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Plant Science 172 (2007) 671–683 www.elsevier.com/locate/plantsci Review Conserved functions of retinoblastoma proteins: From purple retina to green plant cells P. Miskolczi, Á. Lendvai, G.V. Horváth, A. Pettkó-Szandtner, D. Dudits * Institute of Plant Biology, Biological Research Center, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, P.O. Box 521, H-6701 Szeged, Hungary Received 5 September 2006; received in revised form 19 December 2006; accepted 20 December 2006 Available online 3 January 2007 Abstract The mammalian retinoblastoma susceptibility gene product, known as the first tumor suppressor protein (pRB), has a central role in the regulation of the cell cycle, differentiation and apoptotic pathways of specific cell types. Discoveries in the past decade have shown that key elements of the RB regulatory network also exist in higher plants which control a wide range of cellular functions, including cell division cycle and differentiation. As we outline in this review, the plant RB-related proteins (RBRs) display amino acid sequence similarity and biochemical binding properties analogous to their mammalian homologues and they can interact with E2F transcriptional factors, D-type cyclins and viral proteins. The complex regulatory functions of the retinoblastoma proteins are discussed in detail by focusing in particular on the increasing amount of information being produced about the role of these proteins in higher plants. # 2007 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved. Keywords: Retinoblastoma; Pocket proteins; RBR; Cell cycle; Plant development Contents 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Conserved structure of the RB proteins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.1. RB activity depends on the phosphorylation level. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.2. Active pRB level depends also on proteolysis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.3. Specific tools for the analysis of general functions: RB interacting partners Broad functions of the retinoblastoma protein family in animals . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.1. Retinoblastoma family and cell cycle regulation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2. Relevance to cancer and developmental defects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.3. The role of pRB in the regulation of apoptosis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Plant retinoblastoma-related proteins (RBR) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.1. Retinoblastoma-related genes from plants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.2. Expression profiles of the plant RBR subfamily genes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.3. Increasing number of known interactors of plant RBR proteins . . . . . . . . . 4.4. RBR activity is regulated post-transcriptionally by phosphorylation . . . . . . 4.5. Plant RBR proteins play a fundamental role in G1/S transition . . . . . . . . . 4.6. Plant RBR functions in organogenesis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Final conclusions and prospects. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Acknowledgement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . * Corresponding author. Tel.: +36 62 599 768/769; fax: +36 62 433 188. E-mail address: [email protected] (D. Dudits). 0168-9452/$ – see front matter # 2007 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved. doi:10.1016/j.plantsci.2006.12.014 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 672 672 673 673 673 673 673 674 674 674 674 675 675 676 676 677 678 679 679 672 P. Miskolczi et al. / Plant Science 172 (2007) 671–683 1. Introduction The retinoblastoma susceptibility gene was the firstly identified tumor suppressor and was isolated by positional cloning from retinoblastoma tumors [1] that originated from the thin membranous retina situated in the back of the eye. Since then, many investigations showed a broad range of functions for the retinoblastoma protein (pRB) in higher eukaryotic organisms. The retinoblastoma gene family encodes a group of related proteins that participate in several processes of cell growth and differentiation, including cell cycle regulation and control of gene expression [2–4]. It was shown more than a decade ago, that many of the fundamental control mechanisms that govern cell division in animals are also conserved in plants [5–9]. The first retinoblastoma homologue gene of plant origin was cloned from Zea mays [10–12]; subsequently similar genes have been isolated from several other plant species, including the dicot Nicotiana tabacum [13], Arabidopsis thaliana [14], Medicago sativa and the monocot Oryza sativa [15]. Considering the phylogenetic conservation of several cell cycle regulatory elements (CDKs; cyclins) between animals and plants, one might predict that the retinoblastoma-related plant homologues play a complex role, analogous to many functions found in their animal counterparts. However, the plant life cycle possesses several specific features compared to animals, for example, plant development is largely postembryonic; cell divisions occur in specialized zones known as meristems; somatic cells are totipotent. Therefore, we can expect cell cycle regulatory elements in plants – including RB proteins – to show a plant specific nature with respect to growth and developmental control. 2. Conserved structure of the RB proteins In order to evaluate the functional significance of RBs in control mechanisms, it is worth discussing some of the structural features of these proteins. Since our present knowledge of the structural and functional characteristics of the RB protein family is derived mainly from the original RB protein itself, we use this 928 amino acid long human RB protein to present the significant functional regions, as summarized in Fig. 1. The amino-terminal region of pRB (amino acids 1–378) is crucial for embryonic and postnatal development, tumor suppression and the functional integrity of the entire pRB [16]. Results of in vitro experiments with purified recombinant proteins and of yeast two-hybrid interaction tests have revealed the self-association of the retinoblastoma protein and the interaction of its amino- and carboxy-terminal regions [17]. The N-terminal domain also mediates interaction with a 84-kD nuclear matrix protein [18], a cell cycle-regulated kinase [19], and a heat-shock protein [20]. The p84N5 protein may regulate pRB subcellular localization [18] and apoptosis suppression [21]. This domain also binds to the MCM7 protein of the prereplication complex [22]; this data provides the first evidence that pRB and RB-related proteins can directly regulate DNA replication. Fig. 1. Schematic representation of conserved features of the human pRB protein and some plant counterparts. Numbers at the bottom of the bar delineate amino acids comprising the amino terminus (N), A-pocket (A), spacer region, B-pocket (B), C-domain (C). The underlined numbers show the amino acid number of the border of the pockets. The same organizations of pocket domains of plant RB-related proteins are also marked. The black balls represent the approximate locations of potential CDK phosphorylation sites predicted by NetPhosK 1.0 [140]. The accession numbers used in this figure are: HuRB (AAA69807), AtRBR1 (AAF79146); MsRBR (AY941773); OsRBR1 (AY941774); OsRBR2 (AY941775). The small pocket region that contains the A and B domains (amino acids 379–572 and 646–772, respectively, separated by a spacer), was originally identified as an essential part of the pRB for the interaction with two viral oncoproteins: the SV40 large T-antigen and adenovirus E1A [23]. This region is necessary for binding proteins containing a conserved LxCxE amino acid motif, as the above mentioned viral proteins, the human papillomavirus E7 [24], D-type cyclins [25], Elf-1 [26], and a PP1 phosphatase containing a slightly modified version of the LxCxE motif [27]. The importance of this region was underlined by the fact that most of the RB mutations detected in tumors affect at least either one of the A or B domains. A specific characteristic of the structure of these domains is that they contain a five-helix cyclin fold core [28]. Co-crystallization experiments demonstrate that the LxCxE peptide binds a highly conserved groove on the B-domain portion of the pocket; the A-domain portion appears to be required for the stable folding of the B box [28]. The large pocket region of the pRB is composed of the small pocket together with the C-terminal domain (amino acids 773– 928). The large pocket region of pRB is most noted for its ability to bind a class of E2F transcription factors, but it is crucial for interacting with most of the RB-associated proteins identified so far (for review see [29]). Studies have indicated that E2F and the LxCxE motif containing proteins bind on separate sites on pRB [30]. The C-terminal domain alone has been defined by its interaction with the c-Abl tyrosine kinase [31]. It has only a few other known specific protein interactors, such as mdm2, the p53-regulatory oncoprotein [32]. P. Miskolczi et al. / Plant Science 172 (2007) 671–683 In summary, discrete regions of pRB protein are involved in different protein–protein interactions with diverse functional consequences. The characteristics of these protein–protein associations (like duration and strength) are largely dependent on the most important post-translational modification of the pRB: its phosphorylation on numerous S/T residues. 2.1. RB activity depends on the phosphorylation level The mammalian pRB is phosphorylated at multiple sites in a cell cycle-dependent manner; the bulk phosphorylation of pRB sites can be accounted for by the activity of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs). Hypophosphorylated, active forms of pRB dominate in G1, whereas, hyperphosphorylated forms appear as cells enter S phase and dominate in G2 and M phases [33]. Results of phosphopeptide analyses of pRB suggest more than a dozen distinct sites of phosphorylation on either serine or threonine residues [34]. Conversely, pocket protein dephosphorylation by protein phosphatase I is also known to occur in the period from anaphase to G1 and prevents the cell from entering into the next cell cycle [35]. It is also known that protein phosphatase 2A can contribute to production of hypophosphorylated pRB in S phase in response to girradiation induced DNA damage [36]. Oxidative stress can also induce rapid PP2A-dependent dephosphorylation of pRB, p107 and p130 [37]. 2.2. Active pRB level depends also on proteolysis While the pRB phosphorylation status depends on the reversible action of kinases and phosphatases, in some situations hyperphosphorylation may cause degradation of pocket proteins [38], and consequently irreversibly decreases the protein level. HPV 16 E7 protein induces degradation of pRB proteins through the ubiquitin-proteosome pathway [39] and degradation of pRB-related proteins p107 and p130 can also happen by a proteosome-dependent mechanism [40]. Later, it was established that the ubiquitin-proteosome pathway as well as calpain play a potential role in the degradation of the p107 protein [41]. Interestingly, other human viruses can also induce the degradation of the hypophosphorylated forms of the retinoblastoma family member in a proteosome-dependent manner [42]. Caspase-dependent cleavage of pRB was found to participate in programmed cell death [43]; in the apoptotic process, pRB became dephosphorylated and then immediately cleaved into p48 and p68 fragments [44]. On the other hand, caspase-9 can antagonize p53-induced apoptosis by generating a p76 truncated pRB protein [45]. 2.3. Specific tools for the analysis of general functions: RB interacting partners To date, at least 110 cellular proteins have been reported to associate with the mammalian pRB. For extensive review, see [29], which summarizes the literature of the possible retinoblastoma associated partners in animals. According to this article, the interaction partners fall largely into three groups 673 based on some similar characteristics. In the largest group, there are about 70 reported transcriptional regulators which fall into three basic functional categories when bound to pRB (a) factors which repress transcription, (b) factors which activate transcription, and (c) factors that affect transcription in unknown or unclear ways. Secondly, there are more than a dozen enzymes (kinases, phosphatases, and kinase-regulators); most of these post-translationally modify pRB to affect its function. Third and finally, there are more than 20 reported interactors that have a variety of miscellaneous functions. A large number of these proteins directly or indirectly regulate DNA replication, the cell cycle and various nuclear processes. Some of the pRB interactors are mentioned and discussed in this review. A lot of binding partners of pRB with their various functions in different processes play a key role of RB homologue proteins in cellular events with an obvious complexity, as discussed below. 3. Broad functions of the retinoblastoma protein family in animals In the middle of the past century the children’s retinoblastoma tumor was realized not only to occur sporadically, but also to be inherited [46]. Cloning of the retinoblastoma susceptibility gene [47] and identification of its mutations [48] opened an innovative chapter in cancer molecular biology. Soon, further retinoblastoma homologue genes were isolated, and ever since they have been known as a family of pocket proteins, consisting of three members, pRB, p107 [49] and p130 [50] with partially overlapping roles in the life of the mammalian cell [51]. 3.1. Retinoblastoma family and cell cycle regulation The pocket proteins are best known for their roles in restraining the G1-S transition through the regulation of E2F transcription factors (for review see [52]). Genes of the three RB-family members vary in their expression patterns in different tissues at various stages of the cell cycle. The pRB is abundant during all phases of the cell cycle and exhibits only slight variations in gene expression levels but with significant differences in its phosphorylation status. p130 is detectable at high levels in quiescent and differentiated cells, but its level decreases rapidly when quiescent cells stimulated to re-enter the cell cycle. In contrast, p107 levels are generally low in terminally differentiated cells, but rise, when cells are stimulated to proliferate and remain high throughout the proliferative cell cycle [53]. Members of the pocket protein family show a clear difference in their interaction capability with various E2F transcription factors. pRB can bind activator E2Fs (E2F1,2,3a) except for E2F3b, which functions mainly as a repressor. In contrast, p107 and p130 preferentially bind repressor-type E2Fs. Consequently, the pocket proteins not only inhibit E2F mediated transactivation but also work together with another set of E2Fs to repress transcription and inhibit G1-S progression [2,52]. Targeted inactivation of all the three RB-related genes in embryonic stem cell causes 674 P. Miskolczi et al. / Plant Science 172 (2007) 671–683 deregulated G1/S transition, abrogation of G1 arrest and the lack of senescence in culture [54,55]. This confirms the essential role of the pocket family in cell cycle control, G1/S transition and in the tumorigenesis [3]. 3.2. Relevance to cancer and developmental defects Importantly, RB mutations have also been found in nonretinal cancers including sarcomas, small-cell lung, bladder, breast and parathyroid cancers, which evidently show the relevance of pRB role in the regulation of cell proliferation [56]. p130 mutations are also involved in human cancers [57], while the mutation of p107 up to now was shown to associate only with B-cell lymphoma [58]. On the other hand, homozygous rb knockout mice die before the 16th day, and the mice homozygous for either p107 or p130 mutations appear normal, while their double knockouts show mainly defective limb development. These and other results support the conclusion the major involvement of pRB is in tumor initiation and tumor progression while p130 participates rather in tumor progression [51]. It was also shown recently that the acute loss of pRB in primary quiescent cells is sufficient for re-entry in the cell cycle [59]. The RB-family members are differentially expressed during mouse development and their ability to arrest the cell cycle can be cell-type specific [60], which is also a confirmation of distinct cellular and developmental functions (for more details see the following reviews: [61,62]). Similarly to mammal gene products, two members of the RB family in Drosophila, RBF1 and RBF2 are co-expressed at several stages of development; however, spatial and temporal differences are evident, including partly complementary patterns of expression in the embryonic central nervous system [63]. 3.3. The role of pRB in the regulation of apoptosis In the nullzygous rb knockout mice extensive unscheduled apoptosis occurred in multiple cell lineage [64], which was observed especially in tissues in which pRB was highly expressed in normal animals [65]. This result underlines the significant role of pRB in the process of apoptosis [66]. pRB regulates apoptosis during development, and loss of its function results deregulated growth and cell death, moreover, pRB has been proposed to protect differentiating cells from apoptosis [66]. In contrast, p53 guards against DNA-damage and oncogene expression by inducing both cell cycle and apoptosis [66]. E2F transcription factors, which are known to be targets of pRB, play a significant role in this process, since apoptosis was induced in transgenic mice ectopically expressing E2F1 [2]. 4. Plant retinoblastoma-related proteins (RBR) 4.1. Retinoblastoma-related genes from plants A partial cDNA clone of the first identified plant retinoblastoma-related gene was isolated from Z. mays [10]. Subsequently, another cDNA was also isolated, which was considered to be a partial coding sequence for ZmRBR (ZmRBR2), the encoded protein was approximately 90% identical to ZmRBR1[12]. The predicted protein products of the open reading frames showed an analogous domain structure to the animal RB family and showed a persuading similarity to the A and B pocket region [10–12]. The amino acid identity between plant and animal A/B pockets is approximately 30%. Since the discovery of the first maize RB-related homologue, more and more genes encoding retinoblastoma-related proteins have been isolated and characterized from plants. One new RBR gene was discovered from maize itself [67], two homologues were found in other monocot grasses, such as rice (OsRBR1 and OsRBR2) and wheat (TaRBR1 and TaRBR2) [15] and up to now one in Cocos nucifera (Acc.: AAM77469). With no exception, only a single representative Rb homologue sequence could be detected in dicot species so far, including N. tabacum [13], A. thaliana [14], M. sativa [15], Pisum sativum (Acc.: BAA88690) Euphorbia esula (Acc.: AAF34803), Populus tremula Populus tremuloides (Acc.: AAT61377). Furthermore, another homologue is also present in the genome of the unicellular green flagellate, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii [68]. These observations highlight very interesting differences between dicot and monocot species. One might speculate that a more complex Rb pathway in monocot grasses can be responsible for monocot specific responses to plant hormones and developmental strategies. Thus, RB homologue proteins appear to be key regulatory elements of not only animals but also of plants. It is not surprising, that significant similarity (higher than 70%) can be realized in the A and B pockets of the deduced amino acid sequences in all cases. In Fig. 1, we depicted the main characteristics of four plant retinoblastoma related proteins aligned to human pRB. It is obvious that the domain organization in plant retinoblastoma proteins is as important as in metazoans. Up to now, notable diversity can be seen only in Drosophila in which only a very short spacer exists between the pocket domains [69]. Additionally, the identification of the RB-binding LxCxE peptide motif in plant D-type cyclins [70,71] which can mediate the binding of RB in animal cells and the presence of this motif in the plant viral replication protein RepA [72] also support that the RB-mediated cell division and differentiation pathways may also exist in plants. The phylogenetic tree of known plant and a few typical animal retinoblastoma family proteins (Fig. 2) clearly demonstrates that the plant RBR proteins can be categorized into three distinct subfamilies [15]. Subfamily A contains all dicots, while Subfamily B and C represent all monocot RBR proteins. Securely A. thaliana genome carries only a single retinoblastoma-related gene [14] and based on the available sequence information and extensive in silico searches a single retinoblastoma homologue can be predicted for all dicots [15,73]. It is presumable that there could be important differences between at least monocot grasses and dicots since a probable gene duplication event allowed a functionally distinct partitioning of the monocot RBR proteins [15,73]. Consequently, the two types of RBR proteins may suggest a more complex RB pathway in grasses similar to the animal situation [15,67,73]. P. Miskolczi et al. / Plant Science 172 (2007) 671–683 675 Fig. 2. Comparison of plant and animal Rb family members. Phylogenetic tree of RB homologues sequences from both plant and animal. The multiple alignment was made by the ClustalW program and displayed by Phylodendron program (http://iubio.bio.indiana.edu/treeapp/). The scale beneath the tree measures the evolutionary distance between sequences. The accession numbers of the sequences used in this study are: AtRBR1 (AAF79146); CrRBR (CAA09736); CnRBR (AAM77469); CsRBR (BAE80326); EeRBR (AAF34803); GgRBR1 (AAA19644); GgRB2_p130 XM_414087; HsRB1(AAA69807); HsRBL1_p107 CAI95178; HsRBL2_p130 Q08999; MmRB1 AAH96525; MmRBL1_p107 AAH69179; MmRBL2_p130 2211351A; MsRBR (AY941773); NbRBR (AAU05979); NtRBR (BAA76477); OsRBR1 (AY941774); OsRBR2 (AY941775); PsRBR (BAA88690); PtRBR (AAF61377); RnRB1 BAA04958; RnRBL2_p130 NP_112356; SbRBR (BAE06273); TaRBR1 (AY941772); TaRBR2 (AY941776); ZmRBR1 (CAA67422); ZmRBR2 (CAC82493); ZmRBR2a (AAB69650); ZmRBR2b (AAB69651); ZmRBR3 (AAZ99092). 4.2. Expression profiles of the plant RBR subfamily genes The point of interest of the numerous similarities to animals is recruited also by the expression patterns of the two RBR genes of O. sativa. In details, expression of the OsRBR1 gene can be linked to cell division activity because it shows a higher expression in young leaves and decreasing mRNA amounts from the basal regions towards the tip in mature rice leaves [15]. Similarly, the division activity in developing maize leaves was consistently the highest at the basal section and decreased with the increasing distance from the leaf insertion point [74]. The level of OsRBR2 transcripts was several hundred times higher in fully mature leaves than the amounts of mRNA of OsRBR1 and OsRBR2 transcripts detected mostly in differentiated tissues [15]. In maize at least one RBR gene is expressed in all the tissues examined, with the highest levels seen in the shoot apex, where the labelled probe could hybridize to both ZmRBR1 and ZmRBR2 [12]. RBR proteins can be detected both in proliferating and differentiated tissues [11,12]. Increasing the level of the 110 kDa form of ZmRBR1 is associated with the exiting from cell division and entering to differentiation in leaf cells [75], while expression of the RBR3 protein is restricted to the mitotic stage during maize endosperm development [67]. This correlates well with the expression of OsRBR1 predominantly in mitoticaly active tissues [15]. In the case of dicot tobacco the mRNA level of NtRBR1 could be found in all organs examined [13], similarly to alfalfa, where the MsRBR gene showed constitutive transcript levels in all sections of mature leaves, in roots cells and suspension culture [15]. Moreover, based on the expression data available at the Genevestigator database, the AtRBR1 gene is expressed constitutively in different organs [15]. Briefly, single dicot gene transcripts appear to be ubiquitously expressed, while in the cereal monocot species a clear specialization can be observed between the two RB subfamilies already characterized and this suggests distinct function of RBR subfamily members in monocot plants [15,67]. 4.3. Increasing number of known interactors of plant RBR proteins Based on their sequence, one can expect that plant RBR proteins have similar biochemical properties compared to their animal counterparts. Like human pRB, ZmRBR1 and ZmRBR3 are nuclear proteins that bind to both viral and cellular proteins [12,75]. The ZmRBR1 protein can physically interact with mammalian DNA tumor viral oncoproteins, the large-T antigen of simian virus 40 [12] and adenovirus E1A [12], and HPV E7 [10,75]. This RBR species can also interact with plant viral 676 P. Miskolczi et al. / Plant Science 172 (2007) 671–683 replication-associated proteins, such as the RepA protein of wheat dwarf virus [10,11,76] and the tomato golden mosaic virus replication factor AL1 [12,14,77]. The reason so many viral proteins associate with RBR is that many of these contain an LxCxE consensus RB-binding motif, as it is necessary for the Ad E1A, HPV E7 and the RepA proteins to be able to bind to the in vitro translated ZmRBR3 protein in pull-down experiments [67]. Furthermore, the intact LxCxE RBR-binding motif of the replication-associated protein of Maize streak virus is required for invasion of mesophyll cells but it is not necessary for the infectivity of MSV in cereals [78]. The only one exception is the AL1 protein that has a novel, suitably mapped domain instead of the LxCxE motif [14,77]. Interestingly, the two identified mutations in this domain affected AL1-RBR interactions in a different manner and caused altered tissue specificity of infection in plants [14]. Like most viruses, plant D-type cyclins also bind to ZmRBR1 [12,75] utilizing the conserved LxCxE motif for the interaction with the ZmRBR1 protein [75]. Another verification of similar interaction was demonstrated between NtRBR1 and Nicta;CycD3;1 using yeast two hybrid and in vitro binding assays [13]. Other types of cyclins, like the Medsa;CycA2 interacts also with retinoblastoma when its cyclin box remains intact [79], mammalian A-type cyclins also associates with retinoblastoma family proteins as well, but in this case the N-terminal region appears sufficient for binding [80]. It has been shown that ZmRBR1 binds E2F proteins from mammals [12,75], wheat [81] and Arabidopsis [82] sources. NtRBR1 can interact with NtE2F in a yeast two-hybrid assay [83] that was confirmed also by in vitro pull-down assays [84]. This kind of interaction has also been shown recently between the Arabidopsis E2FB and RBR1 proteins [85]. Finally, the list of published interactors of plant RBR proteins can be finished at this moment with numerous chromatin associated proteins, such as maize histone deacetylase (RPD3), which cooperates with ZmRBR1 in repressing gene transcription [86] and WD-40 repeat protein LeMSI1 that binds to the human pRB protein and the ZmRBR1 protein from maize [87]. The CURLY LEAF (CLF) polycomb group protein [88] and the recently characterized FVE (AtMSI4) protein also showed association to the ZmRBR1 protein [89]. Besides, another polycomb protein, the Arabidopsis fertilization independent endosperm (FIE) interacts with human pRB and its plant homologues from Arabidopsis (AtRBR1) and maize (ZmRBR1), but surprisingly this interaction does not occur via the assumed LxCxE conserved motif of the FIE protein [90]. These protein–protein interactions suggest that plant RBRs play an important role in the regulation of gene expression during plant cell cycle and development, involving chromatin remodelling. 4.4. RBR activity is regulated post-transcriptionally by phosphorylation Dependence of the mammalian RB protein function on its phosphorylation status is very well characterized and it is also expected to play an important controlling tool of the plant RBR protein regulation. Concerning this, the first finding was the alteration of the ZmRBR1 phosphorylation state during endosperm development. This protein was shown to be phosphorylated in vitro by an E2F-associated cyclin dependent kinase complex [10]. Just like human RB, ZmRBR1 was a good in vitro substrate of three human G1/S cyclin/CDK complexes [75]. The NtRBR1 protein of tobacco could be phosphorylated in vitro by the tobacco cyclin D/Cdc2 complex [13] and this kinase activity (cyclin D3;3/CDKA) was present only during G1- to S-phases in synchronized tobacco BY-2 cells [91]. These results are consistent with a previous report which showed that a cell cycle regulated kinase activity was associated in vivo with ZmRBR1 and this complex effectively phosphorylated the Cterminal domain of plant RBR protein in vitro [92]. Besides, it has been recently shown that the maize RBR3 protein is also a good substrate of the CycA1;3 associated kinase complex in vitro [67]. In our experiments, the immunoprecipitated MsCDKA;1/A;2 [93,94] complex could phosphorylate the C-terminal region of MsRBR protein in vitro (P. Miskolczi, manuscript in preparation), and the phosphorylation of the RBR C-terminal fragment by MsCDKA;1 is sensitive towards the inhibitory function of KRP from alfalfa [95]. 4.5. Plant RBR proteins play a fundamental role in G1/S transition The revealed sequence and biochemical relations between the plant and animal RB proteins with a high number of homologue interactors strongly suggest that the functions of plant retinoblastoma-related proteins share similarities to their animal counterparts [73,96]. This prediction was supported by experimental results demonstrating the reduced geminivirus DNA replication in wheat cells transiently transfected with plasmids encoding either ZmRBR1 or human p130 [11]. These data suggested that ZmRBR1 controls the G1/S transition in plant cells and was consistent with the fact that geminiviruses need an S-phase environment for their replication [11], similarly to animal DNA tumor viruses [97]. Secondly, in transient expression experiments, ZmRBR1 behaved as a transcriptional repressor (like human pRB) and was capable of suppressing the transcriptional activation by both human HBP1 (an LxCxE-containing activator) and by E2F in human cells [75]. The next indication of functional similarities was the ability of ZmRBR1 to repress both AtE2Fa- and AtE2Fb-mediated transactivation in yeast one-hybrid assays [82]. More recent results showed that the transactivation by NtE2F/NtDP is repressed by co-transfection of NtRBR1, and this repression effect could be overcome by further co-expression of cyclin D in tobacco protoplasts [84]. These findings also underline the expectations that control of cell cycle progression by RBRs through repression of transactivation by E2Fs like to that in animals [2,52]. The above-mentioned results support the widely accepted view that activation of G1/S transition in plants also depends on an RBR control pathway [9,98–100]. It coincides with hyperplastic growth induced by geminivirus infection [101] P. Miskolczi et al. / Plant Science 172 (2007) 671–683 as well as the expression of the RepA protein stimulated cell division in maize callus and tobacco BY2 cell culture where the effect was reduced by over expression of the ZmRBR1 protein [102]. In addition to the viral effects on host cells, the influence of the ORF13 protein of the soil bacterium Agrobacterium rhizogenes has been demonstrated on the plant cell cycle. This protein contains the LxCxE RB-binding motif; therefore, its interaction in vitro with human pRB can be explained [103]. The ectopic expression of ORF13 in tomato increased cell division in the vegetative shoot apical meristem and accelerated formation of leaf primordia. Mutations in the LxCxE motif diminished the influence on cell division rates in the shoot apical meristem, suggesting the possible role of RBR in controlling cell cycle progression in meristematic tissue cells primarily in G1-S phase transition [103]. Besides these facts, existence of six E2F transcription factors and two DP genes in the Arabidopsis genome point to the participation of plant RBR in complex transcription regulation pathways [104]. Phenotypic characterizations of plants overexpressing E2F family members revealed their involvement in regulation of the cell cycle, differentiation, and development [105–109], thus, the central role of the RB/E2F/ DP pathway in regulation of the above mentioned functions have already been convincingly established [6,104]. 4.6. Plant RBR functions in organogenesis The detailed analysis of a series of RBR mutant plants can provide new insight into the functional properties of RBR proteins. The first reported mutant analysis was carried out on homozygotic ZmRBR1 gene insertion mutants in maize, which unexpectedly did not show any obvious phenotypic alterations possibly due to redundancy provided by other RBR genes [96]. By this time, the first established answer to this question, namely, the existence of a compensatory mechanism between different RBR subfamily members in maize was strongly proposed by results obtained in suspension culture where RepA protein mediated inhibition of RBR1 activity was shown to upregulate the RBR3 expression [67]. Analysis of A. thaliana insertion mutant plants, which have only a single copy of the RBR genes, revealed gametophytic lethality, and show certain developmental defects. Retinoblastoma homologue controlled nuclear proliferation in the female gametophyte as a negative regulator during megagametophyte development, as in rbr mutants failure of mitotic arrest of haploid nuclei was observed [110]. Central nucleus initiated autonomous endosperm development was reminiscent of fertilization-independent seed ( fis) mutants [111], therefore, AtRBR1 has an evident function in the cell cycle control during gametogenesis and the repression of autonomous endosperm development. Two of the earlier mentioned interaction partners of RBR proteins, FIE and MSI1 (WD proteins), are members of the polycomb group (PcG), and their mutants show similar effects: autonomous endosperm development in the absence of fertilization [112–117]. FIE share homology with the mam- 677 malian protein embryonic ectoderm development (EED) [118] and with Drosophila extra sex combs (ESC) PcG proteins [119] which form complexes with other members of the PcG group that repress transcription at specific genome sites by modifying the chromatin structure at diverse developmental stages [120]. In animals MSI1 homologues, RbAp46 and RbAp48 interact with the pRB protein [121] and these PcG members belong to those histone deacetylase complexes which play an important role in the modification of chromatin structure and function [122]. The FVE protein that was shown to interact with AtRBR1 and the fve mutant plants provide genetic evidence for the regulation of flowering by repressing flowering locus C (FLC) transcription through a histone deacetylation [89]. Additionally, an other chromatin modifier, the RPD3-type histone deacetylase is involved in RBR-mediated transcriptional regulation, since its antisense expression in Arabidopsis showed different pleotropic effects: changes in organ development including flower abnormality, male and female sterility, asymmetric leaves and late flowering [86,123,124]. Moreover, the Arabidopsis chromatin assembly factor (CAF-1), a heterotrimer of the MS11, FAS1 and FAS2 gene products, is necessary for forming the correct temporal pattern of expression of stem-cell marker genes, such as WUSCHEL (WUS) and SCARECROW (SRC) in shoot or root apical meristems, respectively [125]. As it was discussed above, the MSI1 is an RBR interacting protein in plant [87], suggesting that the participation of the RBR-dependent pathway in the regulation of stem cell populations [104]. The role of RBR pathway in stem cell maintenance has been approved conclusively in Arabidopsis root, where the reduction of RBR gene transcript level increased the amount of stem cell layers without increasing the duration of the cell cycle, while the induced over-expression of RBR protein abrogates the stem cells [126]. This publication also presented some experimental results on the downstream state of RBR-mediated regulation of the SCR patterning gene [126]. Correspondingly, in shoot apical meristem the local overexpression of the RBR protein is sufficient to induce meristem cells into entering initial stages of differentiation, also recently shown by using a microinduction technique [127]. Results obtained by another type of RBR inactivating experimental system, using the inducibly expressed viral inhibitory RepA protein, revealed that RBR limits a cell division in cell type specific manner during Arabidopsis leaf development [128]. At the stage of leaf development when cell proliferation was predominant, RBR restricted cell division, while it controlled the frequency of the endocycle at later phases [128]. Moreover, epidermal cells retain the ability to re-enter the cell cycle, but maintain epidermal cell fate, differently from the mesophyll cell layers [128]. Phenotypic consequences from plants with modified RBR protein levels or changed E2F binding activity indicate that the plant retinoblastoma-related protein has an important cue not only in cell cycle regulation but also in the developmental context in plant organogenesis. This process likely involves a way through chromatin regulation similar to animals [129,130]. 678 P. Miskolczi et al. / Plant Science 172 (2007) 671–683 5. Final conclusions and prospects The complexity of RBR functions in higher plants can be concluded from the wide variety of roles of RBR proteins discussed before [67,96,110,131]. It is assumptive that the evolution of the RB pathway occurred after separation of the fungi from the higher eukaryotic lineage, but preceded the divergence of the plant and animal kingdoms [75]. While animals have at least two homologues of pocket domain proteins, it is an interesting finding that the monocot Gramineae species similarly appear to have two distinct RBR subfamilies [15,73], while only a single representative of this gene was found in the full genome of the A. thaliana [14], and this feature seeming to be common to all dicots [15,73]. These observations strengthen the suggestion that divergent functions of RBRs can contribute to monocot specific characteristics in terms of organ development and re-activation of the cell division cycle. Supporting this assumption, different expression profiles were observed in endosperm and leaf development for distinct RBRs in the case of the analyzed monocot species [15,67]. Interestingly, the characteristics of maize RBR3 are more closely related to p107; for example, the expression of RBR3 is restricted largely to the mitotic phase of endosperm development in maize plant, similar to p107, which exhibits higher expression levels in actively dividing mammalian cells in spite of the maize RBR1 and mammalian pRB genes being constitutively expressing [53,67]. The well-known recalcitrance of cereals to genetic transformation [132] could be a consequence of the possible compensatory mechanism between RBR1 and RBR3, which is in good correlation with facilitated growth and increased transformation efficiency of RepA protein expressing maize transformants [102]. Moreover, yeast two-hybrid analysis has revealed that the Medicago PP2A B00 regulatory subunit, a strong association partner of MsRBR, can interact with OsRBR1, but there was no any detectable association with the OsRBR2 protein [15]; similar characteristic was reported for mammalian pocket proteins [133]. This finding also supported our suggestion that plant RBRs belong to B and C subfamilies have different roles in the regulation of plant cell division and differentiation. To advert to these views remains an exciting point, what kind of functions can be shared and how it consists of compensatory mechanisms between subclasses of monocot RBR proteins. To give a valid explanation to these questions, we should devote further investigations to the monocot RBR family through detailed analyses of different mutants and transgenics involved in the RBR/E2F/CYCD regulating pathway. As we discussed previously, zygotic lethality was observed as a consequence of functional loss of the mouse Rb and Drosophila Rbf genes [134,135] and in accordance with this, Arabidopsis rbr1 mutants show female gametophyte lethality and gametophytic maternal-effect embryo lethality [110]. The effects in later postembryonic stage of organogenesis in Arabidopsis can be investigated by changing active RBR protein levels even in a cell specific manner by using different approaches: e.g. root meristem-specific promoter was used to drive an RBR RNAi silencing construct when the obvious sensitivity of the Arabidopsis root stem cell population was shown. Another good example is the induced RepA proteinbased pocket protein inactivation system, where distinct responses were demonstrated in different cells in terms of maintaining the balance between cell division and endoreplication during Arabidopsis leaf development [128]. These findings affirm the link between RBR and gene expression patterns that mediate stem cell maintenance and demonstrate that there should be a balance between cell division and differentiation needed for correct postembryonic development. Results of studies using the virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) technique to investigate the cellular function of NbRBR1 in Nicotiana benthamiana strengthen the fact that plant retinoblastoma homologues have a key role in negative regulation of cell proliferation, differentiation and also in endoreduplication [136]. The suppression of RBR causes prolonged cell proliferation and causes extra DNA replication in endoreduplicating leaf cells, that generates abnormal organ development like partially retarded trichomes, abnormal leaf formation and plant growth defects [136]. These phenotypes correlated to transcriptional induction of E2F and E2F regulated S-phase genes, indicating the release of E2F transcription factors from RBR-mediated repression in G1/S transition [136]. Observations from other experiments connected to the E2F homologues in plants also favour the generally accepted view that RBR proteins possess a key role in controlling G1/S transition [98–100,137], like in animals [52,138]. Analysis of further mutants of the RB connected pathways could reveal new details in understanding the complex role of controlling of such important mechanisms at both the cellular and the whole organism level. As it turns out from the continuously increasing examples of RBR interacting proteins, plant retinoblastoma homologues are part of a multiprotein complex (or dynamic multiprotein complexes) that supposedly have an important mediating role in chromatin structure regulation [88,90,115,137]. The RBR1/FIE/MSI1/MEA complex could be essential in repressing the activation of E2Fresponsive genes and controlling cell cycle, thus supervising female gamete arrest, while fertilization starts the reinitiation of the cell cycle in the Arabidopsis embryo sac [90,115]. These recent results have given further support to the idea that plant RBR members are also involved in chromatin regulation [88], similarly to animals [129,130]. Nevertheless, identification of numerous interaction partners of animal RB proteins and finding many of them in plants leave no room for doubt that other RBR associated proteins will also be identified in the near future even if the most characteristic classes of the known partners have already been found in plants. We should expect that it will help to clarify and approve some different functional aspects of the monocot RBR subfamilies [15]. While the in vitro phosphorylation of RBR proteins has been demonstrated many times, the phosphatase activity on hyperphosphorylated RBR has not been shown yet, although it was thoroughly investigated in animals [139]. Other types of regulation effects, like ubiquitin-dependent degradation of pRB in animal cells [40] or caspase performed cleavage [44], is not verified up to now and it remains a subject whether and how this regulatory system operates in this respect in plants. P. Miskolczi et al. / Plant Science 172 (2007) 671–683 679 Fig. 3. Summary of the RBR mediated pathway based on the results of the dicot Arabidopsis. The left panel shows the interaction partners of plant RBRs mentioned in this review with their proposed relationships. A summary of the functional contributions based on the reported observations is shown in the middle of figure. The right part of figure outlines the phenotypic effects on the known participants [141–148]. Abbreviations of types of experimental system: OE—over expression; LOF— loss of function; VIGS—virus-induced gene silencing; AS—antisense, RNAi—RNA interference. As we already know, the overall regulation of the cell cycle is broadly parallel in plants and animals, but it is also admitted that plants should deal with the environmental effects in the same place because of their sessile nature and because immobile cells with rigid cell walls have a proper developmental program which can correctly respond to internal and external signals. In order to summarize our current knowledge on the RBR mediated pathways involved in cell cycle regulation and organogenesis, we depicted a scheme of studied participants along with their functional contribution and phenotypic consequences in Fig. 3. We hope that this comparative review can help to understand the complex story about a protein originating from the purple retina to its place in the green plant cell. 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