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1.
Am J Bot ; 111(4): e16309, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38584339

ABSTRACT

PREMISE: Barriers at different reproductive stages contribute to reproductive isolation. Self-incompatibility (SI) systems that prevent self-pollination could also act to control interspecific pollination and contribute to reproductive isolation, preventing hybridization. Here we evaluated whether SI contributes to reproductive isolation among four co-occurring Opuntia species that flower at similar times and may hybridize with each other. METHODS: We assessed whether Opuntia cantabrigiensis, O. robusta, O. streptacantha, and O. tomentosa, were self-compatible and formed hybrid seeds in five manipulation treatments to achieve self-pollination, intraspecific cross-pollination, open pollination (control), interspecific crosses or apomixis, then recorded flowering phenology and synchrony. RESULTS: All species flowered in the spring with a degree of synchrony, so that two pairs of species were predisposed to interspecific pollination (O. cantabrigiensis with O. robusta, O. streptacantha with O. tomentosa). All species had distinct reproductive systems: Opuntia cantabrigiensis is self-incompatible and did not produce hybrid seeds as an interspecific pollen recipient; O. robusta is a dioecious species, which formed a low proportion of hybrid seeds; O. streptacantha and O. tomentosa are self-compatible and produced hybrid seeds. CONCLUSIONS: Opuntia cantabrigiensis had a strong pollen-pistil barrier, likely due to its self-incompatibility. Opuntia robusta, the dioecious species, is an obligate outcrosser and probably partially lost its ability to prevent interspecific pollen germination. Given that the self-compatible species can set hybrid seeds, we conclude that pollen-pistil interaction and high flowering synchrony represent weak barriers; whether reproductive isolation occurs later in their life cycle (e.g., germination or seedling survival) needs to be determined.


Subject(s)
Flowers , Hybridization, Genetic , Opuntia , Pollination , Reproductive Isolation , Seeds , Self-Incompatibility in Flowering Plants , Sympatry , Self-Incompatibility in Flowering Plants/physiology , Flowers/physiology , Seeds/physiology , Opuntia/physiology , Reproduction , Pollen/physiology , Species Specificity , Apomixis/physiology
2.
Protoplasma ; 259(6): 1553-1565, 2022 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35304670

ABSTRACT

Callose (ß-1,3-glucan) is one of the cell wall polymers that plays an important role in many biological processes in plants, including reproductive development. In angiosperms, timely deposition and degradation of callose during sporogenesis accompanies the transition of cells from somatic to generative identity. However, knowledge on the regulation of callose biosynthesis at specific sites of the megasporocyte wall remains limited and the data on its distribution are not conclusive. Establishing the callose deposition pattern in a large number of species can contribute to full understanding of its function in reproductive development. Previous studies focused on callose events in sexual species and only a few concerned apomicts. The main goal of our research was to establish and compare the pattern of callose deposition during early sexual and diplosporous processes in the ovules of some Hieracium, Pilosella and Taraxacum (Asteraceae) species; aniline blue staining technique was used for this purpose. Our findings indicate that callose deposition accompanies both meiotic and diplosporous development of the megaspore mother cell. This suggests that it has similar regulatory functions in intercellular communication regardless of the mode of reproduction. Interestingly, callose deposition followed a different pattern in the studied sexual and diplosporous species compared to most angiosperms as it usually began at the micropylar pole of the megasporocyte. Here, it was only in sexually reproducing H. transylvanicum that callose first appeared at the chalazal pole of the megasporocyte. The present paper additionally discusses the occurrence of aposporous initial cells with callose-rich walls in the ovules of diploid species.


Subject(s)
Apomixis , Asteraceae , Magnoliopsida , Apomixis/physiology , Glucans/metabolism , Magnoliopsida/metabolism , Ovule
3.
Methods Mol Biol ; 2287: 313-322, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34270039

ABSTRACT

Production of doubled haploids (DHs) by androgenesis is a promising and convenient alternative to traditionally used breeding techniques. Low response of anther culture and strong genotype dependency in the development of embryo-like structures (ELS) was reported for oat (Avena sativa L.). Total homozygosity has been reached in one generation. This chapter describes a step-by-step protocol that can be useful for androgenesis studies and oat DH line production through anther culture.


Subject(s)
Apomixis/genetics , Avena/genetics , Genetic Engineering/methods , Apomixis/physiology , Avena/growth & development , Flowers/growth & development , Genotype , Haploidy , Plant Breeding/methods , Reproduction, Asexual/genetics
4.
Methods Mol Biol ; 2287: 333-341, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34270041

ABSTRACT

Anther culture is the most used technique to produce doubled haploid lines in rice. This technique is well developed in a wide range of indica rice genotypes. However, in japonica type, and more specifically, the Mediterranean japonica, the protocols are yet to be optimized. Japonica and indica have different androgenic response, as well as different induction and regeneration rates, albinism ratios and chromosome doubling competence. The step-by-step anther culture protocol presented in this chapter allows to regenerate doubled haploid rice plantlets from anther microspores in 8 months. We also include an in vitro chromosome doubling protocol to induce doubled haploids from haploid plantlets by immersion in a colchicine solution. This chromosome doubling protocol complements the anther culture by taking advantage of the regenerated haploid plantlets.


Subject(s)
Apomixis/genetics , Oryza/genetics , Plant Breeding/methods , Apomixis/physiology , Chromosomes, Plant/genetics , Genetic Engineering/methods , Genotype , Haploidy , Oryza/growth & development , Pollination , Reproduction, Asexual/genetics , Seeds/genetics , Tissue Culture Techniques/methods
5.
Methods Mol Biol ; 2287: 343-360, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34270042

ABSTRACT

Anther culture is an important biotechnological tool for quick recovery of fixed breeding lines with unique gene combinations that might otherwise disappear in the course of an extended series of segregating generations in conventional breeding methods in rice. The haploid microspores in culture or the resultant haploid plants are converted to doubled haploids (homozygotes). Variation in doubled haploid lines from F1 hybrids is due to the recovery of rare gene combinations by single round of recombination following meiosis. Androgenesis in rice is largely species- and genotype-specific. O. glaberrima responds better to anther culture than O. sativa; and japonica sub-group is more responsive to microspore embryogenesis than indica types. The author provides a detailed protocol of the anther culture technique for doubled haploid production in indica rice hybrids amenable for genetic improvement.


Subject(s)
Apomixis/genetics , Oryza/genetics , Plant Breeding/methods , Apomixis/physiology , Chromosomes, Plant/genetics , Genetic Engineering/methods , Genotype , Haploidy , Oryza/growth & development , Pollination , Reproduction, Asexual/genetics , Seeds/genetics , Tissue Culture Techniques/methods
6.
Genes (Basel) ; 11(4)2020 04 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32290084

ABSTRACT

Projections indicate that current plant breeding approaches will be unable to incorporate the global crop yields needed to deliver global food security. Apomixis is a disruptive innovation by which a plant produces clonal seeds capturing heterosis and gene combinations of elite phenotypes. Introducing apomixis into hybrid cultivars is a game-changing development in the current plant breeding paradigm that will accelerate the generation of high-yield cultivars. However, apomixis is a developmentally complex and genetically multifaceted trait. The central problem behind current constraints to apomixis breeding is that the genomic configuration and molecular mechanism that initiate apomixis and guide the formation of a clonal seed are still unknown. Today, not a single explanation about the origin of apomixis offer full empirical coverage, and synthesizing apomixis by manipulating individual genes has failed or produced little success. Overall evidence suggests apomixis arise from a still unknown single event molecular mechanism with multigenic effects. Disentangling the genomic basis and complex genetics behind the emergence of apomixis in plants will require the use of novel experimental approaches benefiting from Next Generation Sequencing technologies and targeting not only reproductive genes, but also the epigenetic and genomic configurations associated with reproductive phenotypes in homoploid sexual and apomictic carriers. A comprehensive picture of most regulatory changes guiding apomixis emergence will be central for successfully installing apomixis into the target species by exploiting genetic modification techniques.


Subject(s)
Apomixis/physiology , Plant Breeding , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Seeds/physiology , Triticum/physiology , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Plant Proteins/genetics
7.
J Exp Bot ; 70(20): 5643-5657, 2019 10 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31294816

ABSTRACT

Germline specification is the first step during sexual and apomictic plant reproduction, and takes place in the nucellus of the ovule, a specialized domain of the reproductive flower tissues. In each case, a sporophytic cell is determined to form the sexual megaspore mother cell (MMC) or an apomictic initial cell (AIC). These differ in their developmental fates: while the MMC undergoes meiosis, the AIC modifies or omits meiosis to form the female gametophyte. Despite great interest in these distinct developmental processes, little is known about their gene regulatory basis. To elucidate the gene regulatory networks underlying germline specification, we conducted tissue-specific transcriptional profiling using laser-assisted microdissection and RNA sequencing to compare the transcriptomes of nucellar tissues between different sexual and apomictic Boechera accessions representing four species and two ploidy levels. This allowed us to distinguish between expression differences caused by genetic background or reproductive mode. Statistical data analysis revealed 45 genes that were significantly differentially expressed, and which potentially play a role for determination of the reproductive mode. Based on annotations, these included F-box genes and E3 ligases that most likely relate to genes previously described as regulators important for germline development. Our findings provide novel insights into the transcriptional basis of sexual and apomictic reproduction.


Subject(s)
Brassicaceae/genetics , Brassicaceae/physiology , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/metabolism , Apomixis/genetics , Apomixis/physiology , Brassicaceae/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant/physiology , Germ Cells , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases/genetics
8.
J Integr Plant Biol ; 61(8): 911-916, 2019 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30697955

ABSTRACT

Apomixis is an asexual reproduction way of plants that can produce clonal offspring through seeds. In this study, we introduced apomixis into rice (Oryza sativa) by mutating OsSPO11-1, OsREC8, OsOSD1, and OsMATL through a CRISPR/Cas9 system. The quadruple mutant showed a transformation from meiosis to mitosis and produced clonal diploid gametes. With mutated Osmatl, which gives rise to haploid induction in plants, the quadruple mutant is expected to be able to be produced apomictic diploid offspring. We named this quadruple mutant as AOP (Apomictic Offspring Producer) for its ability to produce apomictic offspring.


Subject(s)
Apomixis/physiology , Oryza/genetics , Apomixis/genetics , Gene Editing , Mutation/genetics , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Seeds/metabolism , Seeds/physiology
9.
Curr Top Dev Biol ; 131: 565-604, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30612631

ABSTRACT

Apomixis refers to a set of reproductive mechanisms that invariably rely on avoiding meiotic reduction and fertilization of the egg cell to generate clonal seeds. After having long been considered a strictly asexual oddity leading to extinction, the integration of more than 100 years of embryological, genetic, molecular, and ecological research has revealed apomixis as a widely spread component of the dynamic processes that shape flowering plant evolution. Apomixis involves several flexible and versatile developmental pathways that can be combined within the ovule to produce offspring. Here we review the large body of classic and contemporaneous contributions that have addressed unreduced gamete formation, haploid induction, and parthenogenesis in flowering plants. We emphasize similarities and differences between sexual and apomictic reproduction, and highlight their implications for the evolutionary emergence of asexual reproduction through seeds. On the basis of these comparisons, we propose a model that associates the developmental origin of apomixis to a dynamic epigenetic landscape, in which environmental fluctuations reversibly influence female reproductive development through mechanisms of hybridization and polyploidization.


Subject(s)
Apomixis/physiology , Biological Evolution , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Magnoliopsida/growth & development , Plant Proteins/genetics , Magnoliopsida/genetics
10.
Plant Physiol ; 177(3): 1027-1049, 2018 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29844228

ABSTRACT

Apomixis results in asexual seed formation where progeny are identical to the maternal plant. In ovules of apomictic species of the Hieracium subgenus Pilosella, meiosis of the megaspore mother cell generates four megaspores. Aposporous initial (AI) cells form during meiosis in most ovules. The sexual pathway terminates during functional megaspore (FM) differentiation, when an enlarged AI undergoes mitosis to form an aposporous female gametophyte. Then, the mitotically programmed FM dies along with the three other megaspores by unknown mechanisms. Transcriptomes of laser-dissected AIs, ovule cells, and ovaries from apomicts and AI-deficient mutants were analyzed to understand the pathways involved. The steps leading to AI mitosis and sexual pathway termination were determined using antibodies against arabinogalactan protein epitopes found to mark both sexual and aposporous female gametophyte lineages at inception. At most, four AIs differentiated near developing megaspores. The first expanding AI cell to contact the FM formed a functional AI that underwent mitosis soon after megaspore degeneration. Transcriptome analyses indicated that the enlarged, laser-captured AIs were arrested in the S/G2 phase of the cell cycle and were metabolically active. Further comparisons with AI-deficient mutants showed that AIs were enriched in transcripts encoding homologs of genes involved in, and potentially antagonistic to, known FM specification pathways. We propose that AI and FM cell contact provides cues required for AI mitosis and megaspore degeneration. Specific candidates to further interrogate AI-FM interactions were identified here and include Hieracium arabinogalactan protein family genes.


Subject(s)
Apomixis/physiology , Asteraceae/physiology , Ovule/cytology , Ovule/physiology , Plant Proteins/genetics , Asteraceae/genetics , Carbohydrate Metabolism/genetics , Cell Cycle/genetics , Enzymes/genetics , Enzymes/metabolism , Gene Expression Profiling/methods , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Genome, Plant , Mitosis , Mutation , Phylogeny , Plant Cells/immunology , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plants, Genetically Modified , Nicotiana/genetics
11.
Plant Mol Biol ; 96(1-2): 53-67, 2018 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29119346

ABSTRACT

KEY MESSAGE: ncRNA PN_LNC_N13 shows contrasting expression in reproductive organs of sexual and apomictic Paspalum notatum genotypes. Apomictic plants set genetically maternal seeds whose embryos derive by parthenogenesis from unreduced egg cells, giving rise to clonal offspring. Several Paspalum notatum apomixis related genes were identified in prior work by comparative transcriptome analyses. Here, one of these candidates (namely N13) was characterized. N13 belongs to a Paspalum gene family including 30-60 members, of which at least eight are expressed at moderate levels in florets. The sequences of these genes show no functional ORFs, but include segments of different protein coding genes. Particularly, N13 shows partial identity to maize gene BT068773 (RESPONSE REGULATOR 6). Secondary structure predictions as well as mature miRNA and target cleavage detection suggested that N13 is not a miRNA precursor. Moreover, N13 family members produce abundant 24-nucleotide small RNAs along extensive parts of their sequences. Surveys in the GREENC and CANTATA databases indicated similarity with plant long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) involved in splicing regulation; consequently, N13 was renamed as PN_LNC_N13. The Paspalum BT068773 predicted ortholog (N13TAR) originates floral transcript variants shorter than the canonical maize isoform and with possible structural differences between the apomictic and sexual types. PN_LNC_N13 is expressed only in apomictic plants and displays quantitative representation variation across reproductive developmental stages. However, PN_LNC_N13-like homologs and/or its derived sRNAs showed overall a higher representation in ovules of sexual plants at late premeiosis. Our results suggest the existence of a whole family of N13-like lncRNAs possibly involved in splicing regulation, with some members characterized by differential activity across reproductive types.


Subject(s)
RNA, Long Noncoding/genetics , Seeds/physiology , Apomixis/genetics , Apomixis/physiology , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant/physiology , Genotype , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Seeds/genetics
12.
Methods Mol Biol ; 1669: 17-34, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28936646

ABSTRACT

Apomixis, commonly defined as asexual reproduction through seed, is a reproductive trait that occurs in only a few minor crops, but would be highly valuable in major crops. Apomixis results in seed-derived progenies that are genetically identical to their maternal parent. The advantage of apomixis would lie in seed propagation of elite food, feed, and biofuel crops that are heterozygous such as hybrid corn and switchgrass or self-pollinating crops for which no commercial-scale hybrid production system is available. While hybrid plants often outperform parental lines in growth and higher yields, production of hybrid seed is accomplished through carefully controlled, labor intensive crosses. Both small farmers in developing countries who produce their own seed and commercial companies that market hybrid seed could benefit from the establishment of engineered apomixis in plants. In this chapter, we review what has been learned from studying natural apomicts and mutations in sexual plants leading to apomixis-like development, plus discuss how the components of apomixis could be successfully engineered in plants.


Subject(s)
Apomixis/physiology , Hybrid Vigor/physiology , Apomixis/genetics , Crops, Agricultural/genetics , Crops, Agricultural/physiology , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant/physiology , Hybrid Vigor/genetics , Panicum/genetics , Panicum/physiology , Pollination/genetics , Pollination/physiology , Seeds/genetics , Seeds/physiology , Zea mays/genetics , Zea mays/physiology
13.
BMC Biol ; 14(1): 86, 2016 10 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27716180

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Application of apomixis, or asexual seed formation, in crop breeding would allow rapid fixation of complex traits, economizing improved crop delivery. Identification of apomixis genes is confounded by the polyploid nature, high genome complexity and lack of genomic sequence integration with reproductive tissue transcriptomes in most apomicts. RESULTS: A genomic and transcriptomic resource was developed for Hieracium subgenus Pilosella (Asteraceae) which incorporates characterized sexual, apomictic and mutant apomict plants exhibiting reversion to sexual reproduction. Apomicts develop additional female gametogenic cells that suppress the sexual pathway in ovules. Disrupting small RNA pathways in sexual Arabidopsis also induces extra female gametogenic cells; therefore, the resource was used to examine if changes in small RNA pathways correlate with apomixis initiation. An initial characterization of small RNA pathway genes within Hieracium was undertaken, and ovary-expressed ARGONAUTE genes were identified and cloned. Comparisons of whole ovary transcriptomes from mutant apomicts, relative to the parental apomict, revealed that differentially expressed genes were enriched for processes involved in small RNA biogenesis and chromatin silencing. Small RNA profiles within mutant ovaries did not reveal large-scale alterations in composition or length distributions; however, a small number of differentially expressed, putative small RNA targets were identified. CONCLUSIONS: The established Hieracium resource represents a substantial contribution towards the investigation of early sexual and apomictic female gamete development, and the generation of new candidate genes and markers. Observed changes in small RNA targets and biogenesis pathways within sexual and apomictic ovaries will underlie future functional research into apomixis initiation in Hieracium.


Subject(s)
Apomixis/genetics , Asteraceae/genetics , RNA, Plant/genetics , Apomixis/physiology , Asteraceae/physiology , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant/genetics , Genes, Plant/genetics , Ovule/genetics , Ovule/physiology , Seeds/genetics , Seeds/physiology
15.
New Phytol ; 209(3): 1313-23, 2016 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26508329

ABSTRACT

Biological invasions can be associated with shifts of the species' climatic niches but the incidence of such shifts is under debate. The reproductive system might be a key factor controlling such shifts because it influences a species' evolutionary flexibility. However, the link between reproductive systems and niche dynamics in plant invasions has been little studied so far. We compiled global occurrence data sets of 13 congeneric sexual and apomictic species pairs, and used principal components analysis (PCA) and kernel smoothers to compare changes in climatic niche optima, breadths and unfilling/expansion between native and alien ranges. Niche change metrics were compared between sexual and apomictic species. All 26 species showed changes in niche optima and/or breadth and 14 species significantly expanded their climatic niches. However, we found no effect of the reproductive system on niche dynamics. Instead, species with narrower native niches showed higher rates of niche expansion in the alien ranges. Our results suggest that niche shifts are frequent in plant invasions but evolutionary potential may not be of major importance for such shifts. Niche dynamics rather appear to be driven by changes of the realized niche without adaptive change of the fundamental climatic niche.


Subject(s)
Apomixis/physiology , Ecosystem , Flowers/physiology , Introduced Species , Species Specificity
16.
Plant Biol (Stuttg) ; 18(1): 132-8, 2016 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26152277

ABSTRACT

Apomixis is an asexual seed reproduction mechanism thorough which embryos are originated from material tissues inside the ovules, without precedent fertilisation. It allows plants to colonise new habitats, even in places where flower visitors are scarce or where plants are isolate. Apomixis seems to be related to pollen sterility and, in species with flowers that offer pollen as a reward for pollinators, the amount or quality of the pollen offered by these species may influence the amount of the visits and specific composition of the visitors. In order to test this hypothesis, we studied breeding systems of 16 species of Melastomataceae and their flower visitors, evaluating composition and abundance of the visits to apomictic and sexual species. Apomictic plants with no viable pollen or with pollen with low viability did not receive visits from pollinators, and consequently probably produce strictly apomictic fruits. On the other hand, apomictic and sexual plants with high pollen viability do receive visits; in this case, apomictic plants may produce fruits and seeds through both sexual and apomictic methods. The species composition of insects visiting Melastomataceae with high pollen viability was similar, regardless of whether the plants were apomictic or not. It seems that pollen viability levels are important to determine visits to the flowers irrespective of breeding system.


Subject(s)
Apomixis/physiology , Melastomataceae/physiology , Plant Infertility/physiology , Pollination/physiology , Animals , Brazil , Flowers , Insecta , Pollen , Seeds
17.
Ann Bot ; 112(5): 767-87, 2013 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23864004

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Apomixis is an alternative route of plant reproduction that produces individuals genetically identical to the mother plant through seeds. Apomixis is desirable in agriculture, because it guarantees the perpetuation of superior genotypes (i.e. heterotic hybrid seeds) by self-seeding without loss of hybrid vigour. The Paspalum genus, an archetypal model system for mining apomixis gene(s), is composed of about 370 species that have extremely diverse reproductive systems, including self-incompatibility, self-fertility, full sexual reproduction, and facultative or obligate apomixis. Barriers to interspecific hybridization are relaxed in this genus, allowing the production of new hybrids from many different parental combinations. Paspalum is also tolerant to various parental genome contributions to the endosperm, allowing analyses of how sexually reproducing crop species might escape from dosage effects in the endosperm. SCOPE: In this article, the available literature characterizing apomixis in Paspalum spp. and its use in breeding is critically reviewed. In particular, a comparison is made across species of the structure and function of the genomic region controlling apomixis in order to identify a common core region shared by all apomictic Paspalum species and where apomixis genes are likely to be localized. Candidate genes are discussed, either as possible genetic determinants (including homologs to signal transduction and RNA methylation genes) or as downstream factors (such as cell-to-cell signalling and auxin response genes) depending, respectively, on their co-segregation with apomixis or less. Strategies to validate the role of candidate genes in apomictic process are also discussed, with special emphasis on plant transformation in natural apomictic species.


Subject(s)
Apomixis/physiology , Paspalum/physiology , Poaceae/physiology , Apomixis/genetics , Breeding , Chromosome Mapping , Genes, Plant/genetics , Paspalum/genetics , Poaceae/genetics , Reproduction , Signal Transduction , Transformation, Genetic
18.
Plant Physiol ; 163(1): 216-31, 2013 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23864557

ABSTRACT

Hieracium praealtum forms seeds asexually by apomixis. During ovule development, sexual reproduction initiates with megaspore mother cell entry into meiosis and formation of a tetrad of haploid megaspores. The sexual pathway ceases when a diploid aposporous initial (AI) cell differentiates, enlarges, and undergoes mitosis, forming an aposporous embryo sac that displaces sexual structures. Embryo and endosperm development in aposporous embryo sacs is fertilization independent. Transcriptional data relating to apomixis initiation in Hieracium spp. ovules is scarce and the functional identity of the AI cell relative to other ovule cell types is unclear. Enlarging AI cells with undivided nuclei, early aposporous embryo sacs containing two to four nuclei, and random groups of sporophytic ovule cells not undergoing these events were collected by laser capture microdissection. Isolated amplified messenger RNA samples were sequenced using the 454 pyrosequencing platform and comparatively analyzed to establish indicative roles of the captured cell types. Transcriptome and protein motif analyses showed that approximately one-half of the assembled contigs identified homologous sequences in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), of which the vast majority were expressed during early Arabidopsis ovule development. The sporophytic ovule cells were enriched in signaling functions. Gene expression indicative of meiosis was notably absent in enlarging AI cells, consistent with subsequent aposporous embryo sac formation without meiosis. The AI cell transcriptome was most similar to the early aposporous embryo sac transcriptome when comparing known functional annotations and both shared expressed genes involved in gametophyte development, suggesting that the enlarging AI cell is already transitioning to an embryo sac program prior to mitotic division.


Subject(s)
Apomixis/physiology , Asteraceae/cytology , Mitosis , Asteraceae/growth & development , Asteraceae/physiology , Models, Biological , RNA, Plant/metabolism , Seeds/cytology , Seeds/growth & development , Seeds/physiology , Signal Transduction
19.
Plant Reprod ; 26(3): 159-79, 2013 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23852378

ABSTRACT

Seed is one of the key factors of crop productivity. Therefore, a comprehension of the mechanisms underlying seed formation in cultivated plants is crucial for the quantitative and qualitative progress of agricultural production. In angiosperms, two pathways of reproduction through seed exist: sexual or amphimictic, and asexual or apomictic; the former is largely exploited by seed companies for breeding new varieties, whereas the latter is receiving continuously increasing attention from both scientific and industrial sectors in basic research projects. If apomixis is engineered into sexual crops in a controlled manner, its impact on agriculture will be broad and profound. In fact, apomixis will allow clonal seed production and thus enable efficient and consistent yields of high-quality seeds, fruits, and vegetables at lower costs. The development of apomixis technology is expected to have a revolutionary impact on agricultural and food production by reducing cost and breeding time, and avoiding the complications that are typical of sexual reproduction (e.g., incompatibility barriers) and vegetative propagation (e.g., viral transfer). However, the development of apomixis technology in agriculture requires a deeper knowledge of the mechanisms that regulate reproductive development in plants. This knowledge is a necessary prerequisite to understanding the genetic control of the apomictic process and its deviations from the sexual process. Our molecular understanding of apomixis will be greatly advanced when genes that are specifically or differentially expressed during embryo and embryo sac formation are discovered. In our review, we report the main findings on this subject by examining two approaches: i) analysis of the apomictic process in natural apomictic species to search for genes controlling apomixis and ii) analysis of gene mutations resembling apomixis or its components in species that normally reproduce sexually. In fact, our opinion is that a novel perspective on this old dilemma pertaining to the molecular control of apomixis can emerge from a cross-check among candidate genes in natural apomicts and a high-throughput analysis of sexual mutants.


Subject(s)
Apomixis/physiology , Reproduction/physiology , Apomixis/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Plants/genetics , Plants/metabolism , Reproduction/genetics , Seeds/genetics , Seeds/physiology
20.
Genet Mol Res ; 12(2): 988-94, 2013 Apr 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23613244

ABSTRACT

Cassava is the most important staple crop in the Tropics and Subtropics. Apomixis may revolutionize its production due to various attributes. These potential advantages include production by true seed, maintaining cultivar superiority over generations without segregation, and avoiding contamination by bacteria and viruses. Historically, apomixis was initially observed by International Institute of Tropical Agriculture researchers, in the 1980s, in homogenous progeny of hybrid crosses. Later, from 1980 through 2010, apomixis was extensively studied by Universidade de Brasília, in order to determine contributing mechanisms and occurrence. Apomixis genes occur naturally at low frequencies in cultivated cassava and can be transferred by crosses with wild species. Apparently, apomixis in cassava is controlled by more than one recessive gene, which act in an additive form. Aneuploidy is associated with apomixis in cassava and can provide the double dosages necessary for recessive gene action. By using molecular techniques, genetic homogeneous progeny has been demonstrated, while embryonic exams have shown nucellar multiembryos. Polyploidy was found to increase apomixis percentage. From an evolutionary viewpoint, polyploidy has contributed to production of new species, when combined with apomixis. Recently, somatic embryos have been detected in the integument, revealing a rare model of apomixis that has only been documented in cassava.


Subject(s)
Apomixis/physiology , Manihot/physiology , Biological Evolution , Breeding , Gene Frequency , Genes, Plant , Polyploidy
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