Evolution of transporters in plants (Frontiers in Plant Traffic and Transport)

90.6K
views
23
authors
7
articles
Editors
3
Impact
Loading...
11,033 views
133 citations
Original Research
08 February 2012
The Maize PIN Gene Family of Auxin Transporters
Cristian Forestan
1 more and 
Serena Varotto

Auxin is a key regulator of plant development and its differential distribution in plant tissues, established by a polar cell to cell transport, can trigger a wide range of developmental processes. A few members of the two families of auxin efflux transport proteins, PIN-formed (PIN) and P-glycoprotein (ABCB/PGP), have so far been characterized in maize. Nine new Zea mays auxin efflux carriers PIN family members and two maize PIN-like genes have now been identified. Four members of PIN1 (named ZmPIN1a–d) cluster, one gene homologous to AtPIN2 (ZmPIN2), three orthologs of PIN5 (ZmPIN5ac), one gene paired with AtPIN8 (ZmPIN8), and three monocot-specific PINs (ZmPIN9, ZmPIN10a, and ZmPIN10b) were cloned and the phylogenetic relationships between early-land plants, monocots, and eudicots PIN proteins investigated, including the new maize PIN proteins. Tissue-specific expression patterns of the 12 maize PIN genes, 2 PIN-like genes and ZmABCB1, an ABCB auxin efflux carrier, were analyzed together with protein localization and auxin accumulation patterns in normal conditions and in response to drug applications. ZmPIN gene transcripts have overlapping expression domains in the root apex, during male and female inflorescence differentiation and kernel development. However, some PIN family members have specific tissue localization: ZmPIN1d transcript marks the L1 layer of the shoot apical meristem and inflorescence meristem during the flowering transition and the monocot-specific ZmPIN9 is expressed in the root endodermis and pericycle. The phylogenetic and gene structure analyses together with the expression pattern of the ZmPIN gene family indicate that subfunctionalization of some maize PINs can be associated to the differentiation and development of monocot-specific organs and tissues and might have occurred after the divergence between dicots and monocots.

20,819 views
119 citations
Review
18 January 2012
The Plant Mitochondrial Carrier Family: Functional and Evolutionary Aspects
Ilka Haferkamp
 and 
Stephan Schmitz-Esser

Mitochondria play a key role in respiration and energy production and are involved in multiple eukaryotic but also in several plant specific metabolic pathways. Solute carriers in the inner mitochondrial membrane connect the internal metabolism with that of the surrounding cell. Because of their common basic structure, these transport proteins affiliate to the mitochondrial carrier family (MCF). Generally, MCF proteins consist of six membrane spanning helices, exhibit typical conserved domains and appear as homodimers in the native membrane. Although structurally related, MCF proteins catalyze the specific transport of various substrates, such as nucleotides, amino acids, dicarboxylates, cofactors, phosphate or H+. Recent investigations identified MCF proteins also in several other cellular compartments and therefore their localization and physiological function is not only restricted to mitochondria. MCF proteins are a characteristic feature of eukaryotes and bacterial genomes lack corresponding sequences. Therefore, the evolutionary origin of MCF proteins is most likely associated with the establishment of mitochondria. It is not clear whether the host cell, the symbiont, or the chimerical organism invented the ancient MCF sequence. Here, we try to explain the establishment of different MCF proteins and focus on the characteristics of members from plants, in particular from Arabidopsis thaliana.

12,066 views
76 citations
Open for submission
Frontiers Logo

Frontiers in Plant Science

Water and Nutrient Transport Through Aquaporins in Higher Plants
Edited by Farzana Sabir, Olfa Zarrouk, Changai Wu
Deadline
26 December 2024
Submit a paper
Recommended Research Topics
Frontiers Logo

Frontiers in Plant Science

Evolution of Membrane Signaling and Trafficking in Plants
Edited by Markus Geisler, Angus S Murphy, Heven Sze
133.5K
views
42
authors
12
articles
Frontiers Logo

Frontiers in Plant Science

Recent Advances in Understanding Plant Hormone Transporters
Edited by Markus Geisler
149.2K
views
64
authors
13
articles
Frontiers Logo

Frontiers in Plant Science

Transport and Membrane Traffic in Stomatal Biology
Edited by Yizhou Wang, Carlos García-Mata, HONGHONG HU, Rucha Karnik
20.7K
views
19
authors
5
articles
Frontiers Logo

Frontiers in Plant Science

Plant Membrane Transport and Ionic Homeostasis in Hostile Soils
Edited by Stanislav Valentinovich Isayenkov, Vadim Demidchik, Igor Pottosin, Sergey Shabala
55.8K
views
53
authors
8
articles
Frontiers Logo

Frontiers in Plant Science

Aquaporins: Dynamic Role and Regulation, Volume II
Edited by Rupesh Deshmukh, Gloria Bárzana González, Gerd Patrick Bienert
19.7K
views
21
authors
4
articles