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Holoparasitic Rafflesiaceae possess the most reduced endophytes and yet give rise to the world's largest flowers
Authors:Lachezar A. Nikolov  P. B. Tomlinson  Sugumaran Manickam  Peter K. Endress  Elena M. Kramer  Charles C. Davis
Affiliation:1.Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University Herbaria, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA;2.The Kampong, National Tropical Botanical Garden, 4013 Douglas Road, Miami, FL 33133, USA;3.Rimba Ilmu Botanic Garden, Institute of Biological Sciences, University of Malaya, 50603 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and;4.Institute of Systematic Botany, University of Zurich, Zollikerstrasse 107, CH-8008 Zurich, Switzerland
Abstract:

Background and Aims

Species in the holoparasitic plant family Rafflesiaceae exhibit one of the most highly modified vegetative bodies in flowering plants. Apart from the flower shoot and associated bracts, the parasite is a mycelium-like endophyte living inside their grapevine hosts. This study provides a comprehensive treatment of the endophytic vegetative body for all three genera of Rafflesiaceae (Rafflesia, Rhizanthes and Sapria), and reports on the cytology and development of the endophyte, including its structural connection to the host, shedding light on the poorly understood nature of this symbiosis.

Methods

Serial sectioning and staining with non-specific dyes, periodic–Schiff''s reagent and aniline blue were employed in order to characterize the structure of the endophyte across a phylogenetically diverse sampling.

Key Results

A previously identified difference in the nuclear size between Rafflesiaceae endophytes and their hosts was used to investigate the morphology and development of the endophytic body. The endophytes generally comprise uniseriate filaments oriented radially within the host root. The emergence of the parasite from the host during floral development is arrested in some cases by an apparent host response, but otherwise vegetative growth does not appear to elicit suppression by the host.

Conclusions

Rafflesiaceae produce greatly reduced and modified vegetative bodies even when compared with the other holoparasitic angiosperms once grouped with Rafflesiaceae, which possess some vegetative differentiation. Based on previous studies of seeds together with these findings, it is concluded that the endophyte probably develops directly from a proembryo, and not from an embryo proper. Similarly, the flowering shoot arises directly from the undifferentiated endophyte. These filaments produce a protocorm in which a shoot apex originates endogenously by formation of a secondary morphological surface. This degree of modification to the vegetative body is exceptional within angiosperms and warrants additional investigation. Furthermore, the study highlights a mechanical isolation mechanism by which the host may defend itself from the parasite.
Keywords:Comparative morphology, endophyte, gigantism, holoparasitism, host–  parasite relationship, heterochrony, proembryo, Rafflesiaceae, Rafflesia, Rhizanthes, Sapria, Tetrastigma
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