We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
The myth of interconnected plastids and related phenomena.
- Authors
Schattat, Martin; Barton, Kiah; Mathur, Jaideep
- Abstract
Studies spread over nearly two and a half centuries have identified the primary plastid in autotrophic algae and plants as a pleomorphic, multifunctional organelle comprising of a double-membrane envelope enclosing an organization of internal membranes submerged in a watery stroma. All plastid units have been observed extending and retracting thin stroma-filled tubules named stromules sporadically. Observations on living plant cells often convey the impression that stromules connect two or more independent plastids with each other. When photo-bleaching techniques were used to suggest that macromolecules such as the green fluorescent protein could flow between already interconnected plastids, for many people this impression changed to conviction. However, it was noticed only recently that the concept of protein flow between plastids rests solely on the words 'interconnected plastids' for which details have never been provided. We have critically reviewed botanical literature dating back to the 1880s for understanding this term and the phenomena that have become associated with it. We find that while meticulously detailed ontogenic studies spanning nearly 150 years have established the plastid as a singular unit organelle, there is no experimental support for the idea that interconnected plastids exist under normal conditions of growth and development. In this review, while we consider several possibilities that might allow a single elongated plastid to be misinterpreted as two or more interconnected plastids, our final conclusion is that the concept of direct protein flow between plastids is based on an unfounded assumption.
- Subjects
PLASTIDS; ETIOPLASTS; GREEN fluorescent protein; PLANT organelles; PLANT cells &; tissues
- Publication
Protoplasma, 2015, Vol 252, Issue 1, p359
- ISSN
0033-183X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s00709-014-0666-4