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1.
The endosperm is a terminal seed tissue that is destined to support embryo development. In most angiosperms, the endosperm develops initially as a syncytium to facilitate rapid seed growth. The transition from the syncytial to the cellularized state occurs at a defined time point during seed development. Manipulating the timing of endosperm cellularization through interploidy crosses negatively impacts on embryo growth, suggesting that endosperm cellularization is a critical step during seed development. In this study, we show that failure of endosperm cellularization in fertilization independent seed 2 (fis2) and endosperm defective 1 (ede1) Arabidopsis mutants correlates with impaired embryo development. Restoration of endosperm cellularization in fis2 seeds by reducing expression of the MADS-box gene AGAMOUS-LIKE 62 (AGL62) promotes embryo development, strongly supporting an essential role of endosperm cellularization for viable seed formation. Endosperm cellularization failure in fis2 seeds correlates with increased hexose levels, suggesting that arrest of embryo development is a consequence of failed nutrient translocation to the developing embryo. Finally, we demonstrate that AGL62 is a direct target gene of FIS Polycomb group repressive complex 2 (PRC2), establishing the molecular basis for FIS PRC2-mediated endosperm cellularization.  相似文献   

2.
Seed development in flowering plants is initiated after a double fertilization event with two sperm cells fertilizing two female gametes, the egg cell and the central cell, leading to the formation of embryo and endosperm, respectively. In most species the endosperm is a polyploid tissue inheriting two maternal genomes and one paternal genome. As a consequence of this particular genomic configuration the endosperm is a dosage sensitive tissue, and changes in the ratio of maternal to paternal contributions strongly impact on endosperm development. The FERTILIZATION INDEPENDENT SEED (FIS) Polycomb Repressive Complex 2 (PRC2) is essential for endosperm development; however, the underlying forces that led to the evolution of the FIS-PRC2 remained unknown. Here, we show that the functional requirement of the FIS-PRC2 can be bypassed by increasing the ratio of maternal to paternal genomes in the endosperm, suggesting that the main functional requirement of the FIS-PRC2 is to balance parental genome contributions and to reduce genetic conflict. We furthermore reveal that the AGAMOUS LIKE (AGL) gene AGL62 acts as a dosage-sensitive seed size regulator and that reduced expression of AGL62 might be responsible for reduced size of seeds with increased maternal genome dosage.  相似文献   

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Endosperm cellularization is essential for embryo development and viable seed formation. Loss of function of the FERTILIZATION INDEPENDENT SEED (FIS) class Polycomb genes, which mediate trimethylation of histone H3 lysine27 (H3K27me3), as well as imbalanced contributions of parental genomes interrupt this process. The causes of the failure of cellularization are poorly understood. In this study we identified PICKLE RELATED 2 (PKR2) mutations which suppress seed abortion in fis1/mea by restoring endosperm cellularization. PKR2, a paternally expressed imprinted gene (PEG), encodes a CHD3 chromatin remodeler. PKR2 is specifically expressed in syncytial endosperm and its maternal copy is repressed by FIS1. Seed abortion in a paternal genome excess interploidy cross was also partly suppressed by pkr2. Simultaneous mutations in PKR2 and another PEG, ADMETOS (ADM), additively rescue the seed abortion in fis1 and in the interploidy cross, suggesting that PKR2 and ADM modulate endosperm cellularization independently and reproductive isolation between plants of different ploidy is established by imprinted genes. Genes upregulated in fis1 and downregulated in the presence of pkr2 are enriched in glycosyl‐hydrolyzing activity, while genes downregulated in fis1 and upregulated in the presence of pkr2 are enriched with microtubule motor activity, consistent with the cellularization patterns in fis1 and the suppressor line. The antagonistic functions of FIS1 and PKR2 in modulating endosperm development are similar to those of PICKLE (PKL) and CURLY LEAF (CLF), which antagonistically regulate root meristem activity. Our results provide further insights into the function of imprinted genes in endosperm development and reproductive isolation.  相似文献   

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Seeds are dormant and desiccated structures, filled with storage products to be used after germination. These properties are determined by the maturation program, which starts, in Arabidopsis thaliana, mid‐embryogenesis, at about the same time and developmental stage in all the seeds in a fruit. The two factors, chronological and developmental time, are closely entangled during seed development, so their relative contribution to the transition to maturation is not well understood. It is also unclear whether that transition is determined autonomously by each seed or whether it depends on signals from the fruit. The onset of maturation follows the cellularization of the endosperm, and it has been proposed that there exists a causal relationship between both processes. We explored all these issues by analyzing markers for maturation in Arabidopsis mutant seeds that develop at a slower pace, or where endosperm cellularization happens too early, too late, or not at all. Our data show that the developmental stage of the embryo is the key determinant of the initiation of maturation, and that each seed makes that transition autonomously. We also found that, in contrast with previous models, endosperm cellularization is not required for the onset of maturation, suggesting that this transition is independent of the hexose/sucrose ratio in the seed. Our observations indicate that the mechanisms that control endosperm cellularization, embryo growth, and embryo maturation act independently of each other.  相似文献   

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Little is known about regulatory factors that act during the earliest stages of plant embryogenesis. The MADS domain protein AGL15 (for AGAMOUS-like) is expressed preferentially during embryogenesis and accumulates during early seed development in monocotyledonous and dicotyledonous flowering plants. AGL15-specific antibodies and immunohistochemistry were used to demonstrate that AGL15 accumulates before fertilization in the cytoplasm in the cells of the egg apparatus and moves into the nucleus during early stages of development in the suspensor, embryo, and endosperms. Relatively high levels of AGL15 are present in the nuclei during embryo morphogenesis and until the seeds start to dry in Brassica, maize, and Arabidopsis. AGL15 is associated with the chromosomes during mitosis, and gel mobility shift assays were used to demonstrate that AGL15 binds DNA in a sequence-specific manner. To assess whether AGL15 is likely to play a role in specifying the seed or embryonic phase of development, AGL15 accumulation was examined in Arabidopsis mutants that prematurely exit embryogenesis. lec1-2 mutants show an embryo-specific loss of AGL15 at the transition stage, suggesting that AGL15 interacts with regulators in the leafy cotyledons pathway.  相似文献   

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Although heat stress reduces seed size in rice (Oryza sativa), little is known about the molecular mechanisms underlying the observed reduction in seed size and yield. To elucidate the mechanistic basis of heat sensitivity and reduced seed size, we imposed a moderate (34°C) and a high (42°C) heat stress treatment on developing rice seeds during the postfertilization stage. Both stress treatments reduced the final seed size. At a cellular level, the moderate heat stress resulted in precocious endosperm cellularization, whereas severe heat-stressed seeds failed to cellularize. Initiation of endosperm cellularization is a critical developmental transition required for normal seed development, and it is controlled by Polycomb Repressive Complex2 (PRC2) in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). We observed that a member of PRC2 called Fertilization-Independent Endosperm1 (OsFIE1) was sensitive to temperature changes, and its expression was negatively correlated with the duration of the syncytial stage during heat stress. Seeds from plants overexpressing OsFIE1 had reduced seed size and exhibited precocious cellularization. The DNA methylation status and a repressive histone modification of OsFIE1 were observed to be temperature sensitive. Our data suggested that the thermal sensitivity of seed enlargement could partly be caused by altered epigenetic regulation of endosperm development during the transition from the syncytial to the cellularized state.World rice (Oryza sativa) production needs to increase significantly to sustain an increasing population. However, higher average temperatures caused by global warming are predicted to decrease rice yields in many parts of the world, especially Asia. In one study, rice yield was estimated to decrease by 10% for every 1°C rise in minimum growing season temperature (Peng et al., 2004). Comparable yield losses with rising temperatures have been reported for two other major cereal crops: wheat (Triticum spp.) and maize (Zea mays; Wardlaw, 1989; Lobell et al., 2011). Rice, wheat, and maize together are the main sources of calories for most countries (Reynolds et al., 2011). Therefore, it is critical that we understand the agronomic, biological, and economic consequences of high temperature on crop yields.Heat stress during seed development decreases the seed size in many cereals (Nagato and Ebata, 1960; Hunter et al., 1977; Savin et al., 1996) and when coupled with seed number per unit area, determines seed yield. Seed size is largely contributed by the endosperm, a triploid tissue derived from fusion of the sperm cell with the diploid central cell during the double fertilization event. Endosperm development progresses in distinct developmental stages. After fertilization, the endosperm enters the syncytial stage, where triploid nuclei undergo rapid mitotic divisions without cytokinesis, followed by cellularization and finally, differentiation and maturation (Olsen, 2001; Sabelli and Larkins, 2009b). Duration of the syncytial stage and rate of mitotic divisions during this stage are important determinants of seed size (Mizutani et al., 2010). Successful transition from the syncytial to the cellularization stage is critical for normal seed development (Brown et al., 1996).In Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), the processes controlling early endosperm development and the transition from syncytial to cellularized stage are associated with the Polycomb Repressive Complex2 (PRC2) genes, which includes Fertilization-Independent Endosperm (FIE), Fertilization-Independent Seed2 (FIS2), Medea (MEA), and Multicopy Suppressor of IRA1 (Guitton and Berger, 2005; Baroux et al., 2006; Huh et al., 2007). The PRC2 complex is involved in gene silencing mediated by a repressive histone modification (H3K27me3; Köhler and Villar, 2008). Loss of function of several of these PRC2 genes results in abnormal endosperm development. A notable phenotype observed in Arabidopsis FIS mutants is endosperm overproliferation and seed failure (Kiyosue et al., 1999; Sørensen et al., 2002). Several endosperm-specific MADS-box genes (such as Pheres1, AGAMOUS-LIKE36 (AGL36), and AGL62 among others) are misregulated in seeds that are deficient in PRC2-encoding genes (Kang et al., 2008; Köhler and Villar, 2008; Walia et al., 2009). A loss-of-function mutation in Arabidopsis AGL62 resulted in precocious cellularization and smaller seeds (Kang et al., 2008). Although the function of the PRC2 complex is conserved in cereals such as rice and maize, orthologs of FIS2 and MEA have not been reported (Spillane et al., 2007; Luo et al., 2009). Orthologs of the Arabidopsis FIE gene have been reported in both rice (OsFIE1 and OsFIE2) and maize (ZmFIE1 and ZmFIE2; Springer et al., 2002; Danilevskaya et al., 2003; Luo et al., 2009). OsFIE1 is expressed only in the endosperm, whereas OsFIE2 is expressed in all tissues tested (Luo et al., 2009; Nallamilli et al., 2013). OsFIE1 is an imprinted gene, and its expression is regulated by DNA and H3K9me2 methylation (Luo et al., 2009; Zhang et al., 2012). OsFIE2 has a critical role in normal endosperm development and grain filling (Nallamilli et al., 2013).Our understanding of the epigenetic regulation of rice seed development has improved significantly (Zemach et al., 2010; Luo et al., 2011; Rodrigues et al., 2013). However, how the epigenetic regulation during seed development is altered during environmental perturbations is not well characterized. Most research efforts in the past have focused on the grain-filling stage (when storage proteins and starch accumulate) under stressful conditions (Yamakawa et al., 2007). However, it is not known if and how an environmental stress that specifically occurs during early seed development impacts seed size in rice. Here, we present evidence that early rice seed development is highly sensitive to heat stress and results in seed size reduction. We suggest a molecular mechanism that involves the rice PRC2 gene OsFIE1 as a potential component involved in regulating seed enlargement under heat stress.  相似文献   

9.
The cereal endosperm is a storage organ consisting of the central starchy endosperm surrounded by the aleurone layer. In barley, endosperm development is subdivisible into four main stages, i.e. the syncytial (I), the cellularization (II), the differentiation (III) and the maturation stage (IV). During stage I, a multinucleate syncytium is formed, which in stage II develops into the undifferentiated cellular endosperm. During stage III the cells of the endosperm differentiate into two types of aleurone cells (peripheral and modified) and three different starchy endosperm cell types (irregular, prismatic and subaleurone). To elucidate the ontogenetic relationship between the endosperm tissues, the phenotypes of sex (shrunken endosperm mutants expressing xenia) mutant endosperms were studied. These mutants can be classified into two groups, i.e. those in which development is arrested at one of the four wild-type stages described above, and those with abnormal development with new organizational patterns in the endosperm or with novel cell types. Based on these studies, it is suggested that the two endosperm halves represent cell lines derived from the two daughter nuclei of the primary endosperm nucleus, and that the prismatic starchy endosperm cells arise from a peripheral endosperm meristematic activity during stage III. Finally, a model for the main molecular events underlying the morphogenetic processes is discussed.  相似文献   

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The cytoskeleton and spatial control of cytokinesis in the plant life cycle   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Summary One of the intriguing aspects of development in plants is the precise control of division plane and subsequent placement of walls resulting in the specific architecture of tissues and organs. The placement of walls can be directed by either of two microtubule cycles. The better known microtubule cycle is associated with control of the future division plane in meristematic growth where new cells become part of tissues. The future daughter domains are determined before the nucleus enters prophase and the future site of cytokinesis is marked by a preprophase band (PPB) of cortical microtubules. The spindle axis is then organized in accordance with the PPB and, following chromosome movement, a phragmoplast is initiated in the interzone and expands to join with parental walls at the site previously occupied by the PPB. The alternative microtubule cycle lacks both the hooplike cortical microtubules of interphase and the PPB. Wall placement is determined by a radial microtubule system that defines a domain of cytoplasm either containing a nucleus or destined to contain a nucleus (the nuclear cytoplasmic domain) and controls wall placement at its perimeter. This more flexible system allows for cytoplasmic polarization and migration of nuclei in coenocytes prior to cellularization. The uncoupling of cytokinesis from karyokinesis is a regular feature of the reproductive phase in plants and results in specific, often unusual, patterns of cells which reflect the position of nuclei at the time of cellularization (e.g., the arrangement of spores in a tetrad, cells of the male and female gametophytes of angiosperms, and the distinctive cellularization of endosperm). Thus, both microtubule cycles are required for completion of plant life cycles from bryophytes to angiosperms. In angiosperm seed development, the two methods of determining the boundaries of domains where walls will be deposited are operative side by side. Whereas the PPB cycle drives embryo development, the radial-microtubule-system cycle drives the common nuclear type of endosperm development from the syncytial stage through cellularization. However, a switch to the PPB cycle can occur in endosperm, as it does in barley, when peripheral cells divide to produce a multilayered aleurone. The triggers for the switch between microtubule cycles, which are currently unknown, are key to understanding plant development.Dedicated to Professor Brian E. S. Gunning on the occasion of his 65th birthday  相似文献   

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The MADS domain protein AGL15 (AGAMOUS-Like 15) has been found to preferentially accumulate in angiosperm tissues derived from double fertilization (i.e. the embryo, suspensor, and endosperm) and in apomictic, somatic, and microspore embryos. Localization to the nuclei supports a role in gene regulation during this phase of the life cycle. To test whether AGL15 is involved in the promotion and maintenance of embryo identity, the embryogenic potential of transgenic plants that constitutively express AGL15 was assessed. Expression of AGL15 was found to enhance production of secondary embryos from cultured zygotic embryos, and constitutive expression led to long-term maintenance of development in this mode. Ectopic accumulation of AGL15 also promoted somatic embryo formation after germination from the shoot apical meristem of seedlings in culture. These results indicate that AGL15 is involved in support of development in an embryonic mode.  相似文献   

17.
Nguyen H  Brown RC  Lemmon BE 《Protoplasma》2002,219(3-4):210-220
Summary. The micropylar chamber of the mustard Coronopus didymus is a developmental domain distinct from the contiguous central chamber and the more extreme chalazal chamber. Early in syncytial development the micropylar endosperm surrounding the embryo becomes populated with unusual fusiform to multilobed nuclei. These nuclei are sheathed by unique parallel arrays of microtubules that focus at tips of the nuclei and flare to connect with a reticulate network in the common cytoplasm. F-actin does not closely invest the nuclei but instead forms an extensive but separate cytoplasmic reticulum. When the embryo is in the early heart stage, the cytoskeleton of the endosperm undergoes a remarkable transition in preparation for cellularization. Microtubules become reorganized into radial arrays emanating from the nuclei, which themselves become spherical. Radial microtubule systems (RMSs), which replace both the parallel microtubules and the cytoplasmic reticulum, organize the common cytoplasm into evenly spaced nuclear cytoplasmic domains (NCDs). F-actin gradually becomes coaligned with the RMSs. Phragmoplasts are initiated adventitiously at the interfaces of opposing RMSs in the absence of mitosis. Cell plate deposition, which is initiated at multiple sites, results in a network of walls formed more or less simultaneously around the densely packed NCDs. The walls, which are rich in 1–3-β-glucans, join with one another and with the existing walls of both the central cell and embryo to complete cellularization in the micropylar chamber. In the adjacent central chamber where the syncytium is restricted to a thin peripheral layer by the large central vacuole, basic organization of the syncytium into NCDs is followed by alternating cycles of alveolation and periclinal cell division resulting in cellularization. Received July 19, 2001 Accepted October 16, 2001  相似文献   

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Maternal control of higher plant seed development is likely to involve female sporophytic as well as female gametophytic genes. While numerous female sporophytic mutants control the production of the ovule and the embryo sac true maternal effect mutations affecting embryo and endosperm development are rare in plants. A new class of female gametophytic mutants has been isolated that controls autonomous development of endosperm. Molecular analyses of these genes, known as FIS class genes, suggest that they repress downstream seed development genes by chromatin remodelling. Expression of the FIS genes in turn is modulated by parent specific expression or genomic imprinting which in turn is controlled by DNA methylation. Thus maternal control of seed development is a complex developmental event influenced by both genetic and epigenetic processes.  相似文献   

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Arabidopsis haiku mutants reveal new controls of seed size by endosperm   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
In flowering plants, maternal seed integument encloses the embryo and the endosperm, which are both derived from double fertilization. Although the development of these three components must be coordinated, we have limited knowledge of mechanisms involved in such coordination. The endosperm may play a central role in these mechanisms as epigenetic modifications of endosperm development, via imbalance of dosage between maternal and paternal genomes, affecting both the embryo and the integument. To identify targets of such epigenetic controls, we designed a genetic screen in Arabidopsis for mutants that phenocopy the effects of dosage imbalance in the endosperm. The two mutants haiku 1 and haiku 2 produce seed of reduced size that resemble seed with maternal excess in the maternal/paternal dosage. Homozygous haiku seed develop into plants indistinguishable from wild type. Each mutation is sporophytic recessive, and double-mutant analysis suggests that both mutations affect the same genetic pathway. The endosperm of haiku mutants shows a premature arrest of increase in size that causes precocious cellularization of the syncytial endosperm. Reduction of seed size in haiku results from coordinated reduction of endosperm size, embryo proliferation, and cell elongation of the maternally derived integument. We present further evidence for a control of integument development mediated by endosperm-derived signals.  相似文献   

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