Abstract

The fertilization-related kinase 1 (ScFRK1), a nuclear-localized mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase (MAPKKK) from the wild potato species Solanum chacoense, belongs to a small group of pMEKKs that do not possess an extended N- or C-terminal regulatory domain. Initially selected based on its highly specific expression profile following fertilization, in situ expression analyses revealed that the ScFRK1 gene is also expressed early on during female gametophyte development in the integument and megaspore mother cell and, later, in the synergid and egg cells of the embryo sac. ScFRK1 mRNAs are also detected in pollen mother cells. Transgenic plants with lower or barely detectable levels of ScFRK1 mRNAs lead to the production of small fruits with severely reduced seed set, resulting from a concomitant decline in the number of normal embryo sacs produced. Megagametogenesis and microgametogenesis were affected, as megaspores did not progress beyond the functional megaspore (FG1) stage and the microspore collapsed around the first pollen mitosis. As for other mutants that affect embryo sac development, pollen tube guidance was severely affected in the ScFRK1 transgenic lines. Gametophyte to sporophyte communication was also affected, as observed from a marked change in the transcriptomic profiles of the sporophytic tissues of the ovule. The ScFRK1 MAPKKK is thus involved in a signalling cascade that regulates both male and female gamete development.

Highlights

  • Flowering plants or angiosperms exhibit a two-staged life cycle, alternating between a short-lived haploid gametophyte generation composed of only a few cells, and a temporally predominant diploid sporophytic generation

  • Using a subtraction selection screen targeting only genes weakly expressed during fertilization and early embryogenesis, ive members from the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase (MAPKKK) family were isolated in S. chacoense, a self-incompatible wild potato species (Germain et al, 2005)

  • In Arabidopsis thaliana, 21 MAPKKKs are classiied as pMEKKs, with ive of those (AtMAPKKK17–AtMAPKKK21)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Flowering plants or angiosperms exhibit a two-staged life cycle, alternating between a short-lived haploid gametophyte generation composed of only a few cells, and a temporally predominant diploid sporophytic generation. The haploid generation begins with specialized diploid cells (mother cells) of the sporophyte that undergo meiosis to give rise to haploid spores. These spores undergo cell proliferation and differentiation to produce multicellular haploid gametophytes. The major function of gametophyte generation is to produce haploid gametes, the egg and sperm cells, which, upon fusion (one sperm cell fusing with the egg cell and the other with the central cell, giving rise to the embryo and endosperm, respectively), will lead to a new sporophytic generation

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

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