|
|
||||||||
|
First published online January 5, 2007; 10.1104/pp.106.093948 Plant Physiology 143:1429-1438 (2007) © 2007 American Society of Plant Biologists OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE
Cold Nights Impair Leaf Growth and Cell Cycle Progression in Maize through Transcriptional Changes of Cell Cycle Genes1,[W],[OA]Department of Plant Systems Biology, Flanders Institute for Biotechnology, and Department of Molecular Genetics, Ghent University, B9052 Gent, Belgium
Low temperature inhibits the growth of maize (Zea mays) seedlings and limits yield under field conditions. To study the mechanism of cold-induced growth retardation, we exposed maize B73 seedlings to low night temperature (25°C /4°C, day/night) from germination until the completion of leaf 4 expansion. This treatment resulted in a 20% reduction in final leaf size compared to control conditions (25°C/18°C, day/night). A kinematic analysis of leaf growth rates in control and cold-treated leaves during daytime showed that cold nights affected both cell cycle time (+65%) and cell production (22%). In contrast, the size of mature epidermal cells was unaffected. To analyze the effect on cell cycle progression at the molecular level, we identified through a bioinformatics approach a set of 43 cell cycle genes and analyzed their expression in proliferating, expanding, and mature cells of leaves exposed to either control or cold nights. This analysis showed that: (1) the majority of cell cycle genes had a consistent proliferation-specific expression pattern; and (2) the increased cell cycle time in the basal meristem of leaves exposed to cold nights was associated with differential expression of cell cycle inhibitors and with the concomitant down-regulation of positive regulators of cell division.
The growth of maize (Zea mays) seedlings is sensitive to low temperature, particularly during early spring in northern European and American environments. Delayed sowing to avoid this problem reduces the length of the growth season and the potential yield (Lyons, 1973
Cold in early spring has several distinct effects on the establishment of maize seedlings in the field. Severe cold (chilling stress) impairs chloroplast function, thereby reducing photosynthetic capacity (Allen and Ort, 2001
There is evidence that cell cycle regulation plays an important role in growth responses under unfavorable conditions. The activity of the A-type cyclin-dependent kinase (CDKA), one of the central regulators of cell cycle progression, is associated with the decrease in leaf growth rate of some species under stress conditions. In maize grown at contrasting temperature and water supply, there is a positive correlation between CDKA activity, cell division rates, and leaf growth (Granier et al., 2000 In this article, we studied a cold treatment that inhibits early leaf growth of maize but does not cause significant chilling symptoms. We compared the daytime growth (25°C) of seedlings exposed to control (18°C) and cold (4°C) nights and studied the cellular growth mechanisms that inhibit growth. We found a specific inhibition of cell cycle activity in the leaf basal meristem (hereafter referred to as leaf meristem). Therefore, we identified 43 putative maize homologs of cell cycle regulatory genes based on sequence database information. Finally, we analyzed the transcription of these genes by constructing expression profiles along the leaf growth zone using real-time PCR. Our results reveal a link between the observed leaf growth inhibition and the expression of specific cell cycle genes.
Effects of Low Night Temperature on Maize Leaf Growth
We investigated the effect of low night temperature on the growth of leaf 4 of maize seedlings by comparing plants grown under control conditions (25°C/18°C day/night [d/n]) and plants exposed to cold nights (25°C/4°C d/n). This treatment did not cause leaf discoloring or premature senescence. We confirmed these visual observations with measurements of leaf chlorophyll content, which was not significantly affected (Supplemental Fig. S1). Also, the transcript level of the large subunit of the Rubisco gene was similar in both control and treated leaves (data not shown). In contrast, severe cold stress, particularly occurring during the photoperiod, causes profound perturbation of chloroplast development and may lead to cell death (Allen and Ort, 2001
To analyze the developmental basis of reduced leaf size, we measured leaf elongation rate (LER) of leaf 4 from emergence to maturity. The average LER over a 24-h period was approximately constant during the first 120 h after emergence in both treatments. However, growth rates were about 35% lower in leaves exposed to cold nights (P < 0.001, n = 12; Fig. 1A ). In contrast, we observed minimal effects on the growth during the periods before and after steady-state growth; leaves emerged from the sheath of the previous leaf at a similar length, and LER was negligible at 200 h after emergence irrespective of the treatment. Our measurements allowed us to estimate the magnitude of the two components contributing to the observed temperature response in our experimental setup: a general temperature effect, presumably due to temperature effects on enzyme kinetics and general physiological processes (Granier and Tardieu, 1999
Kinematic Analysis Next, we set out to analyze the cold stress response at the cellular level by means of a kinematic analysis of leaf growth during daytime at steady-state growth (48 h after leaf emergence). For a detailed spatial and temporal characterization, we measured epidermal cell length as a function of position along the leaf growth zone. The cell length profiles of both control and cold-treated leaves were similar (Fig. 2, A and B ). For both treatments, the cell length profile had a typical shape characterized by distinctive domains. At the leaf base, there was a zone of approximately constant cell size, in which cell growth and division occur simultaneously (leaf meristem). At more distal positions, cells sharply increased their length by expansion in the absence of mitotic activity (elongation zone). Finally, cell size did not vary throughout the mature part of the leaf.
Epidermal cells expanded to the same mature cell length (124 ± 10 µm and 127 ± 5 µm in control and cold-treated leaves, respectively), implying that overall postmeristematic cell expansion was unaffected and that reduced cell production was responsible for the observed growth reduction. Consistently, cell production decreased significantly by 22% in cold-treated leaves (Table I). Because total cell production depends on the number of meristematic cells and on their division rate, we measured the size of the leaf meristem by staining nuclei and recording the position of the most distal mitotic figures (Fig. 2C). We found a leaf meristem size of 16 to 17 mm, irrespective of treatment (Table I). In contrast, the size of the proliferating epidermal cells was strongly reduced by the stress, particularly in the basal 5 mm (24.0 ± 2.7 µm in control versus 14.4 ± 0.8 µm in cold-treated leaves; Fig. 2A, inset; P < 0.05, n = 3). Combining these observations, we calculate that cold nights increased the number of cells in the leaf meristem (Table I). We concluded that the reduction in cell production due to low night temperature was due to a slower cell cycle progression. Indeed, the calculated average cell cycle duration was 65% longer in these leaves (P < 0.05). Finally, the reduced cell production in the leaf meristem of cold-treated leaves also affected the flux of cells passing through the expansion zone and resulted in altered cell expansion dynamics (Fig. 3 ). Except for the first 10 mm adjacent to the leaf meristem, cell elongation rates in cold-treated leaves were lower in most of the elongation zone. However, the longer residence time in the elongation zone in cold-treated leaves fully compensated for these lower expansion rates, resulting in identical mature epidermal cell size (Table I).
Flowcytometry To investigate whether the cell cycle inhibition occurred during a specific cell cycle phase, we analyzed nuclear DNA content by flowcytometry. We sampled the growth zone in 10-mm segments and further subdivided the basal segment into two 5-mm segments. The distribution of nuclear DNA content was unaffected by the cold treatment (Fig. 4 ). In the leaf meristem, the 2C/4C ratio was similar (2.3 ± 0.2 versus 2.5 ± 0.4, average ± SE, n = 3), where C is the haploid nuclear DNA content. This result indicated that the increased duration of the cell cycle in cold-treated leaves is associated with a comparable increase in duration of both G1 and G2 phases.
Our data also indicate that, irrespective of treatment, endoreduplication occurred in the elongation zone and stopped when cells matured (at distances >70 mm from the base), consistent with similar observations for Arabidopsis leaves (Beemster et al., 2005
Because cold reduced growth through a prolonged cell cycle, we set out to investigate changes in the molecular cell cycle regulatory machinery (CDKs and cyclins and their interacting proteins). In maize, there are only a few cell cycle genes described to date (Table II
). To define a more comprehensive gene set, we performed a sequence homology search on available maize expressed sequence tags (ESTs)/cDNA sequences. We used the cell cycle genes identified in the fully sequenced species Arabidopsis (Vandepoele et al., 2002
For all these classes, we performed a phylogenetic analysis comparing previously characterized cell cycle genes of Arabidopsis and rice with those newly identified in maize (Supplemental Fig. S2). Finally, we used the phylogenetic trees to build a nomenclature based on the one adopted for Arabidopsis (Vandepoele et al., 2002
To identify the molecular changes underlying the slower cell cycle progression in cold-treated leaves, we determined the expression profiles of the 43 identified cell cycle genes along the leaf growth zone. We collected samples from the leaf meristem (segment 05 mm), the elongation zone (segment 4050 mm), and the mature part (segment 90100 mm; arrows in Fig. 2A) during the steady-state growth of leaf 4. For each zone, we determined the relative transcript abundance by real-time PCR using three independent biological replicates. The expression levels of most of the cell cycle genes varied between the three analyzed cell developmental stages; 70% of the transcripts showed a significant change (P < 0.05, n = 3), the remaining 30% had a more stable expression pattern (Table II, class V). Hierarchical clustering of differentially expressed genes yielded four distinct classes and two outliers (Fig. 5 ; Table II). As expected, nearly all of these genes showed high expression in the leaf meristem and a pronounced decrease of transcript abundance toward the mature region. The inhibitor KRP2 represented an exception. The expression of KRP2 was highest in the elongation zone, suggesting a role in cell cycle exit. The four classes of genes with marked proliferation-specific expression displayed a different decline in transcript abundance in the elongation and mature zone. Cluster IV contained seven genes with the most abrupt decrease of transcript abundance in the elongation zone (Fig. 5; Table II). Although dimerization partner a (DPa) displayed the same pattern, it was not included in this cluster, probably because of the slight increase in expression after cell elongation. Clusters I and III contained seven and eight genes, respectively, showing a more gradual decrease of their expression (Fig. 5; Table II). In contrast, cluster II contained six genes characterized by a relatively high expression both in the leaf meristem and elongation zone. These latter genes most likely play a role in both cell division and processes involved in cell elongation and differentiation (Fig. 4). The comparatively high expression in the leaf meristem is in agreement with a regulatory role in cell proliferation for the identified cell cycle genes. To understand the differences in cell division rates identified by kinematic analysis, we measured transcript levels in the leaf meristem following the cold treatment. The expression patterns were consistent between the three biological replicates despite the relatively high variability for some of the transcripts (Supplemental Table S1). Based on this observation, we chose a 3-fold cutoff threshold. By this criterion, 21% of the genes were differentially expressed (Fig. 6 ). Several members of the cyclin and CDK families, as well as members of the E2F/retinoblastoma-related (RBR) pathway, were down-regulated (Fig. 6). Specifically, an A-type cyclin (CYCA3;1) showed the largest down-regulation upon treatment, more than 20-fold on average, followed by CDKA1;1, CDKD1, DEL1, RBR2;2, and an E2F homolog. This group of transcripts includes members of the cell cycle-activating CDK/CYC complexes and of E2F/RBR pathway, which controls cell cycle entry. Additionally, two KRPs show a more constitutive expression profile in our data set (KRP1 and KRP3). These were strongly up-regulated in the leaf meristem, on average 8- and 14-fold, respectively. Combined with the observation that KRP2 was down-regulated by more than 10-fold in the leaf meristem, these results suggest functional divergence between the KRP genes. Taken together, these expression data indicate that a slower cell cycle progression in the leaf meristem of leaves grown at low night temperature was associated with concerted transcriptional changes of both positive and negative cell cycle regulators.
Low Night Temperature Inhibits Growth Rates during the Photoperiod
Temperature is one of the most important environmental factors influencing leaf growth (Lyons, 1973
Here, we investigated whether cold has effects on growth and cell cycle regulation other than the general effects mediated by reaction kinetics. To interpret effects in a temperature-independent manner, growth rates are often modeled as a function of thermal time (Granier and Tardieu, 1998
Using a kinematic analysis based on cell length profiles (indirect kinematic analysis; Fiorani and Beemster, 2006
In conclusion, reduced growth caused by low temperature treatment is associated with a prolonged cell cycle progression and not with a reduction of the meristematic cell number or a smaller mature cell size, as reported for other abiotic stresses. Therefore, we postulate that specific cold-inducible mechanisms regulating cell proliferation exist, as hypothesized previously based on ecophysiological data (Grime and Mowforth, 1982
In this article, we present a set of 43 putative maize cell cycle genes, of which only 13 were previously annotated (Table II). This gene set shows overall the expected proliferation-specific transcription profile throughout leaf development, in agreement with a previous study in Arabidopsis (Beemster et al., 2005
This survey of cell cycle gene expression in maize leaves provides an insight into potential mechanisms that regulate the cell cycle machinery in response to low temperature. Although previous studies showed a link between meristem activity and decreased growth rate during stress treatments (e.g. Ben-Haj-Salah and Tardieu, 1995
Our results show that transcriptional regulation of cell cycle gene expression plays an important role in the decreased cell production and growth during cold stress (Fig. 6). The most striking effect was a decrease in the transcript level of an A-type cyclin (CYCA3;1) that might be an important regulator in response to stress. This observation is consistent with previous studies of A- and B-type cyclins (Burssens et al., 2000
In addition to altered expression of positive cell cycle regulators, some inhibitory proteins (KRP1, KRP2, and KRP3) are also differentially expressed. KRP1 and KRP3 have a strongly increased expression, in contrast to KRP2. Only two of these KRPs (KRP1 and KRP2) were previously described and characterized in maize endosperm. Interestingly, in vitro assays suggested that KRP1 had a stronger inhibitory effect on CDK activity than KRP2 (Coelho et al., 2005
In conclusion, long-term exposure to low night temperature causes specific changes in the expression of cell cycle genes in maize leaves. Although the regulation of cell cycle progression involves several posttranslational mechanisms (Inzé, 2005
Plant Material and Growth Conditions Maize (Zea mays) cv B73 seeds (AgriObtention, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique) were germinated in peat pellets (Jiffy International As) at 25°C, 70% humidity, a 16-h photoperiod, and a light intensity of 200 µmol m2 s1 photosynthetically active radiation. Thereafter, the seedlings were transferred to 2-L pots filled with soil (N°0, Structural) and placed in a growth chamber (type vb1014, Vötsch Industrietechnik) at 70% relative humidity, 400 µmol m2 s1 photosynthetically active radiation at plant level provided by a combination of fluorescent tubes (Osram-77 and Osram-31-830) in a 16-/8-h d/n cycle with a gradual decrease and increase of radiation intensity over 0.5 h. Temperature was kept at 25°C during the photoperiod and decreased to 18°C (control) or to 4°C (treatment) during the last 6 h of the night.
To calculate LER during the photoperiod and the night, we measured the length of leaf 4 (12 plants per treatment) at the beginning and end of the photoperiod from leaf emergence to maturity, using the soil level as a reference point.
To determine cell length profiles, we collected the basal 100 mm of leaf 4 during steady-state growth from three plants per treatment and prepared 10-mm segments for microscopy, as described previously (Fiorani et al., 2000
The raw data obtained for individual leaves were smoothed and interpolated at an interval of 50 µm using the kernel smoothing function locpoly of the KernSmooth package (Wand and Jones, 1995
To estimate meristem size, we isolated the basal 30 mm of leaf 4 from three plants per treatment during steady-state growth. Samples were fixed, as described previously (Fiorani et al., 2000
We calculated growth parameters through a kinematic analysis, as described previously (Fiorani et al., 2000 Cell length profiles and LER were measured on separate batches of plants grown under identical conditions. To estimate variance for cell production, cell division, and cell cycle duration, these parameters were calculated for each sample separately based on their cell length profile (n = 3) and the average of the LER data (n = 12). Using the average LER rather than all possible combinations of the two sets of values avoids overestimation of the variance.
Four discs (113 mm2) were sampled from halfway along the blade of mature leaf 4 of different plants per treatment. They were placed in N,N-dimethylformamide and stored at 4°C in darkness. After 5 d of incubation, we determined spectrophotometrically chlorophyll a and b content (wavelengths 646.8 nm and 663.8 nm using 750 nm as baseline; Porra, 2002
The basal 100 mm of steady-state growing fourth leaves was cut in segments of 10 mm. The most basal 10 mm was subdivided further into two 5-mm segments. To release the nuclei, the segments were chopped with a razor blade in 2 mL ice-cold buffer (200 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 4 mM MgCl2, and 0.1% Triton X-100), filtered over a 30-µm mesh, stained with DAPI (De Veylder et al., 2001
For all sequences available in the TIGR maize Gene Indices (release 16.0), the coding open reading frame was determined with FrameD software (Oryza Interpolated Markov model, parameters -E for eukaryotic EST analysis and -C for correcting frame shifts; Schiex et al., 2003
We used the neighbor-joining algorithm for phylogenetic analysis with the software package TREECON (Van de Peer and De Wachter, 1994
To analyze cell cycle gene expression, we extracted RNA from the fourth leaf of three representative plants at 2 d after emergence. Each of these leaves served as a biological replicate for subsequent analyses and was separated into the leaf meristem (05 mm), elongation (3040 mm), and mature zone (90100 mm). Total RNA was isolated using TRI-reagent (Sigma-Aldrich). First-strand cDNA synthesis was performed on 3 µg of total RNA with the Superscript RT II kit (Invitrogen) and oligo(dT)18 according to the manufacturer's instructions. Based on the concentration of cDNA measured with a Spectrophotometer ND-1000 (NanoDrop Technologies), samples were normalized and 14 ng was used for each reaction. We designed primers using the Beacon Designer 4.0 software (Premier Biosoft International; melting temperature = 59°C ± 1°C; amplicon length, 60150 bp; Supplemental Table S2). Primer specificity was assessed by performing a BLAST search against all known maize sequences available at GenBank and TIGR. For 15 selected primer combinations, sequencing of the PCR products yielded the target sequence, further confirming their specificity. The transcripts were quantified with an iCycler (Bio-Rad) with the qPCR core kit for SYBR green I (Eurogentec). PCR reactions were performed in triplicate technical replicates, following manufacturer guidelines. For each PCR reaction, we observed product melting curves by heating from 60°C to 95°C at 0.2°C/s. For all transcripts, this procedure allowed identification of a single product, which we confirmed by analysis on 2% agarose gels (data not shown).
For relative quantification, we set a threshold cycle at the same level for each reaction within the exponential amplification phase. For normalization, we used the amount of total RNA, because all tested genes (including housekeeping genes) showed significant differences in expression level both for developmental zones and/or treatment. We calculated efficiency and corrected the crossing point values, as described previously (Ramakers et al., 2003
We mean-centered, normalized, and clustered average crossing points of significantly different genes along the leaf developmental gradient using hierarchical clustering algorithms (Eisen et al., 1998
The following materials are available in the online version of this article.
We thank Dr. R.M. Barrôco for sharing rice cell cycle sequence information prior to publication. Received November 30, 2006; accepted December 12, 2006; published January 5, 2007.
1 This work was supported by the Institute for the Promotion of Innovation by Science and Technology in Flanders (Contractueel Landbouwkundig Onderzoek no. 030816) and the Research Fund of Ghent University (Geconcerteerde Onderzoeksacties no. 12051403), by the Research Foundation-Flanders (postdoctoral fellowship to K.V.), and by the Marie Curie Intra-European Fellowship scheme (postdoctoral fellowship FP6MEIFCT2004009388 to F.F.).
2 Present address: Department of Biology, Karadeniz Technical University, 61080 Trabzon, Turkey. The author responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions for Authors (www.plantphysiol.org) is: Dirk Inzé (dirk.inze{at}psb.ugent.be).
[W] The online version of this article contains Web-only data.
[OA] Open Access articles can be viewed online without a subscription. www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.106.093948 * Corresponding author; e-mail dirk.inze{at}psb.ugent.be; fax 3293313809.
Ach R, Durfee T, Miller A, Taranto P, Hanley-Bowdoin L, Zambryski P, Gruissem W (1997) RRB1 and RRB2 encode maize retinoblastoma-related proteins that interact with a plant D-type cyclin and geminivirus replication protein. Mol Cell Biol 17: 50775086[Abstract] Allen DJ, Ort DR (2001) Impacts of chilling temperatures on photosynthesis in warm-climate plants. Trends Plant Sci 6: 3642[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Baskin TI (2000) On the constancy of cell division rate in the root meristem. Plant Mol Biol 43: 545554[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Beemster GTS, De Veylder L, Vercruysse S, West G, Rombaut D, Van Hummelen P, Galichet A, Gruissem W, Inzé D, Vuylsteke M (2005) Genome-wide analysis of gene expression profiles associated with cell cycle transitions in growing organs of Arabidopsis. Plant Physiol 138: 734743 Beemster GTS, Masle J, Williamson RE, Farquhar GD (1996) Effects of soil resistance to root penetration on leaf expansion in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.): kinematic analysis of leaf elongation. J Exp Bot 47: 16631678 Ben-Haj-Salah H, Tardieu F (1995) Temperature affects expansion rate of maize leaves without change in spatial distribution of cell length (analysis of the coordination between cell division and cell expansion). Plant Physiol 109: 861870[Abstract] Burssens S, Himanen K, van de Cotte B, Beeckman T, Van Montagu M, Inzé D, Verbruggen N (2000) Expression of cell cycle regulatory genes and morphological alterations in response to salt stress in Arabidopsis thaliana. Planta 211: 632640[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Coelho CM, Dante RA, Sabelli PA, Sun Y, Dilkes BP, Gordon-Kamm WJ, Larkins BA (2005) Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors in maize endosperm and their potential role in endoreduplication. Plant Physiol 138: 23232336 Colasanti J, Tyers M, Sundaresan V (1991) Isolation and characterization of cDNA clones encoding a functional p34cdc2 homologue from Zea mays. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 88: 33773381 De Veylder L, Beeckman T, Beemster GTS, Krols L, Terras F, Landrieu I, Van Der Schueren E, Maes S, Naudts M, Inzé D (2001) Functional analysis of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors of Arabidopsis. Plant Cell 13: 16531668 Dugan DH (1944) Yield and bushel weight of corn as influenced by time of planting. J Am Soc Agron 36: 166170 Eddy SR (2004) What is a hidden Markov model? Nat Biotechnol 22: 13151316[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Eisen MB, Spellman PT, Brown PO, Botstein D (1998) Cluster analysis and display of genome-wide expression patterns. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 95: 1486314868 Fiorani F, Beemster GTS (2006) Quantitative analyses of cell division in plants. Plant Mol Biol 60: 963979[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Fiorani F, Beemster GTS, Bultynck L, Lambers H (2000) Can meristematic activity determine variation in leaf size and elongation rate among four Poa species? A kinematic study. Plant Physiol 124: 845856 Fry SC (2004) Primary cell wall metabolism: tracking the careers of wall polymers in living plant cells. New Phytol 161: 641675[CrossRef][Web of Science] Gomez LD, Vanacker H, Buchner P, Noctor G, Foyer CH (2004) Intercellular distribution of glutathione synthesis in maize leaves and its response to short-term chilling. Plant Physiol 134: 16621671 Grafi G, Burnett RJ, Helentjaris T, Larkins BA, DeCaprio JA, Sellers WR, Kaelin WG Jr (1996) A maize cDNA encoding a member of the retinoblastoma protein family: involvement in endoreduplication. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 93: 89628967 Graham D, Patterson BD (1982) Responses of plants to low, nonfreezing temperatures: proteins, metabolism, and acclimation. Annu Rev Plant Physiol 33: 347372[Web of Science] Granier C, Inzé D, Tardieu F (2000) Spatial distribution of cell division rate can be deduced from that of p34(cdc2) kinase activity in maize leaves grown at contrasting temperatures and soil water conditions. Plant Physiol 124: 13931402 Granier C, Tardieu F (1998) Is thermal time adequate for expressing the effects of temperature on sunflower leaf development? Plant Cell Environ 21: 695703[CrossRef] Granier C, Tardieu F (1999) Water deficit and spatial pattern of leaf development: variability in responses can be simulated using a simple model of leaf development. Plant Physiol 119: 609620 Grime JP, Mowforth MA (1982) Variation in genome size-an ecological interpretation. Nature 299: 151153[CrossRef][Web of Science] Hsieh W-L, Wolniak SM (1998) Isolation and characterization of a functional A-type cyclin from maize. Plant Mol Biol 37: 121129[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Iba K (2002) Acclimative response to temperature stress in higher plants: approaches of gene engineering for temperature tolerance. Annu Rev Plant Biol 53: 225245[CrossRef][Medline] Inzé D (2005) Green light for the cell cycle. EMBO J 24: 657662[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Joubès J, Chevalier C, Dudits D, Heberle-Bors E, Inzé D, Umeda M, Renaudin J-P (2000) CDK-related protein kinases in plants. Plant Mol Biol 43: 607620[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] La H, Li J, Ji Z, Cheng Y, Li X, Jiang S, Venkatesh P, Ramachandran S (2006) Genome-wide analysis of cyclin family in rice (Oryza Sativa). Mol Genet Genomics 275: 374386[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Lai J, Dey N, Kim C-S, Bharti AK, Rudd S, Mayer KFX, Larkins BA, Becraft P, Messing J (2004) Characterization of the maize endosperm transcriptome and its comparison to the rice genome. Genome Res 14: 19321937 Lyons JM (1973) Chilling injury in plants. Annu Rev Plant Physiol 24: 445466[Web of Science] Notredame C, Higgins DG, Heringa J (2000) T-coffee: a novel method for fast and accurate multiple sequence alignment. J Mol Biol 302: 205217[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Pahlavanian AM, Silk WK (1988) Effect of temperature on spatial and temporal aspects of growth in the primary maize root. Plant Physiol 87: 529532 Pettko-Szandtner A, Meszaros T, Horvath GV, Bako L, Csordas-Toth E, Blastyak A, Zhiponova M, Miskolczi P, Dudits D (2006) Activation of an alfalfa cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor by calmodulin-like domain protein kinase. Plant J 46: 111123[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Porra R (2002) The chequered history of the development and use of simultaneous equations for the accurate determination of chlorophylls a and b. Photosynth Res 73: 149156[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Ramakers C, Ruijter JM, Deprez RHL, Moorman AFM (2003) Assumption-free analysis of quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) data. Neurosci Lett 339: 6266[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Reichheld J-P, Vernoux T, Lardon F, Van Montagu M, Inzé D (1999) Specific checkpoints regulate plant cell cycle progression in response to oxidative stress. Plant J 17: 647656[CrossRef][Web of Science] Renaudin J, Colasanti J, Rime H, Yuan Z, Sundaresan V (1994) Cloning of four cyclins from maize indicates that higher plants have three structurally distinct groups of mitotic cyclins. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 91: 73757379 Renaudin J-P, Doonan JH, Freeman D, Hashimoto J, Hirt H, Inzé D, Jacobs T, Kouchi H, Rouzé P, Sauter M, et al (1996) Plant cyclins: a unified nomenclature for plant A-, B- and D-type cyclins based on sequence organization. Plant Mol Biol 32: 10031018[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Rossi V, Locatelli S, Lanzanova C, Boniotti MB, Varotto S, Pipal A, Goralik-Schramel M, Lusser A, Gatz C, Gutierrez C, et al (2003) A maize histone deacetylase and retinoblastoma-related protein physically interact and cooperate in repressing gene transcription. Plant Mol Biol 51: 401413[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Sabelli PA, Dante RA, Leiva-Neto JT, Jung R, Gordon-Kamm WJ, Larkins BA (2005) RBR3, a member of the retinoblastoma-related family from maize, is regulated by the RBR1/E2F pathway. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 102: 1300513012 Sacks MM, Silk WK, Burman P (1997) Effect of water stress on cortical cell division rates within the apical meristem of primary roots of maize. Plant Physiol 114: 519527[Abstract] Saeed A, Sharov V, White J, Li J, Liang W, Bhagabati N, Braisted J, Klapa M, Currier T, Thiagarajan M, et al (2003) TM4: a free, open-source system for microarray data management and analysis. Biotechniques 34: 374378[Web of Science][Medline] Sampedro J, Cosgrove D (2005) The expansin superfamily. Genome Biol 6: 242[Medline] Schiex T, Gouzy J, Moisan A, de Oliveira Y (2003) FrameD: a flexible program for quality check and gene prediction in prokaryotic genomes and noisy matured eukaryotic sequences. Nucleic Acids Res 31: 37383741 Schuppler U, He P-H, John PCL, Munns R (1998) Effect of water stress on cell division and Cdc2-like cell cycle kinase activity in wheat leaves. Plant Physiol 117: 667678 Sharp RE, Poroyko V, Hejlek LG, Spollen WG, Springer GK, Bohnert HJ, Nguyen HT (2004) Root growth maintenance during water deficits: physiology to functional genomics. J Exp Bot 55: 23432351 Sun Y, Dilkes BP, Zhang C, Dante RA, Carneiro NP, Lowe KS, Jung R, Gordon-Kamm WJ, Larkins BA (1999) Characterization of maize (Zea mays L.) Wee1 and its activity in developing endosperm. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 96: 41804185 Tardieu F, Granier C (2000) Quantitative analysis of cell division in leaves: methods, developmental patterns and effects of environmental conditions. Plant Mol Biol 43: 555567[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Tardieu F, Reymond M, Hamard P, Granier C, Muller B (2000) Spatial distributions of expansion rate, cell division rate and cell size in maize leaves: a synthesis of the effects of soil water status, evaporative demand and temperature. J Exp Bot 51: 15051514 Thompson J, Higgins D, Gibson T (1994) CLUSTAL W: improving the sensitivity of progressive multiple sequence alignment through sequence weighting, position-specific gap penalties and weight matrix choice. Nucleic Acids Res 22: 46734680 Van de Peer Y, De Wachter R (1994) TREECON: a software package for the construction and drawing of evolutionary trees. Comput Appl Biosci 9: 177182[CrossRef] Vandepoele K, Raes J, De Veylder L, Rouze P, Rombauts S, Inzé D (2002) Genome-wide analysis of core cell cycle genes in Arabidopsis. Plant Cell 14: 903916 Wand MP, Jones MC (1995) Kernel Smoothing. CRC Press, London Wang H, Qi Q, Schorr P, Cutler AJ, Crosby WL, Fowke LC (1998) ICK1, a cyclin-dependent protein kinase inhibitor from Arabidopsis thaliana interacts with both Cdc2a and CycD3, and its expression is induced by abscisic acid. Plant J 15: 501510[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Wang W, Vinocur B, Altman A (2003) Plant responses to drought, salinity and extreme temperatures: towards genetic engineering for stress tolerance. Planta 218: 114[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] West G, Inzé D, Beemster GTS (2004) Cell cycle modulation in the response of the primary root of Arabidopsis to salt stress. Plant Physiol 135: 10501058 Xie Q, Sanz-Burgos A, Hannon G, Gutierrez C (1996) Plant cells contain a novel member of the retinoblastoma family of growth regulatory proteins. EMBO J 15: 49004908[Web of Science][Medline] This article has been cited by other articles:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| ASPB Publications | PLANT PHYSIOLOGY® | THE PLANT CELL | |
|---|---|---|---|