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W. Nagl

Bio: W. Nagl is an academic researcher from Kaiserslautern University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nuclear DNA & Endoreduplication. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 220 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI
17 Jun 1976-Nature
TL;DR: A relationship between the basic nuclear DNA content and the occurrence and degree of endopolyploidy is reported and strongly suggests that DNA endoreduplication can be regarded as an evolutionary alternative to the high nuclearDNA content that has been achieved in other species mainly by ‘saltatory replications’.
Abstract: DNA endoreduplication and related phenomena (such as endomitosis, polyteny, nuclear restitution and somatic polyploidy in general) are widespread over the animal and plant kingdoms, although they occur most frequently among insects and angiosperms1–3. The systematic restriction to certain phyla and species has been interpreted in terms of high genetic control of such events3, whereas the characteristic developmental pattern of various degrees of endopolyploidy has been considered as an expression of their functional role in differentiation and synthesising capacity of the cells2,4,5. Recently,however, any role of endoreduplication in cell differentiation has been questioned because of the existence of species apparently lacking endopolyploidy6. All previous discussions on endoreduplication, endopolyploidy and polyteny have, however, ignored the basic DNA contents of the species studied. We here report a relationship between the basic nuclear DNA content and the occurrence and degree of endopolyploidy. This strongly suggests that DNA endoreduplication can be regarded as an evolutionary alternative to the high nuclear DNA content that has been achieved in other species mainly by ‘saltatory replications’.

233 citations


Cited by
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TL;DR: The molecular mechanisms that regulate cell division and endoreduplication are reviewed and the understanding on how the cell cycle is integrated with plant development is discussed.
Abstract: Cell cycle regulation is of pivotal importance for plant growth and development. Although plant cell division shares basic mechanisms with all eukaryotes, plants have evolved novel molecules orchestrating the cell cycle. Some regulatory proteins, such as cyclins and inhibitors of cyclin-dependent kinases, are particularly numerous in plants, possibly reflecting the remarkable ability of plants to modulate their postembryonic development. Many plant cells also can continue DNA replication in the absence of mitosis, a process known as endoreduplication, causing polyploidy. Here, we review the molecular mechanisms that regulate cell division and endoreduplication and we discuss our understanding, albeit very limited, on how the cell cycle is integrated with plant development.

781 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A detailed review of the debate surrounding the C‐value enigma, the various theories proposed to explain it, and the evidence in favour of a causal connection between DNA content and cell size is provided.
Abstract: Variation in DNA content has been largely ignored as a factor in evolution, particularly following the advent of sequence-based approaches to genomic analysis. The significant genome size diversity among organisms (more than 200 000-fold among eukaryotes) bears no relationship to organismal complexity and both the origins and reasons for the clearly non-random distribution of this variation remain unclear. Several theories have been proposed to explain this ‘C-value enigma’ (heretofore known as the ‘C-value paradox’), each of which can be described as either a ‘mutation pressure’ or ‘optimal DNA’ theory. Mutation pressure theories consider the large portion of non-coding DNA in eukaryotic genomes as either ‘junk’ or ‘selfish’ DNA and are important primarily in considerations of the origin of secondary DNA. Optimal DNA theories differ from mutation pressure theories by emphasizing the strong link between DNA content and cell and nuclear volumes. While mutation pressure theories generally explain this association with cell size as coincidental, the nucleoskeletal theory proposes a coevolutionary interaction between nuclear and cell volume, with DNA content adjusted adaptively following shifts in cell size. Each of these approaches to the C-value enigma is problematic for a variety of reasons and the preponderance of the available evidence instead favours the nucleotypic theory which postulates a causal link between bulk DNA amount and cell volume. Under this view, variation in DNA content is under direct selection via its impacts on cellular and organismal parameters. Until now, no satisfactory mechanism has been presented to explain this nucleotypic effect. However, recent advances in the study of cell cycle regulation suggest a possible ‘gene–nucleus interaction model’ which may account for it. The present article provides a detailed review of the debate surrounding the C-value enigma, the various theories proposed to explain it, and the evidence in favour of a causal connection between DNA content and cell size. In addition, a new model of nucleotypic influence is developed, along with suggestions for further empirical investigation. Finally, some evolutionary implications of genome size diversity are considered, and a broadening of the traditional ‘biological hierarchy’ is recommended.

640 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Arabidopsis thaliana hypocotyl is widely used to study the effects of light and plant growth factors on cell elongation as discussed by the authors, and it has been shown that the observed growth response to light is a part of an integrated developmental change throughout the elongating organ.
Abstract: The Arabidopsis thaliana hypocotyl is widely used to study the effects of light and plant growth factors on cell elongation. To provide a framework for the molecular-genetic analysis of cell elongation in this organ, here we describe, at the cellular level, its morphology and growth and identify a number of characteristic, developmental differences between light-grown and dark-grown hypocotyls. First, in the light epidermal cells show a characteristic differentiation that is not observed in the dark. Second, elongation growth of this organ does not involve significant cortical or epidermal cell divisions. However, endoreduplication occurs, as revealed by the presence of 4C and 8C nuclei. In addition, 16C nuclei were found specifically in dark-grown seedlings. Third, in the dark epidermal cells elongate along a steep, acropetal spatial and temporal gradient along the hypocotyl. In contrast, in the light all epidermal cells elongated continuously during the entire growth period. These morphological and physiological differences, in combination with previously reported genetic data (T. Desnos, V. Orbovic, C. Bellini, J. Kronenberger, M. Caboche, J. Traas, H. Hofte [1996] Development 122: 683-693), illustrate that light does not simply inhibit hypocotyl growth in a cell-autonomous fashion, but that the observed growth response to light is a part of an integrated developmental change throughout the elongating organ.

629 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A total organ-size checkpoint may also help to coordinate cell size and cell number within an organ, and can contribute to final cell-size determination in plants.

530 citations