the cytochalasin effect is on transport through the nodal complex. The approach of Bostrom and Walker was followed and developed further by Ding and Tazawa (1989), again using C. corallina, although with 86Rb+ (as an analogue of K+) as the solute, and with temperature as well as cytochalasin B as the means of decreasing the speed of cytoplasmic streaming. The results are closely similar to those of Bostrom and Walker (1976); that is, direct proportionality between transnodal 4 | Raven et al. solute flux and the speed of cytoplasmic streaming. The studies of Bostrom and Walker (1976) and Ding and Tazawa (1989) are apparently the only data sets in which changing the speed of cytoplasmic streaming was used to examine its involvement in axial solute transport in the Charales. Other work consistent with a role for cytoplasmic streaming in axial solute transport in the Charales did not use cytochalasin, but was still plausibly interpreted in terms of an essential role for cytoplasmic streaming. Raven and Smith (1978) and Raven (1981) calculated the differences in the concentration of sucrose between the upward and downward streams of the streaming cytoplasm of C. corallina which would be required to account for the organic carbon supply needed for apical growth of shoots. The calculations involved determining the requirement for organic carbon for apical growth of the shoot from the organic carbon content of the length of shoot added each day. From this is subtracted the quantity of organic carbon added by photosynthesis minus respiration over a 24 h light–dark cycle. This calculation leaves the shortfall of organic carbon which is supplied by cytoplasmic streaming. The other input is the axial speed of cytoplasmic streaming, which is less than the measured speed of streaming, since cytoplasmic streaming follows a spiral path (Goldstein et al., 2008). The method equated the difference in sucrose concentration between upward and downward streams expressed as organic carbon (mol organic carbon in sucrose m–3) to account for the observed growth rate expressed on the basis of the cross-sectional area of the upward stream (mol organic carbon m–2 cross-sectional area s–1) divided by the axial speed of cytoplasmic streaming (m s–1). The calculated difference in sucrose concentration between the upward and downward stream can be readily accommodated by the measured sucrose concentration in the streaming cytoplasm (Ding et al., 1991), as discussed by Raven (2003). Raven (2003) cites work (Andrews et al., 1984b; Box et al., 1984; Box, 1986, 1987, 1988) showing that phosphorus, and combined nitrogen, entering the rhizoids of C. hispida move to the shoots, and their axial movement through the shoot is consistent with involvement of cytoplasmic streaming. However, it is important to re-emphasize that neither this work nor that discussed above on organic carbon flux to the shoot apex examined the effect of inhibition of cytoplasmic streaming by cytochalasin on nutrient movement and distribution. The same is true of the work of Vemeer et al. (2003) on the uptake and distribution of ammonium and nitrate taken up by rhizoids and shoots of Chara sp., and also the work of Wüstenberg et al. (2011) showing that C. hispida (L.) Hartm. grew rapidly when phosphorus was supplied as tricalcium phosphate to the rhizoids in the sediment with no phosphate in the bulk water round the shoot. There was no treatment with measurements of growth rate with phosphate supplied to both rhizoid and shoot; it is clear that internodal cells of characeans can take up phosphate from the surrounding water (Smith, 1966; Mimura et al., 1998; Reid et al., 2000). The findings of Boot et al. (2012) on PAT clearly show that transport of auxin, which involves apoplasmic fluxes for intercellular transport, does not show the direct proportionality between axial flux and the speed of cytoplasmic streaming found for symplasmic transport of 36Cl– and of 86Rb+ across the nodes of Chara. This is despite the clear quantitative inadequacy of diffusion to explain the observed axial auxin movement for the segment of the pathway involving movement within internodal cells. It is of interest that Bostrom and Walker (1976) considered as an explanation for their results, but rejected as less economical, the hypothesis that the cytochalasin effect on intercellular transport of 36Cl– is in the symplasmic flux through the nodal complex rather than the effect on cytoplasmic streaming. Since there is no symplasmic step in PAT, the alternative hypothesis would bring the transport of nutrient solutes into line with the PAT. This alternative hypothesis finds some support from the occurrence of actin and myosin within the plasmodesmatal channel, at least in flowering plants (White and Barton, 2011). However, the alternative hypothesis requires the use of a cytochalasininsensitive mechanochemical motor for the intracellular transport of all of the nutrient solutes. Possible involvement of mechanochemical motors other than myosin–actin in polar auxin transport A further possibility, discussed below, is that auxin transport could be accounted for as cargo on dynein–tubulin or kinesin– tubulin mechanochemical motors, either by binding to a protein or in vacuoles undetectable by the light microscopy used by Boot et al. (2012), with unknown loading and unloading steps. However, such a mechanism would be impossible for the major osmotically active solutes in the cytosol, Cl– (tracer 36 Cl–) and K+ (tracer 86Rb+), which are present at concentrations several orders of magnitude greater than that of auxin (Vorobiev, 1967; Reeves et al., 1985; Petersson et al., 2009). Assuming that all of the auxin measured in protoplasts of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh.by Petersson et al. (2009) is in the cytoplasm, and that the cytoplasm occupies 10% of the protoplast, the auxin concentration in the cytoplasm (cytosol plus membrane-bounded compartments) is up to 10 µM, while the Cl– concentration is at least 20 mM and the K+ concentration is ~100 mM (Bradley and Williams, 1967; Vorobiev, 1967; Larkum, 1969; Lefebvre and Gillet, 1971; Lüttge and Higinbotham, 1979; Reeves et al., 1985). The myosin–actin motor which drives cytoplasmic streaming in the Characeae is exceptional in the speed of movement of the ATPase component (in this case the characean form of myosin XI) along the skeletal filament (in this case filamentous actin) relative to other myosin–actin systems, and also dynein–tubulin and kinesin–tubulin motors (Table 1). These speeds of 60 µm s–1 at 20–25 °C for cytoplamsic streaming in large internodal cells of characeans in vivo have also been demonstrated in vitro (Yamamoto et al., 1994; HigashiFujime et al., 1995; Rivolta et al., 1995). The speed is the product of the step size (i.e. the distance of relative movement of myosin and actin in each ATP hydrolysis cycle) and the specific rate (s–1) of ATP hydrolysis (i.e. ATP hydrolysis s–1 per myosin head activated by attachment to filaments at saturating ATP and filament concentrations). With a step length (sliding distance per ATP hydrolysed) of 0.019 µm Commentary | 5 Table 1. Speed of movement and maximum rates of ATP hydrolysis of biological mechanochemical motors. Based on Howard (1997). Motor Speed Speed ATPase specific References in vivo µm s–1 in vitro µm s–1 activitya Myosins of amoeboid movement, vesicle transport, smooth and striated muscle Myosin XI used in streaming of Characeae 0.2–6 0.2–8 1.2–20 Howard (1997) 50–60 (100) 60 390–500 Dynein in axoneme Dynein in cytoplasm Kinesin in mitosis and meiosis Kinesin in other transport processes 7 11 0.018 1.8–2.0 4.5 1.25 0.06 0.4–0.8 10 2 2 44 Hope and Walker (1975), Yamamoto et al. (1994, 2006), Higashi-Fujime et al. (1995), Rivolta et al. (1995), Howard (1997), Ito et al. (2003), Kimura et al. (2003), Shimmen and Yokota (2004), Ito et al. (2007, 2010) Howard (1997) Howard (1997) Howard (1997) Howard (1997) a ATP hydrolysis s–1 per myosin/dynein/kinesin head activated by attachment to actin (for myosin) or tubulin (for dynein and kinesin) filaments at saturating ATP and filament concentrations. (Kimura et al., 2003) and a specific ATP hydrolysis rate of 500 s–1 (Ito et al., 2003, 2007), the predicted speed of movement is 9.5 µm s–1, which is still only 16% of the observed speed in vitro and in vivo. Kimura et al. (2003) suggest that this discrepancy could be explained if the ATP hydrolysis rate increases if multiple myosin molecules are moving along the same actin filament. As already indicated, the alternative cytochalasin-insensitive mechanochemical motors (dynein–tubulin or kinesin– tubulin) have sliding speeds (Table 1) which are inadequate by at least an order of magnitude to account for the speed of PAT (or of cytoplasmic streaming) in characeans. These other mechanochemical motors (dynein–tubulin and kinesin–tubulin) have smaller step lengths (Kimura et al., 2003), as well as much lower specific reaction rates of the ATPase than do the myosin–actin systems. Even the fastest specific rate of ATP hydrolysis, that for the kinesin–tubulin system involved in anterograde neural transport, is only one-tenth that of the myosin XI–actin system in Chara (Table 1; Howard, 1997). If either dynein–tubulin or kinesin–tubulin is to carry auxin at the observed rate in Chara, there must be an amplification of the in vitro and in vivo speeds listed in Table 1 (see also Howard, 1997). Before considering the means by which such an amplification could occur, we examine the evidence for the occurrence of tubulin-based mechanochemical motors in green algae and in embryophytes other than in flagellar motility (dynein) and during mitosis and meiosis (kinesin). Colchicine, which causes the breakdown of microtubules and thus inhibits, among other processes, dynein- and kinesin-dependent transport processes, does not inhibit the myosin–actin-dependent cytoplasmic streaming in Nitella (Bradley, 1973) at concentrations which are known to disrupt the microtubular apparatus of Nitella (Green, 1962). Colchicine, but not cytochalasin, inhibited the light-regulated movement of chloroplasts and other cytoplasmic granules in the coenocytic green alga Dichotomosiphon, consistent with involvement of dynein or kinesin associated with microtubules in the movement (Maekawa et al., 1985). Dichotomosiphon is a member of the class Ulvophyceae, phylogenetically rather distant within the green algae from the Charophyceae (Graham et al., 2009). For dynein, contrary to earlier suggestions that flowering plants had no dynein, it is clear from analysis of genome sequences that they have genes encoding dyneins despite the absence of the ‘obvious’ structure which uses dynein, namely the flagella of male gametes (King, 2002). The Charales have flagella on their male gametes and so must have at least flagellar dynein, so any mechanism for auxin transport in Chara based on dynein–tubulin activity is potentially applicable to embryophytes lacking flagella as well as to the Charales. Such auxin transport must also, despite its speed, not cause cytoplasmic streaming since this process relates solely to the myosin–actin system. The kinesin–tubulin system is involved in chromosome movement in nuclear division, so the kinesin family must be represented in all eukaryotes. Presumably it is the kinesins which bring about axonemal and neural retrograde transport and which have a two orders of magnitude higher speed of transport (Table 1), which could be available for carrying auxin as cargo. Some evidence is consistent with polar movement of auxin involving transport in vesicles for at least the latter part of the intracellular pathway in Zea mays L. roots (Schlicht et al., 2006; Mancuso et al., 2007). However, the only correlation with the cytoskeleton reported for this pathway is with actin filaments (Schlicht et al., 2006). If a mechanochemical motor is involved, it is most likely to be the cytochalasin-sensitive myosin–actin system, which would not explain the absence of cytochalasin inhibition of PAT in Chara found by Boot et al. (2012). Vesicle transport by the Nitella myosin–actin system has been demonstrated by Kachar et al. (1993; see also Verchot-Lubicz and Goldstein, 2010). The speed of movement based on a myosin–actin system can also be increased by having many actin filaments in series, as in muscle: 100 in series with a speed of 6.3 µm s–1 for each filament gives a speed of 0.63 mm s–1. However, this mechanism is not appropriate for driving cytoplasmic streaming, 6 | Raven et al. since it involves contraction depending on overlapping filaments of actin and myosin, followed by relaxation, rather than continued movement of myosin along actin in the direction of cytoplasmic streaming. This argument can also be used to rule out having a muscle-like amplification mechanism for dynein–tubulin or kinesin–tubulin. A further increase in speed of movement at the macroscopic level is the principle of levers, working at higher levels in more differentiated organisms. For photosynthetic organisms, the largest ‘solar mobile’ (an organism whose motility is powered by photosynthesis: Grassmann, 1988) is the ‘golden jellyfish’ (Mastigias) with symbiotic dinoflagellates in a ‘marine’ lake in Pulau (Dawson and Hamner, 2003). This organism has a bell diameter of up to 135 mm, and can swim at up to 70 mm s–1 by expelling water from the bell by muscular (i.e. myosin– actin) contraction. Mastigias may not be entirely energized by photosynthesis: phagomixotrophy is a possible alternative. The ‘golden jellyfish’ carries out diel vertical migrations (possibly related to obtaining nutrients from the oxycline/thermocline at night and obtaining light energy near the surface of the turbid upper mixed layer in the day), and horizontal migrations each day, apparently related to remaining in direct sunlight during the day in the partly shaded lake (Dawson and Hamner, 2003). An analogous mismatch of the speed of movement of a mechanochemical motor along a cytoskeletal structure is the dynein–tubulin system of flagella and cilia. Again using a photosynthetic example, namely the photosynthetic ciliate Myrionecta rubra Lohman, 1908 (= Mesodinium rubrum), which is up to 45 µm long and can ‘jump’ at up to 12 mm s–1, there are contradictory results as to whether cells have slower, sustained swimming, for example in diel vertical migration (Lindholm, 1985; Fenchel and Hansen, 2006; Riisgard and Larsen, 2009). They are photosynthetic, but rely on eating cryptophyte algae which supply not only their chloroplasts (kleptoplasty) but also the algal nucleus (karyoklepty) which houses at least 90% of the genes needed to maintain the plastids. Even so, at least occasional meals are needed (Johnson, 2011). The most rapid swimmers among strictly photosynthetic organisms seem to be members of the freshwater genus Volvox. The spherical colonies of biflagellate green (Chlorophyceae) algal cells are ~1 mm in diameter and can swim at 1–2 mm s–1. They use this swimming speed to undergo diel vertical migrations of 10–15 m in stratified habitats (with vertical water movements of <1–2 mm s–1). The colonies are nearer the surface in the day when they can photosynthesize and are deeper at night when they have access to a higher inorganic nutrient concentration (Beardall et al., 2009). The speed ratio (speed of swimming:speed of movement of dynein along tubulin) for the cilia-based swimming of M. rubra is >104, while that for flagella-based swimming of Volvox is ~103. For the muscle-based system in Mastigias, the speed ratio is ~105. There seem to be no examples of such amplification of speed for the kinesin–tubulin system. Thus, in principle, the speed ratio can be explained, although detailed mechanisms are not all worked out (Howard, 1997; Lindemann and Lesich, 2010). Ecological parallels between vertical motile photosynthetic organisms and cytoplasmic streaming in the Charales in exploiting habitats with marked vertical gradients in resource supply The diel (or longer term) vertical migration enabled by cilia or flagella, as with those related to changes in the density of organisms by means of variations in gas vesicle expansion, the quantity of dense solids, and/or the density of the solution in aqueous vacuoles, has a functional parallel with the cytoplasmic streaming in characeans with rhizoids in the dark but high-nutrient sediment, and shoots in low-nutrient but diurnally illuminated overlying water. In both cases the motility mechanisms seem to allow the organisms to make greater use of spatially and temporarily variable resources (light and nutrients) relative to organisms lacking the motility mechanisms (Raven, 1981, 1984, 1989, 2003; Beardall et al., 2009). Conclusions The occurrence of PAT in the Charales shows that PAT originated in the algal ancestors of the embryophytes; further work is needed to determine if PAT occurs elsewhere in multicellular members of the Charophyceae, in other multicellular green algae, or even more generally in multicellular algae. In embryophytes, PAT occurs in parenchymatously constructed structures which commonly also have xylem and phloem (or their bryophyte analogues) as longdistance transport processes in parallel to PAT; in C. corallina PAT shares the pathway for long-distance transport of nutrients though the parenchymatously constructed nodal complexes and the single giant cells of the internode and, in some Chara species, the corticating cells around the internodal cells. The speed of auxin movement by PAT is much more rapid than that attributable to diffusion and is of the same order as the rate of cytoplasmic streaming in the giant internodal cells, yet complete inhibition of streaming by the inhibitor cytochalasin H does not slow down auxin transport. Explanations for this independence of PAT and cytoplasmic streaming are sought in the operation of other mechanochemical motors, namely dynein–tubulin and kinesin–tubulin, as alternatives to the myosin–actin system which powers cytoplasmic streaming. Experiments in which microtubules are disrupted, for example by colchicine, could show if one of the tubulin-based motors is involved. 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