Abstract

BackgroundThe INNER NO OUTER (INO) gene is expressed in the outermost cell layer of the outer integument of bitegmic ovules and is essential for this organ’s growth. The role and cross-species functional conservation of INO orthologs were examined in members of the Solanaceae, which have unitegmic ovules. Unitegmy has evolved several times in disparate angiosperm lineages. INO expression has been observed in the outermost cell layers of all examined unitegmic ovules, but the functional role of INO in unitegmic ovules has not previously been evaluated.ResultsINO orthologs were unambiguously identified in tobacco and tomato by sequence homology. Expression of the tomato INO gene was limited to the outer cell layer of the single integument indicating that this single integument has properties of the outer integument. Expression occurred only after integument initiation, later than observed in ovules of other examined angiosperms. Virus-induced knock-down of expression of the INO ortholog in tobacco inhibited growth of the outer cell layer of the integument leading to a decrease in both integument extension and curvature of the ovule. The altered ovules closely resemble those of the aberrant testa shape (ats) ino mutant combination in Arabidopsis where we see the effect of the ino mutation on a single fused integument produced by the ats mutation. Despite significant sequence identity and similar expression patterns, the tomato INO coding region was not able to complement the Arabidopsis ino mutant.ConclusionsThe similarity of effects of ino mutations on the unitegmic ovules of tobacco and the fused integuments of the Arabidopsis ats mutant show that: 1) INO orthologs play the same role in promoting integument growth in ovules of tobacco and Arabidopsis; and 2) the unitegmic ovules of tobacco (and hence other solanaceous species) are most likely the result of a congenital fusion of two ancestral integuments. Our results further indicate that INO has a conserved role in growth of the outermost cell layer of integuments. The curvature of solanaceous ovules is driven by unequal growth of the outer layers of the single integument that likely correspond to an ancestral outer integument.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12870-016-0835-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The INNER NO OUTER (INO) gene is expressed in the outermost cell layer of the outer integument of bitegmic ovules and is essential for this organ’s growth

  • While there was only a single tomato gene in the INO clade (SlINO), the other sub-families of YABBY genes: CRABS CLAWS (CRC), YAB2, YAB3/filamentous flower (FIL), and YAB5 were each represented by two genes in tomato (Additional file 2: Table S1)

  • Our results show that INO orthologs in the Solanaceae are essential to the growth and expansion of the outer layer(s) of ovule integuments, and the ancestral role of INO is largely conserved in the derived unitegmic ovules of this group

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Summary

Introduction

The INNER NO OUTER (INO) gene is expressed in the outermost cell layer of the outer integument of bitegmic ovules and is essential for this organ’s growth. INO expression has been observed in the outermost cell layers of all examined unitegmic ovules, but the functional role of INO in unitegmic ovules has not previously been evaluated. INO expression has been studied in a range of taxa, including early diverging bitegmic angiosperms such as Cabomba caroliniana (CcINO) (Nymphaeales) and Annona squamosa (Magnoliales) and in these early lineages, the expression of INO in the outermost cell layer of the outer integument is conserved [7, 8]. A unitegmic A. squamosa mutant lacks the INO gene and the outer integument is absent, suggesting that the role of INO in outer integument growth was established early in the angiosperm lineage [7]. INO expression can be used as a practical marker for the outer integument that is useful in understanding the nature and evolution of integuments in angiosperms

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