Abstract

The dynamics of actin distribution during stomatal complex formation in leaves of winter rye was examined by means of immunofluorescence microscopy of epidermal sheets. This method results in actin localization patterns that are the same as those seen with rhodamine-phalloidin staining, but are more stable. During stomatal development MFs are extensively rearranged, and most of the time the orientation or placement of MFs is distinctly different from that of MTs, the exception being co-localization of MTs and MFs in phragmoplasts. Although MFs show an orientation similar to that of MTs in interphase guard mother cells, no banding of MFs into anything resembling the interphase MT band is observed. From prophase to telophase, a distinct, dense concentration of MFs is found in subsidiary cell mother cells (SMCs) between the nucleus and the region of the cell cortex facing the guard mother cell. Cytochalasin B treatment causes incorrect positioning of the SMC nucleus/daughter nuclei and abarrent placement and orientation of the new cell wall that forms the boundary of the subsidiary cell at cytokinesis. These results suggest that MFs are involved in maintaining the SMC nucleus in its correct position and the SMC spindle in the correct orientation relative to the division site previously delineated by the preprophase band. Because these MFs thus appear to assure that the SMC phragmoplast begins to form in the correct orientation near the division site to which it needs to grow, we suggest that MFs are involved in control of correct placement and orientation of the new cell wall of the subsidiary cell.

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