Abstract

Tobacco seeds show a coat-imposed dormancy in which the seed envelope tissues (testa and endosperm) impose a physical constraint on the radicle protrusion. The germination-limiting process is represented by the endosperm rupture which is induced by cell-wall weakening. Transgenic tobacco seeds, obtained by insertion of exogenous genes codifying for seed-based oral vaccines (F18 and VT2eB), showed retarded germination with respect to the wild type and modified the expression of endogenous proteins. Morphological and proteomic analyses of wild type and transgenic seeds revealed new insights into factors influencing seed germination. Our data showed that the interference of exogenous DNA influences the germination rather than the dormancy release, by modifying the maturation process. Dry seeds of F18 and VT2eB transgenic lines accumulated a higher amount of reserve and stress–related proteins with respect to the wild type. Moreover, the storage proteins accumulated in tobacco F18 and VT2eB dry seeds have structural properties that do not enable the early limited proteolysis observed in the wild type. Morphological observations by electron and light microscopy revealed a retarded mobilization of the storage material from protein and lipid bodies in transgenic seeds, thus impairing water imbibition and embryo elongation. In addition, both F18 and VT2eB dry seeds are more rounded than the wild type. Both the morphological and biochemical characteristics of transgenic seeds mimic the seed persistent profile, in which their roundness enables them to be buried in the soil, while the higher content of storage material enables the hypocotyl to elongate more and the cotyledons to emerge.

Highlights

  • In angiosperms, double fertilization enables the triploid endosperm to develop as reserve tissue, to supply nutrients for the embryo during germination and seedling [1]

  • The presence of VT2eB and F18 genes in the two lines of transgenic seeds was assessed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR)

  • Preliminary experiments of seed germination on soil revealed a significant delay of F18 and VT2eB seedlings compared to WT, in four independent experiments

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Summary

Introduction

Double fertilization enables the triploid endosperm to develop as reserve tissue, to supply nutrients for the embryo during germination and seedling [1]. Storage proteins are synthesized during seed maturation and are conserved in specialized tissues, such as in the endosperm and/or in the parenchyma of cotyledons [2]. The way storage proteins are protected during seed maturation from uncontrolled proteolysis involves the deposit of reserve proteins into membrane-bounded organelles as vacuoles or protein bodies (PB) [3]. The structural features of reserve proteins protect them from proteinases deposited in the same compartments, storage proteins such as legumins, albumins, some lectins and vicilins undergo limited proteolysis within the storage vacuoles [4, 5]

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