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. 2018 Jan 29;131(2):jcs202275.
doi: 10.1242/jcs.202275.

Chloroplast behaviour and interactions with other organelles in Arabidopsis thaliana pavement cells

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Chloroplast behaviour and interactions with other organelles in Arabidopsis thaliana pavement cells

Kiah A Barton et al. J Cell Sci. .

Abstract

Chloroplasts are a characteristic feature of green plants. Mesophyll cells possess the majority of chloroplasts and it is widely believed that, with the exception of guard cells, the epidermal layer in most higher plants does not contain chloroplasts. However, recent observations on Arabidopsis thaliana have shown a population of chloroplasts in pavement cells that are smaller than mesophyll chloroplasts and have a high stroma to grana ratio. Here, using stable transgenic lines expressing fluorescent proteins targeted to the plastid stroma, plasma membrane, endoplasmic reticulum, tonoplast, nucleus, mitochondria, peroxisomes, F-actin and microtubules, we characterize the spatiotemporal relationships between the pavement cell chloroplasts (PCCs) and their subcellular environment. Observations on the PCCs suggest a source-sink relationship between the epidermal and the mesophyll layers, and experiments with the Arabidopsis mutants glabra2 (gl2) and immutans (im), which show altered epidermal plastid development, underscored their developmental plasticity. Our findings lay down the foundation for further investigations aimed at understanding the precise role and contributions of PCCs in plant interactions with the environment.

Keywords: Chloroplasts; Epidermis; Organelle interactions; Pavement cells; Stromules.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing interestsThe authors declare no competing or financial interests.

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