植物における初期生殖系列分離の系譜追跡研究(Cell Lineage Tracing Reveals Early Segregated Germline in Plants)

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2026-04-01 中国科学院(CAS)

中国科学院遺伝発生生物学研究所(IGDB)の銭文峰研究チームは、シロイヌナズナを用いた細胞系譜追跡により、植物における生殖細胞系列(germline)が従来考えられていたより早期に分離されることを明らかにした。動的編集型の系譜記録技術を用いて細胞分裂過程の変異を蓄積・解析し、体細胞と生殖細胞の系統関係を再構築。その結果、花形成時の遅い分離に加え、分枝形成前に起こる早期分離も存在することが判明し、植物にもワイスマン説に対応する仕組みがあることを示した。発生可塑性と遺伝的安定性の両立機構の理解に貢献する成果である。

植物における初期生殖系列分離の系譜追跡研究(Cell Lineage Tracing Reveals Early Segregated Germline in Plants)
Lineage tracing in Arabidopsis reveals dual origins of germline cells. (Image by IGDB)

<関連情報>

シロイヌナズナにおけるワイスマンの遺伝資源説の検証 Testing Weismann’s germ plasm theory in Arabidopsis

Haotian Guo, Geyu Zhang, Lu Gao, Yang Liu, Yu Wang, Zhan Liu, Chunmei Guan, Chun Zhang, Li Liu, Qing Huan, Wenfeng Qian
Current Biology  Available online: 30 March 2026
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2026.03.003

Highlights

  • Dynamic editing-based lineage tracing is applied to Arabidopsis
  • Some progenies from different plant branches cluster in the cell lineage tree
  • Green progenies can arise from albino siliques in the Atmsh1 mutant
  • Late-arising mutations are infrequently detected in progeny

Summary

Weismann’s germ plasm theory proposed that germline cells are set aside early in development, ensuring that mutations arising in somatic tissues during an organism’s lifetime are not inherited. While this principle has been well supported in animals, it has not been rigorously tested in plants. Plants differ fundamentally from animals in that their meristematic cells drive continuous growth and organ formation throughout life, leading to the long-held view that the plant germline segregates late. Here, we used a dynamic genome-editing lineage tracing system to construct cell lineages in Arabidopsis thaliana, including both somatic and germline cells. Our analysis of the cell lineage tree revealed two distinct germline segregation patterns. While some germline cells clustered with somatic cells from their branch of origin (consistent with late segregation), others from different branches shared a recent common ancestry (indicative of early segregation). This supports a dual-origin model for germline cells in A. thaliana: early-segregated germlines represent a plant counterpart to Weismann’s barrier, reducing the risk of transmitting excessive mutations across generations, whereas late-segregated germlines can inherit beneficial mutations acquired during development, potentially facilitating adaptation.

細胞遺伝子工学
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