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Award details
Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms of Cytokinesis Mediated by the TIO Fused Kinase
Reference
BB/E001017/1
Principal Investigator / Supervisor
Professor David Twell
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Institution
University of Leicester
Department
Biology
Funding type
Research
Value (£)
326,813
Status
Completed
Type
Research Grant
Start date
01/05/2007
End date
30/04/2010
Duration
36 months
Abstract
Cytokinesis is an essential process that needs to be fully integrated with growth and development. Understanding the mechanisms of cytokinesis in plants is also of fundamental biological importance given that cytokinesis is executed in distinct ways in plants and animals. We have recently discovered a unique Arabidopsis protein kinase, TWO-IN-ONE (TIO) that is closely related to animal FUSED proteins, and has an essential role in cell plate expansion in gametophytic and sporophytic cells. To enable analysis of TIO functions in living plant cells we have developed expression tools that allow regulated expression in microspores and in sporophytic tissues. We propose to address the role of different TIO protein domains through expression of a series of TIO mutant proteins. Given the potential role of TIO in phragmoplast organisation and expansion we will also exploit transgenic lines expressing GFP::TUA6 fusion constructs to visualise phragmoplast microtubule dynamics in wild type and TIO-depleted cells at pollen mitosis I. Although the different organismal roles of FUSED proteins have clearly evolved independently, the indirect association of Drosophila fused with microtubules through binding to the kinesin protein Cos2, suggests a possible mechanism of action for TIO. We will directly test whether NPK1-activating kinesin-like proteins HINKEL and TETRASPORE, represent binding partners for TIO. We will also use yeast-2-hybrid screening and insertional mutagenesis to characterize a TIO-interacting F-box protein that may regulate TIO abundance during the cell cycle and screen to identify other proteins interacting partners with specific TIO protein domains.
Summary
The division of cells in plants and animals is a vitally important process as it provides the building blocks for complex growth and development. During cell division the genetic material of the mother cell is divided into twin daughter nuclei that are split into separate daughter cells by a process known as cytokinesis. Plant and animal cells use different modes of cytokinesis. In animals this involves a pinching in process ('outside-in' mode), whereas in plants it involves building a new internal partition ('inside-out' mode). Because of the evolution of specific ways of 'splitting' plant cells and the importance of this process for plant growth, crop and food production, we are trying to understand the details of how this process is regulated in plants. To this end we have used genetic screens to identify genes that are required for cell division during pollen development in the important model plant species Arabidopsis thaliana (thale cress). This led to the isolation of two-in-one mutants that produce pollen grains with two nuclei in a common cytoplasm as a result of failure to build internal dividing walls. We have cloned the TWO-IN-ONE gene that is mutated in the two-in-one mutants and discovered that it is closely related to the FUSED gene that is present in humans and fruit flies. However unlike its animal counterparts that are not involved in cytokinesis, we have shown that TWO-IN-ONE is required for cytokinesis throughout the plant life cycle in vegetative (green) and reproductive parts of the plant and so is essential for plant growth, development and survival. In this work our objective is to understand how the TWO-IN-ONE protein is important in the cell division process using molecular, genetic and cell biology approaches. We will study the effect of making mutant forms of the TWO-IN-ONE protein to see how efficiently they function compared with the normal TWO-IN-ONE protein. We will use fluorescent proteins to monitor in living cells how the structures involved in building the new dividing wall are organised and how mutated TWO-IN-ONE proteins influences this process. We will also study other proteins that can bind with the TWO-IN-ONE protein that may help the TWO-IN-ONE protein to carry out its tasks. The outcome of this investigation will help us to explain at the cellular and molecular levels how TIO carries out its role in the plant cell division process. Moreover this work may also help us to explain how a conserved protein of ancient origin has evolved unique roles in the cell biology and life cycles of plants and animals.
Committee
Closed Committee - Plant & Microbial Sciences (PMS)
Research Topics
Plant Science
Research Priority
X – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative
X - not in an Initiative
Funding Scheme
X – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
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