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Invited Review
Plant Peroxisome Multiplication: Highly Regulated and Still Enigmatic
Jianping Hu 1*
(   1 Department of Energy Plant Research Laboratory and Plant Biology Department, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824, USA )
  *Author for correspondence.
Tel: +1 517 432 4620;
Fax: +1 517 353 9168;
E-mail: <huji@msu.edu>.

Supported by the US Department of Energy, Michigan State University Intramural Research Grant Program, and the National Science Foundation (MCB 0618335).

Copyright 2007 Institute of Botany, the Chinese Academy of Sciences
KEYWORDS
Arabidopsis • dynamin-related proteins • peroxisome multiplication • PEX11

ABSTRACT

Plant peroxisomes play a key role in numerous physiological processes and are able to adapt to environmental changes by altering their content, morphology, and abundance. Peroxisomes can multiply through elongation, constriction, and fission; this process requires the action of conserved, as well as species-specific proteins. Genetic and morphological analyses have been used with the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana to determine at the mechanistic level how plant peroxisomes increase their abundance. The five-member PEX11 family promotes early steps of peroxisome multiplication with an unknown mechanism and some subfamily specificities. The dynamin-related protein (DRP)3 subfamily of dynamin-related large guanosine triphosphatases mediates late steps of both peroxisomal and mitochondrial multiplication. New genetic and biochemical tools will be needed to identify additional, especially plant-specific, constituents of the peroxisome multiplication pathways.


Received 14 Feb. 2007 Accepted 8 May 2007

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1672-9072.2007.00537.x About DOI

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