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1.
Olisthodiscus luteus is a unicellular biflagellate alga which contains many small discoidal chloroplasts. This naturally wall-less organism can be axenically maintained on a defined nonprecipitating artificial seawater medium. Sufficient light, the presence of bicarbonate, minimum mechanical turbulence, and the addition of vitamin B12 to the culture medium are important factors in the maintenance of a good growth response. Cells can be induced to divide synchronously when subject to a 12-hour light/12-hour dark cycle. The chronology of cell division, DNA synthesis, and plastid replication has been studied during this synchronous growth cycle. Cell division begins at hour 4 in the dark and terminates at hour 3 in the light, whereas DNA synthesis initiates 3 hours prior to cell division and terminates at hour 10 in the dark. Synchronous replication of the cell's numerous chloroplasts begins at hour 10 in the light and terminates almost 8 hours before cell division is completed. The average number of chloroplasts found in an exponentially growing synchronous culture is rather stringently maintained at 20 to 21 plastids per cell, although a large variability in plastid complement (4-50) is observed within individual cells of the population. A change in the physiological condition of an Olisthodiscus cell may cause an alteration of this chloroplast complement. For example, during the linear growth period, chloroplast number is reduced to 14 plastids per cell. In addition, when Olisthodiscus cells are grown in medium lacking vitamin B12, plastid replication continues in the absence of cell division thereby increasing the cell's plastid complement significantly.  相似文献   

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3.
Absolute DNA amounts of individual chloroplasts from mesophyll and epidermal cells of developing spinach leaves were measured by microspectrofluorometry using the DNA-specific stain, 4,6-diamidino-2-phenyl indole, and the bacterium, Pediococcus damnosus, as an internal standard. Values obtained by this method showed that DNA amounts of individual chloroplasts from mesophyll cells fell within a normal distribution curve, although mean DNA amounts changed during leaf development and also differed from the levels in epidermal chloroplasts. There was no evidence in the data of plastids containing either the high or low levels of DNA which would be indicative of discontinuous polyploidy of plastids, or of division occurring in only a small subpopulation of chloroplasts. By contrast, the distribution of nuclear DNA amounts in the same leaf tissues in which cell division was known to be occurring showed a clear bimodal distribution. We consider that the distribution of chloroplast DNA in the plastid population shows that there is no S-phase of chloroplast DNA synthesis, all chloroplasts in the population in young leaf cells synthesize DNA, and all chloroplasts divide.  相似文献   

4.
Using cultured cells of the hornwortAnthoceros punctatus, the change in the relative chloroplast DNA content in each stage of chloroplast division was investigated to clarify the relationship between the division cycle of a chloroplast and a cell nucleus. Samples of cultured cells were stained with 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) and then observed with an epifluorescence microscope and a chromosome image analyzing system (CHIAS). A chloropiast in cultured cells duplicated DNA with an increase in size. When a chloroplast began to divide, it was constricted in the middle, taking a dumbbell shape, and then divided into two daughter chloroplasts. In cultured cells of this species, the pattern of quantitative change of chloroplast DNA, that is, the DNA replication pattern of chloroplasts, corresponded to that of cell nuclear DNA in mitosis.  相似文献   

5.
When Euglena gracilis is grown under vitamin B12 deficiency conditions, the amount of protein and of chlorophyll per cell increase with decrease of B12 in the medium and consequently in the cell. The increase in cell protein is proportional to and precedes an increase in the number of chloroplasts per cell. This replication of the chloroplasts under deficiency conditions is not accompanied by nuclear or cell division. It is concluded that chloroplast replication in Euglena gracilis is independent of nuclear and cellular replication, at least under B12 deficiency conditions. We established a graph of the growth of Euglena under different concentrations of vitamin B12 added to the growth medium, which permitted us to calculate that at least 22,000 molecules of vitamin B12 per cell are required to give normal growth.  相似文献   

6.
Nuclear division immediately follows nuclear DNA doubling in all stages of the life cycle examined in the green alga Volvox; fluorescence microfluorometry of individual cells revealed no evidence of prolonged accumulation of nuclear DNA prior to mitosis in reproductive cells. Somatic cell nuclear DNA quantity is unaffected by developmental events in gonidia of the same spheroid; it remains constant from the end of cleavage until the death of the cell. In reproductive cells, chloroplast DNA replication precedes nuclear replication. The sites of plastid DNA accumulation, made visible by use of the fluorochrome 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole, increase in number during the prolonged growth phase of the V. carteri gonidium. Microspectrofluorometry of fluorochrome-stained DNA in situ shows that plastid DNA increases exponentially throughout this phase. The continuous plastid DNA accumulation during gonidial growth appears to represent a prokaryote-like instead of a eukaryote-like control of DNA synthesis. Most somatic cells contain plastid DNA, and this does not increase in amount during colony growth and reproduction. Most sperm cells also contain plastid DNA, although approximately 5% of somatic cells and up to 20% of sperm cells have no discernable plastid DNA. This is the second group of organisms in which DNA-free plastids have been observed.  相似文献   

7.
Pyke KA  Leech RM 《Plant physiology》1994,104(1):201-207
A nuclear recessive mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana, arc5, has been isolated in which there is no significant increase in chloroplast number during leaf mesophyll cell expansion and in which there are only 13 chloroplasts per mesophyll cell compared with 121 in wild-type cells. Mature arc5 chloroplasts in fully expanded mesophyll cells are 6-fold larger than in wild-type cells. A large proportion of arc5 chloroplasts also show some degree of central constriction, suggesting that the mutation has prevented the completion of the chloroplast division process. To examine the interaction of arc loci, a double mutant was constructed between arc1, a mutant possessing many small chloroplasts, and arc5. A second double mutant was also constructed between arc3, a previously discovered mutant also possessing few large chloroplasts per cell, and arc1. Analysis of these double mutants shows that chloroplast number per mesophyll cell is greater when arc5 and arc3 mutations are expressed in the arc1 background than when expressed alone. The cell-specific nature of arc mutants was also analyzed. The phenotypic traits characteristic of arc3 and arc5 are a reduction in chloroplast number and an increase in chloroplast size in mesophyll cells: these changes are also observed in reduced form in the epidermal and guard cell chloroplasts of arc3 and arc5 plants. Analysis of parenchyma sheath cell chloroplasts suggests that in leaves of arc1 plants the normal developmental distinction between mesophyll and parenchyma sheath chloroplasts is perturbed. The relevance of these findings to the analysis of the control of chloroplast division in mesophyll cells is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
During development of the first leaf of breadwheat (Triticum aestivum L.) the number of chloroplasts per mesophyll cell increases between three- and four-fold. To establish if chloroplast replication is accompanied by endoreduplication, the nuclear DNA content of the cells was determined by chemical assay of isolated nuclei from mesophyll protoplasts and by microdensitometry of nuclei in mesophyll tissue. The DNA content of the nuclei was constant (27 to 32 pg) at each phase of chloroplast replication. Approximately 93% of the cells had a nuclear DNA content close to the 2C value of 32 pg. It is concluded that chloroplast replication is not dependent on nuclear endoreduplication in seedling leaves of wheat.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Synchronous cultures of the algaDunaliella salina were grown in blue or red light. The relationships between replication of chloroplast DNA, cell size, cell age and the number of chloroplast nucleoids were studied. The replication of chloroplast DNA and the division of chloroplast nucleoids occurred in two separate periods of the chloroplast cycle. DNA replication was concomitant with that in the nucleocytoplasmic compartment but nucleoid division occurred several hours earlier than nuclear division. Red-light-grown cells were bigger and grew more rapidly than those grown in blue light. In newly formed daughter cells, the chloroplast nucleoids were small and spherical and they were localized around the pyrenoid. During the cell cycle they spread to other parts of the chloroplast. The number of DNA molecules per nucleoid doubled during DNA replication in the first third of the cell cycle but decreased several hours later when the nucleoids divided. Their number was fairly constant independent of the different light quality. Cells grown in red light replicated their chl-DNA and divided their nucleoids before those grown in blue light and their daughter cells possessed about 25 nucleoids as opposed to 15.Abbreviations DAPI 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole - chl-DNA chloroplast DNA - PAR photosynthetically active radiation  相似文献   

10.
Changes in Chloroplast DNA Levels during Growth of Spinach Leaves   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In young spinach leaves, 1–4 mm long, 7–10% of thetotal DNA of the leaf was chloroplast (pt) DNA. Growth in theseleaves was mainly by cell division with plastid division keepingpace with cell division and maintaining about 10 plastids percell. About 1% of the leaf cells were formed in 4.0 mm leaves.Both cell division and cell expansion contribute to the nextstage of leaf growth, which was quantitatively the major periodof new cell formation, nuclear DNA synthesis and ptDNA synthesis.Relative to the nuclear DNA level ptDNA levels rose to 21% ofthe total DNA and chloroplast.plastome copy numbers from 1500to 5000 per cell while chloroplast numbers rose from 10 to 30per cell. In the final period of leaf growth, cell expansionwas the main determinant of growth and chloroplast number percell rose to 180. In contrast to young leaves, newly emergedcotyledons contained 20% of their DNA as ptDNA and, during cellexpansion, cell number per cotyledon doubled. On average, thecells became octoploid, and chloroplast numbers and plastomecopy numbers rose to 500 and 22 000 per cell respectively. Similarlevels of nuclear ploidy, chloroplast number and plastome copynumber were induced in the first leaf pair of spinach followingdecapitation. When senescence was induced in mature leaves byshading, no loss of nuclear or ptDNA occurred. Following theonset of leaf yellowing and a form of senescence induced bynitrogen deficiency in leaves which had not fully expanded,there was preferential loss of ptDNA which fell from 8200 to3700 plastome copies per cell over an 11 d period. Key words: Spinach, Chloroplast, DNA, Ploidy  相似文献   

11.
arc5 is a chloroplast division mutant of Arabidopsis thaliana. To identify the role of ARC5 in the chloroplast replication process we have followed the changes in arc5 chloroplasts during their perturbed division. ARC5 does not affect proplastid division but functions at a later stage in chloroplast development. Chloroplasts in developing mesophyll cells of arc5 leaves do not increase in number and all of the chloroplasts in mature leaf cells show a central constriction. Young arc5 chloroplasts are capable of initiating the division process but fail to complete daughter-plastid separation. Wild-type plastids increase in number to a mean of 121 after completing the division process, but in the mutant arc5 the approximately 13 plastids per cell are still centrally constricted but much enlarged. As the arc5 chloroplasts expand and elongate without dividing, the internal thylakoid membrane structure becomes flexed into an undulating ribbon. We conclude that the ARC5 gene is necessary for the completion of the last stage of chloroplast division when the narrow isthmus breaks, causing the separation of the daughter plastids.  相似文献   

12.
Chloroplasts arose from a cyanobacterial endosymbiont and multiply by division. In algal cells, chloroplast division is regulated by the cell cycle so as to occur only once, in the S phase. Chloroplasts possess multiple copies of their own genome that must be replicated during chloroplast proliferation. In order to examine how chloroplast DNA replication is regulated in the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, we first asked whether it is regulated by the cell cycle, as is the case for chloroplast division. Chloroplast DNA is replicated in the light and not the dark phase, independent of the cell cycle or the timing of chloroplast division in photoautotrophic culture. Inhibition of photosynthetic electron transfer blocked chloroplast DNA replication. However, chloroplast DNA was replicated when the cells were grown heterotrophically in the dark, raising the possibility that chloroplast DNA replication is coupled with the reducing power supplied by photosynthesis or the uptake of acetate. When dimethylthiourea, a reactive oxygen species scavenger, was added to the photoautotrophic culture, chloroplast DNA was replicated even in the dark. In contrast, when methylviologen, a reactive oxygen species inducer, was added, chloroplast DNA was not replicated in the light. Moreover, the chloroplast DNA replication activity in both the isolated chloroplasts and nucleoids was increased by dithiothreitol, while it was repressed by diamide, a specific thiol-oxidizing reagent. These results suggest that chloroplast DNA replication is regulated by the redox state that is sensed by the nucleoids and that the disulfide bonds in nucleoid-associated proteins are involved in this regulatory activity.Chloroplasts are semiautonomous organelles that possess their own genome, which is complexed with proteins to form nucleoids and also certain machinery needed for protein synthesis, as is the case in prokaryotes. It is generally accepted that chloroplasts arose from a bacterial endosymbiont closely related to the currently extant cyanobacteria (Archibald, 2009; Keeling, 2010). In a manner reminiscent of their free-living ancestor, chloroplasts proliferate by the division of preexisting organelles that are coupled to the duplication and segregation of the nucleoids (Kuroiwa, 1991) and have retained the bulk of their bacterial biochemistry. However, chloroplasts have subsequently been substantially remodeled by the host cell so as to function as complementary organelles within the eukaryotic host cell (Rodríguez-Ezpeleta and Philippe, 2006; Archibald, 2009; Keeling, 2010). For example, most of the genes that were once in the original endosymbiont genome have been either lost or transferred into the host nuclear genome. As a result, the size of the chloroplast genome has been reduced to less than one-tenth that of the free-living cyanobacterial genome. Thus, the bulk of the chloroplast proteome consists of nucleus-encoded proteins that are translated on cytoplasmic ribosomes and translocated into chloroplasts. In addition, chloroplast division ultimately came to be a process tightly regulated by the host cell, which ensured permanent inheritance of the chloroplasts during the course of cell division and from generation to generation (Rodríguez-Ezpeleta and Philippe, 2006; Archibald, 2009; Keeling, 2010).Chloroplast division is performed by constriction of the ring structures at the division site, encompassing both the inside and the outside of the two envelopes (Yang et al., 2008; Maple and Møller, 2010; Miyagishima, 2011; Pyke, 2013). One part of the division machinery is derived from the cyanobacterial cytokinetic machinery that is based on the FtsZ protein. In contrast, other parts of the division machinery involve proteins specific to eukaryotes, including one member of the dynamin family. The majority of algae (both unicellular and multicellular), which diverged early within the Plantae, have just one or at most only a few chloroplasts per cell. In algae, the chloroplast divides once per cell cycle before the host cell completes cytokinesis (Suzuki et al., 1994; Miyagishima et al., 2012). In contrast, land plants and certain algal species contain dozens of chloroplasts per cell that divide nonsynchronously, even within the same cell (Boffey and Lloyd, 1988). Because land plants evolved from algae, there is likely to have been a linkage between the cell cycle and chloroplast division in their algal ancestor that was subsequently lost during land plant evolution. Our recent study showed that the timing of chloroplast division in algae is restricted to the S phase by S phase-specific formation of the chloroplast division machinery, which is based on the cell cycle-regulated expression of the components of the chloroplast division machinery (Miyagishima et al., 2012).Because chloroplasts possess their own genome, chloroplast DNA must be duplicated so that each daughter chloroplast inherits the required DNA after division. However, it is still unclear how the replication of chloroplast DNA is regulated and whether the replication is coupled with the timing of chloroplast division, even though certain studies have addressed this issue, as described below.Bacteria such as Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis possess a single circular chromosome. In these bacteria, the process of DNA replication is tightly coupled with cell division (Boye et al., 2000; Zakrzewska-Czerwińska et al., 2007), in which the initiation of replication is regulated such that it occurs only once per cell division cycle (Boye et al., 2000). In contrast, cyanobacteria contain multiple copies of their DNA (e.g. three to five copies in Synechococcus elongatus PCC 7942; Mann and Carr, 1974; Griese et al., 2011). In some obligate photoautotrophic cyanobacterial species, replication is initiated only when light is available (Binder and Chisholm, 1990; Mori et al., 1996; Watanabe et al., 2012). Replication is initiated asynchronously among the multiple copies of the DNA. Although the regulation of the initiation of DNA replication is less stringent than that in E. coli and B. subtilis, as described above, a recent study using S. elongatus PCC 7942 showed that this replication peaks prior to cell division, as in other bacteria.Chloroplasts also contain multiple copies of DNA (approximately 1,000 copies; Boffey and Leech, 1982; Miyamura et al., 1986; Baumgartner et al., 1989; Oldenburg and Bendich, 2004; Oldenburg et al., 2006; Shaver et al., 2008). In algae, chloroplast DNA is replicated in a manner that keeps pace with chloroplast and cell division in order to maintain the proper DNA content per chloroplast (i.e. per cell). In contrast, in land plants, the copy number of DNA in each chloroplast (plastid) changes during the course of development and differentiation, although contradictory results were reported about leaf development (Lamppa and Bendich, 1979; Boffey and Leech, 1982; Hashimoto and Possingham, 1989; Kuroiwa, 1991; Rowan and Bendich, 2009; Matsushima et al., 2011). Previous studies that synchronized the algal cell cycle by means of a 24-h light/dark cycle showed that chloroplast DNA is replicated only during the G1 phase, after which it is separated into daughter chloroplasts during the S phase by chloroplast division, implying that chloroplast DNA replication and division are temporally separated (Chiang and Sueoka, 1967; Grant et al., 1978; Suzuki et al., 1994). However, under these experimental conditions, G1 cells grow and the chloroplast DNA level increases during the light period. Cells enter into the S phase, chloroplast DNA replication ceases, and the chloroplasts divide at the beginning of the dark period. Thus, it is still unclear whether chloroplast DNA replication is directly controlled by the cell cycle, as is the case in chloroplast division, or chloroplast DNA replication occurs merely when light energy is available.We addressed this issue using a synchronous culture as well as a heterotrophic culture of the mixotrophic green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. The results show that chloroplast DNA replication occurs independently of either the cell cycle or the timing of chloroplast division. Instead, it is shown that chloroplast DNA replication occurs when light is available in photoautotrophic culture and even under darkness in heterotrophic culture. Further experimental results suggest that chloroplast DNA replication is regulated by the redox state in the cell, which is sensed by the chloroplast nucleoids.  相似文献   

13.
Moss chloroplasts should prove useful for studying the cyanobacteria-derived system in chloroplasts. To determine the effects of antibiotics that inhibit bacterial peptidoglycan synthesis, the numbers of chloroplasts in treated Physcomitrella patens cells were counted. Ampicillin and D-cycloserine caused a rapid decrease in the number of chloroplasts per cell. Fosfomycin affected half of the cells, while vancomycin affected a few cells. Conversely, bacitracin had no effect. With the decrease in chloroplast number, macrochloroplasts appeared in antibiotic-treated cells. Removal of the antibiotics resulted in the recovery of chloroplast number, suggesting that the decrease in number was directly dependent on the antibiotic treatment. Microscopic observations showed that the decrease in the number of chloroplasts resulted from cell division without chloroplast division. These results suggest that enzymes derived from the bacterial peptidoglycan synthesis pathway are related to moss chloroplast division.  相似文献   

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The amounts of chloroplast DNA and nuclear DNA in the cellsof spinach leaf discs cultutred under different light regimeshave been measured. The cellular level of ctDNA increased 10-foldin discs cultured in white light and was accompanied by a 2-foldincrease in the cellular level of nuclear DNA. In low intensitygreen light the cellular level of ctDNA increased 6-fold butwas not accompanied by an increase in the level of nuclear DNA.No net DNA synthesis on a per cell basis occurred in discs culturedin darkness. Chloroplasts of uncultured leaf discs containedan average of 83 plastome copies. The number of plastome copiesper chloroplast after 6 days culture decreased to 36 copiesin darkness, remained almost constant at 73 copies in whitelight and increased to 215 copies in low intensity green light. These results suggest that ctDNA replication can be independentof cellular levels of nuclear DNA and chloroplast division.  相似文献   

16.
Summary. To understand the regulatory mechanisms of chloroplast proliferation, chloroplast replication was studied in cultured leaf disks cut from plants of 25 species. In leaf disks from Brassica rapa var. perviridis, the number of chloroplasts per cell increased remarkably in culture. We examined chloroplast replication in this plant in vivo and in culture media with and without benzyladenine, a cytokinin. In whole plants, leaf cells undergo two phases from leaf emergence to full expansion: an early proliferative stage, in which mitosis occurs, and a differentiational stage after mitosis has diminished. During the proliferative stage, chloroplast replication keeps pace with cell division. In the differentiational phase, cell division ceases but chloroplast replication continues for two or three more cycles, with the number of chloroplasts per cell reaching about 60. In the leaf disks, the number of chloroplasts per cell increased from about 18 to 300 without benzyladenine, and to over 600 with benzyladenine, indicating that this cytokinin enhances chloroplast replication in cultured tissue. We also studied changes in ploidy and cell volume between in vivo cells and cells grown in culture with and without benzyladenine. Ploidy and cell volume increased in a manner very similar to that of the number of chloroplasts, suggesting a relationship between these phenomena.Correspondence and reprints: Department of Biological Sciences, Graduate School of Science, University of Tokyo, Hongo, Tokyo 113-0033, Japan.  相似文献   

17.
In Vicia faba L., the tissue specific proteins, legumin and vicilin, are synthesized during the cell expansion phase of cotyledon development. During this growth period, RNA and nuclear DNA increase 8- to 10-fold. 3H-Uridine and 3H-adenosine are incorporated into ribosomal RNA, both 25S and 18S, and into transfer RNA. DNA isolated from cotyledons in the cell division phase of growth has been compared with DNA isolated from cotyledons undergoing expansion growth. Results indicate that the DNA increase involves replication of the whole genome (endoreduplication).  相似文献   

18.
Changes in the physiological state of the multiplastidic alga Olisthodiscus luteus result in a shift in chloroplast complement from 33 to 21 plastids. The effect of this induced change in organelle complement on nuclear and chloroplast DNA levels has been analyzed. Data suggest that the absolute amount of chloroplast and nuclear DNA found within a cell remains constant but that the amount of chloroplast DNA per plastid is inversely proportional to the number of chloroplasts to which that DNA must be distributed.  相似文献   

19.
Synchronized cultures of the green alga Scenedesmus quadricauda were grown in the absence (untreated cultures) or in the presence (FdUrd-treated cultures) of 5-fluorodeoxyuridine, the specific inhibitor of nuclear DNA replication. The attainment of commitment points, at which the cells become committed to nuclear DNA replication, mitosis and cellular division, and the course of committed processes themselves were determined for cell cycle characterization. FdUrd-treated cultures showed nearly unaffected growth and attainment of the commitment points, while DNA replication(s), nuclear division(s) and protoplast fission(s) were blocked. Interestingly, the FdUrd-treated cells possessed a very high mitotic histone H1 kinase activity in the absence of any nuclear division(s). Compared with the untreated cultures, the kinase activity as well as mitotic cyclin B accumulation increased continuously to high values without any oscillation. Division of chloroplasts was not blocked but occurred delayed and over a longer time span than in the untreated culture. The FtsZ protein level in the FdUrd-treated culture did not exceed the level in the untreated culture, but rather, in contrast to the untreated culture, remained elevated. FtsZ structures were both localized around pyrenoids and spread inside of the chloroplast in the form of spots and mini-rings. The abundance and localization of the FtsZ protein were comparable in untreated and FdUrd-treated cells until the end of the untreated cell cycle. However, in the inhibitor-treated culture, the signal did not decrease and was localized in intense spots surrounding the chloroplast/cell perimeter; this was in agreement with both the elevated protein level and persisting chloroplast division.  相似文献   

20.
Chloroplast proliferation was investigated inAdiantum protonemata growing under continuous red light. Cell division is absent when cells are grown under red light. The chloroplast number increases as the cell length increases, therefore the chloroplasts divide in the absence of cell division. Chloroplasts in the basal part of the filamentous protonemal cell migrate gradually toward the cell apex, but there is no large net migration from the tip to the base or vice versa, indicating that chloroplast division takes place in the apical part of the protonemata. Chloroplast number in the apical 100 μm was maintained at about 200 during cell growth at least over eight days. The chloroplasts were either dumbbell- or ellipsoid-shaped. Dumbbell-shaped chloroplasts are abundant everywhere in a protonema, ranging from 30 to 50% of the total chloroplasts. The dumbbell-shaped chloroplasts attached to or very close to the plasma membrane seem to be the ones that are dividing but the dumbbell-shaped ones in the other regions do not divide. These data support the hypothesis that a signal from the plasma membrane induces the dumbbell-shaped chloroplasts to divide.  相似文献   

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