Fobert PR; Gaudin V et al 1996
- Authors: Fobert PR; Gaudin V; Lunness P; Coen ES; Doonan JH
- Title: DISTINCT CLASSES OF CDC2-RELATED GENES ARE DIFFERENTIALLY EXPRESSED
DURING THE CELL DIVISION CYCLE IN PLANTS
- Location: Plant Cell 1996 Sep;8(9):1465-1476
- Abstract: cdc2 and several related genes encode the catalytic subunits of
cyclin-dependent kinases, which have been implicated in a number of
cellular processes, including control of cell division. As a first step
in exploring their function in plants, we isolated four cdc2-related
genes from Antirrhinum. Two genes, cdc2a and cdc2b,
encode proteins that contain a perfectly conserved PSTAIRE motif
characteristic of cdc2 homologs, whereas the products of the two
remaining genes, cdc2c and cdc2d, appear to represent a new subclass of
proteins that have so far only been identified in plants. Transcripts of
these novel genes were localized in isolated cells dispersed throughout
actively dividing regions of the inflorescence. This localization is
consistent with accumulation that is specific to particular phases of the
cell cycle. Correlating cell labeling with nuclear condensation and
double-labeling experiments using cdc2 and histone H4 as probes indicated
that cdc2c transcripts accumulate during S phase as well as during the G2
and M transition, whereas cdc2d expression was specific to the G2 and M
phases. All cells labeled with cdc2d also contained cdc2c label,
indicating that expression of cdc2d completely overlapped with that of
cdc2c. Transcripts of cdc2a and cdc2b were detected in all cells within
actively dividing regions, but at levels that were only slightly higher
than those observed in nondividing areas. These transcripts did not
appear to accumulate in a cell cycle-specific fashion. The genes cdc2a
and cdc2b were able to partially complement a yeast cdc2 mutation,
although all four genes appeared to interfere with the sizing mechanism
of yeast cells. We propose that plants contain at least two classes of
cdc2-related genes that differ in structure, expression, and perhaps
function. [References: 55]
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