Although it is well known that hierarchical transcriptional networks are essential for various aspects of plant development and environmental response, little has been investigated about whether and how they also regulate the plant cell cycle. Recent studies on cell cycle regulation in identified SCARECROW-LIKE28 (SCL28), a GRAS-type transcription factor, that constitutes a hierarchical transcriptional pathway comprised of MYB3R, SCL28 and SIAMESE-RELATED (SMR). In this pathway, MYB3R family proteins regulate the G2/M-specific transcription of the gene, of which products, in turn, positively regulate the transcription of genes encoding a group of plant-specific inhibitor proteins of cyclin-dependent kinases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMaintaining stable and transient quiescence in differentiated and stem cells, respectively, requires repression of the cell cycle. The plant RETINOBLASTOMA-RELATED (RBR) has been implicated in stem cell maintenance, presumably by forming repressor complexes with E2F transcription factors. Surprisingly we find that mutations in all three canonical E2Fs do not hinder the cell cycle, but similarly to RBR silencing, result in hyperplasia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell size control is one of the prerequisites for plant growth and development. Recently, a GRAS family transcription factor, SCARECROW-LIKE28 (SCL28), was identified as a critical regulator for both mitotic and postmitotic cell-size control. Here, we show that is specifically expressed in proliferating cells and exerts its function to delay G2 progression during mitotic cell cycle in .
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