Litcius/Paper detail

Spatially resolved proteomics of the Arabidopsis stomatal lineage identifies polarity complexes for cell divisions and stomatal pores

Eva‐Sophie Wallner, Andrea Mair, Dominik Handler, Claire D. McWhite, Shou‐Ling Xu, Liam Dolan, Dominique C. Bergmann

2024Developmental Cell26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cell polarity is used to guide asymmetric divisions and create morphologically diverse cells. We find that two oppositely oriented cortical polarity domains present during the asymmetric divisions in the Arabidopsis stomatal lineage are reconfigured into polar domains marking ventral (pore-forming) and outward-facing domains of maturing stomatal guard cells. Proteins that define these opposing polarity domains were used as baits in miniTurboID-based proximity labeling. Among differentially enriched proteins, we find kinases, putative microtubule-interacting proteins, and polar SOSEKIs with their effector ANGUSTIFOLIA. Using AI-facilitated protein structure prediction models, we identify potential protein-protein interaction interfaces among them. Functional and localization analyses of the polarity protein OPL2 and its putative interaction partners suggest a positive interaction with mitotic microtubules and a role in cytokinesis. This combination of proteomics and structural modeling with live-cell imaging provides insights into how polarity is rewired in different cell types and cell-cycle stages.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyCytokinesisPolarity (international relations)Cell polarityArabidopsisCell biologyGuard cellMicrotubuleEffectorCell Cycle ProteinCell divisionProtein–protein interactionMitosisProteomicsMicrotubule-associated proteinCell cycleCellGeneGeneticsMutantCellular transport and secretionPlant Molecular Biology ResearchMicrotubule and mitosis dynamics