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Planta 1993-Mar

Studies on the behavior of organelles and their nucleoids in the root apical meristem of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Col.

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M Fujie
H Kuroiwa
S Kawano
T Kuroiwa

Keywords

Abstract

The behavior of cell nuclei, mitochondrial nucleoids (mt-nucleoids) and plastid nucleoids (ptnucleoids) was studied in the root apical meristem of Arabidopsis thaliana. Samples were embedded in Technovit 7100 resin, cut into thin sections and stained with 4'-6-diamidino-2-phenylindole for light-microscopic autoradiography and microphotometry. Synthesis of cell nuclear DNA and cell division were both active in the root apical meristem between 0 μm and 300 μm from the central cells. It is estimated that the cells generated in the lower part of the root apical meristem enter the elongation zone after at least four divisions. Throughout the entire meristematic zone, individual cells had mitochondria which contained 1-5 mt-nucleoids. The number of mitochondria increased gradually from 65 to 200 in the meristem of the central cylinder. Therefore, throughout the meristem, individual mitochondria divided either once or twice per mitotic cycle. By contrast, based on the incorporation of [(3)H]thymidine into organelle nucleoids, syntheses of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and plastid DNA (ptDNA) occurred independently of the mitotic cycle and mainly in a restricted region (i.e., the lower part of the root apical meristem). Fluorimetry, using a videointensified microscope photon-counting system, revealed that the amount of mtDNA per mt-nucleoid in the cells in the lower part of the meristem, where mtDNA synthesis was active, corresponded to more than 1 Mbp. By contrast, in the meristematic cells just below the elongation zone of the root tip, the amount of mtDNA per mt-nucleoid fell to approximately 170 kbp. These findings strongly indicate that the amount of mtDNA per mitochondrion, which has been synthesized in the lower part of the meristem, is gradually reduced as a result of continual mitochondrial divisions during low levels of mtDNA synthesis. This phenomenon would explain why differentiated cells in the elongation zone have mitochondria that contain only extremely small amounts of mtDNA.

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