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ARS Home » Pacific West Area » Albany, California » Plant Gene Expression Center » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #168295

Title: MAINTENANCE OF STEM CELL POPULATIONS IN PLANTS

Author
item SHARMA, VIJAY - ARS-UCB PLNT GENE EXP CTR
item CARLES, CRISTEL - ARS-UCB PLNT GENE EXP SCT
item Fletcher, Jennifer

Submitted to: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: 8/5/2003
Publication Date: 8/5/2003
Citation: Sharma, V.K., Carles, C.C., Fletcher, J.C. 2003. Maintenance of stem cell populations in plants. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 100(1):11823-11829.

Interpretive Summary: This article summarizes our current understanding of stem cell research in model plant systems, and reports the finding that the Arabidopsis ULTRAPETALA (ULT) gene encodes a novel plant protein. Based on its loss of function mutant phenotypes, ULT has been shown to limit the number of stem cells that are produced by Arabidopsis shoot and floral meristems. We cloned the ULT gene using a standard map-based approach. Our results reveal that ULT is a member of a plant-specific family of proteins that is necessary for the normal timing of gene activity during Arabidopsis flower formation.

Technical Abstract: Flowering plants have the unique ability to produce new organs continuously, for hundreds of years in some species, from stem cell populations maintained at their actively growing tips. The shoot tip is called the shoot apical meristem, and it acts as a self-renewing source of undifferentiated, pluripotent stem cells whose descendents become incorporated into organ and tissue primordia and acquire different fates. Stem cell maintenance is an active process, requiring constant communication between different regions of the shoot apical meristem to coordinate loss of stem cells from the meristem through differentiation with their replacement through cell division. Stem cell research in model plant systems is facilitated by the fact that mutants with altered meristem cell identity or accumulation are viable, allowing dissection of stem cell behavior using genetic, molecular and biochemical methods. Such studies have determined that in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana stem cell maintenance information flows via a signal transduction pathway that is established during embryogenesis and maintained throughout the life cycle. Signaling through this pathway results in the generation of a spatial feedback loop, involving both positive and negative interactions, that maintains stem cell homeostasis. Stem cell activity during reproductive development is terminated by a temporal feedback loop involving both stem cell maintenance genes and a phase-specific flower pattering gene. Our current investigations provide additional insights into the molecular mechanisms that regulate stem cell activity in higher plants.