Joseph G. Kunkel
University of Massachusetts Amherst
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Featured researches published by Joseph G. Kunkel.
The Plant Cell | 1997
Terena L. Holdaway-Clarke; José A. Feijó; Grant Hackett; Joseph G. Kunkel; Peter K. Hepler
Ratio images of cytosolic Ca2+ (Ca2+i) in growing, fura-2-dextran-loaded Lilium longiflorum pollen tubes taken at 3- to 5-sec intervals showed that the tip-focused [Ca2+]i gradient oscillates with the same period as growth. Similarly, measurement of the extracellular inward current, using a noninvasive ion-selective vibrating probe, indicated that the tip-directed extracellular Ca2+ (Ca2+o) current also oscillates with the same period as growth. Cross-correlation analysis revealed that whereas the [Ca2+]i gradient oscillates in phase with growth, the influx of Ca2+o lags by ~11 sec. Ion influx thus appears to follow growth, with the effect that the rate of growth at a given point determines the magnitude of the ion influx ~11 sec later. To explain the phase delay in the extracellular inward current, there must be a storage of Ca2+ for which we consider two possibilities: either the inward current represents the refilling of intracellular stores (capacitative calcium entry), or it represents the binding of the ion within the cell wall domain.
BioEssays | 2000
José A. Feijó; Joaquim Sainhas; Terena L. Holdaway-Clarke; M. Sofia Cordeiro; Joseph G. Kunkel; Peter K. Hepler
The occurrence of oscillatory behaviours in living cells can be viewed as a visible consequence of stable, regulatory homeostatic cycles. Therefore, they may be used as experimental windows on the underlying physiological mechanisms. Recent studies show that growing pollen tubes are an excellent biological model for these purposes. They unite experimental simplicity with clear oscillatory patterns of both structural and temporal features, most being measurable during real‐time in live cells. There is evidence that these cellular oscillators involve an integrated input of plasma membrane ion fluxes, and a cytosolic choreography of protons, calcium and, most likely, potassium and chloride. In turn, these can create positive feedback regulation loops that are able to generate and self‐sustain a number of spatial and temporal patterns. Other features, including cell wall assembly and rheology, turgor, and the cytoskeleton, play important roles and are targets or modulators of ion dynamics. Many of these features have similarities with other cell types, notably with apical‐growing cells. Pollen tubes may thus serve as a powerful model for exploring the basis of cell growth and morphogenesis. BioEssays 23:86–94, 2001.
Plant Physiology | 2008
Luis Cárdenas; Alenka Lovy-Wheeler; Joseph G. Kunkel; Peter K. Hepler
Prevention of actin polymerization with low concentrations of latrunculin B (Lat-B; 2 nm) exerts a profound inhibitory effect on pollen tube growth. Using flow-through chambers, we show that growth retardation starts after 10 min treatment with 2 nm Lat-B, and by 15 to 20 min reaches a basal rate of 0.1 to 0.2 μm/s, during which the pollen tube exhibits relatively few oscillations. If treated for 30 min, complete stoppage of growth can occur. Studies on the intracellular Ca2+ concentration indicate that the tip-focused gradient declines in parallel with the inhibition of growth. Tubes exhibiting nonoscillating growth display a similarly reduced and nonoscillating Ca2+ gradient. Studies on the pH gradient indicate that Lat-B eliminates the acidic domain at the extreme apex, and causes the alkaline band to move more closely to the tip. Removing Lat-B and returning the cells to control medium reverses these effects. Phalloidin staining of F-actin reveals that 2 nm Lat-B degrades the cortical fringe; it also disorganizes the microfilaments in the shank causing the longitudinally oriented elements to be disposed in swirls. Cytoplasmic streaming continues under these conditions, however the clear zone is obliterated with all organelles moving into and through the extreme apex of the tube. We suggest that actin polymerization promotes pollen tube growth through extension of the cortical actin fringe, which serves as a track to target cell wall vesicles to preferred exocytotic sites on the plasma membrane.
The Plant Cell | 2009
Sylvester T. McKenna; Joseph G. Kunkel; Maurice Bosch; Caleb M. Rounds; Luis Vidali; Lawrence J. Winship; Peter K. Hepler
We examined exocytosis during oscillatory growth in lily (Lilium formosanum and Lilium longiflorum) and tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) pollen tubes using three markers: (1) changes in cell wall thickness by Nomarski differential interference contrast (DIC), (2) changes in apical cell wall fluorescence in cells stained with propidium iodide (PI), and (3) changes in apical wall fluorescence in cells expressing tobacco pectin methyl esterase fused to green fluorescent protein (PME-GFP). Using PI fluorescence, we quantified oscillatory changes in the amount of wall material from both lily and tobacco pollen tubes. Measurement of wall thickness by DIC was only possible with lily due to limitations of microscope resolution. PME-GFP, a direct marker for exocytosis, only provides information in tobacco because its expression in lily causes growth inhibition and cell death. We show that exocytosis in pollen tubes oscillates and leads the increase in growth rate; the mean phase difference between exocytosis and growth is –98° ± 3° in lily and –124° ± 4° in tobacco. Statistical analyses reveal that the anticipatory increase in wall material predicts, to a high degree, the rate and extent of the subsequent growth surge. Exocytosis emerges as a prime candidate for the initiation and regulation of oscillatory pollen tube growth.
The Plant Cell | 2006
Alenka Lovy-Wheeler; Joseph G. Kunkel; Ellen G. Allwood; Patrick J. Hussey; Peter K. Hepler
Lily (Lilium formosanum or Lilium longiflorum) pollen tubes, microinjected with a low concentration of the pH-sensitive dye bis-carboxyethyl carboxyfluorescein dextran, show oscillating pH changes in their apical domain relative to growth. An increase in pH in the apex precedes the fastest growth velocities, whereas a decline follows growth, suggesting a possible relationship between alkalinity and cell extension. A target for pH may be the actin cytoskeleton, because the apical cortical actin fringe resides in the same region as the alkaline band in lily pollen tubes and elongation requires actin polymerization. A pH-sensitive actin binding protein, actin-depolymerizing factor (ADF), together with actin-interacting protein (AIP) localize to the cortical actin fringe region. Modifying intracellular pH leads to reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton, especially in the apical domain. Acidification causes actin filament destabilization and inhibits growth by 80%. Upon complete growth inhibition, the actin fringe is the first actin cytoskeleton component to disappear. We propose that during normal growth, the pH increase in the alkaline band stimulates the fragmenting activity of ADF/AIP, which in turn generates more sites for actin polymerization. Increased actin polymerization supports faster growth rates and a proton influx, which inactivates ADF/AIP, decreases actin polymerization, and retards growth. As pH stabilizes and increases, the activity of ADF/AIP again increases, repeating the cycle of events.
Plant Physiology | 2006
Luis Cárdenas; Sylvester T. McKenna; Joseph G. Kunkel; Peter K. Hepler
The location and changes in NAD(P)H have been monitored during oscillatory growth in pollen tubes of lily (Lilium formosanum) using the endogenous fluorescence of the reduced coenzyme (excitation, 360 nm; emission, >400 nm). The strongest signal resides 20 to 40 μm behind the apex where mitochondria (stained with Mitotracker Green) accumulate. Measurements at 3-s intervals reveal that NAD(P)H-dependent fluorescence oscillates during oscillatory growth. Cross-correlation analysis indicates that the peaks follow growth maxima by 7 to 11 s or 77° to 116°, whereas the troughs anticipate growth maxima by 5 to 10 s or 54° to 107°. We have focused on the troughs because they anticipate growth and are as strongly correlated with growth as the peaks. Analysis of the signal in 10-μm increments along the length of the tube indicates that the troughs are most advanced in the extreme apex. However, this signal moves basipetally as a wave, being in phase with growth rate oscillations at 50 to 60 μm from the apex. We suggest that the changes in fluorescence are due to an oscillation between the reduced (peaks) and oxidized (troughs) states of the coenzyme and that an increase in the oxidized state [NAD(P)+] may be coupled to the synthesis of ATP. We also show that diphenyleneiodonium, an inhibitor of NAD(P)H dehydrogenases, causes an increase in fluorescence and a decrease in tube growth. Finally, staining with 5-(and-6)-chloromethyl-2′,7′-dichlorohydrofluorescein acetate indicates that reactive oxygen species are most abundant in the region where mitochondria accumulate and where NAD(P)H fluorescence is maximal.
Trends in Plant Science | 2012
Peter K. Hepler; Joseph G. Kunkel; Caleb M. Rounds; Lawrence J. Winship
Growing pollen tubes require calcium to maintain a tip-focused cytosolic gradient and as a constituent of the constantly expanding cell wall. Advances in cell and molecular biology as well as electrophysiology implicate several candidate channels and receptors in the flow of calcium into the cell. In this review we discuss the channels that have been identified and consider the role of the growing tip cell wall acting as a sink for calcium thus accounting for differences in oscillatory phase between influx measured on the outside of the cell and changes in tip concentration inside the cell. We also briefly draw attention to uptake mechanisms that restrict and shape the calcium signature in the growing pollen tube.
Sexual Plant Reproduction | 2006
Kathleen L. Wilsen; Alenka Lovy-Wheeler; Boris Voigt; Diedrik Menzel; Joseph G. Kunkel; Peter K. Hepler
Given the importance of the actin cytoskeleton to pollen tube growth, we have attempted to decipher its structure, organization and dynamic changes in living, growing pollen tubes of Nicotiana tabacum and Lilium formosanum, using three different GFP-labeled actin-binding domains. Because the intricate structure of the actin cytoskeleton in rapidly frozen pollen tubes was recently resolved, we now have a clear standard against which to compare the quality of labeling produced by these GFP-labeled probes. While GFP-talin, GFP-ADF and GFP-fimbrin show various aspects of the actin cytoskeleton structure, each marker produces a characteristic pattern of labeling, and none reveals the entire spectrum of actin. Whereas GFP-ADF, and to a lesser extent GFP-talin, label the fringe of actin in the apex, no similar structure is observed with GFP-fimbrin. Further, GFP-ADF only occasionally labels actin cables in the shank of the pollen tube, whereas GFP-fimbrin labels an abundance of fine filaments in this region, and GFP-talin bundles actin into a central cable in the core of the pollen tube surrounded by a few finer elements. High levels of expression of GFP-talin and GFP-fimbrin frequently cause structural rearrangements of the actin cytoskeleton of pollen tubes, and inhibit tip growth in a dose dependent manner. Most notably, GFP-talin results in thick cortical hoops of actin, transverse to the axis of growth, and GFP-fimbrin causes actin filaments to aggregate. Aberrations are seldom seen in pollen tubes expressing GFP-ADF. Although these markers are valuable tools to study the structure of the actin cytoskeleton of growing pollen tubes, given their ability to cause aberrations and to block pollen tube growth, we urge caution in their use.
Developmental Biology | 1986
Don M. Wojchowski; Peter Parsons; John H. Nordin; Joseph G. Kunkel
Several discrete events were resolved in the processing of vitellogenin in Blattella germanica. Using tunicamycin to inhibit the synthesis of high-mannose oligosaccharide, a high molecular weight pro-vitellogenin peptide (apo-proVG, Mr 215,000) was identified in fat body. Dosages of tunicamycin which inhibited glycosylation of vitellogenin by 98% inhibited its synthesis by as much as 59%, yet led to an intracellular accumulation of apo-proVG. Reversibility and dose dependency of these effects on vitellogenin synthesis, glycosylation, proteolytic processing, and secretion were demonstrated. In control insects, glycosylation of apo-proVG yielded a Mr 240,000 pro-vitellogenin peptide (proVG). FITC-Concanavalin A bound to purified proVG but not to apo-proVG, thus confirming an absence of high-mannose oligosaccharide in the apo-protein. Following its glycosylation, proVG was processed rapidly in fat body to Mr 160,000 (VG160) and Mr 102,000 (VG102) peptides which subsequently were secreted into hemolymph. After uptake into developing oocytes, the VG160 peptide was processed further prior to chorionation, yielding subunits of Mr 95,000 and 50,000. Uniqueness of the peptides of mature vitellin (Mr 102,000, 95,000, and 50,000) was indicated by comparison of the CNBr fragments of each purified subunit. Staining of CNBr fragments with FITC-Concanavalin A also indicated that high-mannose oligosaccharides are attached at one or more sites within each vitellin subunit. Resolution of the substructure of this insect vitellin and identification of events involved in the processing and secretion of its fat body apo-protein provide a basis for further study of the assembly and transport of vitellogenin, its packaging in eggs, and utilization during embryogenesis.
Archive | 1981
Joseph G. Kunkel
The ontogeny of larval forms of invertebrates and vertebrates has fascinated embryologists and volutionary biologists for centuries (Gould, 1977). We are now at a stage when appropriate choices of models of metazoan developmental phenomena may allow us to understand them on a mechanistic and molecular level. Success in this venture may depend on the ultimate complexity of the model chosen to study and for this reason potential models of minimal complexity should be sought.