Increased cellular ploidy is widespread during developmental processes of multicellular organisms, especially in plants. Elevated ploidy levels are typically achieved either by endoreplication or endomitosis, which are often regarded as modified cell cycles that lack an M phase either entirely or partially. We identified GIGAS CELL1 (GIG1)/OMISSION OF SECOND DIVISION1 (OSD1) and established that mutation of this gene triggered ectopic endomitosis. On the other hand, it has been reported that a paralog of GIG1/OSD1, UV-INSENSITIVE4 (UVI4), negatively regulates endoreplication onset in Arabidopsis thaliana. We showed that GIG1/OSD1 and UVI4 encode novel plant-specific inhibitors of the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) ubiquitin ligase. These proteins physically interact with APC/C activators, CDC20/FZY and CDH1/FZR, in yeast two-hybrid assays. Overexpression of CDC20.1 and CCS52B/FZR3 differentially promoted ectopic endomitosis in gig1/osd1 and premature occurrence of endoreplication in uvi4. Our data suggest that GIG1/OSD1 and UVI4 may prevent an unscheduled increase in cellular ploidy by preferentially inhibiting APC/CCDC20 and APC/CFZR, respectively. Generation of cells with a mixed identity in gig1/osd1 further suggested that the APC/C may have an unexpected role for cell fate determination in addition to its role for proper mitotic progression.
It is widely assumed that mitotic cyclins are rapidly degraded during anaphase, leading to the inactivation of the cell cycle-dependent protein kinase Cdc2 and allowing exit from mitosis. The proteolysis of mitotic cyclins is ubiquitin/26S proteasome mediated and requires the presence of the destruction box motif at the N terminus of the proteins. As a first attempt to study cyclin proteolysis during the plant cell cycle, we investigated the stability of fusion proteins in which the N-terminal domains of an A-type and a B-type tobacco mitotic cyclin were fused in frame with the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase ( CAT ) reporter gene and constitutively expressed in transformed tobacco BY2 cells. For both cyclin types, the N-terminal domains led the chimeric cyclin-CAT fusion proteins to oscillate in a cell cycle-specific manner. Mutations within the destruction box abolished cell cycle-specific proteolysis. Although both fusion proteins were degraded after metaphase, cyclin A-CAT proteolysis was turned off during S phase, whereas that of cyclin B-CAT was turned off only during the late G 2 phase. Thus, we demonstrated that mitotic cyclins in plants are subjected to post-translational control (e.g., proteolysis). Moreover, we showed that the proteasome inhibitor MG132 blocks BY2 cells during metaphase in a reversible way. During this mitotic arrest, both cyclin-CAT fusion proteins remained stable. INTRODUCTIONThe cell division cycle is a sequential process that permits the replication of the genome, the segregation of chromosomes to two daughter nuclei, and finally cytokinesis. Progression through the cell cycle involves many proteins, which are regulated both at the transcriptional and posttranslational levels. Today, it has become clear that the timed destruction of key proteins plays an essential role in cell cycle progression. The first protein shown to be subjected to cell cycle-specific proteolysis was cyclin B (Evans et al., 1983). For many other proteins, cell cycle-specific proteolysis has been reported: among them are the G 1 cyclins and the mitotic cyclins, the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors (CKIs), proteins involved in sister chromatid separation, and spindle components (reviewed in Peter and Herskowitz, 1994;Murray, 1995; King et al., 1996; Hoyt, 1997). The degradation of cell cycle regulator proteins is not just a way to break down a protein whose function is achieved at a specific step of the cell cycle, but it is also a way to directly control the cell cycle. Thus, the highly regulated proteolysis of CKIs allows DNA replication to begin, and degradation of proteins involved in sister chromatid separation is required at the onset of anaphase.Proteins subjected to degradation are marked with ubiquitin tags and subsequently are targeted to the degradative action of the 26S proteasome. The ubiquitin/26S proteasome proteolytic pathway is highly conserved in eukaryotes and is involved in many other important cellular functions aside from cell cycle progression (reviewed in Hochstrasser, 1995). Deg...
It is widely assumed that mitotic cyclins are rapidly degraded during anaphase, leading to the inactivation of the cell cycle-dependent protein kinase Cdc2 and allowing exit from mitosis. The proteolysis of mitotic cyclins is ubiquitin/26S proteasome mediated and requires the presence of the destruction box motif at the N terminus of the proteins. As a first attempt to study cyclin proteolysis during the plant cell cycle, we investigated the stability of fusion proteins in which the N-terminal domains of an A-type and a B-type tobacco mitotic cyclin were fused in frame with the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT ) reporter gene and constitutively expressed in transformed tobacco BY2 cells. For both cyclin types, the N-terminal domains led the chimeric cyclin-CAT fusion proteins to oscillate in a cell cycle-specific manner. Mutations within the destruction box abolished cell cycle-specific proteolysis. Although both fusion proteins were degraded after metaphase, cyclin A-CAT proteolysis was turned off during S phase, whereas that of cyclin B-CAT was turned off only during the late G2 phase. Thus, we demonstrated that mitotic cyclins in plants are subjected to post-translational control (e.g., proteolysis). Moreover, we showed that the proteasome inhibitor MG132 blocks BY2 cells during metaphase in a reversible way. During this mitotic arrest, both cyclin-CAT fusion proteins remained stable.
In plants after the disassembly of mitotic spindle, a specific cytokinetic structure called the phragmoplast is built, and after cytokinesis, microtubules populate the cell cortex in an organized orientation that determines cell elongation and shape. Here, we show that impaired cyclin B1 degradation, resulting from a mutation within its destruction box, leads to an isodiametric shape of epidermal cells in leaves, stems, and roots and retarded growth of seedlings. Microtubules in these misshaped cells are grossly disorganized, focused around the nucleus, whereas they were entirely missing or abnormally organized along the cell cortex. A high percentage of cells expressing nondestructible cyclin B1 had doubled DNA content as a result of undergoing endomitosis. During anaphase the cytokinesis-specific syntaxin KNOLLE could still localize to the midplane of cell division, whereas NPK1-activating kinesin-like protein 1, a cytokinetic kinesin-related protein, was unable to do so, and instead of the formation of a phragmoplast, the midzone microtubules persisted between the separated nuclei, which eventually fused. In summary, our results show that the timely degradation of mitotic cyclins in plants is required for the reorganization of mitotic microtubules to the phragmoplast and for proper cytokinesis. Subsequently, the presence of nondegradable cyclin B1 leads to a failure in organizing properly the cortical microtubules that determine cell elongation and shape.
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