Current Biology
Volume 31, Issue 9, 10 May 2021, Pages 1918-1930.e5
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Article
AGC kinases and MAB4/MEL proteins maintain PIN polarity by limiting lateral diffusion in plant cells

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2021.02.028Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • MAB4/MEL proteins are recruited to the plasma membrane by PINs

  • PINs, MAB4/MELs, and AGC kinases directly interact in a multiprotein complex

  • PIN phosphorylation and MAB4/MEL recruitment form a positive feedback loop

  • MAB4/MELs and AGC kinases maintain PIN polarity by limiting PIN lateral diffusion

Summary

Polar subcellular localization of the PIN exporters of the phytohormone auxin is a key determinant of directional, intercellular auxin transport and thus a central topic of both plant cell and developmental biology. Arabidopsis mutants lacking PID, a kinase that phosphorylates PINs, or the MAB4/MEL proteins of unknown molecular function display PIN polarity defects and phenocopy pin mutants, but mechanistic insights into how these factors convey PIN polarity are missing. Here, by combining protein biochemistry with quantitative live-cell imaging, we demonstrate that PINs, MAB4/MELs, and AGC kinases interact in the same complex at the plasma membrane. MAB4/MELs are recruited to the plasma membrane by the PINs and in concert with the AGC kinases maintain PIN polarity through limiting lateral diffusion-based escape of PINs from the polar domain. The PIN-MAB4/MEL-PID protein complex has self-reinforcing properties thanks to positive feedback between AGC kinase-mediated PIN phosphorylation and MAB4/MEL recruitment. We thus uncover the molecular mechanism by which AGC kinases and MAB4/MEL proteins regulate PIN localization and plant development.

Keywords

cell polarity
lateral diffusion
protein phosphorylation
polar auxin transport
Arabidopsis
plant development
positive feedback

Cited by (0)

9

Present address: School of Life Sciences, Division of Life Sciences and Medicine, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei 230027, China

10

Present address: Department of Developmental Biology, Beckman Center, Stanford, CA 94305, USA

11

Present address: HAN University of Applied Sciences, 6826 CC Arnhem, the Netherlands

12

Present address: Rijk Zwaan, 2678 KX De Lier, the Netherlands

13

Present address: Department of Cell and Chemical Biology, Leids Universitair Medisch Centrum, 2333 ZC Leiden, the Netherlands

14

These authors contributed equally

15

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