Dynamic reorientation of cortical microtubules, from transverse to longitudinal, in living plant cells.

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The direction in which plant tissue cells expand is reflected in the alignment of microtubules in the cortical array. When microtubules and coaligned wall microfibrils are arranged transversely around the cell, turgor pressure is chaneled into cell elongation. However, various agents (such as wounding, ethylene, abscisic acid) can cause the microtubules to reorientate by 90 degrees so that they become aligned parallel to the cell's long axis, allowing lateral expansion instead of elongation. The mechanism by which microtubules undergo rapid shifts of alignment is crucial to understanding growth control in plants, but because current models are derived from studies on fixed cells, nothing is known about the dynamics of converting one microtubule alignment to another. Cells tend to have one predominant microtubule alignment--transverse, oblique, or longitudinal--but it is not established whether each represents a stable independent set that only changes by rounds of complete de- and repolymerization, or whether reorientation is a more continuous process involving movement of stable or dynamic microtubules. By microinjecting pea (Pisum sativum) epidermal cells with rhodamine-conjugated brain tubulin and optically sectioning them by confocal laser scanning microscopy, we could follow labeled microtubules for up to 2 hr as they reorientate. Reorientation does not occur by complete depolymerization of microtubules in one orientation followed by polymerization of a new array in another orientation. Instead, increased numbers of discordant microtubules in nontransverse alignment appear in particular locations. Neighboring microtubules then adopt the new alignment, so that there is a stage during which different alignments coexist before the array on the outer tangential cell face finally adopts a uniform steeply oblique/longitudinal configuration. Rapid fluorescence recovery after photobleaching confirms that bundles of cortical microtubules are not stable but exhibit properties consistent with dynamic instability. Dynamic microtubules offer a mechanism for rapid growth responses to a range of physiological stimuli.

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