News Release

Self-isolation or keep calm and carry on -- the plant cell's dilemma

Peer-Reviewed Publication

John Innes Centre

Cell-Isolation -- Plasmodesmata

image: A cell in which the plasmodesmal connections are open (the green fluorescent protein that the cell produces moves in to the surrounding cells) and an isolated cell, in which the connections are closed view more 

Credit: John Innes Centre

Self-isolation in the face of a marauding pathogen may save lives but it comes at the expense of life-sustaining essentials such as transport, communication and connectivity.

This leaves decision makers with a dreadful dilemma as they judge when it's time to relax lockdown measures.

New research suggests plants must balance similar trade-offs as they respond to pathogens that could rip through their defence cell by cell.

Plant cells communicate with their neighbours by tunnel-like connections called plasmodesmata. This is one way that cells exchange information and resources.

Plasmodesmata are lined by the same membrane that surrounds the cell and they allow molecules to move from one cell into the surrounding cells.

When a cell perceives a threat like an invading fungus or bacteria, the plasmodesmata close over and the cells are temporarily isolated.

In this study researchers at the John Innes Centre used bioimaging approaches to investigate what proteins are involved in this process of cellular self-isolation.

They show that the cell wall material of fungus - called chitin - triggers different responses in the membrane that lines the plasmodesmal tunnels when compared to the responses it triggers in the membrane that surrounds the cell body.

The signaling cascade in plasmodesmata triggers the production of a polysaccharide called callose that forces the plasmodesmal tunnel to close over and for the cells to isolate themselves.

"This indicates that cells control their connectivity independently of other responses, although we don't yet know why this is," explains Dr Christine Faulkner of the John Innes Centre.

The study also finds that guard-like receptors that sit in the plasmodesmata are different from those that sit in the rest of the membrane, but both receptors use the same enzyme.

"This is puzzling", says Dr Faulkner, "but we also discovered that the mechanism of activation of this enzyme in the plasmodesmata is different to the mechanism used in the rest of the membrane. Thus, it seems that while both receptors use the same tool (the enzyme) to transmit a signal, they use it differently for different purposes."

The requirement for specific signaling in the plasmodesmal part of the cell membrane suggests that the vital processes requiring cell-to-cell connectivity must be regulated independently of immune response.

The study concludes: "This raises questions whether there is a critical requirement for cells to balance connectivity and resource exchange with a protective mechanism imposed by isolation."

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The article: Chitin perception in plasmodesmata characterises submembrane immune-signaling specificity in plants, appears in PNAS


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