Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Alison G. Roberts is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Alison G. Roberts.


The Plant Cell | 2002

Membrane Protein Transport between the Endoplasmic Reticulum and the Golgi in Tobacco Leaves Is Energy Dependent but Cytoskeleton Independent Evidence from Selective Photobleaching

Federica Brandizzi; Erik L. Snapp; Alison G. Roberts; Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz; Chris Hawes

The mechanisms that control protein transport between the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and the Golgi apparatus are poorly characterized in plants. Here, we examine in tobacco leaves the structural relationship between Golgi and ER membranes using electron microscopy and demonstrate that Golgi membranes contain elements that are in close association and/or in direct contact with the ER. We further visualized protein trafficking between the ER and the Golgi using Golgi marker proteins tagged with green fluorescent protein. Using photobleaching techniques, we showed that Golgi membrane markers constitutively cycle to and from the Golgi in an energy-dependent and N-ethylmaleimide–sensitive manner. We found that membrane protein transport toward the Golgi occurs independently of the cytoskeleton and does not require the Golgi to be motile along the surface of the ER. Brefeldin A treatment blocked forward trafficking of Golgi proteins before their redistribution into the ER. Our results indicate that in plant cells, the Golgi apparatus is a dynamic membrane system whose components continuously traffic via membrane trafficking pathways regulated by brefeldin A– and N-ethylmaleimide–sensitive machinery.


The Plant Cell | 1997

Phloem Unloading in Sink Leaves of Nicotiana benthamiana: Comparison of a Fluorescent Solute with a Fluorescent Virus.

Alison G. Roberts; Simon Santa Cruz; I. M. Roberts; Denton A. M. Prior; Robert Turgeon; Karl J. Oparka

Using noninvasive imaging techniques, we compared phloem unloading of the membrane-impermeant, fluorescent solute carboxyfluorescein (CF) with that of potato virus X expressing the gene for the green fluorescent protein. Although systemic virus transport took considerably longer to occur than did CF transport, unloading of both solute and virus occurred predominantly from the class III vein network, a highly branched veinal system found between class II veins. The minor veins (classes IV and V) played no role in solute or virus import but were shown to be functional in xylem transport at the time of import by labeling with Texas Red dextran. After virus exit from the class III phloem, the minor veins eventually became infected by cell-to-cell virus movement from the mesophyll. During the sink/source transition, phloem unloading of CF was inhibited from class III veins before the cessation of phloem import through them, suggesting a symplastic isolation of the phloem in class III veins before its involvement in export. The progression of the sink/source transition for carbon was unaffected by the presence of the virus in the sink leaf. However, the virus was unable to cross the sink/source boundary for carbon that was present at the time of viral entry, suggesting a limited capacity for cell-to-cell virus movement into the apical (source) region of the leaf. A functional model of the sink/source transition in Nicotiana benthamiana is presented. This model provides a framework for the analysis of solute and virus movement in leaves.


The Plant Cell | 2001

Tuberization in potato involves a switch from apoplastic to symplastic phloem unloading

Roberto Viola; Alison G. Roberts; Sophie Haupt; Silvia Gazzani; Robert D. Hancock; Nelson Marmiroli; Gordon C. Machray; Karl J. Oparka

Phloem unloading was studied in potato plants in real time during the early stages of tuberization using carboxyfluorescein (CF) as a phloem-mobile tracer, and the unloading pattern was compared with autoradiography of tubers that had transported 14C assimilates. In stolons undergoing extension growth, apoplastic phloem unloading predominated. However, during the first visible signs of tuberization, a transition occurred from apoplastic to symplastic transport, and both CF and 14C assimilates subsequently followed identical patterns of phloem unloading. It is suggested that the switch to symplastic sucrose unloading may be responsible for the upregulation of several genes involved in sucrose metabolism. A detailed analysis of sugar levels and 14C sugar partitioning in tuberizing stolons revealed a distinct difference between the apical region of the tuber and the subapical region. Analysis of invertase activity in nontuberizing and tuberizing stolons revealed a marked decline in soluble invertase in the subapical region of swelling stolons, consistent with the switch from apoplastic to symplastic unloading. However, cell wall–bound invertase activity remained high in the apical 1 to 2 mm of tuberizing stolons. Histochemical analysis of potato lines transformed with the promoter of an apoplastic invertase gene (invGE) linked to a reporter gene also revealed discrete gene expression in the apical bud region. Evidence is presented that the apical and lateral tuber buds function as isolated domains with respect to sucrose unloading and metabolism.


The Plant Cell | 1998

Cell-to-Cell and Phloem-Mediated Transport of Potato Virus X: The Role of Virions

Simon Santa Cruz; Alison G. Roberts; Denton A. M. Prior; Sean Chapman; Karl J. Oparka

Movement-deficient potato virus X (PVX) mutants tagged with the green fluorescent protein were used to investigate the role of the coat protein (CP) and triple gene block (TGB) proteins in virus movement. Mutants lacking either a functional CP or TGB were restricted to single epidermal cells. Microinjection of dextran probes into cells infected with the mutants showed that an increase in the plasmodesmal size exclusion limit was dependent on one or more of the TGB proteins and was independent of CP. Fluorescently labeled CP that was injected into epidermal cells was confined to the injected cells, showing that the CP lacks an intrinsic transport function. In additional experiments, transgenic plants expressing the PVX CP were used as rootstocks and grafted with nontransformed scions. Inoculation of the PVX CP mutants to the transgenic rootstocks resulted in cell-to-cell and systemic movement within the transgenic tissue. Translocation of the CP mutants into sink leaves of the nontransgenic scions was also observed, but infection was restricted to cells close to major veins. These results indicate that the PVX CP is transported through the phloem, unloads into the vascular tissue, and subsequently is transported between cells during the course of infection. Evidence is presented that PVX uses a novel strategy for cell-to-cell movement involving the transport of filamentous virions through plasmodesmata.


The Plant Cell | 2005

Two Plant–Viral Movement Proteins Traffic in the Endocytic Recycling Pathway

Sophie Haupt; Graham H. Cowan; Angelika Ziegler; Alison G. Roberts; Karl J. Oparka; Lesley Torrance

Many plant viruses exploit a conserved group of proteins known as the triple gene block (TGB) for cell-to-cell movement. Here, we investigated the interaction of two TGB proteins (TGB2 and TGB3) of Potato mop-top virus (PMTV), with components of the secretory and endocytic pathways when expressed as N-terminal fusions to green fluorescent protein or monomeric red fluorescent protein (mRFP). Our studies revealed that fluorophore-labeled TGB2 and TGB3 showed an early association with the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and colocalized in motile granules that used the ER-actin network for intracellular movement. Both proteins increased the size exclusion limit of plasmodesmata, and TGB3 accumulated at plasmodesmata in the absence of TGB2. TGB3 contains a putative Tyr-based sorting motif, mutations in which abolished ER localization and plasmodesmatal targeting. Later in the expression cycle, both fusion proteins were incorporated into vesicular structures. TGB2 associated with these structures on its own, but TGB3 could not be incorporated into the vesicles in the absence of TGB2. Moreover, in addition to localization to the ER and motile granules, mRFP-TGB3 was incorporated into vesicles when expressed in PMTV-infected epidermal cells, indicating recruitment by virus-expressed TGB2. The TGB fusion protein-containing vesicles were labeled with FM4-64, a marker for plasma membrane internalization and components of the endocytic pathway. TGB2 also colocalized in vesicles with Ara7, a Rab5 ortholog that marks the early endosome. Protein interaction analysis revealed that recombinant TGB2 interacted with a tobacco protein belonging to the highly conserved RME-8 family of J-domain chaperones, shown to be essential for endocytic trafficking in Caenorhabditis elegans and Drosophila melanogaster. Collectively, the data indicate the involvement of the endocytic pathway in viral intracellular movement, the implications of which are discussed.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

The photoreversible fluorescent protein iLOV outperforms GFP as a reporter of plant virus infection

Sean Chapman; Christine Faulkner; Eirini Kaiserli; Carlos García-Mata; Eugene I. Savenkov; Alison G. Roberts; Karl J. Oparka; John M. Christie

Fluorescent proteins (FPs) based on green fluorescent protein (GFP) are widely used throughout cell biology to study protein dynamics, and have extensive use as reporters of virus infection and spread. However, FP-tagging of viruses is limited by the constraints of viral genome size resulting in FP loss through recombination events. To overcome this, we have engineered a smaller (≈10 kDa) flavin-based alternative to GFP (≈25 kDa) derived from the light, oxygen or voltage-sensing (LOV) domain of the plant blue light receptor, phototropin. Molecular evolution and Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV)-based expression screening produced LOV variants with improved fluorescence and photostability in planta. One variant in particular, designated iLOV, possessed photophysical properties that made it ideally suited as a reporter of subcellular protein localization in both plant and mammalian cells. Moreover, iLOV fluorescence was found to recover spontaneously after photobleaching and displayed an intrinsic photochemistry conferring advantages over GFP-based FPs. When expressed either as a cytosolic protein or as a viral protein fusion, iLOV functioned as a superior reporter to GFP for monitoring local and systemic infections of plant RNA viruses. iLOV, therefore, offers greater utility in FP-tagging of viral gene products and represents a viable alternative where functional protein expression is limited by steric constraints or genome size.


The Plant Cell | 2002

Functional Analysis of a DNA-Shuffled Movement Protein Reveals That Microtubules Are Dispensable for the Cell-to-Cell Movement of Tobacco mosaic virus

Trudi Gillespie; Petra C. Boevink; Sophie Haupt; Alison G. Roberts; Rachel L. Toth; Tracy A. Valentine; Sean Chapman; Karl J. Oparka

Microtubules interact strongly with the viral movement protein (MP) of Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) and are thought to transport the viral genome between plant cells. We describe a functionally enhanced DNA-shuffled movement protein (MPR3) that remained bound to the vertices of the cortical endoplasmic reticulum, showing limited affinity for microtubules. A single amino acid change was shown to confer the MPR3 phenotype. Disruption of the microtubule cytoskeleton in situ with pharmacological agents, or by silencing of the α-tubulin gene, had no significant effect on the spread of TMV vectors expressing wild-type MP (MPWT) and did not prevent the accumulation of MPWT in plasmodesmata. Thus, cell-to-cell trafficking of TMV can occur independently of microtubules. The MPR3 phenotype was reproduced when infection sites expressing MPWT were treated with a specific proteasome inhibitor, indicating that the degradation of MPR3 is impaired. We suggest that the improved viral transport functions of MPR3 arise from evasion of a host degradation pathway.


Traffic | 2007

Targeting of TMV movement protein to plasmodesmata requires the actin/ER network: evidence from FRAP

Kathryn M. Wright; Nicola T. Wood; Alison G. Roberts; Sean Chapman; Petra C. Boevink; Katrin MacKenzie; Karl J. Oparka

Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) was used to study the mechanism by which fluorescent‐protein‐tagged movement protein (MP) of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) is targeted to plasmodesmata (PD). The data show that fluorescence recovery in PD at the leading edge of an infection requires elements of the cortical actin/endoplasmic reticulum (ER) network and can occur in the absence of an intact microtubule (MT) cytoskeleton. Inhibitors of the actin cytoskeleton (latrunculin and cytochalasin) significantly inhibited MP targeting, while MT inhibitors (colchicine and oryzalin) did not. Application of sodium azide to infected cells implicated an active component of MP transfer to PD. Treatment of cells with Brefeldin A (BFA) at a concentration that caused reabsorption of the Golgi bodies into the ER (precluding secretion of viral MP) had no effect on MP targeting, while disruption of the cortical ER with higher concentrations of BFA caused significant inhibition. Our results support a model of TMV MP function in which targeting of MP to PD during infection is mediated by the actin/ER network.


Protoplasma | 2001

Dynamic changes in the frequency and architecture of plasmodesmata during the sink-source transition in tobacco leaves.

I. M. Roberts; Petra C. Boevink; Alison G. Roberts; Norbert Sauer; C. Reichel; Karl J. Oparka

SummaryThe sink-source transition in tobacco leaves was studied noninvasively using transgenic plants expressing the green-fluorescent protein (GFP) under control of theArabidopsis thaliana SUC2 promoter, and also by imaging transgenic plants that constitutively expressed a tobacco mosaic virus movement protein (MP) fused to GFP (MP-GFP). The sink-source transition was measured on intact leaves and progressed basipetally at rates of up to 600 μm/h. The transition was most rapid on the largest sink leaves. However, leaf size was a poor indicator of the current position of the sink-source transition. A quantitative study of plasmodesmatal frequencies revealed the loss of enormous numbers of simple plasmodemata during the sink-source transition. In contrast, branched plasmodesmata increased in frequency during the sink-source transition, particularly between periclinal cell walls of the spongy mesophyll. The progression of plasmodesmal branching, as mapped by the labelling of plasmodesmata with MP-GFP fusion, occurred asynchronously in different cell layers, commencing in trichomes and appearing lastly in periclinal cell walls of the palisade layer. It appears that dividing cells retain simple plasmodesmata for longer periods than nondividing cells. The rapid conversion of simple to branched plasmodesmata is discussed in relation to the capacity for macromolecular trafficking in developing leaf tissues.


Plant Physiology | 2004

Coordinate Expression and Independent Subcellular Targeting of Multiple Proteins from a Single Transgene

Abdelhak El Amrani; Abdellah Barakate; Barak M. Askari; Xuejun Li; Alison G. Roberts; Martin D. Ryan; Claire Halpin

A variety of conventional methods allow the expression of multiple foreign proteins in plants by transgene stacking or pyramiding. However, most of these approaches have significant drawbacks. We describe a novel alternative, using a single transgene to coordinate expression of multiple proteins that are encoded as a polyprotein capable of dissociating into component proteins on translation. We demonstrate that this polyprotein system is compatible with the need to target proteins to a variety of subcellular locations, either cotranslationally or posttranslationally. It can also be used to coordinate the expression of selectable marker genes and effect genes or to link genes that are difficult to assay to reporter genes that are easily monitored. The unique features of this polyprotein system are based on the novel activity of the 2A peptide of Foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) that acts cotranslationally to effect a dissociation of the polyprotein while allowing translation to continue. This polyprotein system has many applications both as a research tool and for metabolic engineering and protein factory applications of plant biotechnology.

Collaboration


Dive into the Alison G. Roberts's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Denton A. M. Prior

Scottish Crop Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Simon Santa Cruz

Scottish Crop Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Graham H. Cowan

Scottish Crop Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

I. M. Roberts

Scottish Crop Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eugene I. Savenkov

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge