A whole-cell electron tomography model of vacuole biogenesis in Arabidopsis root cells

  • Yong Cui*
  • , Wenhan Cao
  • , Yilin He
  • , Qiong Zhao
  • , Mayumi Wakazaki
  • , Xiaohong Zhuang
  • , Jiayang Gao
  • , Yonglun Zeng
  • , Caiji Gao
  • , Yu Ding
  • , Hiu Yan Wong
  • , Wing Shing Wong
  • , Ham Karen Lam
  • , Pengfei Wang
  • , Takashi Ueda
  • , Marcela Rojas-Pierce
  • , Kiminori Toyooka
  • , Byung Ho Kang
  • , Liwen Jiang
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

132 Scopus citations

Abstract

Plant vacuoles are dynamic organelles that play essential roles in regulating growth and development. Two distinct models of vacuole biogenesis have been proposed: separate vacuoles are formed by the fusion of endosomes, or the single interconnected vacuole is derived from the endoplasmic reticulum. These two models are based on studies of two-dimensional (2D) transmission electron microscopy and 3D confocal imaging, respectively. Here, we performed 3D electron tomography at nanometre resolution to illustrate vacuole biogenesis in Arabidopsis root cells. The whole-cell electron tomography analysis first identified unique small vacuoles (SVs; 400–1,000 nm in diameter) as nascent vacuoles in early developmental cortical cells. These SVs contained intraluminal vesicles and were mainly derived/matured from multivesicular body (MVB) fusion. The whole-cell vacuole models and statistical analysis on wild-type root cells of different vacuole developmental stages demonstrated that central vacuoles were derived from MVB-to-SV transition and subsequent fusions of SVs. Further electron tomography analysis on mutants defective in MVB formation/maturation or vacuole fusion demonstrated that central vacuole formation required functional MVBs and membrane fusion machineries.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)95-105
Number of pages11
JournalNature Plants
Volume5
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2019
Externally publishedYes

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