Abstract
The significance of cytokinins for the progression of the cell cycle is well known.
Cytokinins contribute to the control of the expression of D-cyclins and other cell
cycle genes, but knowledge as to how they affect the progression of the cell cycle
is still limited. Highly synchronized tobacco BY-2 cells with clearly defined cell
cycle stages were employed to determine cytokinin patterns in detail throughout the
entire cycle. Concentrations of trans-zeatin, and of some other cytokinins, oscillated during the course of the cell cycle,
increasing substantially at all four phase transitions and decreasing again to a minimum
value during the course of each subsequent phase. Addition of exogenous cytokinins
or inhibition of cytokinin biosynthesis promoted the progression of the cell cycle
when the effects of these manipulations intensified the endogenous fluctuations, whereas
the progression of the cycle was retarded when the amplitude of the fluctuations was
decreased. The results show that the attainment of low concentrations of cytokinins
is as important as the transient increases in concentration for a controlled progression
from one phase of the cell cycle to the next. Cytokinin oxidase/dehydrogenase activity
also showed fluctuations during the course of the cell cycle, the timing of which
could at least partly explain oscillations of cytokinin levels. The activities of
the enzyme were sufficient to account for the rates of cytokinin disappearance observed
subsequent to a phase transition.
Key words
Cytokinins - cell cycle - BY-2 cells - lovastatin - cytokinin oxidase/dehydrogenase
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K. Hartig
Department of Plant Physiology
University of Bayreuth
Universitätsstraße 30
95440 Bayreuth
Germany
Email: katja.hartig@uni-bayreuth.de
Editor: R. Mendel