Plant cells undergo two types of cell cycles-the mitotic cycle in which DNA replication is coupled to mitosis, and the endocycle in which DNA replication occurs in the absence of cell division. To ...investigate DNA replication programs in these two types of cell cycles, we pulse labeled intact root tips of maize (Zea mays) with 5-ethynyl-2'-deoxyuridine (EdU) and used flow sorting of nuclei to examine DNA replication timing (RT) during the transition from a mitotic cycle to an endocycle. Comparison of the sequence-based RT profiles showed that most regions of the maize genome replicate at the same time during S phase in mitotic and endocycling cells, despite the need to replicate twice as much DNA in the endocycle and the fact that endocycling is typically associated with cell differentiation. However, regions collectively corresponding to 2% of the genome displayed significant changes in timing between the two types of cell cycles. The majority of these regions are small with a median size of 135 kb, shift to a later RT in the endocycle, and are enriched for genes expressed in the root tip. We found larger regions that shifted RT in centromeres of seven of the ten maize chromosomes. These regions covered the majority of the previously defined functional centromere, which ranged between 1 and 2 Mb in size in the reference genome. They replicate mainly during mid S phase in mitotic cells but primarily in late S phase of the endocycle. In contrast, the immediately adjacent pericentromere sequences are primarily late replicating in both cell cycles. Analysis of CENH3 enrichment levels in 8C vs 2C nuclei suggested that there is only a partial replacement of CENH3 nucleosomes after endocycle replication is complete. The shift to later replication of centromeres and possible reduction in CENH3 enrichment after endocycle replication is consistent with a hypothesis that centromeres are inactivated when their function is no longer needed.
•Improved viral mapping single-stranded DNA viruses by >60-fold for begomoviruses out of plants.•Successful sequencing of viral single-stranded DNA from whiteflies over a wide range of viral ...loads.•Size selection improved viral read mapping by over 90 %.
The ability of begomoviruses to evolve rapidly threatens many crops and underscores the importance of detecting these viruses quickly and to understand their genome diversity. This study presents an improved protocol for the enhanced amplification and enrichment of begomovirus DNA for use in next generation sequencing of the viral genomes. An enhanced rolling circle amplification (RCA) method using EquiPhi29 polymerase was combined with size selection to generate a cost-effective, short-read sequencing method. This improved short-read sequencing produced at least 50 % of the reads mapping to the target viral reference genomes, African cassava mosaic virus and East African cassava mosaic virus. This study provided other insights into common misconceptions about RCA and lessons that could be learned from the sequencing of single-stranded DNA virus genomes. This protocol can be used to examine the viral DNA as it moves from host to vector, thus producing valuable information for viral DNA population studies, and would likely work well with other circular Rep-encoding ssDNA viruses (CRESS) DNA viruses.
Asymmetric divisions are key to regulating the number and patterning of stomata in Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. Many formative asymmetric divisions take place in neighbor cells (NCs), cells ...adjacent to a stoma or stomatal precursor. TOO MANY MOUTHS is a receptor-like protein required for the correct plane of NC division, resulting in the placement of the new precursor distal to the pre-existing stoma. Because plant cells usually become polarized before asymmetric division, we studied whether NCs display a cytological asymmetry as a function of cell stage and of possible division behavior. Cells that divided in the developing leaf epidermis were smaller than 400 μm-2 in area and included NCs as well as isolated cells. All NCs in the youngest complexes divided with comparable frequencies, but divisions became restricted to the smaller and most recently produced NCs as the stomatal complex matured. The majority of developing NCs had distally located nuclei, suggesting that nuclear position is actively regulated in NCs. NC stages exhibiting distally located nuclei were the likeliest to divide asymmetrically. However, a distal nucleus did not necessarily predict an asymmetric division, because more NCs had distal nuclei than were likely to divide. No defect was detected in nuclear distribution in tmm NCs. These data suggest that TMM uses intercellular signals to control the plane of asymmetric division after or independently of nuclear positioning.
We deeply sequenced two pairs of widely used infectious clones (4 plasmids) of the bipartite begomoviruses African cassava mosaic virus (ACMV) and East African cassava mosaic Cameroon virus (EACMCV). ...The ACMV clones were quite divergent from published sequences. Raw reads, consensus plasmid sequences, and the infectious clones themselves are all publicly available.
ABSTRACT
We deeply sequenced two pairs of widely used infectious clones (4 plasmids) of the bipartite begomoviruses African cassava mosaic virus (ACMV) and East African cassava mosaic Cameroon virus (EACMCV). The ACMV clones were quite divergent from published sequences. Raw reads, consensus plasmid sequences, and the infectious clones themselves are all publicly available.
Paradormancy, also known as summer dormancy, is the temporary dormancy which precedes winter or endodormancy in temperate woody plants. Apical dominance, the control exerted by the shoot apex over ...the outgrowth of the lateral buds, is thought to play a primary role in the paradormancy of these current lateral buds which normally do not grow out until the following spring after over-wintering. In the present study, to test apical dominance, periodic decapitation and defoliation beginning with early spring flushing and extending through the growing season were carried out on eleven tree species (white ash, green ash, red oak, black walnut, pignut hickory, shagbark hickory, sweetgum, cottonwood, sugar maple, hybrid silver/red maple and white pine) ranging in age from 6 to 50–60 years. Significant decapitation and defoliation release of current lateral buds into growing branches was found only in silver/red hybrid maple and red oak, respectively. In a greenhouse study of 1-year-old sugar maple and green ash seedlings, a significant response was found only in the latter. The lack of response in most of the older species analyzed indicates that other inhibitory influences may be overriding that of apical dominance and suggests that apical dominance does not play the primary role in paradormancy in some temperate woody species.