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HEREDITAS ›› 2006, Vol. 28 ›› Issue (12): 1597-1597~1606.doi: 10.1360/yc-006-1597

• 专论与综述 • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Advances in Research of the Structure and Function of Plant Centromeres

SHE Chao-Wen1,2, SONG Yun-Chun2

  

  1. (1. Department of Biology, Huaihua University, Huaihua 418008, China; 2. Key Laboratory of MOE for Plant Developmental Biology, Col-lege of Life Sciences, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430072, China)
  • Received:2006-02-12 Revised:2006-04-18 Online:2006-12-10 Published:2006-12-10
  • Contact: ChaoWen She

Abstract:

Centromeres are the chromosomal domains necessary for faithful chromosome segregation and transmission during mitosis and meiosis in eukaryotes. In the last decade, centromeres in some plant species including Arabidopsis, rice and maize have been deeply studied at molecular level. Centromeric DNAs evolve rapidly and are little conserved among various plants, but the types of centromeric DNA sequences and their organization patterns within centromeres are basically similar in plants. Plant centromeres are usually composed of clusters of tandemly arrayed satellite repeats that are interspersed with centromere-specific retrotransposons. In contrast to centromeric DNA, structural and transient centromeric/kinetochoric proteins are conserved among eukaryotes including plants. As the cases in other eukaryotes, the presence of CENH3 (centromeric histone H3)-containing nucleosomes is the fundamental feature of plant functional centromeres, and CENH3 plays critical roles in the identity and maintenance of plant centromeric chromatin.

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