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1.
Self-incompatibility (SI) has emerged as an evolutionary strategy to enhance the genetic variability of plant species. In Brassica, it is controlled by a single multiallelic locus, the S-locus, encoding a receptor kinase (SRK) expressed in the stigma papilla cells and its ligand, a small protein (SCR) located in the pollen coat. Pollen rejection is achieved only when the receptor recognizes SCR coming from the same S-allele. If a single papilla cell is simultaneously pollinated by a self- and a cross-pollen grain, it is capable of distinguishing between the two and responding accordingly, rejecting self while accepting cross pollen. This phenomenon reveals that SI response is strictly localized and does not involve the whole papilla cell. It also suggests that the distribution of SRK inside the cell may play an important role in regulating this dual response. We have recently demonstrated that SRK is mostly intracellular, only small amounts being present in distinct domains of the plasma membrane (PM), where interaction with SCR occurs. Following ligand recognition, the receptor-ligand complex is endocytosed and degraded. Based on this, we propose a model of the significance of SRK intracellular trafficking for the functioning and specificity of SI response.Key words: self-incompatibility, S-receptor kinase, internalization, SI domains  相似文献   

2.
Background and Aims The S-locus receptor kinase (SRK), which is expressed in stigma epidermal cells, is responsible for the recognition and inhibition of ‘self’ pollen in the self-incompatibility (SI) response of the Brassicaceae. The allele-specific interaction of SRK with its cognate pollen coat-localized ligand, the S-locus cysteine-rich (SCR) protein, is thought to trigger a signalling cascade within the stigma epidermal cell that leads to the arrest of ‘self’ pollen at the stigma surface. In addition to the full-length signalling SRK receptor, stigma epidermal cells express two other SRK protein species that lack the kinase domain and whose role in the SI response is not understood: a soluble version of the SRK ectodomain designated eSRK and a membrane-tethered form designated tSRK. The goal of this study was to describe the sub-cellular distribution of the various SRK protein species in stigma epidermal cells as a prelude to visualizing receptor dynamics in response to SCR binding.Methods The Arabidopsis lyrata SRKb variant was tagged with the Citrine variant of yellow fluorescent protein (cYFP) and expressed in A. thaliana plants of the C24 accession, which had been shown to exhibit a robust SI response upon transformation with the SRKb–SCRb gene pair. The transgenes used in this study were designed for differential production and visualization of the three SRK protein species in stigma epidermal cells. Transgenic stigmas were analysed by pollination assays and confocal microscopy.Key Results and Conclusions Pollination assays demonstrated that the cYFP-tagged SRK proteins are functional and that the eSRK is not required for SI. Confocal microscopic analysis of cYFP-tagged SRK proteins in live stigma epidermal cells revealed the differential sub-cellular localization of the three SRK protein species but showed no evidence for redistribution of these proteins subsequent to incompatible pollination.  相似文献   

3.
The self‐incompatibility (SI) response occurs widely in flowering plants as a means of preventing self‐fertilization. In these self/non‐self discrimination systems, plant pistils reject self or genetically related pollen. In the Solanaceae, Plantaginaceae and Rosaceae, pistil‐secreted S‐RNases enter the pollen tube and function as cytotoxins to specifically arrest self‐pollen tube growth. Recent studies have revealed that the S‐locus F‐box (SLF) protein controls the pollen expression of SI in these families. However, the precise role of SLF remains largely unknown. Here we report that PhSSK1 (Petunia hybrida SLF‐interacting Skp1‐like1), an equivalent of AhSSK1 of Antirrhinum hispanicum, is expressed specifically in pollen and acts as an adaptor in an SCF(Skp1‐Cullin1‐F‐box)SLF complex, indicating that this pollen‐specific SSK1‐SLF interaction occurs in both Petunia and Antirrhinum, two species from the Solanaceae and Plantaginaceae, respectively. Substantial reduction of PhSSK1 in pollen reduced cross‐pollen compatibility (CPC) in the S‐RNase‐based SI response, suggesting that the pollen S determinant contributes to inhibiting rather than protecting the S‐RNase activity, at least in solanaceous plants. Furthermore, our results provide an example that a specific Skp1‐like protein other than the known conserved ones can be recruited into a canonical SCF complex as an adaptor.  相似文献   

4.
Self-incompatibility (SI) in Brassica is controlled by the S locus. The specificity of the SI response is controlled on the stigma side by the S receptor kinase (SRK) and on the pollen side by the SCR (S locus cysteine-rich) protein, but other proteins might be involved in the process of self-pollen rejection. In this study, we show that the AtPP gene linked to the S locus of Brassica napus is expressed in the stigmas of SI lines. AtPP has a developmental pattern of expression similar to the SRK gene. The AtPP protein has similarity with members of an Arabidopsis protein family and with an S-adenosyl-L-methionine:salicylic acid carboxyl methyltransferase, which is a plant defense-related protein of Clarkia breweri representing a new class of methyltransferases. A member of the AtPP gene family is present in the homeolog region of the S locus in Arabidopsis. Therefore, this gene might have co-evolved with S genes from an ancestral S locus of Brassicaceae. Possible functions of the AtPP protein in the self-recognition process are discussed. Received: 9 October 2000 / Revision accepted: 23 April 2001  相似文献   

5.
Cellular responses rely on signal perception and integration. A nice example of this is self incompatibility (SI), which is an important mechanism to prevent inbreeding. It prevents self-fertilization by using a highly discriminatory cellular recognition and rejection mechanism. Most Sl systems are genetically specified by the S-locus, which has a pollen and a pistil S-component. A receptor-ligand interaction is used by Papaver rhoeas to control SI. S proteins encoded by the pistil part of the S-locus interact with incompatible pollen to achieve rapid inhibition of tip growth. The incompatible Sl interaction triggers a Ca^2+-dependent signaling cascade. A number of Sl-specific events are triggered in incompatible pollen, including rapid depolymerization of the actin cytoskeleton; phosphorylation of soluble inorganic pyrophosphatases (SPPases), Prp26.1; activation of a mitogen activated protein kinase, p56; programmed cell death (PCD) involving a caspase-3-1ike activity. These events contribute to prevent self-fertilizaUon. We are attempting to establish the functional significance of these events, and their possible involvement in integrating a coordinated signaling response. Here we describe the identification of these components shown to be involved in Sl, together with recent progress in identifying links between some of them. These data constitute the first steps in elucidating how SI signaling is integrated.  相似文献   

6.
The inhibition of self-pollination in self-incompatible Brassicaceae is based on allele-specific trans-activation of the highly polymorphic S-locus receptor kinase (SRK), which is displayed at the surface of stigma epidermal cells, by its even more polymorphic pollen coat-localized ligand, the S-locus cysteine-rich (SCR) protein. In an attempt to achieve constitutive activation of SRK and thus facilitate analysis of self-incompatibility (SI) signaling, we coexpressed an Arabidopsis lyrata SCR variant with its cognate SRK receptor in the stigma epidermal cells of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) plants belonging to the C24 accession, in which expression of SRK and SCR had been shown to exhibit a robust SI response. Contrary to expectation, however, coexpression of SRK and SCR was found to inhibit SRK-mediated signaling and to disrupt the SI response. This phenomenon, called cis-inhibition, is well documented in metazoans but has not as yet been reported for plant receptor kinases. We demonstrate that cis-inhibition of SRK, like its trans-activation, is based on allele-specific interaction between receptor and ligand. We also show that stigma-expressed SCR causes entrapment of its SRK receptor in the endoplasmic reticulum, thus disrupting the proper targeting of SRK to the plasma membrane, where the receptor would be available for productive interaction with its pollen coat-derived SCR ligand. Although based on an artificial cis-inhibition system, the results suggest novel strategies of pollination control for the generation of hybrid cultivars and large-scale seed production from hybrid plants in Brassicaceae seed crops and, more generally, for inhibiting cell surface receptor function and manipulating signaling pathways in plants.Ligand receptor signaling plays important roles in cell-cell communication between neighboring cells in a variety of developmental and physiological processes. This communication typically relies on the interaction of transmembrane receptors displayed on the surface of signal-receiving cells with their cognate ligands derived from signal-sending neighboring cells, which, in turn, leads to the activation of receptor-mediated signaling cascades that modify intracellular activities of the signal-receiving cell. Such is the case with communication between pollen grains and stigma epidermal cells, a process that has an important role in directing reproductive success and determining pollination modes (i.e. selfing or outcrossing) in the Brassicaceae. In this family, outcrossing is enforced by self-incompatibility (SI), a mechanism controlled by haplotypes of the S locus, by which the stigma epidermal cells of a plant recognize and reject self pollen grains (i.e. those derived from the same flower, the same plant, or plants expressing the same S-locus haplotype), thus preventing self-pollination, while allowing the growth of tubes from nonself pollen grains (i.e. those derived from plants expressing a different S-locus haplotype; Nasrallah and Nasrallah, 2014a). Inhibition of self pollen in the SI response is initiated by allele-specific interaction between two highly polymorphic proteins encoded at the S locus: the S-locus receptor kinase (SRK), which is localized at the plasma membrane of stigma epidermal cells (Stein et al., 1991, 1996), and its ligand, the S-locus cysteine-rich protein (SCR), which accumulates in the pollen coat and diffuses onto the stigma surface upon pollen-stigma contact (Schopfer et al., 1999; Takayama et al., 2000; Shiba et al., 2001). The interaction of the SRK extracellular domain, or S domain, with its cognate SCR ligand is thought to activate downstream signaling cascades in stigma epidermal cells, which lead to inhibition of pollen germination on the stigma surface and/or pollen tube penetration through the stigma epidermal cell wall. The SRK and SCR genes are the primary determinants of the transition between the outcrossing and selfing modes of mating in the Brassicaceae, as demonstrated by the observation that transformation of SRK and SCR gene pairs derived from self-incompatible Arabidopsis lyrata or Capsella grandiflora restored SI in several accessions of the normally self-fertile Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana; Nasrallah et al., 2002, 2004; Boggs et al., 2009).Tight regulation of the SI response is critical for ensuring reproductive success in self-incompatible plants. Activation of SRK signaling must be triggered only by pollen-derived cognate SCR ligand upon interaction of stigma epidermal cells with self pollen grains, because constitutive activation of SI signaling in stigma epidermal cells would result in inhibition of nonself as well as self pollen grains and would result in female sterility. This adverse outcome is averted by tight regulation of the SCR gene, which is expressed exclusively in the anthers of self-incompatible plants and whose protein products are localized exclusively in the pollen coat (Schopfer and Nasrallah, 2000; Shiba et al., 2001). For experimental studies of SI, however, constitutive activation of SRK-mediated signaling in stigma epidermal cells would be useful, as it might provide a convenient means of identifying components of the poorly understood SRK-mediated signaling pathway.A reaction that resembles a constitutive SI response, in which stigma epidermal cells inhibit both self and nonself pollen grains, has been obtained by manual application of purified recombinant SCR proteins produced in bacteria (Kachroo et al., 2001; Chookajorn et al., 2004) or synthetic SCR (Takayama et al., 2001) to stigmas that express their cognate SRK receptors. Unlike the highly localized activation induced by pollen-derived SCR at the site of pollen-stigma contact, treatment of the stigma surface with SCR protein can clearly cause global activation of SRK in most, if not all, epidermal cells of a stigma. However, treating stigmas in the numbers required for analysis of SRK signaling is extremely laborious, can damage stigmas, and produces inconsistent results. Therefore, a method that circumvents these problems would be advantageous. In metazoans, constitutive activation of receptor kinases has been shown to result not only from receptor mutations that cause constitutive kinase activity (Webster and Donoghue, 1996; Hirota et al., 1998) and mutations in signaling components that cause ligand-independent activation of downstream cascades (Wang et al., 2012, 2014; Roberts et al., 2013; Han, 2014), but also from ectopic expression of ligands within the same cells as their receptors, as occurs in several pathological conditions (Sporn and Roberts, 1985; Castellano et al., 2006; Krasagakis et al., 2011).Accordingly, an attempt was made to generate Arabidopsis plants having a stable constitutive stigma SI response by coexpressing an SRK variant and its cognate SCR in stigma epidermal cells, which should, in principle, constitutively activate the SI response in these cells. This report shows that, while pollen-derived SCR trans-activates the SRK-mediated SI response, stigma-expressed SCR inhibits the activity of its cognate SRK by causing entrapment of the receptor in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). This phenomenon is similar in its outcome to the ligand-mediated cis-inhibition phenomenon that had previously been observed in metazoans for some signaling systems that use transmembrane proteins as ligands (Yaron and Sprinzak, 2012) but had not been described for plant receptor-like kinases. The results suggest novel strategies for control of receptor-like kinase activity and manipulation of signaling pathways in plants and for pollination control in hybrid breeding programs and seed production from hybrid plants in the Brassicaceae.  相似文献   

7.
Recognition of “self” pollen in the self-incompatibility (SI) response of the Brassicaceae is determined by allele-specific interaction between the S-locus receptor kinase (SRK), a transmembrane protein of the stigma epidermis, and its ligand, the pollen coat-localized S-locus cysteine-rich (SCR) protein. The current model for SRK-mediated signaling proposes a central role for the plant U-box (PUB) Armadillo repeat-containing protein ARC1, an E3 ligase that interacts with, and is phosphorylated by, the kinase domain of SRK. According to the model, activated ARC1 causes the degradation of factors required for successful pollen tube growth. However, Arabidopsis thaliana plants transformed with functional SRK and SCR genes isolated from self-incompatible A. lyrata can express an intense SI response despite lacking a functional ARC1 gene. Here, we tested the possibility that a different member of the A. thaliana PUB protein family might have assumed the role of ARC1 in SI. Toward this end, we analyzed the AtPUB2 gene, which is annotated as being highly expressed in stigmas. Our functional analysis of a T-DNA insertion pub2 allele, together with yeast two-hybrid interaction assays and reporter analysis of AtPUB2 promoter activity, demonstrates that AtPUB2 does not function in SI. The results leave open the question of whether the proposed model of ARC1-mediated signaling applies to transgenic SRKSCR self-incompatible A. thaliana plants.  相似文献   

8.
Many flowering plants have evolved self-incompatibility (SI) systems to prevent inbreeding. In the Brassicaceae, SI is genetically controlled by a single polymorphic locus, termed the S-locus. Pollen rejection occurs when stigma and pollen share the same S-haplotype. Recognition of S-haplotype specificity has recently been shown to involve at least two S-locus genes, S-receptor kinase (SRK) and S-locus protein 11 or S-locus Cys-rich (SP11/SCR). SRK encodes a polymorphic membrane-spanning protein kinase, which is the sole female determinant of the S-haplotype specificity. SP11/SCR encodes a highly polymorphic Cys-rich small basic protein specifically expressed in the anther tapetum and in pollen. In cauliflower (B. oleracea), the gain-of-function approach has demonstrated that an allele of SP11/SCR encodes the male determinant of S-specificity. Here we examined the function of two alleles of SP11/SCR of B. rapa by the same approach and further established that SP11/SCR is the sole male determinant of SI in the genus Brassica sp. Our results also suggested that the 522-bp 5'-upstream region of the S9-SP11 gene used to drive the transgene contained all the regulatory elements required for the unique sporophytic/gametophytic expression observed for the native SP11 gene. Promoter deletion analyses suggested that the highly conserved 192-bp upstream region was sufficient for driving this unique expression. Furthermore, immunohistochemical analyses revealed that the protein product of the SP11 transgene was present in the tapetum and pollen, and that in pollen of late developmental stages, the SP11 protein was mainly localized in the pollen coat, a finding consistent with its expected biological role.  相似文献   

9.
芸薹属的自交不亲和性是受单基因座、复等位基因控制的孢子体控制型。自交不亲和基因座位(S-locus)是由多个基因组成的复杂区域,称之为S多基因家族,其大多数成员分布于芸薹属的整个染色体组。目前已鉴定出100多个S等位基因,它们的起源分化始于一千万年前。S-座位上存在的多基因有3种:SRK,SLG和SCR/SP11;SRK和SLG在柱头中表达,SCR/SP11在雄蕊中表达。SRK蛋白在识别同类花粉的过程中起主要作用,而SLG蛋白增强了这种自交不亲和反应。SLG与SRK基因中编码S-结构域的核苷酸序列相似性程度高达85%~98%。基因转换可能是SLG和SRK的高度同源性能够得以保持的原因。SRK,SLG和SCR基因紧密相连,并表现出高水平的序列多样性。SRK与SLG基因间的距离很近,在20~25 kb之间。在柱头和花粉中,自交不亲和等位基因之间的共显性关系要比显性和隐性关系更加普遍,这是芸薹属自交不亲和性的一大特点。自交不亲和基因的进化模式存在两种假说:双基因进化模式和中性变异体进化模式;可能存在几种不同的进化方式,它们共同在自然群体中新的S等位基因进化过程中起作用。  相似文献   

10.
十字花科植物自交不亲和性(SI)受墨位点(S-locus)编码的sRK和sCR控制,它们分别是柱头和花粉中的sI特异识别因子。野生型拟南芥不具有sI,而近来通过转基因手段将外源艘K—scR基因转入野生型拟南芥可以使其表现sI,由此建立了一个可用于十字花科sI研究的新型模式植物。本文综述了利用这种转基因拟南芥在SI机制及进化方面取得的进展,包括sI新基因的挖掘、候选基因功能分析和拟南芥生殖模式的转变等。  相似文献   

11.
As a starting point for a phylogenetic study of self-incompatibility (SI) in crucifers and to elucidate the genetic basis of transitions between outcrossing and self-fertilizing mating systems in this family, we investigated the SI system of Arabidopsis lyrata. A. lyrata is an outcrossing close relative of the self-fertile A. thaliana and is thought to have diverged from A. thaliana approximately 5 million years ago and from Brassica spp 15 to 20 million years ago. Analysis of two S (sterility) locus haplotypes demonstrates that the A. lyrata S locus contains tightly linked orthologs of the S locus receptor kinase (SRK) gene and the S locus cysteine-rich protein (SCR) gene, which are the determinants of SI specificity in stigma and pollen, respectively, but lacks an S locus glycoprotein gene. As described previously in Brassica, the S haplotypes of A. lyrata differ by the rearranged order of their genes and by their variable physical sizes. Comparative mapping of the A. lyrata and Brassica S loci indicates that the S locus of crucifers is a dynamic locus that has undergone several duplication events since the Arabidopsis--Brassica split and was translocated as a unit between two distant chromosomal locations during diversification of the two taxa. Furthermore, comparative analysis of the S locus region of A. lyrata and its homeolog in self-fertile A. thaliana identified orthologs of the SRK and SCR genes and demonstrated that self-compatibility in this species is associated with inactivation of SI specificity genes.  相似文献   

12.
Many plants have a self‐incompatibility (SI) system in which the rejection of self‐pollen is determined by multiple haplotypes at a single locus, termed S. In the Solanaceae, each haplotype encodes a single ribonuclease (S‐RNase) and multiple S‐locus F‐box proteins (SLFs), which function as the pistil and pollen SI determinants, respectively. S‐RNase is cytotoxic to self‐pollen, whereas SLFs are thought to collaboratively recognize non‐self S‐RNases in cross‐pollen and detoxify them via the ubiquitination pathway. However, the actual mechanism of detoxification remains unknown. Here we isolate the components of a SCFSLF (SCF = SKP1‐CUL1‐F‐box‐RBX1) from Petunia pollen. The SCFSLF polyubiquitinates a subset of non‐self S‐RNases in vitro. The polyubiquitinated S‐RNases are degraded in the pollen extract, which is attenuated by a proteasome inhibitor. Our findings suggest that multiple SCFSLF complexes in cross‐pollen polyubiquitinate non‐self S‐RNases, resulting in their degradation by the proteasome.  相似文献   

13.
Selfincompatibility (SI) is a major genetic mechanism to prevent selffertilization in flowering plants and, in most cases, controlled by a single multiallelic locus, known as the S locus. In Brassica, the genes mediating both stylar (SRK, S receptor kinase) and pollen (SCR/SP11, S locus cystein rich protein/S locus protein 11) expression of selfincompatible reaction have been characterized though the first S locus-encoded gene, SLG (S locus glycoprotein), was isolated nearly fifteen years ago. These findings have finally unveiled the molecular partners in pollen recognition during selfincompatible reaction in Brassica.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Pollen germination and pollen‐tube growth under natural conditions were observed in a population of a distylous species, Primula sieboldii, in which partial self‐compatibility has been demonstrated in some long‐styled genets. We observed post‐pollination processes microscopically in styles collected after self‐morph and inter‐morph hand pollination (with standardized pollen load on the stigmas) in four genets each from the following three ‘genet types’: self‐incompatible long‐styled (SI), partially self‐compatible long‐styled (SC) and self‐incompatible short‐styled morph genets. Irrespective of the genet type, pollen germination began within 24 h after pollination and tubes of pollen reached to the style base with 48–96 h after inter‐morph pollination. Although pollen tubes germinated after self‐pollination in the SC genets, the number of germinated pollen tubes was significantly lower than in the case of inter‐morph pollination. Few pollen tubes germinated after self‐pollination of the SI or short‐styled genets. In SC genets, the rate of pollen‐tube growth did not differ between self‐morph and inter‐morph pollination (~1.9 mm/day). Therefore, differences in self‐compatibility between SC and SI genets in P. sieboldii are likely to be attributable to differential pollen germination rates rather than to differential pollen‐tube growth rates.  相似文献   

16.
In most self-incompatible plant species, recognition of self-pollen is controlled by a single locus, termed the S-locus. In Brassica, genetic dissection of the S-locus has revealed the presence of three highly-polymorphic genes: S-receptor kinase (SRK), S-locus protein 11 (SP11) (also known as S-locus cysteine-rich protein; SCR) and S-locus glycoprotein (SLG). SRK encodes a membrane-spanning serine/threonine kinase that determines the S-haplotype specificity of the stigma. SP11 encodes a small cysteine-rich protein that determines the S-haplotype specificity of pollen. SLG encodes a secreted form of stigma protein similar to the extracellular domain of SRK. Recent biochemical studies have revealed that SP11 functions as the sole ligand for its cognate SRK receptor complex. Their interaction induces the autophosphorylation of SRK, which is expected to trigger the signalling cascade that results in the rejection of self-pollen. This so-called ligand-receptor complex interaction and receptor activation occur in an S-haplotype-specific manner, and this specificity is almost certainly the basis for self-pollen recognition.  相似文献   

17.
Self-incompatibility (SI) is thought to have played a key role in the evolution of species as it promotes their outcrossing through the recognition and rejection of self-pollen grains. In most species, SI is under the control of a complex, multiallelic S-locus. The recognition system is associated with quantitative variations of the strength of the SI reaction; the origin of these variations is still not elucidated. To define the genetic regulations involved, we studied the variability of the SI response in homozygous S 15 S 15 plants in cauliflower. These plants were obtained from a self-progeny of a self-compatible (SC) plant heterozygous for S 15 , which was generated after five selfing generations from one strongly self-incompatible initial plant. We found a continuous phenotypic variation for SI response in the offspring plants homozygous for the S 15 haplotype, from the strict SI reaction to self-compatibility, with a great proportion of the plants being partially self-compatible (PSC). Decrease in SI levels was also observed during the life of the flower. The number of pollen tubes passing through the stigma barrier was higher when counted 3 or 5 days after pollination than one day after pollination. Analysis of the expression of the two key genes regulating self-pollen recognition in cauliflower, the S-locus receptor kinase (SRK) and S-locus cysteine-rich (SCR/SP11) genes, revealed that self-compatibility or PSC was associated with decreased SRK or SCR/SP11 expression. Our work shows the particularly high level of phenotypic plasticity of the SI response associated with certain S-haplotypes in cauliflower.  相似文献   

18.
The evolution of self‐compatibility (SC) by the loss of self‐incompatibility (SI) is regarded as one of the most frequent transitions in flowering plants. SI systems are generally characterized by specific interactions between the male and female specificity genes encoded at the S‐locus. Recent empirical studies have revealed that the evolution of SC is often driven by male SC‐conferring mutations at the S‐locus rather than by female mutations. In this study, using a forward simulation model, we compared the fixation probabilities of male vs. female SC‐conferring mutations at the S‐locus. We explicitly considered the effects of pollen availability in the population and bias in the occurrence of SC‐conferring mutations on the male and female specificity genes. We found that male SC‐conferring mutations were indeed more likely to be fixed than were female SC‐conferring mutations in a wide range of parameters. This pattern was particularly strong when pollen availability was relatively high. Under such a condition, even if the occurrence of mutations was biased strongly towards the female specificity gene, male SC‐conferring mutations were much more often fixed. Our study demonstrates that fixation probabilities of those two types of mutation vary strongly depending on ecological and genetic conditions, although both types result in the same evolutionary consequence—the loss of SI.  相似文献   

19.
A recent investigation found evidence that the transition of Arabidopsis thaliana from ancestral self-incompatibility (SI) to full self-compatibility occurred very recently and suggested that this occurred through a selective fixation of a nonfunctional allele (PsiSCR1) at the SCR gene, which determines pollen specificity in the incompatibility response. The main evidence is the lack of polymorphism at the SCR locus in A. thaliana. However, the nearby SRK gene, which determines stigma specificity in self-incompatible Brassicaceae species, has extremely high sequence diversity, with 3 very divergent SRK haplotypes, 2 of them present in multiple strains. Such high diversity is extremely unusual in this species, and it suggests the possibility that multiple, different SRK haplotypes may have been preserved from A. thaliana's self-incompatible ancestor. To study the evolution of S-haplotypes in the A. thaliana lineage, we searched the 2 most closely related Arabidopsis species Arabidopsis lyrata and Arabidopsis halleri, in which most populations have retained SI, and found SRK sequences corresponding to all 3 A. thaliana haplogroup sequences. Our molecular evolutionary analyses of these 3 S-haplotypes provide an independent estimate of the timing of the breakdown of SI and again exclude an ancient transition to selfing in A. thaliana. Comparing sequences of each of the 3 haplogroups between species, we find that 2 of the 3 SRK sequences (haplogroups A and B) are similar throughout their length, suggesting that little or no recombination with other SRK alleles has occurred since these species diverged. The diversity difference between the SCR and SRK loci in A. thaliana, however, suggests crossing-over, either within SRK or between the SCR and SRK loci. If the loss of SI involved fixation of the PsiSCR1 sequence, the exchange must have occurred during its fixation. Divergence between the species is much lower at the S-locus, compared with reference loci, and we discuss two contributory possibilities. Introgression may have occurred between A. lyrata and A. halleri and between their ancestral lineage and A. thaliana, at least for some period after their split. In addition, the coalescence times of sequences of individual S-haplogroups are expected to be less than those of alleles at non-S-loci.  相似文献   

20.
Mate selection and maintenance of genetic diversity is crucial to successful reproduction and species survival. Plants utilize self-incompatibility system as a genetic barrier to prevent self pollen from developing on the pistil, leading to hybrid vigor and diversity. In Brassica (canola, kale, and broccoli), an allele-specific interaction between the pollen SCR/SP11 (S-locus cysteine rich protein/S locus protein 11) and the pistil S Receptor Kinase, results in the activation of SRK which recruits the Arm Repeat Containing 1 (ARC1) E3 ligase to the proteasome. The targets of Arm Repeat Containing 1 are proposed to be compatibility factors, which when targeted for degradation by Arm Repeat Containing 1 results in pollen rejection. Despite the fact that protein degradation is predicted to be important for successful self-pollen rejection, the identity of the various proteins whose abundance is altered by the SI pathway has remained unknown. To identify potential candidate proteins regulated by the SI response, we have used the two-dimensional difference gel electrophoresis analysis, coupled with matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization/time of flight/MS. We identified 56 differential protein spots with 19 unique candidate proteins whose abundance is down-regulated following self-incompatible pollinations. The identified differentials are predicted to function in various pathways including biosynthetic pathways, signaling, cytoskeletal organization, and exocytosis. From the 19 unique proteins identified, we investigated the role of tubulin and the microtubule network during both self-incompatible and compatible pollen responses. Moderate changes in the microtubule network were observed with self-incompatible pollinations; however, a more distinct localized break-down of the microtubule network was observed during compatible pollinations, that is likely mediated by EXO70A1, leading to successful pollination.  相似文献   

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