Abstract

Physical membrane displacement is a process common to all forms of vesicle budding as well as cell enlargement and pleomorphic shape changes. Cell-free reconstitution of membrane budding has been achieved with transitional endoplasmic reticulum fractions from both plants and animals where 50 to 70 nm transition vesicles have been observed to bud from the part-rough, part-smooth membrane elements that define transitional endoplasmic reticulum. This budding phenomenon requires ATP, is facilitated by cytosol and guanine nucleotides, and is both time- and temperature-dependent. The transitional endoplasmic reticulum buds that form when concentrated by preparative free-flow electrophoresis will attach specifically to cis Golgi apparatus membranes immobilized on nitrocellulose as an acceptor compartment. Golgi apparatus membranes derived from the trans compartment do not serve as an efficient acceptor compartment. Transfer of the vesicles once formed is rapid, nearly complete and no longer dependent upon added ATP. Transfer shows a strict temperature dependency corresponding to that of the intact cell where at temperatures of 16°C or below, vesicles form but do not attach to cis Golgi whereas at temperatures of greater than 16°C, vesicles both form and fuse. The principle ATPase of transitional endoplasmic reticulum which may be involved in the budding process has been identified, characterized and isolated. A 38 kDa cis Golgi apparatus associated protein also has been identified as a potential candidate as a docking protein. Transfer between trans Golgi apparatus and the plasma membrane also has been studied by cell-free analysis. Here, transfer has been found to be stimulated by NADH or NADH plus ascorbate. The role of NADH is unknown but the ability of plant and Golgi apparatus to oxidize NADH is inhibited by brefeldin A, a compound known to block membrane trafficking even at the level of the trans Golgi network. NADH oxidase activity of plasma membranes also has been described and is inhibited as well by brefeldin. Recent observations suggest that brefeldin A may block both the formation of vesicles at the trans Golgi apparatus as well as auxin hormone-stimulated cell elongation in plants. This once again raises the possibility of whether or not plant cell elongation is obligatorily mediated by membrane input from the Golgi apparatus. The latter seems unlikely based on two additional lines of evidence. The first is that auxin-induced cell elongation in plants shows no sharp temperature transition over the range of 4 to 24°C, whereas production of secretory vesicles from the trans Golgi apparatus appears to be largely prevented at temperatures of 18°C or less. Secondly, the sodium selective ionophore, monensin, which effectively blocks the formation of functional secretory vesicles at the trans Golgi apparatus, is also largely without effect on auxin-induced cell elongation for periods of 4 h or longer. Taken together the findings suggest that the action of brefeldin A on vesicle budding at the Golgi apparatus and cell enlargement, are not directly correlated but may represent a common action of the drug on some constituent essential to membrane displacement mechanisms.

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