日本植物生理学会年会およびシンポジウム 講演要旨集
Supplement to Plant and Cell Physiology Vol. 44
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MOR1 and its function in microtubule organization, cell division and cell elongation
*GO WasteneysDA CollingsR HimmelspachE KawamuraMC RashbrookeK SugimotoAT Whittington
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会議録・要旨集 フリー

p. S34

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MICROTUBULE ORGANIZATION 1 (MOR1) is a plant member of the TOGp-Dis1-XMAP215 class of microtubule-associated proteins. Single amino acid substitutions in an N-terminal HEAT repeat of this 217 kDa Arabidopsis protein generate short, misaligned cortical microtubules at 29*C. The N-terminal HEAT repeat is strongly conserved in all known eukaryotic homologues of MOR1.
The mor1-1 and mor1-2 mutations impair growth anisotropy and directional handedness in all organs. Within hours of microtubule disorganization, we detect left-handed twisting and, later, radial swelling. Although tip growth continues, root hairs develop an antler-like appearance, demonstrating that microtubules help to stabilize tip growth. The gemini1 pollen-defective mutants are allelic to MOR1 and a tobacco homologue has recently been isolated from phragmoplasts, demonstrating a role for MOR1 in the cytokinetic apparatus and cytoplasmic polarization. An amino-terminus-specific antibody labels microtubules in all arrays throughout the cell cycle, strongly supporting a ubiquitous association of MOR1 with all microtubule arrays.
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© 2003 by The Japanese Society of Plant Physiologists
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