TIP GROWTH IN PLANT-CELLS MAY BE AMEBOID AND NOT GENERATED BY TURGOR PRESSURE

Citation
Jd. Pickettheaps et Ag. Klein, TIP GROWTH IN PLANT-CELLS MAY BE AMEBOID AND NOT GENERATED BY TURGOR PRESSURE, Proceedings - Royal Society. Biological Sciences, 265(1404), 1998, pp. 1453-1459
Citations number
33
Categorie Soggetti
Biology
ISSN journal
09628452
Volume
265
Issue
1404
Year of publication
1998
Pages
1453 - 1459
Database
ISI
SICI code
0962-8452(1998)265:1404<1453:TGIPMB>2.0.ZU;2-S
Abstract
Cellular growth in higher plants is generated (powered) by internal tu rgor pressure. Basic physics shows that the pressure required to defor m a plastic tube by elongation is inversely proportional to the tube's diameter. Accordingly, the turgor required to drive tip growth of ver y narrow cylindrical plant cells becomes very high, probably too high to be realized in living cells. The non-involvement of turgor in tip g rowth is demonstrated directly in living diatoms secreting fine tubula r spines of silica. In some species, the membrane at the tip of the ri gid tube is deformed inwards into its lumen during normal extension, w hereas in other species, many cells are partly plasmolysed during norm al, active spine ('seta') extension. Evidence from other cells is cons istent with the general conclusion that turgor is not significant in t ip growth. We support the alternative hypothesis proposed by M. Harold and colleagues that extension in tip cells can be amoeboid, driven by cycling of the actin cytoskeleton. Actively growing setae display an internal, fibrous, collar-like sleeve, probably of actin at the tip; i t is visualized as a molecular treadmill ('nanomachine') that uses as its support-base the rigid tube that has just been secreted. This scen ario can thereby explain how the perfectly even diameter of very long, fine setae is maintained throughout their extension, even when their tips are far distant from the cell body.