» Articles » PMID: 29503816

A Salutary Role of Reactive Oxygen Species in Intercellular Tunnel-Mediated Communication

Overview
Specialty Cell Biology
Date 2018 Mar 6
PMID 29503816
Citations 12
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The reactive oxygen species, generally labeled toxic due to high reactivity without target specificity, are gradually uncovered as signaling molecules involved in a myriad of biological processes. But one important feature of ROS roles in macromolecule movement has not caught attention until recent studies with technique advance and design elegance have shed lights on ROS signaling for intercellular and interorganelle communication. This review begins with the discussions of genetic and chemical studies on the regulation of symplastic dye movement through intercellular tunnels in plants (plasmodesmata), and focuses on the ROS regulatory mechanisms concerning macromolecule movement including small RNA-mediated gene silencing movement and protein shuttling between cells. Given the premise that intercellular tunnels (bridges) in mammalian cells are the key physical structures to sustain intercellular communication, movement of macromolecules and signals is efficiently facilitated by ROS-induced membrane protrusions formation, which is analogously applied to the interorganelle communication in plant cells. Although ROS regulatory differences between plant and mammalian cells exist, the basis for ROS-triggered conduit formation underlies a unifying conservative theme in multicellular organisms. These mechanisms may represent the evolutionary advances that have enabled multicellularity to gain the ability to generate and utilize ROS to govern material exchanges between individual cells in oxygenated environment.

Citing Articles

Novel resources to investigate leaf plasmodesmata formation in C and C monocots.

Tsang H, Ganguly D, Furbank R, von Caemmerer S, Danila F Plant J. 2024; 120(5):2207-2225.

PMID: 39494762 PMC: 11629748. DOI: 10.1111/tpj.17113.


Enzymatic Activity and Its Relationships with the Total Phenolic Content and Color Change in the High Hydrostatic Pressure-Assisted Curing of Vanilla Bean ().

Buitimea-Cantua G, Chavez-Leal V, Soto-Caballero M, Tellez-Medina D, Welti-Chanes J, Escobedo-Avellaneda Z Molecules. 2023; 28(22).

PMID: 38005328 PMC: 10674283. DOI: 10.3390/molecules28227606.


ROS are evolutionary conserved cell-to-cell stress signals.

Fichman Y, Rowland L, Oliver M, Mittler R Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2023; 120(31):e2305496120.

PMID: 37494396 PMC: 10400990. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2305496120.


High Hydrostatic Pressure to Increase the Biosynthesis and Extraction of Phenolic Compounds in Food: A Review.

Navarro-Baez J, Martinez L, Welti-Chanes J, Buitimea-Cantua G, Escobedo-Avellaneda Z Molecules. 2022; 27(5).

PMID: 35268602 PMC: 8911777. DOI: 10.3390/molecules27051502.


ROS-induced dramatic lipid changes in .

Jin T, Wang X, Deng Z, Liu X, Liang D Redox Rep. 2021; 26(1):190-196.

PMID: 34755584 PMC: 8583927. DOI: 10.1080/13510002.2021.2002001.


References
1.
Hassanain H, Sharma Y, Moldovan L, Khramtsov V, Berliner L, Duvick J . Plant rac proteins induce superoxide production in mammalian cells. Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 2000; 272(3):783-8. DOI: 10.1006/bbrc.2000.2791. View

2.
Zhang Z, Henderson C, Gurr S . Blumeria graminis secretes an extracellular catalase during infection of barley: potential role in suppression of host defence. Mol Plant Pathol. 2010; 5(6):537-47. DOI: 10.1111/j.1364-3703.2004.00251.x. View

3.
Zhu D, Hu C, Sheng W, Tan K, Haidekker M, Sun A . NAD(P)H oxidase-mediated reactive oxygen species production alters astrocyte membrane molecular order via phospholipase A2. Biochem J. 2009; 421(2):201-10. DOI: 10.1042/BJ20090356. View

4.
Otero S, Helariutta Y, Benitez-Alfonso Y . Symplastic communication in organ formation and tissue patterning. Curr Opin Plant Biol. 2015; 29:21-8. DOI: 10.1016/j.pbi.2015.10.007. View

5.
Hemetsberger C, Herrberger C, Zechmann B, Hillmer M, Doehlemann G . The Ustilago maydis effector Pep1 suppresses plant immunity by inhibition of host peroxidase activity. PLoS Pathog. 2012; 8(5):e1002684. PMC: 3349748. DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1002684. View