mitotic inhibitor ccs52 is required for endoreduplication and ploidy-dependent cell enlargement in plants
Plant organs develop mostly post‐embryonically from persistent or newly formed meristems. After cell division arrest, differentiation frequently involves endoreduplication and cell enlargement. Factors controlling transition from mitotic cycles to differentiation programmes have not been identified...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The EMBO journal 1999-08, Vol.18 (16), p.4476-4484 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Plant organs develop mostly post‐embryonically from persistent or newly formed meristems. After cell division arrest, differentiation frequently involves endoreduplication and cell enlargement. Factors controlling transition from mitotic cycles to differentiation programmes have not been identified yet in plants. Here we describe
ccs52
, a plant homologue of APC activators involved in mitotic cyclin degradation. The
ccs52
cDNA clones were isolated from
Medicago sativa
root nodules, which exhibit the highest degree of endopolyploidy in this plant.
ccs52
represents a small multigenic family and appears to be conserved in plants. Overexpression of
ccs52
in yeast triggered mitotic cyclin degradation, cell division arrest, endoreduplication and cell enlargement. In
Medicago
, enhanced expression of
ccs52
was found in differentiating cells undergoing endoreduplication. In transgenic
M.truncatula
plants, overexpression of the
ccs52
gene in the antisense orientation resulted in partial suppression of
ccs52
expression and decreased the number of endocycles and the volume of the largest cells. Thus, the
ccs52
product may switch proliferating cells to differentiation programmes which, in the case of endocycles, result in cell size increments. |
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ISSN: | 0261-4189 1460-2075 1460-2075 |
DOI: | 10.1093/emboj/18.16.4476 |