| Literature DB >> 11864376 |
Abstract
Recent work has identified the elusive male (pollen) determinant that underlies self-incompatibility in Brassica (cabbage). The key pollen factor, recognized by the stigma of an incompatible plant, is a small cysteine-rich protein that interacts directly with the receptor domain of a stigma receptor serine-threonine kinase to initiate haplotype-specific pollen recognition and rejection.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2002 PMID: 11864376 PMCID: PMC139015 DOI: 10.1186/gb-2002-3-2-reviews1004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol ISSN: 1474-7596 Impact factor: 13.583
Figure 1Genetic control of self-incompatibility (SI). When allelic forms (haplotypes) of the S locus are matched in pollen (male tissue) and pistil (female tissue) the pollen is rendered incompatible. The incompatibility response is mediated by a variety of molecular mechanisms in different species. (a) In GSI the SI phenotype of the pollen is determined by its own haploid genome, and the growing pollen tubes are usually inhibited in the style (the S alleles of the male and female parent plants and the haplotype of the pollen are indicated). GSI dictates that S alleles are expressed co-dominantly in the pistil. Note that 50% of pollen from an S1S2 individual is compatible with the S1S3 pistil because half the pollen grains express the S1 allele and half the S2 allele. (b) In SSI the SI phenotype of the pollen is determined by the diploid genome of its parent plant, so if S alleles are expressed co-dominantly 'in the pollen', 100% of the pollen from a S1S2 individual will be inhibited by an S1S3 pistil (in SSI, pollen is usually inhibited on the stigma). SSI is possible because pollen S alleles are expressed sporophytically in diploid cells of the anther tapetum that supplies the S proteins to the pollen coating.
Figure 2Model for the mechanism of SSI in Brassica species. Inhibition of incompatible pollen occurs at the stigma surface, usually before germination of the pollen, and appears to involve a deregulation of water flow to the pollen from the stigma during hydration of the pollen grain [29]. Here, pollen from an S1S2 individual is inhibited on an S1S3 stigma as a consequence of a haplotype-specific interaction between male (pollen) and female (stigma) products of the S1 haplotype (see Figure 1b). The S proteins are color coded: S1, green; S2, blue; and S3, pink. SCR1, a pollen S protein, is recognized by, and binds to, the extracellular receptor domain of SRK1, a stigma S protein, thereby inducing dimerization of SRK1 and autophosphorylation (shown by P) on serine and threonine residues in the kinase domain (shown as a zig-zag tail). 'Activation' of the SRK protein then initiates an intracellular signaling cascade within the stigma that leads to localized rejection of the pollen. SLG acts as an accessory protein in the formation of the receptor complex (see text for further details). PCP-A1, a small cysteine-rich pollen-coat protein similar to SCR, but not genetically linked to S, binds nonspecifically to SLGs from all haplotypes and may function as an additional accessory protein alongside SLG during formation of the receptor complex. Signaling downstream of SRK has not yet been characterized, but essential for the SI response is ARC1, an arm-repeat protein, that binds to the kinase domain of SRK in a phosphorylation-dependent manner, but whose function is as yet unknown. Exine is the outer region of the pollen cell wall.