Abstract

In plant cells, plastids divide by binary fission involving a complex pathway of events. Although there are clear similarities between bacterial and plastid division, limited information exists regarding the mechanism of plastid division in higher plants. Here we demonstrate that AtMinE1, an Arabidopsis homologue of the bacterial MinE topological specificity factor, is an essential integral component of the plastid division machinery. In prokaryotes MinE imparts topological specificity during cell division by blocking division apparatus assembly at sites other than midcell. We demonstrate that overexpression of AtMinE1 in E. coli results in loss of topological specificity and minicell formation suggesting evolutionary conservation of MinE mode of action. We further show that AtMinE1 can indeed act as a topological specificity factor during plastid division revealing that AtMinE1 overexpression in Arabidopsis seedlings results in division site misplacement giving rise to multiple constrictions along the length of plastids. In agreement with cell division studies in bacteria, AtMinE1 and AtMinD1 show distinct intraplastidic localisation patterns suggestive of dynamic localisation behaviour. Taken together our findings demonstrate that AtMinE1 is an evolutionary conserved topological specificity factor, most probably acting in concert with AtMinD1, required for correct plastid division in Arabidopsis.

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