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Dive into the research topics where Denton A. M. Prior is active.

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Featured researches published by Denton A. M. Prior.


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 | 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.


Planta | 1988

Movement of Lucifer Yellow CH in potato tuber storage tissues: A comparison of symplastic and apoplastic transport.

Karl J. Oparka; Denton A. M. Prior

The fluorescent dye Lucifer Yellow CH (LYCH) was introduced directly into the symplast of potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) tuber storage parenchyma by microinjection and also into the apoplast through cuts made in the stolon cortex. Microinjected LYCH moved away rapidly from a single storage cell and spread radially via the symplast. When the microinjected tissue was subsequently fixed in glutaraldehyde and sectioned the dye was seen clearly to be localised in the cytoplasm but not in the vacuole. In comparison, when LYCH was introduced into cuts made in the stolon cortex the dye entered the tuber by the xylem and subsequently spread apoplastically. No movement of dye was observed in the phloem. In glutaraldehyde-fixed tissues, in which LYCH was introduced to the apoplast, the dye was found within xylem vessels, in the cell walls and in intercellular spaces. Wall regions, possibly associated with plasmodesmata, became stained by the dye as it moved through the apoplast. Three hours after introduction of the dye to the stolon, intense deposits of LYCH were found in the vacuoles of all cells in the tuber, many aligned along the tonoplast. Differentiating vascular parenchyma elements contained large amounts of dye within enlarging vacuoles. However, with the exception of plasmolysed and-or damaged cells, LYCH was absent from the cytoplasm following its introduction to the plasmalemma it is suggested that the most likely pathway from the cell wall to the vacuole was by endocytosis, the dye being transported across the cytoplasm in membrane-bound vesicles. Clathrin-coated vesicles were abundant in the storage cells, providing a possible endocytotic pathway for dye movement. The significance of these observations is discussed in relation to the movement of LYCH in plant tissues and to the movement of solutes within and between storage cells of the tuber.


Plant Physiology | 1996

Induction of Phloem Unloading in Arabidopsis thaliana Roots by the Parasitic Nematode Heterodera schachtii

Annette Böckenhoff; Denton A. M. Prior; Florian M. W. Grundler; Karl J. Oparka

Phloem unloading of both the fluorescent probe carboxyfluorescein (CF) and 14C-labeled solutes was induced in Arabidopsis thaliana L. roots by the parasitic nematode Heterodera schachtii Schmidt. Confocal laser scanning microscopy demonstrated that anomalous unloading of CF from the sieve element companion cell complexes occurred specifically into the syncytium, the nematode- induced feeding structure located within the stele of the root. From this syncytial complex of modified root cells, both fluorescent and radioactive labels were withdrawn by feeding nematodes. Movement of CF was unidirectional from the phloem to the syncytium. A range of low-molecular-weight fluorescent probes (including CF) microinjected into the syncytium stayed in this structure, demonstrating that it is symplastically isolated from the surrounding root tissue. The mechanism of unloading in this host-pathogen relationship therefore appears to be apoplastic. Our results provide unequivocal evidence that sedentary cyst-forming nematodes have direct access to phloem-derived solutes.


Protoplasma | 1995

Imaging the green fluorescent protein in plants — viruses carry the torch

Karl J. Oparka; Alison G. Roberts; Denton A. M. Prior; Sean Chapman; David C. Baulcombe; S. Santa Cruz

SummaryThe green fluorescent protein (GFP) was introduced into plant cells using potato virus X as a vector. The GFP was produced at high levels within virus-infected cells by utilising a duplication of the viral coat protein subgenomic RNA promoter sequence to direct transcription of mRNA encoding the GFP. We also exploited the ability of GFP to retain its fluorescence when fused to other proteins by fusing it to the PVX coat protein. The resultant fluorescent virus became systemic and its movement from cell to cell was traced using confocal laser scanning microscopy. Using PVX as the vector, additional fusions of the GFP were made to the movement protein of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV). The fluorescent fusion protein produced was targeted to specific wall sites thought to be plasmodesmatal pit fields. The utility of virus-based vectors for the delivery and targeting of GFP in living plant cells is discussed.


Nature | 1997

USING GFP TO STUDY VIRUS INVASION AND SPREAD IN PLANT TISSUES

Karl J. Oparka; Alison G. Roberts; Simon Santa Cruz; Petra C. Boevink; Denton A. M. Prior; Anna Smallcombe

GFP is beginning to revolutionize the study of virus movement in plants. Insertion of the gfpgene into the viral genome allows the virus to be tracked both in whole plants and also in single cells.


Planta | 1990

Osmotic induction of fluid-phase endocytosis in onion epidermal cells.

Karl J. Oparka; Denton A. M. Prior; N. Harris

A transient plasmolysis/deplasmolysis (plasmolytic cycle) of onion epidermal cells has been shown to induce the formation of fluid-phase endocytic vesicles. Plasmolysis in the presence of the membrane-impermeant fluorescent probes Lucifer Yellow CH (LYCH) and Cascade Blue hydrazide resulted in the uptake of these probes by fluid-phase endocytosis. Following deplasmolysis, many of the dye-containing vesicles left their parietal positions within the cell and underwent vigorous streaming in the cytoplasm. Vesicles were observed to move within transvacuolar strands and their movements were recorded over several hours by video-microscopy. Within 2 h of deplasmolysis several of the larger endocytic vesicles had clustered around the nuclear membrane, apparently lodged in the narrow zone of cytoplams surrounding the nucleus. In further experiments LYCH was endocytically loaded into the cells during the first plasmolytic cycle and Cascade Blue subsequently loaded during a second plasmolytic cycle. This resulted in the introduction of two populations of endocytic vesicles into the cells, each containing a different probe. Both sets of vesicles underwent cytoplasmic streaming. The data are discussed in the light of previous observations of fluid-phase endocytosis in plant cells.


Planta | 1988

Uptake of Lucifer Yellow CH into intact barley roots: Evidence for fluid-phase endocytosis

Karl J. Oparka; David Robinson; Denton A. M. Prior; P. Derrick; Kathryn M. Wright

Intact barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) roots have been shown to take up the highly fluorescent dye Lucifer Yellow CH (LYCH) into their cell vacuoles. In the apical 1 cm of root tip, differentiating and dividing cells showed a prolific uptake of LYCH into their provacuoles. The LYCH was retained during fixation, apparently becoming bound to electron-dense material in the vacuoles. The dye freely entered the apoplast of roots in which the Casparian band was not developed, being taken up into the vacuoles of cells in both the cortex and stele. However, when LYCH was applied to a 1-cm zone approx. 6 cm behind the root tip the Casparian band on the radial walls of the endodermis completely prevented the dye from entering the cells of the stele, only the cell walls and vacuoles of the cortical cells taking up the dye. The inability of LYCH to cross the plasmalemma of the endodermal cells and enter the stele via the symplast substantiates previous claims that the dye is unable to cross the plasmalemma of plant cells. The results are discussed in the light of recent demonstrations that LYCH is a particularly effective marker for fluid-phase endocytosis in animal and yeast cells. A calculation of the energetic requirements for LYCH uptake into barley roots supports the contention that LYCH is taken up into the vacuoles of plant cells by fluid-phase endocytosis.


Planta | 1990

Effect of sink isolation on sugar uptake and starch synthesis by potato-tuber storage parenchyma

Karl J. Oparka; Howard V. Davies; Kathryn M. Wright; Roberto Viola; Denton A. M. Prior

Import into potato (Solarium tuberosum L. cv. Record) tubers was terminated by removing the sink at its connection with the stolon. The ability of discs of storage tissue from the excised tubers to take up exogenous sugars and convert them to starch was compared with that of discs from untreated tubers from the same plant population. In rapidly-growing control tubers, glucose and fructose were taken up to a greater extent than sucrose, 77% of the glucose being converted to starch within 3 h (compared with 64% and 27% for fructose and sucrose, respectively). These values fell as the tubers aged but the ranking (glucose > fructose > sucrose) was maintained, emphasising a severe rate-limiting step following the import of sucrose into the growing tuber. Sink isolation had little effect on the ability of the storage cells to take up exogenous sucrose across the plasmalemma for up to 7 d after sink isolation. However, the ability of the same cells to convert the sucrose to starch was severely inhibited within 24 h, as was the sensitivity of starch synthesis to turgor. In the case of glucose, sink isolation inhibited both the uptake and the conversion to starch, the latter being inhibited to a greater degree. A detailed metabolic study of tubers 7 d after excision showed that, with sucrose as substrate, 94% of the radioactivity in the soluble sugar pool was recovered in sucrose following sink isolation (92% in control tubers). However, with glucose as substrate, 80% of the radioactivity was recovered as sucrose following tuber excision (28% in control tubers), providing evidence that sucrose synthesis acts as a major alternative carbon sink when starch synthesis is inhibited. In the same tubers, sucrose-synthase activity decreased by 70% following sink isolation, compared with a 45% reduction in ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase. Activities of UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase, starch phosphorylase, starch synthase nd both PPi- and ATP-dependent phosphofructokinases remained unchanged. Acid-invertase activity increased fivefold.


Journal of Microscopy | 1999

EN BLOC OPTICAL SECTIONING OF RESIN-EMBEDDED SPECIMENS USING A CONFOCAL LASER SCANNING MICROSCOPE

Denton A. M. Prior; Karl J. Oparka; I. M. Roberts

Reconstruction of 3D structures of specimens embedded for light or electron microscopy is usually achieved by cutting serial sections through the tissues, then assembling the images from each section to reconstruct the original structure or feature. This is both time‐consuming and destructive, and may lead to areas of particular interest being missed. This paper describes a method of examining specimens which have been fixed in glutaraldehyde and embedded in epoxy resin, by utilising the autofluorescence preserved or enhanced by aldehyde fixation, and by using a confocal laser scanning microscope to section optically such specimens in the block down to a depth of about 200 μm. In this way, the accurate estimation of the depth of particular features could be used to facilitate subsequent sectioning at the light microscope or electron microscope level for more detailed studies, and 3D images of tissues/structures within the block could be easily prepared if required.

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Alison G. Roberts

Scottish Crop Research Institute

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I. M. Roberts

Scottish Crop Research Institute

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Simon Santa Cruz

Scottish Crop Research Institute

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S. Santa Cruz

Scottish Crop Research Institute

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Anna Smallcombe

Scottish Crop Research Institute

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