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Complementary Medicines
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1.
Plant Reprod ; 29(1-2): 165-77, 2016 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26728622

ABSTRACT

KEY MESSAGE: Cowpea reproductive tools. Vigna unguiculata L. Walp. (cowpea) is recognized as a major legume food crop in Africa, but seed yields remain low in most varieties adapted to local conditions. The development of hybrid cowpea seed that could be saved after each generation, enabling significant yield increases, will require manipulation of reproductive development from a sexual to an asexual mode. To develop new technologies that could support the biotechnological manipulation of reproductive development in cowpea, we examined gametogenesis and seed formation in two transformable, African-adapted, day-length-insensitive varieties. Here, we show that these two varieties exhibit distinct morphological and phenological traits but share a common developmental sequence in terms of ovule formation and gametogenesis. We present a reproductive calendar that allows prediction of male and female gametogenesis on the basis of sporophytic parameters related to floral bud size and reproductive organ development, determining that gametogenesis occurs more rapidly in the anther than in the ovule. We also show that the mode of megagametogenesis is of the Polygonum-type and not Oenothera-type, as previously reported. Finally, we developed a whole-mount immunolocalization protocol and applied it to detect meiotic proteins in the cowpea megaspore mother cell, opening opportunities for comparing the dynamics of protein localization during male and female meiosis, as well as other reproductive events in this emerging legume model system.


Subject(s)
Gametogenesis, Plant , Ovule/growth & development , Pollen/growth & development , Vigna/growth & development , Cell Differentiation , Fertilization , Ovule/cytology , Pollen/cytology , Vigna/cytology
2.
Plant J ; 66(5): 890-902, 2011 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21418351

ABSTRACT

Asexual seed formation, or apomixis, in the Hieracium subgenus Pilosella is controlled by two dominant independent genetic loci, LOSS OF APOMEIOSIS (LOA) and LOSS OF PARTHENOGENESIS (LOP). We examined apomixis mutants that had lost function in one or both loci to establish their developmental roles during seed formation. In apomicts, sexual reproduction is initiated first. Somatic aposporous initial (AI) cells differentiate near meiotic cells, and the sexual pathway is terminated as AI cells undergo mitotic embryo sac formation. Seed initiation is fertilization-independent. Using a partially penetrant cytotoxic reporter to inhibit meioisis, we showed that developmental events leading to the completion of meiotic tetrad formation are required for AI cell formation. Sexual initiation may therefore stimulate activity of the LOA locus, which was found to be required for AI cell formation and subsequent suppression of the sexual pathway. AI cells undergo nuclear division to form embryo sacs, in which LOP functions gametophytically to stimulate fertilization-independent embryo and endosperm formation. Loss of function in either locus results in partial reversion to sexual reproduction, and loss of function in both loci results in total reversion to sexual reproduction. Therefore, in these apomicts, sexual reproduction is the default reproductive mode upon which apomixis is superimposed. These loci are unlikely to encode genes essential for sexual reproduction, but may function to recruit the sexual machinery at specific time points to enable apomixis.


Subject(s)
Asteraceae/genetics , Genes, Plant , Genetic Loci , Ovule/cytology , Reproduction, Asexual , Seeds/cytology , Asteraceae/cytology , Asteraceae/growth & development , Asteraceae/radiation effects , Chromosome Segregation , Crosses, Genetic , Gametogenesis, Plant , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Germination , Meiosis , Ovule/growth & development , Ovule/radiation effects , Plants, Genetically Modified/genetics , Plants, Genetically Modified/growth & development , Pollen/growth & development , Pollination , Seeds/growth & development , Seeds/radiation effects , Tetraploidy
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