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1.
The Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) gynoecium, the female floral reproductive structure, requires the action of genes that specify positional identities during its development to generate an organ competent for seed development and dispersal. Early in gynoecial development, patterning events divide the primordium into distinct domains that will give rise to specific tissues and organs. The medial domain of the gynoecium gives rise to the ovules, and several other structures critical for reproductive competence. Here we report a synergistic genetic interaction between seuss and aintegumenta mutants resulting in a complete loss of ovule initiation and a reduction of the structures derived from the medial domain. We show that patterning events are disrupted early in the development of the seuss aintegumenta gynoecia and we identify PHABULOSA (PHB), REVOLUTA, and CRABS CLAW (CRC) as potential downstream targets of SEUSS (SEU) and AINTEGUMENTA (ANT) regulation. Our genetic data suggest that SEU additionally functions in pathways that are partially redundant and parallel to PHB, CRC, and ANT. Thus, SEU and ANT are part of a complex and robust molecular system that coordinates patterning cues and cellular proliferation along the three positional axes of the developing gynoecium.  相似文献   

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The INNER NO OUTER (INO) and AINTEGUMENTA (ANT) genes are essential for ovule integument development in Arabidopsis thaliana. Ovules of ino mutants initiate two integument primordia, but the outer integument primordium forms on the opposite side of the ovule from the normal location and undergoes no further development. The inner integument appears to develop normally, resulting in erect, unitegmic ovules that resemble those of gymnosperms. ino plants are partially fertile and produce seeds with altered surface topography, demonstrating a lineage dependence in development of the testa. ant mutations affect initiation of both integuments. The strongest of five new ant alleles we have isolated produces ovules that lack integuments and fail to complete megasporogenesis. ant mutations also affect flower development, resulting in narrow petals and the absence of one or both lateral stamens. Characterization of double mutants between ant, ino and other mutations affecting ovule development has enabled the construction of a model for genetic control of ovule development. This model proposes parallel independent regulatory pathways for a number of aspects of this process, a dependence on the presence of an inner integument for development of the embryo sac, and the existence of additional genes regulating ovule development.  相似文献   

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The presence of a gynoecium composed of carpels is a key feature of angiosperms. The carpel is often regarded as a homologue of the gymnosperm megasporophyll (that is, an ovule-bearing leaf), but higher complexity of the morphological nature of carpel cannot be ruled out. Angiosperm carpels can fuse to form a syncarpous gynoecium. A syncarpous gynoecium usually includes a well-developed compitum, an area where the pollen tube transmitting tracts of individual carpels unite to enable the transition of pollen tubes from one carpel to another. This phenomenon is a precondition to the emergence of carpel dimorphism manifested as the absence of a functional stigma or fertile ovules in part of the carpels. Pseudomonomery, which is characterized by the presence of a fertile ovule (or ovules) in one carpel only, is a specific case of carpel dimorphism. A pseudomonomerous gynoecium usually has a single plane of symmetry and is likely to share certain features of the regulation of morphogenesis with the monosymmetric perianth and androecium. A genuine monomerous gynoecium consists of a single carpel. Syncarpous gynoecia can be abruptly transformed into monomerous gynoecia in the course of evolution or undergo sterilization and gradual reduction of some carpels. Partial or nearly complete loss of carpel individuality that precludes the assignment of an ovule (or ovules) to an individual carpel is observed in a specific group of gynoecia. We termed this phenomenon mixomery, since it should be distinguished from pseudomonomery.  相似文献   

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Krizek BA  Prost V  Macias A 《The Plant cell》2000,12(8):1357-1366
The Arabidopsis AINTEGUMENTA (ANT) gene has been shown previously to be involved in ovule development and in the initiation and growth of floral organs. Here, we show that ANT acts in additional processes during flower development, including repression of AGAMOUS (AG) in second whorl cells, promotion of petal epidermal cell identity, and gynoecium development. Analyses of ap2-1 ant-6 double mutants reveal that ANT acts redundantly with AP2 to repress AG in second whorl cells. The abaxial surface of ant petals contains features such as stomata and elongated, interdigitated cells that are not present on wild-type petals. The loss of petal identity in these second whorl cells does not result from ectopic AG expression, suggesting that ANT acts in a pathway promoting petal cell identity that is independent of its role in repression of AG. These data suggest that ANT may function as a class A gene.  相似文献   

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Several members of the MADS-box gene family have been shown to be important regulators of flower development, controlling such well-studied early events as the formation of the floral meristem and the specification of floral organ identity. Other floral-specific MADS-box genes, of as yet unknown function, have been isolated by homology and are proposed to be part of a regulatory hierarchy controlling flower development. Some of these genes might regulate later aspects of flower development, such as development of individual floral organs, which is less well studied at the molecular level. This paper presents a detailed analysis of the expression pattern of one such gene from Arabidopsis , AGL1 , using RNA in situ hybridization. It is found that AGL1 is specifically expressed in particular regions of the gynoecium and ovule, only during and after floral development stage 7. AGL1 expression at the tip of the growing carpel primordia, along the margins of the ovary valves in developing and mature gynoecia and in specific regions of developing and mature ovules provides important insights into the possible roles of AGL1 . It is proposed that AGL1 may have regulatory functions in the structural definition and/or function of the valve margins, in axis maintenance during ovule development, in nutritional supply to the growing ovule and embryo sac, and in pollen tube guidance. In the floral homeotic mutants ag-1 , ap3-3 and ap2-2 , AGL1 mRNA is expressed in an organ-dependent manner, suggesting that AGL1 is a carpel-specific gene and as such ultimately depends upon the carpel identity gene AG for proper gene expression.  相似文献   

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In angiosperms, initiation of ovule enlargement represents the start of seed development, the molecular mechanism of which is not yet elucidated.It was previously reported that pollen tube contents,rather than double fertilization, can trigger ovule enlargement. However, it remains unclear whether the signal(s) to trigger the initiation of ovule enlargement are from the sperm cells or from the pollen tubes.Recently, we identified a mutant drop1- drop2-, which produces pollen tubes with no sperm cells. Taking advantage of this special genetic material, we conducted pollination assays, and found that the ovules pollinated with drop1- drop2- pollen could initiate the enlargement and exhibited significant enlarged sizes at 36 h after pollination in comparison with those unpollinated ovules. However, the sizes of the ovules pollinated with drop1- drop2- pollen are significantly smaller than those of the ovules pollinated with wildtype pollen. These results demonstrate that the pollen tube, rather than the sperm cells, release the signal to trigger the initiation of ovule enlargement, and that double fertilization is required for further enlargement of the seeds.  相似文献   

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When mutations in CUP-SHAPED COTYLEDON1 (CUC1) and CUC2 are combined, severe defects involving fusion of sepals and of stamens occur in Arabidopsis flowers. In addition, septa of gynoecia do not fuse along the length of the ovaries and many ovules have their growth arrested. CUC2 is expressed at the tips of septal primordia during gynoecium development and at the boundary between nucellus and chalaza during ovule development. These expression patterns are partially consistent with the phenotype of the mutant gynoecium. CUC2 mRNA is also shown to be expressed at the boundaries between meristems and organ primordia during both the vegetative and reproductive phases. This expression pattern indicates that CUC2 is generally involved in organ separation in shoot and floral meristems.  相似文献   

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Previous work from our lab identified mutants, Mgr3 and Mgr9, of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) that produced unusual elongated green outgrowths from placentae in vivo. Similarly appearing stigmatoid growths were described developing from some in vitro cultures of excised placentae of tobacco (Hicks and McHughen, 1974, 1977). Here we report a developmental analysis and comparison of the unusual stigmatoid outgrowths seen in in vitro cultures of wild-type and mutant placentae, as well as the green outgrowths seen in vivo in the mutants. The growths produced by wild-type and mutant placental cultures in vitro, and the growths produced by the mutants in vivo, are identified as abnormal stigmas and styles. Wild-type in vitro placental cultures also produce outgrowths identified as homologs of whole carpels. Carpel fusion is not required for differentiation of stigma, style, transmitting tract, vascular traces, ovary, and ovules in these structures. The type and extent of stigmatoid growth production depends upon the age of the explant at excision and culture initiation. Before ovule primordium initiation, few growths are seen in culture; for a short window of time afterward, the primordia are competent to give rise to stigmatoid and carpelloid growths when cultured. After commitment to ovule development occurs, the primordia produce only ovules when cultured. The behavior of the mutant placental cultures is dimorphic. Explants from early stages behave similarly to wild-type when cultured, but differences between wild-type and the mutant behaviors in culture arise at the time when the stigmatoid growths begin to appear in vivo in the mutants. These results imply that ovule primordia pass through stages of distinct sequential restrictions of fate, first to growth as gynoecia, and then second to growth as ovules. The mutant strains described here perturb the commitment to differentiation as ovules.  相似文献   

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AINTEGUMENTA (ANT) was previously shown to be involved in floral organ initiation and growth in Arabidopsis. ant flowers have fewer and smaller floral organs and possess ovules that lack integuments and a functional embryo sac. The present work shows that young floral meristems of ant plants are smaller than those in wild type. Failure to initiate the full number of organ primordia in ant flowers may result from insufficient numbers of meristematic cells. The decreased size of ant floral organs appears to be a consequence of decreased cell division within organ primordia. Ectopic expression of ANT under the control of the constitutive 35S promoter results in the development of larger floral organs. The number and shape of these organs is not altered and the size of vegetative organs is normal. Microscopic and molecular analyses indicate that the increased size of 35S::ANT sepals is the result of increased cell division, whereas the increased sizes of 35S::ANT petals, stamens, and carpels are primarily attributable to increased cell expansion. In addition, 35S::ANT ovules often exhibit increased growth of the nucellus and the funiculus. These results suggest that ANT stimulates cell growth in floral organs.  相似文献   

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Arabidopsis gene FILAMENTOUS FLOWER (FIL) has been demonstrated to control the formation and development of inflorescence and floral meristems. This includes an early step in the establishment of a flower-forming domain within the floral primordium and the establishment of floral meristem identity. Another Arabidopsis gene LEUNIG (LUG) was previously found to specify the identity of the floral organ and control gynoecium fusion. In this paper, we describe floral phenotypes of a newly isolated fil allele, fil-21, and the phenotypic comparison of gynoecia between the fil-21 single mutant and fil-21 lug-101 double mutant. The gynoecium of fil-21 displays a well-fused structure, while that of the strong lug allele, lug-101, is unfused except at the gynoecium apex. However, gynoecia are markedly affected in the fil-21 lug-101 double mutant, being unfused. In late-appearing flowers of the double mutant, the gynoecia can even separate completely into several parts. These results suggest that LUG and FIL have a functional domain that is partially redundant in flower development, and synergistically regulate the gynoecium fusion. Received 18 June 2001/ Accepted in revised form 1 October 2001  相似文献   

16.
Seed is the offspring of angiosperms. Plants produce large numbers of seeds to ensure effective reproduction and survival in varying environments. Ovule is a fundamentally important organ and is the precursor of the seed. In Arabidopsis and other plants characterized by multi-ovulate ovaries, ovule initiation determines the maximal ovule number, thus greatly affecting seed number per fruit and seed yield. Investigating the regulatory mechanism of ovule initiation has both scientific and economic significance. However, the genetic and molecular basis underlying ovule initiation remains unclear due to technological limitations. Very recently, rules governing the multiple ovules initiation from one placenta have been identified, the individual functions and crosstalk of phytohormones in regulating ovule initiation have been further characterized, and new regulators of ovule boundary are reported, therefore expanding the understanding of this field. In this review, we present an overview of current knowledge in ovule initiation and summarize the significance of ovule initiation in regulating the number of plant offspring, as well as raise insights for the future study in this field that provide potential routes for the improvement of crop yield.  相似文献   

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Three morphological problems were investigated in three species of the Nyctaginaceae: epiphylly, phyllotaxis and placentation. Epiphylly, which occurs in Bougainvillea spectabilis , is the result of ontogenetic displacement resulting from the activity of an intercalary meristem at the base of the floral bract and the floral bud. Floral development of Bougainvillea spectabilis was compared with that of Boerhaavia diffusa and Mirabilis jalapa . Considerable variation occurs with regard to the number and arrangement of stamens. Five stamens are initiated simultaneously, alternate to the petals, in Mirabilis . In Bougainvillea , eight stamens arise sequentially at divergence angles suggestive of a 3/8 spiral. No developmental evidence was found to support the derivation of the eight stamens from a two whorled pentamerous androecium. Boerhaavia normally has only two stamens which most frequently are initiated toward opposite sides of the floral apex, but may also be formed in a 2/5 to 3/8 divergence. In some flowers only one or three stamens are formed. The gynoecium is formed in the same way in all three species: growth occurs in a crescent-shaped zone at the periphery of the floral apex thus producing the gynoecial wall. The single ovule, which is basal in the mature gynoecium, is formed from the gradual upgrowth and transformation of the floral apex and is developmentally terminal. Even the two-layered tunica is maintained as the floral apex is transformed into the ovule primordium. If 'carpel' is defined traditionally as a folded megasporophyll which bears and encloses ovule(s) then carpels are not present in the gynoecia of the three species studied. If 'carpel' is re-defined as an appendage which encloses ovule(s), then the gynoecia of the Nyctaginaceae are carpellate. However, the ovules remain cauline regardless of which definition is adopted.  相似文献   

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Effect of phytohormones on fiber initiation of cotton ovule   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In order to study the effect of phytohormones on cotton fiber initiation, contents of four endogenous phytohormones and activities of four related enzymes in ovules (in vivo) of a fuzzless–lintless mutant (fl) and its wild-type (FL) line were measured from 4 days before anthesis (day −4) to 4 days after anthesis (day 4). The results showed that contents of indole-3-acetic acid, gibberellic acid (GA), and zeatin riboside in fl ovules were lower than those in FL ovules. Therefore, indole-3-acetic acid, GA, and zeatin riboside were thought to be the promoters of fiber initiation. Although abscisic acid (ABA) content in fl ovule was slightly higher than that in FL ovule on day 0, which might imply that ABA inhibited fiber initiation. Fiber initiation could also be influenced by enzyme through regulating synthesis and degradation of related phytohormones since fl ovules were significantly higher in activities of indole-3-acetic acid oxidase, cytokinin oxidase and peroxidase, but lower in activity of tryptophan synthetase than those in FL ovules. To test the above hypothesis, exogenous plant growth regulators were also applied for the culture of ovules from fl and FL in vitro. When no regulators were added, no fiber was induced on fl ovule, but a few fibers were induced in FL ovule. Higher total fiber units (TFU) were observed when indole-3-acetic acid and gibberellic acid (GA3) were applied either separately or in combination to media. TFU did not increased with zeatin riboside alone, but the highest TFU was achieved when zeatin riboside was applied together with indole-3 acetic acid and GA3, which implied that fiber initiation could be promoted by them as additive.  相似文献   

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