Abstract

The Japanese pear ‘Osa-Nijisseiki’ (S 2S 4 SM) (SM = stylar-part mutant) is a self-compatible bud mutant that originated from self-incompatible ‘Nijisseiki’ (S 2S 4). The S 4-allele of the pear is deleted and it shows unilateral incompatibility to cultivar with an S 2S 4 genotype. However, when pollen-tube growth was compared between cross-compatible [‘Osa-Nijisseiki’ × ‘Okusankichi’ (S 5S 7)], unilateral-compatible [‘Osa-Nijisseiki’ × ‘Kikusui’ (S 2S 4)], self-compatible (‘Osa-Nijisseiki’ × ‘Osa-Nijisseiki’), and unilateral-incompatible pollination (‘Kikusui’ × ‘Osa-Nijisseiki’), pollen-tube growth clearly showed the following order: cross-compatible > unilateral-compatible > self-compatible > unilateral-incompatible. This indicates that the ‘Osa-Nijisseiki’ style produces specific inhibitor(s) not only to S 2- and S 4-pollen but also “self-pollen”, because the phenotype of S 4 SM-pollen is the same as S 4-pollen. Stylar protein analysis demonstrated that ‘Osa-Nijisseiki’ produces S 2-RNase (RNase associated with S 2-allele) together with a small amount of S 4-RNase. The purified S 4-RNase possessed almost the same inhibitory action on the growth of S 4-pollen-tubes in vitro at 1 μg μl −1 as that from original ‘Nijisseiki’. These results suggest that the depressed growth of unilateral-compatible and self-pollen-tubes in ‘Osa-Nijisseiki’ is due to this biologically active S 4-RNase. Growth of self-pollen-tubes may also be depressed by inhibitor(s) specific to “self-pollen” unrelated to S-alleles.

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.