Abstract

TaMs1 encodes a non-specific lipid transfer protein (nsLTP) and is required for pollen development in wheat. Although MS1 is a Poaceae-specific gene, the roles of MS1 genes in other Poaceae plants are unknown, especially in rice and maize. Here, we identified one ortholog in rice (OsLTPg29) and two orthologs in maize (ZmLTPg11 and ZmLTPx2). Similar to TaMs1, both OsLTPg29 and ZmLTPg11 genes are specifically expressed in the microsporocytes, and both OsLTPg29 and ZmLTPg11 proteins showed lipid-binding ability to phosphatidic acid and several phosphoinositides. To determine their roles in pollen development, we created osltpg29 mutants and zmltpg11zmltpx2 double mutants by CRISPR/Cas9. osltpg29, not zmltpg11zmltpx2, is defective in pollen development, and only OsLTPg29, not ZmLTPg11, can rescue the male sterility of tams1 mutant. Our results demonstrate that the biological function of MS1 in pollen development differs in the evolution of Poaceae plants.

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