The IPB has once again been recognized for its exemplary actions in terms of equal opportunity-oriented personnel and organizational policies and has received the TOTAL E-QUALITY certification for the…
The Plant Science Student Conference (PSSC) has been organised by students from the two Leibniz institutes, IPK and IPB, every year for the last 20 years. In this interview, Christina Wäsch (IPK) and…
In ancestors of modern-day streptophyte algae, cell division has undergone a switch from a cleavage-like mode to an inside-out mechanism, in which new cell walls are inserted at the cell center and expand centrifugally, eventually fusing with the maternal cell wall at a specific cortical region, termed cortical division zone (CDZ) 1-3. This switch in cell division involved the stepwise evolution of two novel cytoskeleton arrays, the phragmoplast and preprophase band (PPB). The PPB/phragmoplast system possibly provided basis for tunable cell division orientation, which enabled 3D development and morphological adaptations required for successful colonization of terrestrial habitats4. How the cytoskeleton acquired its novel functions, however, is still largely enigmatic. Our previous work identified IQ67-DOMAIN8 (IQD8) of Arabidopsis thaliana as an important determinant of PPB formation and division plane positioning5,6. IQD8 is an intrinsically disordered scaffold protein that interacts with core components of the CDZ7. Here, through phylogenetic and functional analyses, we show that IQDs emerged in the last common ancestor of Klebsormidiophyceae and Phragmoplastophyta algae. Gradual changes in motif composition and acquisition likely facilitated functional diversification of IQDs in terms of subcellular localization and protein-protein interactions. Cross-complementation studies in Arabidopsis mutants provide evidence for evolutionarily conserved functions of land-plant IQDs as key regulators of PPB formation and division plane control. In summary, our work establishes IQDs as plant-specific scaffold proteins, which likely played a role in rewiring and neofunctionalization of protein-protein interaction networks at distinct subcellular sites to facilitate evolutionary adaptations of the cell division apparatus and microtubule cytoskeleton in general.
In plants, the cortical ER network is connected to the plasma membrane through the ER-PM contact sites (EPCS), whose structures are maintained by EPCS resident proteins and the cytoskeleton. Strong co-alignment between EPCS and the cytoskeleton is observed in plants, but little is known of how the cytoskeleton is maintained and regulated at the EPCS. Here we have used a yeast-two-hybrid screen and subsequent in vivo interaction studies in plants by FRET-FLIM analysis, to identify two microtubule binding proteins, KLCR1 (Kinesin Light Chain Related protein 1) and IQD2 (IQ67-Domain 2) that interact with the actin binding protein NET3C and form a component of plant EPCS, that mediates the link between the actin and microtubule networks. The NET3C-KLCR1-IQD2 module, acting as an actin-microtubule bridging complex, has a direct influence on ER morphology. Their loss of function mutants, net3a/NET3C RNAi, 0klcr1 or iqd2, exhibit defects in pavement cell morphology which we suggest is linked to the disorganization of both actin filaments and microtubules. In conclusion, our results reveal a novel cytoskeletal associated complex, which is essential for the maintenance and organization of both cytoskeletal structure and ER morphology at the EPCS, and for normal plant cell morphogenesis.