Abstract

LP28, a pollen-specific LEA-like protein identified in Lilium longiflorum purportedly related to the desiccation tolerance of pollen, was localized during male gametogenesis using immuno-electron microscopy. At premeiotic interphase, LP28 label is absent from the microsporocyte. LP28 label was first detected in the cell wall of the microsporocyte at meiotic prophase I. LP28 gradually increased as the cell wall thickened. In the dyad, after the first meiotic division, LP28 label also appeared in the septum. In the tetrad, after the second meiotic division, LP28 was detected throughout the cell wall, including the septa. Immunolabeling of callose during meiosis indicated that the appearance and localization of LP28 was very similar to that of callose. After the microspores were released from the tetrad by digesting the callosic cell wall, LP28 was not found in the microspores. In bicellular pollen, just after microspore mitosis, LP28 appeared in the generative cell wall, which also consisted of callose. After pollen germination, LP28 also accumulated in the callosic layer of the elongated pollen tube wall and the callose plug. Thus, LP28 colocalized with the callosic cell wall during male gametogenesis. The possible role of LP28 with respect to wall formation during meiosis and pollen development is discussed.

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