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1.
Summary Two distinct segregation patterns are recognized after G X W plastid crosses in Pelargonium. Type I parents produce offspring in which maternal zygotes are frequent, biparental intermediate, and paternal zygotes rare (MZ>BPZ>PZ), as defined by the presence or absence of green or white plastids in the young embryos into which the zygotes develop. Type II parents produce offspring in which maternal and paternal zygotes are frequent with biparental zygotes the least frequent class (MZ>BPZPr 1 Pr 1. Type II plants, which do not breed true, are regarded as heterozygotes — Pr 1 Pr 2. The nuclear gene is symbolized as Pr as it is presumed to control alternative patterns of plastid segregation through an effect on plastid replication.Selfs and intercrosses of heterozygous plants segregate in an unexpected 1:1 ratio and not the expected 3:1 (1:2:1). The alternative homozygote — Pr 2 Pr 2 — could not be detected. Reciprocal crosses between heterozygotes (Pr 1 Pr 2) and homozygotes (Pr 1 Pr 1) give the expected 1:1 ratio when the Pr 2 allele is derived from the male, whereas there is often, but not always, a highly significant deviation from 1:1 when the Pr 2 allele is derived from the female.A simple explanation, which is not wholly satisfactory, is to assume that Pr 2 is a gametophytic lethal on the female side. An alternative, or additional, explanation is that an incompatibility mechanism is involved in which Pr 1 is a self-compatible allele, Pr 2 a self-incompatible allele, and Pr 1-Pr 2 cross-compatible alleles. Successful fertilization is then determined by sporophytic control on the male side and gametophytic control on the female side.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Plastids are plant cellular organelles that are generally inherited from the maternal parent in the angiosperms. Many species exhibit biparental inheritance of plastids, but usually with a predominantly maternal influence. In contrast to this, we report strong paternal inheritance of plastids in reciprocal crosses of alfalfa, Medicago sativa, by following restriction fragment length polymorphisms for plastid DNA in two normal green plastids. Mitochondrial inheritance remained exclusively maternal.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Genetic studies have demonstrated biparental inheritance of plastids in alfalfa. The ratio of paternal to maternal plastids in the progeny varies according to the genotypes of the parents, which can be classified as strong or weak transmitters of plastids. Previous cytological investigations of generative cells and male gametes have provided no consistent explanation for plastid inheritance patterns among genotypes. However, plastids in the mature egg cells of a strong female genotype (6–4) were found to be more numerous and larger than in mature eggs of a weak female genotype (CUF-B), and the plastids in 6–4 eggs are positioned equally around the nucleus. In CUF-B, the majority of plastids are positioned below (toward the micropyle) the mid level of the nucleus, which is the future division plane of the zygote. Since only the apical portion of the zygote produces the embryo proper, plastids in the basal portion were predicted to become included in the suspensor cells and not be inherited. In the present study, we examined zygotes and a two-celled proembryo from a cross between CUF-B and a strong male genotype (301), a cross that results in over 90% of the progeny possessing paternal plastids only. Our results indicate that the distribution of plastids observed in the CUF-B egg cell is maintained through the first division of the zygote. Further, paternal plastids are similarly distributed; however, within the apical portion of the zygote and in the apical cell of the two-celled proembryo, the number of paternal plastids is typically much greater than the number of maternal plastids. These findings suggest that maternal and paternal plastid distribution within the zygote is a significant factor determining the inheritance of maternal and paternal plastids in alfalfa.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Zonal pelargoniums exhibit biparental plastid inheritance. After G x W plastid crosses the progeny are a mixture of green, variegated and white embryos corresponding to a maternal, biparental or paternal inheritance of plastids, respectively. There are two patterns of segregation: type-I females have families in which the majority of embryos are green, variegated are of intermediate frequency and white are the least frequent. Type-II females have families in which green and white embryos are present at about the same frequency and variegated are the least common. The results of many selfs and crosses made within and between 8 type-I and 8 type-II plants led us to conclude that the type of female was determined by its genotype with respect to a pair of complementary genes. Plants giving rise to the type-II pattern contained one or two copies of the dominant alleles of both genes, whereas in the absence of either one or both dominant alleles the plants were type I. The genes were called Pr1/pr1 and Pr2/pr2, an adaptation of symbolism used previously. All 8 type IIs were double heterozygotes Pr1pr1, Pr2pr2, whereas we found 3 genotypes among the type Is, Pr1Pr1, pr2pr2; pr1pr1, Pr2Pr2 and pr1pr1, Pr2pr2. In unrelated experiments we found type IIs of which some were again double heterozygotes and others single heterozygotes Pr1pr1, Pr2Pr2 or Pr1Pr1, Pr2pr2. The model displaces an earlier model based on the proposed operation of a gametophytic lethal or incompatibility system.  相似文献   

5.
Inheritance of chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) was examined in F1 progenies derived from three crosses and three corresponding reciprocal crosses betweenStellaria porsildii andS. longifolia. Chloroplast DNA restriction fragments were analyzed using methods of nonradioactive digoxigenin-11-dUTP labeling and chemiluminescent detection with Lumi-Phos 530. Distinct interspecific restriction fragment polymorphisms were identified and used to demonstrate the mode of cpDNA inheritance. Mode of cpDNA inheritance differed among crosses. Two crosses in whichS. porsildii, SP2920-21, was the maternal parent exhibited three different types of plastids, maternal, paternal and biparental, among the F1 hybrids, suggesting a biparental cpDNA inheritance and plastid sorting-out inStellaria.  相似文献   

6.
Summary A high frequency of paternal plastid transmission occurred in progeny from crosses among normal green alfalfa plants. Plastid transmission was analyzed by hybridization of radiolabeled alfalfa plastid DNA (cpDNA) probes to Southern blots of restriction digests of the progeny DNA. Each probe revealed a specific polymorphism differentiating the parental plastid genomes. Of 212 progeny, 34 were heteroplastidic, with their cpDNAs ranging from predominantly paternal to predominantly maternal. Regrowth of shoots from heteroplasmic plants following removal of top growth revealed the persistence of mixed plastids in a given plant. However, different shoots within a green heteroplasmic plant exhibited paternal, maternal, or mixed cpDNAs. Evidence of maternal nuclear genomic influence on the frequency of paternal plastid transmission was observed in some reciprocal crosses. A few tetraploid F1 progeny were obtained from tetraploid (2n=4x=32) Medicago sativa ssp. sativa x diploid (2n=2x=16) M. sativa ssp. falcata crosses, and resulted from unreduced gametes. Here more than the maternal genome alone apparently functioned in controlling plastid transmission. Considering all crosses, only 5 of 212 progeny cpDNAs lacked evidence of a definitive paternal plastid fragment.Contribution No. 89-524-J from the Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station, Kansas State University, Manhattan  相似文献   

7.
W. L. Chiu  B. B. Sears 《Genetics》1993,133(4):989-997
Plastids of Oenothera, the evening primrose, can be transmitted to the progeny from both parents. In a constant nuclear background, the frequency of biparental plastid transmission is determined by the types of plastid genomes (plastomes) involved in the crosses. In this study, the impact of nuclear genomes on plastid inheritance was analyzed. In general, the transmission efficiency of each plastome correlated strongly with its compatibility with the nuclear genome of the progeny, suggesting that plastome-genome interactions can influence plastid transmission by affecting the efficiency of plastid multiplication after fertilization. Lower frequencies of plastid transmission from the paternal side were observed when the pollen had poor vigor due to an incompatible plastome-genome combination, indicating that plastome-genome interactions may also affect the input of plastids at fertilization. Parental traits that affect the process of fertilization can also have an impact on plastid transmission. Crosses using maternal parents with long styles or pollen with relatively low growth capacity resulted in reduced frequencies of paternal plastid transmission. These observations suggest that degeneration of pollen plastids may occur as the time interval between pollination and fertilization is lengthened.  相似文献   

8.
Mitochondria and chloroplasts of eucaryotic cells contain populations of DNA molecules. In certain cases, e.g., the chloroplasts of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and the mitochondria of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, organelles contributed by the two parents are known to fuse in the zygote, creating a single population of DNA molecules. In a cross, this population will include molecules of both parental genotypes. There is reason to suspect that organelle DNA molecules in this population are selected randomly for replication and recombination. This would result in random changes in the frequency of a particular allele or genotype within the organelle gene pool of a single zygote and also within its clone of progeny cells. A given gene frequency would increase in some zygote clones and decrease in others, analogous to random drift of gene frequencies in small Mendelian populations. To test this, we have examined the distribution of chloroplast gene frequencies among the zygote clones produced in each of a number of crosses of Chlamydomonas. These distributions are typically U or L shaped as predicted by the random drift hypothesis. They include uniparental zygote clones, in which a chloroplast allele from one parent has been fixed (frequency 100%) and the alternative allele from the other parent has been lost (frequency 0%). Among the remaining (biparental) zygote clones, there is a linear distribution of allele frequencies, showing a great increase in variance over the input frequencies. In these experiments both biparental and uniparental zygotes show a bias favoring chloroplast alleles from the mt+ (maternal) parent, and there is no statistically significant mode at the allele frequency of 0.5 corresponding to the equal input of alleles from the maternal and paternal (mt?) parents. The observed distributions support the hypothesis that both uniparental inheritance and the high variance of allele frequencies among zygote clones are due to random drift of allele frequencies, coupled with a directional force which favors fixation of the maternal allele. In addition, statistical analysis of the data shows a strong but incomplete tendency for linked chloroplast markers to be fixed or lost together in uniparental zygotes. Possible cellular and molecular mechanisms for these observations are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
It is widely held that organelles inherit from the maternal lineage. However, the plastid genome in quite a few angiosperms appears to be biparentally transmitted. It is unclear how and why biparental inheritance of the genome became activated. Here, we detected widespread occurrence of plastids in the sperm cells (a cellular prerequisite for biparental inheritance) of traditional Caprifoliaceae. Of the 12 genera sampled, the sperm cells of Abelia, Dipelta, Heptacodium, Kolkwitzia, Leycesteria, Linnaea, Lonicera, Symphoricarpos, Triosteum and Weigela possessed inheritable plastids. The other genera, Sambucus and Viburnum, lacked plastids in sperm cells. Interestingly, such exclusion of plastids in the sperm cells of some Caprifoliaceae appeared to be associated with the divergence of Dipsacales phylogeny. Closer examination of Weigela florida revealed that both plastids and plastid DNA were highly duplicated in the generative cells. This implies that the appearance of plastids in sperm cells involved cellular mechanisms. Because such mechanisms must enhance the strength of plastid transmission through the paternal lineage and appear ubiquitous in species exhibiting biparental or potential biparental plastid inheritance, we presume that biparental plastid genetics may be a derived trait in angiosperms. This is consistent with our extended phylogenetic analysis using species with recently discovered modes of potential plastid inheritance. The results show that basal and early angiosperms have maternal plastid transmission, whereas all potential biparental transmission occurs at terminal branches of the tree. Thus, unlike previous studies, we suggest that biparental plastid inheritance in angiosperms was unilaterally converted from the maternal transmission mode during late angiosperm evolution.  相似文献   

10.
ULTRASTRUCTURE OF PLASTID INHERITANCE: GREEN ALGAE TO ANGIOSPERMS   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
1. Plastid inheritance in most green algae and land plants is uniparental. In oogamous species, plastids are usually derived from the maternal parent; even when inheritance is biparental, maternal plastids usually predominate. Only a few species of conifer are known to have essentially paternal plastid inheritance. In spite of the overall strong maternal bias, there exists a spectrum of species in which plastid inheritance ranges from purely maternal to predominantly paternal. 2. Factors that influence the pattern of plastid inheritance operate both before (often long before) and after fertilization. For example, several different mechanisms for exclusion of plastids from particular cells, none of which is completely effective on its own, may operate sequentially during both gametogenesis and embryo-genesis. There appears to exist a general trend such that the more highly evolved the organism, the more numerous the mechanisms employed and the earlier they first come into operation. The pattern of plastid inheritance shown by a species represents the efficiency or lack of efficiency of these combined mechanisms. 3. In the newly-formed zygote of many unicellular algae, the plastids from both gametes are present and there is direct competition between them. Often the plastid from one mating type (usually the ‘invading’ male gamete, where this can be identified) quickly degenerates. Species such as Chlamydomonas are unusual in that the plastids from the two gametes fuse. In spite of this, inheritance of plastid DNA is normally uniparental. How this is accomplished remains unclear. In oogamous algae, the paternal plastids which enter the egg cell are frequently fewer in number and smaller in size than those contributed by the female gamete. The reduced contribution of paternal plastids can result from asymmetrical cell division or from differential timing of cell and plastid division during spermatogenesis. 4. In species ranging from unicellular algae to angiosperms, plastids may be partially or completely debarred from particular cells at critical stages during the reproductive cycle. An important factor in this form of plastid elimination is their postioning with respect to the nucleus prior to a cell division. When plastids closely encircle the nucleus, they are usually incorporated equally into the two daughter cells; when the plastids are concentrated at some distance from the nucleus, they are frequently excluded from one daughter cell. 5. Elimination of plastids from a gamete prior to plasmogamy prevents direct competition between the two types of plastid in the zygote or embryo. Perhaps the most effective method of excluding paternal plastids from the egg cell has been achieved by some lower land plants; the plastids migrate to the posterior part of the spermatozoid, and are discarded from there in a discrete vesicle before the egg is reached. 6. Plastid inheritance in conifers appears to be unique. In those species in which the derivation of plastids in the pro-embryo can be determined, it has been found that they come only from the male gamete. Maternal plastids are positively excluded from the pro-embryo and later degenerate. 7. In most angiosperm species plastid inheritance is maternal; in only a few species is it regularly biparental. The first step towards exclusion of paternal plastids often takes place in the uninucleate pollen grain where the plastids may be concentrated at the pole of the cell farthest from the site of the future generative cell. Any plastids that succeed in entering the generative cell may degenerate before the gametes are released from the pollen tube. Even if paternal plastids reach the egg, they are at a disadvantage because they are (a) entering an environment that is essentially alien, and (b) normally present in much smaller numbers than maternal plastids. Later, when the zygote divides, the few paternal plastids may fail to become incorporated in the small terminal cell which gives rise to the embryo proper. 8. There appears to be no consistent evolutionary progression in the use of more efficient mechanisms to influence plastid inheritance; most of the mechanisms associated with exclusion of paternal plastids in angiosperms, for example, can also be found in one or other species of green alga. The primary factors that influence plastid inheritance appear to be (I) direct competition in the zygote between plastids of the two parental types – the principal mechanism operating in isogamous algae, but also operating in some angiosperms; and (2) the divergent evolution of the two types of gamete - on the one hand a small male gamete with a minimum of cytoplasm which is capable of moving (spermatozoid) or being moved (pollen) efficiently, and, on the other hand, a large egg cell with numerous organelles, which is well able to act as ‘host’ for the future zygote. Many of the additional mechanisms that influence the pattern of plastid inheritance seem to be the more or less ‘accidental’ result of other evolutionary events.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Mapping of chloroplast DNA (ctDNA) restriction fragment patterns from a chlorophyll deficient mutant and two phenotypically normal alfalfa genotypes (Medicago sativa L.) has demonstrated the existence of a distinct ctDNA genotype from each source. These unique restriction fragment patterns were utilized to identify maternal or paternal origin of ctDNA in hybrid plants from crosses involving the normal alfalfa genotypes as females and the yellow-green chlorophyll deficient sectors as males. Progeny from these crosses expressing the yellow-green sectored phenotypes contained paternal ctDNA in the chlorophyll deficient sectors and maternal ctDNA in the normal sectors, confirming biparental plastid inheritance. The existence of mixed cells containing both mutant and normal plastids at various stages of sorting-out was observed by transmission electron microscopy of mesophyll cells in mosaic tissue from hybrid plants. This observation verified the biparental transmission of plastids in alfalfa.  相似文献   

12.
B B Sears 《Plasmid》1980,3(1):18-34
In the investigations reported here, the length of zygospore incubation or “maturation” prior to the induction of meiosis was found to affect the inheritance pattern of chloroplast genes. The frequency of zygospores transmitting chloroplast alleles from both parents drops with increasing zygospore age following mating, while the frequencies of zygospores homoplasmic for maternal or paternal chloroplast alleles increase correspondingly. Since there is a negligible reduction in viability, zygospores which are initially biparental appear to become pure for the chloroplast genes from one or the other parent prior to the occurrence of cell division. These results are amplified in crosses of mt+ cells which have been irradiated with ultraviolet (uv) light or grown in the presence of the base analog, 5-fluorodeoxyuridine, which also perturbs maternal inheritance. Low doses of uv irradiation, applied to zygospores derived from crosses in which the maternal parent was also irradiated prior to mating, increase the biparental zygospore frequency while reducing the proportion of maternal zygospores. This indicates that at least some maternal zygospore clones are actually derived from zygospores which still contain both parental chloroplast genomes prior to the induction of germination. Thus, a subclass of zygospores must contain paternal chloroplast genomes which are either eliminated upon germination or are not expressed in the resulting zygospore clone. Tetrad analysis of biparental zygospores derived from uv-irradiated mt+ gametes demonstrates that the frequency of maternal chloroplast alleles in biparental zygospores decreases as they age. One result is an increase in the proportion of meiotic products homoplasmic for all paternal markers. The increased segregation of homoplasmic daughter cells during the meiotic divisions may result from a reduction in chloroplast ploidy by elimination of maternal genomes. Alternatively, it may reflect an altered ratio of maternal:paternal genomes due to continuous rounds of pairing and gene conversion between heterologous chloroplast DNAs leading to genetic drift within the DNA population of the organelle.  相似文献   

13.
Biparental inheritance of plastids has been documented in numerous angiosperm species. The adaptive significance of the mode of plastid inheritance (unior biparental) is poorly understood. In plants exhibiting paternal inheritance of plastids, DNA-containing plastids in the microgametophyte may affect survival or growth of the gametophyte or the embryo. In this study the number of plastids containing DNA (nucleoids) in generative cells and generative cell and pollen volumes were evaluated in a range of genotypes of Medicago sativa (alfalfa). M. sativa exhibits biparental inheritance of plastids with strong paternal bias. The M. sativa genotypes used were crossed as male parents to a common genotype and the relationships between the gametophytic traits measured and male reproductive success were assessed. Generative cell plastid number and pollen grain size exhibited opposing associations with male fertility. Path analysis showed that generative cell plastid number was negatively associated with male fertility. This study provides evidence that there may be a competitive advantage at fertilization afforded sperm that have minimized their organelle content. The apparent lack of strong selection for reduced plastid number in generative cells of M. sativa may be a reflection of the diminished importance of reproductive success due to its perenniality or its long use in cultivation.  相似文献   

14.
Plastidial (pt) and mitochondrial (mt) genes usually show maternal inheritance. Non-Mendelian, biparental inheritance of plastids was first described by Baur (Z Indukt Abstamm Vererbungslehre 1:330–351, 1909) for crosses between Pelargonium cultivars. We have analyzed the inheritance of pt and mtDNA by examining the progeny from reciprocal crosses of Pelargonium zonale and P. inquinans using nucleotide sequence polymorphisms of selected pt and mt genes. Sequence analysis of the progeny revealed biparental inheritance of both pt and mtDNA. Hybrid plants exhibited variegation: our data demonstrate that the inquinans chloroplasts, but not the zonale chloroplasts bleach out, presumably due to incompatibility of the former with the hybrid nuclear genome. Different distribution of maternal and paternal sequences could be observed in different sectors of the same leaf, in different leaves of the same plant, and in different plants indicating random segregation and sorting-out of maternal and paternal plastids and mitochondria in the hybrids. The substantial transmission of both maternal and paternal mitochondria to the progeny turns Pelargonium into a particular interesting subject for studies on the inheritance, segregation and recombination of mt genes.  相似文献   

15.
被子植物质体遗传的细胞学研究   总被引:12,自引:2,他引:10  
植物细胞质遗传涉及细胞质中含DNA的两种细胞器——质体和线粒体从亲代至子代的传递。相对来说线粒体遗传的研究远不及质体的多,这可能是线粒体这种细胞器缺乏合适的表型突变体之故。高等植物质体遗传的研究历史可追溯到本世纪初在杂交试验中对叶色遗传的非孟德尔定律的发现,Baur在马蹄纹天竺葵(Pelargonium zonale)中从叶色突变体(白化体)的杂交遗传分析,发现了双亲质体遗传;而Correns在紫茉莉(Mirabilis jalapa)中则发现了单亲母本质体遗传(见Kuroiwa)。此后,对质体基因组突变性状遗传分析的研究,大量的资料说明了在被子植物中存在双亲质体遗传和单亲母系质体遗传两种类型,而后一种占大多数,仅少数是比较有规律的为双亲质体遗传或偶尔是双亲质体遗传。几十年来应用遗传分析的方法对被子植物质体遗传的研究,着重于揭示不同植物种质体的遗传是单亲母系或是双亲质体传递,以及探索杂种核基因对质体传递方式的影响。  相似文献   

16.
Non-Mendelian genes in Chamydomonas reinhardtii are inherited in a uniparental (UP) fashion. Most zygotes and their progeny receive UP genes only from the mt(+) or maternal parent. However, a few exceptional zygotes are also found in which the mt(-) or paternal UP genome is transmitted. Most of the exceptional zygotes are biparental in that their progeny segregate UP genes transmitted by both parents. As a result, biparental zygotes have been extensively used to study the rules governing UP inheritance.The frequency of biparental zygotes can be greatly increased if the maternal parent is irradiated with ultraviolet light prior to mating. Based principally on studies with ultraviolet-induced biparental zygotes, Sager has argued that a vegetative cell contains two copies of the UP genome and that the progeny of a biparental zygote receive a copy derived from each parent. Results reported in this paper with spontaneous and ultraviolet-induced biparental zygotes do not support the two copy model, but argue for a mulitple copy model with most of the copies normally being transmitted by the maternal parent. A multiple copy model which accounts for both Sager's results and ours is presented.  相似文献   

17.
The inheritance of mitochondria and plastids in angiosperms has been categorized into three modes: maternal, biparental and paternal. Many mechanisms have been proposed for maternal inheritance, including: (1) physical exclusion of the organelle itself during pollen mitosis I (PMI); (2) elimination of the organelle by formation of enucleated cytoplasmic bodies (ECB); (3) autophagic degradation of organelles during male gametophyte development; (4) digestion of the organelle after fertilization; and (5)—the most likely possibility—digestion of organellar DNA in generative cells just after PMI. In detailed cytological observations, the presence or absence of mitochondrial and plastid DNA in generative cells corresponds to biparental/paternal inheritance or maternal inheritance of the respective organelle examined genetically. These improved cytological observations demonstrate that the replication or digestion of organellar DNA in young generative cells just after PMI is a critical point determining the mode of cytoplasmic inheritance. This review describes the independent control mechanisms in mitochondria and plastids that lead to differences in cytoplasmic inheritance in angiosperms.  相似文献   

18.
Research using chlorophyll-deficient mutants has shown that plastids are inherited biparentally in Medicago sativa L. (alfalfa). Variation in plastid transmission behavior was observed among crosses in earlier studies, but it was not determined whether this variation was under genetic control. In my research, genetic analyses of the frequencies of normal (G), chlorophyll-deficient (CD), and sectored (G and CD) progenies produced from G x CD crosses demonstrated that plastid inheritance patterns in alfalfa are influenced by both maternal and paternal genotypes. A strong paternal bias in plastid transmission existed in the majority of crosses despite the potential developmental disadvantages associated with paternally contributed CD plastids. The high frequencies of uniparental progenies suggest that genetic control of plastid inheritance in alfalfa may be exerted through effects on the number and distribution of maternal and paternal plastids early in embryo development.  相似文献   

19.
Plastid DNA is absent in pollen or sperm cells of Arabidopsis thaliana. Accordingly, plastids and mitochondria, in a standard genetic cross, are transmitted to the seed progeny by the maternal parent only. Our objective was to test whether paternal plastids are transmitted by pollen as an exception. The maternal parent in our cross was a nuclear male sterile (ms1-1/ms1-1), spectinomycin-sensitive Ler plant. It was fertilized with pollen of a male fertile RLD-Spc1 plant carrying a plastid-encoded spectinomycin resistance mutation. Seedlings with paternal plastids were selected by spectinomycin resistance encoded in the paternal plastid DNA. Our data, in general, support maternal inheritance of plastids in A. thaliana. However, we report that paternal plastids are transmitted to the seed progeny in Arabidopsis at a low (3.9 x 10(-5)) frequency. This observation extends previous reports in Antirrhinum majus, Epilobium hirsutum, Nicotiana tabacum, Petunia hybrida, and the cereal crop Setaria italica to a cruciferous species suggesting that low-frequency paternal leakage of plastids via pollen may be universal in plants previously thought to exhibit strict maternal plastid inheritance. The genetic tools employed here will facilitate testing the effect of Arabidopsis nuclear mutations on plastid inheritance and allow for the design of mutant screens to identify nuclear genes controlling plastid inheritance.  相似文献   

20.
Plastids and mitochondria, the DNA‐containing cytoplasmic organelles, are maternally inherited in the majority of angiosperm species. Even in plants with strict maternal inheritance, exceptional paternal transmission of plastids has been observed. Our objective was to detect rare leakage of plastids via pollen in Nicotiana sylvestris and to determine if pollen transmission of plastids results in co‐transmission of paternal mitochondria. As father plants, we used N. sylvestris plants with transgenic, selectable plastids and wild‐type mitochondria. As mother plants, we used N. sylvestris plants with Nicotiana undulata cytoplasm, including the CMS‐92 mitochondria that cause cytoplasmic male sterility (CMS) by homeotic transformation of the stamens. We report here exceptional paternal plastid DNA in approximately 0.002% of N. sylvestris seedlings. However, we did not detect paternal mitochondrial DNA in any of the six plastid‐transmission lines, suggesting independent transmission of the cytoplasmic organelles via pollen. When we used fertile N. sylvestris as mothers, we obtained eight fertile plastid transmission lines, which did not transmit their plastids via pollen at higher frequencies than their fathers. We discuss the implications for transgene containment and plant evolutionary histories inferred from cytoplasmic phylogenies.  相似文献   

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