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            In plant cells, vacuoles are extremely important for growth and development, and influence important cellular functions as photosynthesis, respiration, and transpiration. Plant cells contain lytic and storage vacuoles, whose size can be different depending on cell type and tissue developmental stage. One of the main roles of vacuoles is to regulate the cell turgor in response to different stimuli. Thus, studying the morphology, dynamics, and physiology of vacuole is fundamentally important to advance knowledge in plant cell biology at large. The availability of fluorescent probes allows marking vacuoles in multiple ways. These may be fast, when using commercially available chemical dyes, or relatively slow, in the case of specific genetically encoded markers based on proteins directed either to the membrane of the vacuole (tonoplast) or to the vacuole lumen. Any of these approaches provides useful information about the morphology and physiology of the vacuole.more » « less
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            The availability of more specific dyes for a subset of endomembrane compartments, combined with the development of genetically encoded probes and advanced microscopy technologies, makes live cell imaging an approach that goes beyond the microscopically observation of cell structure. Here we describe the latest improved techniques to investigate protein–protein interaction, protein topology, and protein dynamics.more » « less
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            Abstract The unfolded protein response (UPR) of the endoplasmic reticulum constitutes a conserved and essential cytoprotective pathway designed to survive biotic and abiotic stresses that alter the proteostasis of the endoplasmic reticulum. The UPR is typically considered cell-autonomous and it is yet unclear whether it can also act systemically through non-cell autonomous signaling. We have addressed this question using a genetic approach coupled with micro-grafting and a suite of molecular reporters in the model plant speciesArabidopsis thaliana. We show that the UPR has a non-cell autonomous component, and we demonstrate that this is partially mediated by the intercellular movement of the UPR transcription factor bZIP60 facilitating systemic UPR signaling. Therefore, in multicellular eukaryotes such as plants, non-cell autonomous UPR signaling relies on the systemic movement of at least a UPR transcriptional modulator.more » « less
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