Katanin: A Sword Cutting Microtubules for Cellular, Developmental, and Physiological Purposes

KATANIN is a well-studied microtubule severing protein affecting microtubule organization and dynamic properties in higher plants. By regulating mitotic and cytokinetic and cortical microtubule arrays it is involved in the progression of cell division and cell division plane orientation. KATANIN is also involved in cell elongation and morphogenesis during plant growth. In this way KATANIN plays critical roles in diverse plant developmental processes including the development of pollen, embryo, seed, meristem, root, hypocotyl, cotyledon, leaf, shoot, and silique. KATANIN-dependent microtubule regulation seems to be under the control of plant hormones. This minireview provides an overview on available KATANIN mutants and discusses advances in our understanding of KATANIN biological roles in plants.


INTRODUCTION
KATANIN is a conserved AAA ATPase protein complex severing microtubules and it was discovered in Xenopus laevis (McNally and Vale, 1993). KATANIN is a heterodimer formed from catalytic p60 and regulatory p80 subunits while its severing activity requires hexamerization on the microtubule surface (Hartman and Vale, 1999;Stoppin-Mellet et al., 2007). Catalytic p60 subunit represents a microtubule-stimulated ATPase that requires ATP hydrolysis to sever microtubules. The exact timing of severing is not well-understood since KATANIN likely moves along the microtubule before severing it (Eckert et al., 2012). Factors that may specify the KATANIN-mediated microtubule severing include microtubule lattice defects (Davis et al., 2002;Díaz-Valencia et al., 2011;Jiang et al., 2017), tubulin post-translational modifications (Sudo and Baas, 2010), and the occurrence of free tubulin dimers which may inhibit KATANIN activity through their carboxyl terminal tails (Bailey et al., 2015). The power stroke leading to microtubule severing is depending on a nucleotide-based transition of KATANIN oligomers between an open spiral structure (all p60 protomer nucleotide binding sites are occupied by ATP) and a closed, nucleotide devoid, ring structure that requires ATP hydrolysis (Zehr et al., 2017). Regulatory p80 subunit is a WD40-containing protein which is stimulating the microtubule severing activity of the p60 subunit and in animal cells is thought to mediate KATANIN targeting to specific sites such as the centrosome while potentiating microtubule binding (e.g., McNally and Vale, 1993;Hartman et al., 1998;McNally et al., 2000). The plant p60 subunit suffices for microtubule severing (Stoppin-Mellet et al., 2002), but the targeting of Arabidopsis KATANIN to specific microtubule severing sites (see later) is mediated by four different p80 subunits (Wang et al., 2017). Studies in rice showed that the overexpression of a p80 ortholog (OsKTN80a) relates to cell elongation and cell division defects (Wan et al., 2014). In many animal models studied so far, KATANIN activity and localization is also depending on its interactions with TUBULINS and other proteins.
To simplify the text, KATANIN will be used here for the Arabidopsis KATANIN p60. KATANIN deserves a special attention in this review for three reasons. First, ever since its discovery and functional characterization, (McClinton et al., 2001;Stoppin-Mellet et al., 2002) it is a dominant microtubule regulator in plants as evident by studies on various KATANIN mutants with rather severe phenotypes (see later). However, it is worth to note that there are very scarce studies on plant homologs of other microtubule severing AAA-ATPases such as FIDGETIN (Girard et al., 2015) and SPASTIN (Gardiner, 2014) Second, many studies described KATANIN key roles in the organization of cortical microtubule arrays (Stoppin-Mellet et al., 2006;Wightman and Turner, 2007;Nakamura et al., 2010;Lindeboom et al., 2013;Wightman et al., 2013;Zhang et al., 2013;Komis et al., 2017). Third, KATANIN is involved in the regulation of cell division plane orientation (Panteris et al., 2011;Panteris and Adamakis, 2012;Komis et al., 2017) and in the mitotic and cytokinetic progression .

CELLULAR FUNCTIONS OF PLANT KATANIN
Cellular functions of plant KATANIN have been a matter of intensive research during the past decade. It became apparent that KATANIN is essential to break the initial isotropy of cortical microtubule organization and bias their parallel organization during conditional or developmental establishment of cell growth directionality. KATANIN plays a central role in the coordination of shoot apical meristem growth and emergence of leaf primordia in relation to compressive mechanical forces (Uyttewaal et al., 2012) and auxin signaling (Sassi et al., 2014). It is also involved in blue light-or auxin-induced hypocotyl cell elongation (Lindeboom et al., 2013;Lin et al., 2013).
In this regard, KATANIN was shown to sever emergent, γ-TUBULIN and AUGMIN-nucleated microtubules, which branch-off from pre-existing microtubules (Nakamura et al., 2010) as well as microtubules that cross each other during their elongation Turner, 2007, 2008;Zhang et al., 2016). Such cross-severing ability of KATANIN is considered to be important for the reorientation of cortical microtubules by blue light or ethylene (Soga et al., 2010a;Lindeboom et al., 2013) since it promotes disassembly of microtubules with unfavorable orientation. A recent modeling study uncovered the possibility that KATANIN-mediated severing at microtubule crossovers should only occur under permissive angles of encounter, below which microtubule bundling is more likely (Deinum et al., 2017). Moreover, KATANIN activity might support microtubule bundling (Stoppin-Mellet et al., 2006). There are also other microtubule binding proteins, e.g., TORTIFOLIA1 (SPIRAL2), which can regulate KATANIN severing activity (Buschmann et al., 2004;Wightman et al., 2013).

THE ROLE OF KATANIN IN PLANT MITOSIS AND CELL DIVISION PLANE ORIENTATION
Some studies proposed the role of KATANIN in microtubule organization within preprophase band (PPB; Panteris et al., 2011;Komis et al., 2017) but showed conflicting results regarding the role of KATANIN in mitotic spindle formation. In this respect fra2, lue1, bot1, and ktn1-2 mutants possessed pronounced multipolar prophase spindles (Panteris et al., 2011;Panteris and Adamakis, 2012), although a previous study using tubulin immunolabeling failed to show spindle defects in fra2 mutant (Burk et al., 2001). The latter results were recently corroborated with live cell imaging of dividing ktn1-2 cells which showed normal spindle formation but marked delay in mitotic progression and deregulation of spindle positioning throughout mitosis . Microtubule organization of the phragmoplast was also affected (Panteris et al., 2011;Komis et al., 2017), while its centrifugal expansion was delayed . In the context of cell division plane orientation some studies showed disorganized cell files in roots of various KATANIN mutants (Bichet et al., 2001;Webb et al., 2002;Panteris et al., 2011). Although it was suggested that spindle multipolarity in KATANIN mutants might define the plane of phragmoplast expansion (Panteris et al., 2011), it was later shown that it rather followed the plane of the aberrant PPB . The connection of PPB to cell division plane orientation was very recently revisited revealing that PPB is involved in mitotic spindle positioning (Schaefer et al., 2017). In this respect, our work on the ktn1-2 mutant showed aberrant PPB formation and uncontrolled spindle rotational motions during cell division . Although these results are preliminary, they suggest a role of KATANIN in spindle-cell cortex interactions which are co-aligning the spindle equator with the PPB-determined cell division zone (Smertenko et al., 2017) and define the geometry of cell plate expansion later during cytokinesis. On the other hand, spindle assembly was not visibly affected and it is a pending question whether the localization of KATANIN in Arabidopsis mitotic spindles (Panteris et al., 2011) regulates spindle formation and shape or spindle sizing as it was previously reported (McNally et al., 2006;Loughlin et al., 2011;Panteris et al., 2011).

IDENTIFICATION OF DEVELOPMENTAL ROLES OF KATANIN USING MUTANTS
There have been many KATANIN mutants identified during the past years and for many of them information on the nature of the mutation is missing ( Table 1). Some mutants are predicted to lack KATANIN or encode truncated versions while others presumably affect some particular protein domain (e.g., the AAA-ATPase domain as in the case of erh3 alleles; Table 1) but with unknown consequences for the functionality of the protein produced. On the other hand, the inducible overexpression of KATANIN was shown to cause heavy fragmentation of cortical microtubules while favoring microtubule bundling in Arabidopsis pavement cells (Stoppin-Mellet et al., 2006). Table 1 also provides comparative information related to phenotypes of diverse KATANIN mutants.
The first described Arabidopsis mutant of KATANIN in the locus named BOTERO1 (BOT1) was bot1-1. It is an EMS (ethyl methane sulfonate) mutant in the genetic background of Col-0 ecotype. Seven alleles have been described in this locus: bot1-1 to bot1-5, bot1-7, and bot1-8 (Tables 1, 2; Bichet et al., 2001). These mutants exhibit radially swollen cells with isotropic cortical microtubule arrays, suggesting a specific role of BOT1 in the organization of cortical microtubules during cell elongation. Thus, botero1 mutant has round and thick leaves and thick stems. Hypocotyls are shorter and thicker, inflorescence stems have shorter internodes and shorter anthers might cause reduced fertility. Cortical microtubules of leaf primordia show delayed reorientation responses during mechanical stimulation (Uyttewaal et al., 2012). However, the mutation has no effect on tip growth of root hairs and pollen tubes, and on trichome morphogenesis (Bichet et al., 2001). During mitosis, PPB microtubules in bot1 root cells exhibit malorganized and defective perinuclear formation while the cytokinetic phragmoplast shows aberrant microtubule organization (Panteris and Adamakis, 2012).
The mutant fragile fiber 2 (fra2) is an EMS mutant (Tables 1, 2) which displays fragility of all organs and particularly of stems. This fragility is accompanied by reduced cellulose deposition, resulting in shorter and thinner fibers and increased fragility due to the lower mechanical resistance. Cell growth is aberrant in all organs of such mutant with pleiotropic phenotypes. As reported trichome morphogenesis is affected (Burk et al., 2001) unlike to what was observed for botero mutants (Bichet et al., 2001). The mutant displays dwarf phenotype (Figure 1). The size of inflorescence stem is strongly reduced and it is related to the decreased length of internodes, but not to their lower number. Rosette leaves are more round-shaped and have smaller blades. Sepals, petals, pistils, anthers, and siliques are shorter and thicker. Siliques bear unfertilized ovules and seed set is reduced. Ovule development is variably defective ranging from normal to severely malformed, suggesting an abnormal migration and positioning of nuclei and problematic polar nuclei fusion (Burk et al., 2001;Luptovciak et al., 2017). Most trichomes on fra2 leaves have two instead of three branches (Burk et al., 2001). Luo and Oppenheimer (1999) have identified mutants that show a reduction in trichome branch number from three branches to two and they named them furca (two-pronged fork in the Latin). One of these genes called FURCA2 (FRC2) was later replaced in TAIR database as BOT1 and ERH3. There are three frc2 alleles: frc2-1, frc2-2, frc2-3, and about 60% of their trichomes show two branches. frc2-1 and frc2-3 have apparently decreased fertility compared to the wild-type plants which is caused by a premature extension of the pistil from the unopened flower before anthers mature.
Another set of EMS mutants is designated as ectopic root hair 3 (erh 3-1 to erh1-3; Tables 1, 2) as they display disturbed root and root hair phenotypes. In this case, the authors studied root hair emergence and the developmental succession of trichoblasts and atrichoblasts in the root epidermis, rather than the process of root hair tip growth. All three erh3 mutants have point mutations in the AAA-ATPase domain, however, it is not clear whether this can influence nucleotide occupancy and subsequently KATANIN oligomerization and severing. The most severe phenotypical defects have been observed in the erh3-2 mutant where the root is the shortest compared to the wild type and appears radially swollen while root tissue patterning is disturbed (Webb et al., 2002).
The lue1 mutation was originally isolated in the screening of mutants with altered expression of GA20-oxidase, and the gene was named LUCIFERASE SUPER-EXPRESSOR1 (LUE1; Tables 1, 2). It is a recessive mutation displaying dwarf mutant phenotype achieving only 30% of the wild type size (Meier et al., 2001;Bouquin et al., 2003) (Figure 1). Cortical microtubules and cellulose microfibrils are abnormally arranged in the lue1 mutant. In comparison to the wild type, lue1 mutant has shorter leaves and inflorescences, while siliques contain 80% less seeds being bigger and more round (Luptovciak et al., 2017). This mutant also shows altered ethylene sensitivity leading to the improper formation of the hypocotyl hook and to decreased hypocotyl elongation (Bouquin et al., 2003).

PHYSIOLOGICAL FUNCTIONS OF KATANIN
Studies on KATANIN mutants revealed that the altered microtubule severing has also a number of physiological consequences. First of all, KATANIN is a microtubule-interacting protein which can connect the external environment with microtubule regulation (Nakamura, 2015). The sensitivity of KATANIN to external stimuli is likely mediated by Rho GTPase signaling (Lin et al., 2013), however, other mechanisms cannot  Meier et al., 2001;Bouquin et al., 2003;Luptovciak et al., 2017 Frontiers in Plant Science | www.frontiersin.org be excluded. External stimuli cause reorientation of microtubules followed by specific developmental reprogramming. Such mechanism is linking hormonal regulation to the cytoskeleton, because KATANIN is involved in gibberellic acid (GA) (Meier et al., 2001;Bouquin et al., 2003) ethylene (Soga et al., 2010a,b) and auxin responses (Chen et al., 2014).
Arabidopsis KATANIN mutants show defective microtubule reorientation in response to GA, ethylene and auxin (Bouquin et al., 2003;Komorisono et al., 2005;Soga et al., 2010a;Chen et al., 2014;Sassi et al., 2014). KATANIN transcript accumulation (by an unknown mechanism) is induced by these hormones (Bouquin et al., 2003;Soga et al., 2010a, eFP browser hormone series http://bbc.botany.utoronto.ca/efp). It is therefore supposed to control GA, ethylene, and auxin-dependent developmental processes requiring microtubule reorientation. Impaired responses of KATANIN mutants are likely connected to the altered synthesis and metabolism of hormones. This was demonstrated by increased mRNA levels of GA biosynthetic enzymes in rice mutant dgl1 (Komorisono et al., 2005) and by changed abundances of proteins involved in GA, ethylene, auxin, and abscisic acid metabolism in fra2 and ktn1-2 mutants (Takáč et al., 2017). Thus, KATANIN might be a protein integrating multiple microtubule-dependent hormonal responses. Other proteins involved in hormonal signal integration are DELLA proteins (Achard et al., 2006;Santner and Estelle, 2009). DELLA proteins are suppressed by GA via their destabilization (Fu et al., 2002). Interestingly, DELLA proteins have been found to mediate microtubule reorientation during GA response. The mechanism is based on DELLA interaction with prefoldin complex, which is disrupted by DELLA degradation during GA response. Prefoldin complex is important for tubulin folding (Gu et al., 2008). When mislocalized to the nucleus it causes altered microtubule organization (Locascio et al., 2013). It was proposed that apart from tubulin monomer supply, an additional mechanism such as microtubule severing can be implicated in the final organization of microtubule arrays (Locascio et al., 2013). According to these reports, KATANIN might work in concert with DELLA-prefoldin complex. Nevertheless, a molecular interplay between DELLA and KATANIN remains to be confirmed. KATANIN likely is not required for DELLA degradation, since DELLA is destabilized in the rice dgl1 mutant (Komorisono et al., 2005).
In addition to hormonal stimuli, KATANIN mediates the reorientation of cortical microtubules upon blue light exposure (Lindeboom et al., 2013). Under blue light, hypocotyl phototropism was connected to KATANIN severing activity at the microtubule crossovers, resulting in the formation of new microtubules with transversal orientation. KATANIN is regulated by phototropin receptor, as evidenced by cell biological analyses of phot1phot2 double mutant (Lindeboom et al., 2013). In this context, KATANIN was identified by using yeast two hybrid assay as an interactor of the actin-binding kinesin-like protein KIN-14A (Bouquin et al., 2003;Suetsugu et al., 2012). This is a microtubule motor protein involved in blue light induced chloroplast movements (Suetsugu et al., 2010), where phototropins PHOT1 and PHOT2 play a crucial role (Luesse et al., 2010). Therefore, it is likely that interactions between KATANIN, phototropins and kinesin-like protein KIN-14A govern the blue light induced chloroplast movement. Microtubule severing is also required for plant responses to mechanical forces (Uyttewaal et al., 2012;Sampathkumar et al., 2014). This is essential for the control of cell shape, growth anisotropy and plant morphogenesis.
FIGURE 2 | Differences in the microtubule organization and cell shape of Arabidopsis thaliana Col-0 and ktn1-2 petiole epidermal cells carrying a GFP-TUA6 microtubule marker after spinning disk microscopy imaging. In differentiated cells, most cortical microtubules are transversal to the cell axis in Col-0 showing parallel placement to each other (A) resulting in relatively narrow angular distribution (C) whereas they appear more disorganized and randomly oriented in ktn1-2 (B) exhibiting broader angular distribution pattern (D). Scale bar = 10 µm.
KATANIN is also important for translational miRNAmediated repression, as revealed by genetic screen (Brodersen et al., 2008). The Arabidopsis mutant mad5, carrying G-to-A transition in the start codon of KATANIN, showed increased abundances of miRNA-targeted proteins. Similar results were obtained in fra2 and lue1 mutants, whose genetic background differs from that of mad5 (Table 1). Defects in miRNAmediated translational repression might suggest that some overabundant proteins in fra2 and lue1 mutants found in a recent proteomic study (Takáč et al., 2017) belong to miRNA-targeted proteins. Notably, fra2 and lue1 mutants also showed substantial alterations in the translational machinery, represented by changes in the abundance of ribosomal proteins (Takáč et al., 2017). The mRNA silencing machinery is closely connected to stress granules (Mollet et al., 2008). Stress granules are assembled during environmental stress and are sites of post-transcriptional mRNA processing and silencing (Anderson and Kedersha, 2008). KATANIN is implicated in stress granule formation (Gutierrez-Beltran et al., 2015) and mediates the abundance and the accumulation of Tudor staphylococcal nuclease proteins (TSN1 and 2) (Takáč et al., 2017). These proteins are important for stress-induced mRNA decapping in the stress granules and they modulate abiotic stress responses (Gutierrez-Beltran et al., 2015).

FUTURE DIRECTIONS
In conclusion, microtubule severing by KATANIN appears to be crucial for a broad range of important cellular, developmental, and physiological processes in plants.
Undoubtedly, studies on KATANIN brought about fascinating results on how microtubule severing can lead to the biased organization of cortical microtubules during conditional cell growth. It is fascinating to see that KATANIN provides a molecular connection between extracellular stimulation via physical signals such as light or mechanical forces and coordination of cell growth in a multicellular context. In this respect, it will be of interest to look on the microtubule counterpart and understand the features of the microtubule lattice at branching or crossover sites that are attracting KATANIN. Maybe these sites accumulate lattice defects (Davis et al., 2002;Díaz-Valencia et al., 2011;Jiang et al., 2017) or tubulin post-translational modifications which may target or regulate KATANIN activity similarly to SPASTIN (Lacroix et al., 2010;Sudo and Baas, 2010;Valenstein and Roll-Mecak, 2016). The field of plant KATANIN research is largely devoid of similar functional studies while data on modifiers of KATANIN activity and/or localization are scarce and mostly based on genetic evidence (e.g., Trehin et al., 2013;Wightman et al., 2013;Chen et al., 2014;Sassi et al., 2014). Therefore, KATANIN mutants should be better characterized regarding their biochemical and cell biological properties.
On the other hand, KATANIN function during mitotic cell division is still obscure and we believe that a very promising future direction will be to address in more detail the roles of microtubule severing in the PPB formation and maturation, in the mitotic spindle assembly and in the positioning and guidance of the phragmoplast. It is of particular interest to see how KATANIN is distributed within the PPB and how microtubule severing is coordinated during PPB narrowing since PPB maturation is significantly prolonged and frequently disturbed in KATANIN mutants (Panteris et al., 2011;Komis et al., 2017). It will be also necessary to decipher whether KATANIN is necessary (Panteris et al., 2011) or not  for mitotic spindle assembly and see whether KATANIN activity may be linked to spindle scaling issues as it does in animals (McNally et al., 2006;Loughlin et al., 2011). Finally, the role of KATANIN in the establishment of spindle-cell cortex association necessary for spindle positioning is another pending question.
Last but not least, is the necessity to characterize the importance of plant FIDGETIN and SPASTIN homologs in order to acquire a full view on the roles of microtubule severing proteins during plant growth and development.

AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
All authors listed have made a substantial, direct and intellectual contribution to the work, and approved it for publication.