Abstract

We prepared Arabidopsis thaliana lines expressing a functional green fluorescent protein (GFP)-linked vacuolar H(+)-pyrophosphatase (H(+)-PPase) under the control of its own promoter to investigate morphological dynamics of vacuoles and tissue-specific expression of H(+)-PPase. The lines obtained had spherical structures in vacuoles with strong fluorescence, which are referred to as bulbs. Quantitative analyses revealed that the occurrence of the bulbs correlated with the amount of GFP. Next, we prepared a construct of H(+)-PPase linked with a nondimerizing GFP (mGFP); we detected no bulbs. These results indicate that the membranes adhere face-to-face by antiparallel dimerization of GFP, resulting in the formation of bulbs. In plants expressing H(+)-PPase-mGFP, intravacuolar spherical structures with double membranes, which differed from bulbs in fluorescence intensity and intermembrane spacing, were still observed in peripheral endosperm, pistil epidermis and hypocotyls. Four-dimensional imaging revealed the dynamics of formation, transformation, and disappearance of intravacuolar spherical structures and transvacuolar strands in living cells. Visualization of H(+)-PPase-mGFP revealed intensive accumulation of the enzyme, not only in dividing and elongating cells but also in mesophyll, phloem, and nectary cells, which may have high sugar content. Dynamic morphological changes including transformation of vacuolar structures between transvacuolar strands, intravacuolar sheet-like structures, and intravacuolar spherical structures were also revealed.

Highlights

  • H+-translocating inorganic pyrophosphatase (H+-PPase) catalyzes a coupled reaction of PPi hydrolysis and active proton transport across membranes

  • Exons and introns are respectively shown as wide red squares and narrow dark-blue squares. sGFP with a [Gly4Ser]2, a flexible linker, was inserted at position +132 of VHP1

  • Nucleotides 21809 to +3071 of the VHP1 gene were subcloned from genomic DNA, and sGFP was inserted into the +132 bp position. (C) Sequence alignment of loop A

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Summary

Introduction

H+-translocating inorganic pyrophosphatase (H+-PPase) catalyzes a coupled reaction of PPi hydrolysis and active proton transport across membranes. The biochemical properties, membrane topology, tertiary structure, gene expression profile, and physiological roles of H+-PPase have been investigated in various organisms (reviewed in Maeshima, 2000; Gaxiola et al, 2007). In addition to acidification of vacuoles, H+-PPases play a key role in the removal of excessive PPi from the cytoplasm (Ferjani et al, 2011). The type II H+-PPases exist in the Golgi apparatus and related organelles, but in amounts

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