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A Brief Tour of the Cell CycleNancy A. EckardtNews and Reviews Editor The mitotic cell cycle consists of alternating rounds of DNA replication (which occurs during the S phase) and chromosome segregation (mitosis or M phase) interrupted by gaps known as G1 (the interval before S phase) and G2 (the interval after S phase). Events that occur in each phase are regulated to ensure that DNA is replicated only once in each cell cycle and that each daughter cell ends up with a complete complement of the genome. Regulation of phase transitions is principally achieved through the action of a host of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) and their corresponding regulatory cyclin proteins. Although the basic cell cycle machinery is highly conserved among all eukaryotes, there are a number of important differences in cell cycle control between higher plants and other eukaryotes. In this issue of The Plant Cell, we highlight three articles related to different aspects of the cell cycle that focus attention on unique characteristics of plant cell cycles and point the way to new discoveries in cell cycle control and organelle replication.
Mitosis usually progresses into cytokinesis, resulting in cell division and the production of two new daughter cells. Our first stop on the cell cycle tour is to view an exception to this rule in plant cells: the development of syncytia in endosperm tissue, which is the focus of work presented by Boisnard-Lorig et al. (pages 495509). Syncytia, which are typical of plant endosperm tissue, are cells with multiple nuclei that originate from the fusion of multiple cells or from single cells in which DNA replication and nuclear divisions proceed without cytokinesis. Unlike other eukaryotes, flowering plants typically undergo double fertilization: the pollen tube delivers two male gametes to the embryo sac; one fuses with the egg to form the zygote, and the other fuses with the two polar nuclei of the diploid central cell to produce a triploid endosperm nucleus. Division of the endosperm nucleus gives rise to endosperm tissue, which surrounds the developing embryo and plays an important role in the nutrition of the embryo during embryogenesis and seed germination. In numerous species, the endosperm initially develops as a syncytium that contains up to a few hundred nuclei. Ultimately, the syncytium divides into individual cells in a process called cellularization. Boisnard-Lorig observed mitosis in the endosperm tissue of developing Arabidopsis seedlings via constitutive expression of a histone 2B::YFP fusion chromatin marker. The authors observed the development of three spatially distinct domains with syncytial endosperm that exhibit differences in the activity of cell cycle control parameters. Thus, spatial regulation of cell cycle control genes may play a role in the development of the endosperm. For example, it is shown that endoreduplication is likely limited to one of the three endosperm domains, the chalazal endosperm, because this domain accumulates very few nuclei and these nuclei are larger and appear to contain a much greater quantity of chromatin than the nuclei present in the other two domains. Endoreduplication is the most common mechanism of polyploidization in plants, a widespread phenomenon among higher plants and of particular importance in many crop species. Mechanisms of endoreduplication in plants are still poorly understood (
The second stop on our tour is at a spindle assembly checkpoint in the M phase of embryo cells of the brown alga Fucus. Corellou et al. (pages 585598) studied aspects of the embryonic cell cycle in Fucus spiralis, which produces large populations of synchronously developing external zygotes that are easy to manipulate and observe experimentally. In animals, there are major differences in cell cycle control between somatic cells and embryo cells. The somatic cell cycle is tightly regulated via a series of "checkpoints," typically involving CDKs, which monitor cell cycle progression, ensuring that only one round of DNA replication occurs per cycle and preventing mitosis until DNA synthesis and repair are complete. In contrast, checkpoints involving tight regulation of CDK activity appear to be less stringent or absent from early embryonic cells in animals. From experiments using the drugs nocodazole (which inhibits mitotic spindle formation) and olomoucine (a specific inhibitor of CDK activity), Corellou et al. show that, similar to somatic cell cycles, the Fucus zygote cell cycle includes a spindle assembly checkpoint targeted at CDK activity. This checkpoint appears to operate by maintaining high levels of CDK activity, and the authors suggest that inactivation of CDKs may be required for cells to undergo chromatin decondensation and exit mitosis. Previous work by this group ( Although it is tempting to view the Fucus system as a model for photosynthetic organisms, including higher plants, it must be remembered that brown algae (phylum Phaeophyta) belong to the division of Stramenopiles (also called Chromista), a group of protists that includes the diatoms (Bacillariophyta), yellow-green algae (Xanthophyta), and water molds (Oomycota). Phaeophytes and other stramenopiles, although traditionally classified as plants, actually are not closely related to green plants and occupy their own division within the kingdom Protista (or perhaps they may be placed in a separate kingdom called Chromista). Eukaryotic phylogenies show that animals and fungi may be more closely related to plants than are brown algae and other stramenopiles. Thus, work with Fucus may not provide information about higher plant embryogenesis and must be viewed with caution in this context. Rather, this work provides valuable information for comparative studies of eukaryotes, including plants, animals, and fungi. It remains to be seen whether characteristics of cell cycle control in Fucus are shared with plants and/or other eukaryotes.
In one of the most detailed analyses of the embryonic cell cycle of higher plants to date,
The final stop on this brief tour of the cell cycle is to investigate another feature unique to plant (and algal) cells: plastids and plastid division. Plastids are believed to have originated from an endosymbiosis event in which an early photosynthetic prokaryote invaded or was engulfed by a primitive eukaryotic host (
Plastid division appears to be driven by the formation of a contractile ring called the plastid-dividing (PD) ring (reviewed by
Miyagishima et al. (pages 707721) present high resolution ultrastructural analysis of the outer PD ring in dividing chloroplasts of the red alga Cyanidioschyzon merolae. Negative staining of isolated dividing chloroplasts showed that the outer ring consisted of 5-nm-diameter filaments, which formed a rigid structure that did not disassemble in 2 M urea . Immunoblotting of extracted proteins with CmFtsZ-specific antibody suggested that FtsZ was not present in the outer ring, and an unidentified 56-kD protein was isolated as a candidate ring component. The authors previously identified two types of FtsZ protein in C. merolae, one (CmFtsZ2) with similarity to cyanobacterial FtsZ that localized to chloroplast protein fractions and one (CmFtsZ1) that resembles an
However, as in the case of Fucus, it cannot be assumed that green plants necessarily will share features of red algae, which belong to the protist phylum Rhodophyta. In transgenic Arabidopsis plants, expression of either AtFtsZ1 or AtFtsZ2, both of which encode proteins related to cyanobacterial FtsZ sequences, reduces the number of chloroplasts in mature leaf cells from 100 to 1, indicating that both genes are required for chloroplast division in higher plant cells ( The cell cycle of higher plants contains unique features, aspects of which may be ripe for discovery in Arabidopsis. For example, molecular identification of the 56-kD protein component of the outer PD ring in C. merolae will lead to the immediate identification of homologs in the completely sequenced genome of Arabidopsis. It also should be possible to identify all of the CDKs in Arabidopsis and begin a process of systematically investigating their possible functions in cell cycle control and other plant growth processes. The three articles highlighted here should stimulate renewed interest in comparative studies of cell cycle control among higher plants, algae, and other eukaryotes.
REFERENCES
Boisnard-Lorig, C., Colon-Carmona, A., Bauch, M., Hodge, S., Doerner, P., Bancharel, E., Dumas, C., Haseloff, J., and Berger, F. (2001) Dynamic analyses of the expression of the HISTONE::YFP fusion protein in Arabidopsis show that syncytial endosperm is divided in mitotic domains. Plant Cell 13:495-509 Corellou, F., Bisgrove, S.R., Kropf, D.L., Meijer, L., Kloareg, B., and Bouget, F.-Y. (2000) A S/M DNA replication checkpoint prevents nuclear and cytoplasmic events of cell division including centrosomal axis alignment and inhibits activation of cyclin-dependent kinase-like proteins in fucoid zygotes. Development 127:1651-1660[Abstract].
Corellou, F., Brownlee, C., Detivaud, L., Kloareg, B., and Bouget, F.-Y. (2001) Cell cycle in the Fucus zygote parallels a somatic cell cycle but displays a unique translational regulation of cyclin-dependent kinases. Plant Cell 13:585-598 Gray, M.W. (1992) The endosymbiont hypothesis revisited. Int. Rev. Cytol. 141:233-357[ISI][Medline]. Joubès, J., and Chevalier, C. (2000) Endoreduplication in higher plants. Plant Mol. Biol. 43:735-745[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]. Margulis, L. (1970) Origin of Eukaryotic Cells. New Haven, CT, Yale University Press.
Miyagishima, S., Takahara, M., and Kuroiwa, T. (2001) Novel filaments 5 nm in diameter constitute the cytosolic ring of the plastid division apparatus. Plant Cell 13:707-721
Osteryoung, K.W., Stokes, K.D., Rutherford, S.M., Percival, A.L., and Lee, W.Y. (1998) Chloroplast division in higher plants requires members of two functionally divergent gene families with homology to bacterial ftsZ. Plant Cell 10:1991-2004
Pyke, K.A. (1999) Plastid division and development. Plant Cell 11:549-556 Sauter, M., von Wiegen, P., and Lörz, H. (1998) Cell cycle regulatory genes from maize are differentially controlled during fertilization and first embryonic cell division. Sex. Plant Reprod. 11:41-48. Takahara, M., Takahashi, H., Matsunaga, S., Miyagishima, S., Sakai, A., Kawano, S., and Kuroiwa, T. (2000) A putative mitochondrial ftsZ gene is encoded in the unicellular primitive red alga Cyanidioschyzon merolae. Mol. Gen. Genet. 264:452-460[CrossRef][ISI][Medline].
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