Abstract

Vacuolar invertase (VIN) has long been considered as a major player in cell expansion. However, direct evidence for this view is lacking due, in part, to the complexity of multicellular plant tissues. Here, we used cotton (Gossypium spp.) fibers, fast-growing single-celled seed trichomes, to address this issue. VIN activity in elongating fibers was approximately 4-6-fold higher than that in leaves, stems, and roots. It was undetectable in fiberless cotton seed epidermis but became evident in initiating fibers and remained high during their fast elongation and dropped when elongation slowed. Furthermore, a genotype with faster fiber elongation had significantly higher fiber VIN activity and hexose levels than a slow-elongating genotype. By contrast, cell wall or cytoplasmic invertase activities did not show correlation with fiber elongation. To unravel the molecular basis of VIN-mediated fiber elongation, we cloned GhVIN1, which displayed VIN sequence features and localized to the vacuole. Once introduced to Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), GhVIN1 complemented the short-root phenotype of a VIN T-DNA mutant and enhanced the elongation of root cells in the wild type. This demonstrates that GhVIN1 functions as VIN in vivo. In cotton fiber, GhVIN1 expression level matched closely with VIN activity and fiber elongation rate. Indeed, transformation of cotton fiber with GhVIN1 RNA interference or overexpression constructs reduced or enhanced fiber elongation, respectively. Together, these analyses provide evidence on the role of VIN in cotton fiber elongation mediated by GhVIN1. Based on the relative contributions of sugars to sap osmolality in cotton fiber and Arabidopsis root, we conclude that VIN regulates their elongation in an osmotic dependent and independent manner, respectively.

Highlights

  • Vacuolar invertase (VIN) has long been considered as a major player in cell expansion

  • We examined if temporal changes of VIN activity correlate with the timing and magnitude of fiber elongation during development

  • This is because the VIN activity increased by 70% from 21 to 0 and 1 d after anthesis (DAA) (Fig. 1C), which correlates with that observed from the histological assay (Fig. 1B)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Vacuolar invertase (VIN) has long been considered as a major player in cell expansion. VIN activity in elongating fibers was approximately 4-6-fold higher than that in leaves, stems, and roots It was undetectable in fiberless cotton seed epidermis but became evident in initiating fibers and remained high during their fast elongation and dropped when elongation slowed. [C] Some figures in this article are displayed in color online but in black and white in the print edition Based on their pH optimums and subcellular localizations, invertases are classified into three isoforms: a nonglycosylated cytosolic invertase (CIN), with an optimal pH of 7.0 to 7.8, and highly glycosylated acid invertases with an optimum pH of 3.5 to 5.5 either tightly bound to cell wall (CWIN) or appearing as a soluble form inside the vacuole (VIN; Roitsch and Gonzalez, 2004). High VIN expression or activity has been observed in a range of expanding tissues, including maize

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call