Laurie G. Smith
e-mail: lsmith@biomail.ucsd.edu |
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Plant tissues are composed of a variety of distinct cell types arranged in a configuration that enables each tissue to carry out its function. We are interested in processes that establish the cellular architecture of plant tissues during development. Because the shapes and positions of plant cells are defined by their walls, the cellular architecture of plant tissues reflects both the pattern of cell division - where new walls are positioned at the conclusion of cytokinesis - and patterns of cell expansion. We are taking a molecular genetic approach to study these processes. We have taken advantage of the extremely regular cellular organization of the maize leaf epidermis by isolating several mutants that perturb this pattern (see images, below). Analysis of these mutant phenotypes has shown that these mutants define genes required for the establishment of cell polarity, the spatial control of cytokinesis, and cell morphogenesis. Some of these genes have been cloned, and we continue to study the functions of these genes and their protein products in both maize and Arabidopsis.

CELL DIVISION
tangled, discordia and pangloss mutants show irregular
cellular organization in the leaf epidermis (see illustrations).
Analysis of the tangled phenotype has shown that this gene
is required for the spatial control of cytokinesis in all organs
and cell types that have been examined. tangled mutant
cells show defects both in selection of the division plane early
in the cell cycle and guidance of the phragmoplast (the cytokinetic
apparatus of plant cells) to the appropriate division plane during
cytokinesis. In contrast to tangled, discordia and pangloss
mutations perturb only the asymmetric divisions that occur relatively
late in leaf development to create various specialized cell types.
Three different Pangloss genes are required for the establishment
of polarity in asymmetrically dividing cells, whereas three Discordia
genes are required later for guidance of the phragmoplast to the
asymmetric division plane. The nature of Discordia and
Pangloss gene products is not yet known; cloning these
genes is one of our highest priorities.
The Tangled gene encodes a highly basic protein that can
bind directly to microtubules and belongs to a family of proteins
that are preferentially associated with the cytoskeletal structures
in dividing cells that become misoriented in tangled mutants.
We continue to investigate how TANGLED acts to orient cytoskeletal
structures in dividing cells. We have recently extended these
studies into Arabidopsis through analysis of an Arabidopsis
Tangled-like gene, ATN.
CELL MORPHOGENESIS 
Leaf epidermal cells in most plant species have lobed shapes;
lobes of adjacent cells interlock, probably to increase the mechanical
strength of the epidermis as a cell sheet. Three different Brick
(Brk) genes acting in a single pathway are required for
the formation of epidermal cell lobes. In wild-type cells, dense
patches of cortical actin mark the sites where lobes emerge, and
persist at the lobe tips as they grow out. In brk mutants,
these cortical actin patches fail to form. These observations
suggest that local actin polymerization is critical for lobe formation.
While the Brk2 and Brk3 genes have not yet been
cloned, we have shown that Brk1 encodes a small, highly
conserved protein that has recently been implicated in stimulation
of actin polymerization via regulation of the Arp2,3 activator,
WAVE, in mammalian cells. We continue to study the function and
localization of the BRK1 protein in maize and Arabidopsis.