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SIAMESE, a plant-specific cell cycle regulator, controls endoreplication onset in Arabidopsis thaliana
Authors:Churchman Michelle L  Brown Matthew L  Kato Naohiro  Kirik Viktor  Hülskamp Martin  Inzé Dirk  De Veylder Lieven  Walker Jason D  Zheng Zhengui  Oppenheimer David G  Gwin Taylor  Churchman Jason  Larkin John C
Institution:Department of Biological Sciences, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70803, USA.
Abstract:Recessive mutations in the SIAMESE (SIM) gene of Arabidopsis thaliana result in multicellular trichomes harboring individual nuclei with a low ploidy level, a phenotype strikingly different from that of wild-type trichomes, which are single cells with a nuclear DNA content of approximately 16C to 32C. These observations suggested that SIM is required to suppress mitosis as part of the switch to endoreplication in trichomes. Here, we demonstrate that SIM encodes a nuclear-localized 14-kD protein containing a cyclin binding motif and a motif found in ICK/KRP (for Interactors of Cdc2 kinase/Kip-related protein) cell cycle inhibitor proteins. Accordingly, SIM was found to associate with D-type cyclins and CDKA;1. Homologs of SIM were detected in other dicots and in monocots but not in mammals or fungi. SIM proteins are expressed throughout the shoot apical meristem, in leaf primordia, and in the elongation zone of the root and are localized to the nucleus. Plants overexpressing SIM are slow-growing and have narrow leaves and enlarged epidermal cells with an increased DNA content resulting from additional endocycles. We hypothesize that SIM encodes a plant-specific CDK inhibitor with a key function in the mitosis-to-endoreplication transition.
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