In higher plants, meristem organization and cell division regulation are two fundamentally important and intimately related biological processes. Identifying and isolating regulatory genes in these processes is essential for understanding higher plant growth and development. We describe the molecular isolation and analyses of an Arabidopsis gene, TSO1, which regulates both of these processes. We previously showed that tso1 mutants displayed defects in cell division of floral meristem cells including partially formed cell walls, increased DNA content, and multinucleated cells (Liu, Z., Running, M. P. and Meyerowitz, E. M. (1997). Development 124, 665-672). Here, we characterize a second defect of tso1 in inflorescence meristem development and show that the enlarged inflorescence in tso1 mutants results from repeated division of one inflorescence meristem into two or more inflorescence meristems. Using a map-based approach, we isolated the TSO1 gene and found that TSO1 encodes a protein with cysteine-rich repeats bearing similarity to Drosophila Enhancer of zeste and its plant homologs. In situ TSO1 mRNA expression pattern and the nuclear localization of TSO1-GFP are consistent with a regulatory role of TSO1 in floral meristem cell division and in inflorescence meristem organization.

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