| Literature DB >> 23852378 |
Gianni Barcaccia1, Emidio Albertini.
Abstract
Seed is one of the key factors of crop productivity. Therefore, a comprehension of the mechanisms underlying seed formation in cultivated plants is crucial for the quantitative and qualitative progress of agricultural production. In angiosperms, two pathways of reproduction through seed exist: sexual or amphimictic, and asexual or apomictic; the former is largely exploited by seed companies for breeding new varieties, whereas the latter is receiving continuously increasing attention from both scientific and industrial sectors in basic research projects. If apomixis is engineered into sexual crops in a controlled manner, its impact on agriculture will be broad and profound. In fact, apomixis will allow clonal seed production and thus enable efficient and consistent yields of high-quality seeds, fruits, and vegetables at lower costs. The development of apomixis technology is expected to have a revolutionary impact on agricultural and food production by reducing cost and breeding time, and avoiding the complications that are typical of sexual reproduction (e.g., incompatibility barriers) and vegetative propagation (e.g., viral transfer). However, the development of apomixis technology in agriculture requires a deeper knowledge of the mechanisms that regulate reproductive development in plants. This knowledge is a necessary prerequisite to understanding the genetic control of the apomictic process and its deviations from the sexual process. Our molecular understanding of apomixis will be greatly advanced when genes that are specifically or differentially expressed during embryo and embryo sac formation are discovered. In our review, we report the main findings on this subject by examining two approaches: i) analysis of the apomictic process in natural apomictic species to search for genes controlling apomixis and ii) analysis of gene mutations resembling apomixis or its components in species that normally reproduce sexually. In fact, our opinion is that a novel perspective on this old dilemma pertaining to the molecular control of apomixis can emerge from a cross-check among candidate genes in natural apomicts and a high-throughput analysis of sexual mutants.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23852378 PMCID: PMC3747320 DOI: 10.1007/s00497-013-0222-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Reprod ISSN: 2194-7953 Impact factor: 3.767
Fig. 1Comparison between conventional and apomixis-mediated methods for breeding F1 hybrid varieties. In traditional breeding, within a segregating population (e.g., F2 population) some genotypes are selected and after some generation of selfing followed by phenotypic selection, tested for their specific combining ability in order to be used as parental lines for the constitution of heterotic F1 hybrid seeds. The best performing inbred lines are selected, multiplied in isolated fields, and crossed in pairwise combinations to obtain uniform, vigorous, and high-yield F1 hybrids. This scheme, however, requires a series of actions: the two inbred lines must be kept pure and multiplied in separate fields. Then, to obtain the hybrid seed, it is necessary to establish a dedicated field where about one quarter of the plants is used as pollinator (i.e., pollen donor inbred) and on the remaining plants (i.e., seed parent inbred) the hybrid F1 seeds will be harvested. Farmers cannot re-use seeds collected from F1 hybrids as these seeds will give rise to highly variable populations because of genetic segregation and recombination. Using apomictic lines, however, the situation would be much simpler. Once superior inbred lines to be used as seed parent are selected, they can be crossed with clonal lines as pollen donors carrying the gene for apomixis, in order to obtain F1 hybrid seeds sharing a highly heterozygous genotype. From this moment on, each F1 hybrid variety can be maintained for several generations with permanently fixed heterosis
Basic information on inheritance models, genetic recombination potentials, and molecular mapping studies of apospory and diplospory in apomictic species
| Apomixis system | Endosperm development | Suppression of recombination | References for genetic mapping and inheritance | Candidate genes | References for candidate genes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apospory | |||||
| | Pseudogamous | Yes | do Valle and Savidan ( |
| Lacerda et al. ( |
| | Pseudogamous | No | Sherwood et al. ( |
| Conner et al. ( |
| | Autonomous | No | Bicknell et al. ( |
| Rodrigues et al. ( |
| | Pseudogamous | No | Matzk et al. ( |
| Schallau et al. ( |
| | Pseudogamous | No | Ebina et al. ( |
| Chen et al. ( |
| | Pseudogamous | Yes | Martinez et al. ( |
| Felitti et al. ( |
| | Pseudogamous | Yes | Pupilli et al. ( | Unspecified ( | Calderini et al. ( |
| | Pseudogamous | Yes | Jessup et al. ( |
| Singh et al. ( |
| | Pseudogamous | Yes | Ozias-Akins et al. ( |
| Conner et al. ( |
| | Pseudogamous | No | Barcaccia et al. ( |
| Albertini et al. ( |
| | Pseudogamous | No | Nogler ( | ND | |
| Diplospory | |||||
| | Pseudogamous | Yes | Schranz et al. ( |
| Corral et al. ( |
| | Autonomous | No | Noyes and Rieseberg ( | ND | |
| | Autonomous | No | Tas and van Dijk ( | ND | |
| | Pseudogamous | Yes | Leblanc et al. ( | ND | |
Candidate genes for apomixis are also given along with references
Fig. 2Expression data related to candidate genes for apomixis. Gene expression patterns and levels of APOSTART6 in P. pratensis and ARIADNE7 in H. perforatum as assessed by in situ hybridization and real-time RT-PCR analysis. a–d APOSTART6 expression patterns in longitudinal sections of P. pratensis ovaries: signal is present in one or more nucellar cells (arrow) within the ovule of apomictic genotypes (a) and in the megaspore mother cell in sexual genotypes (data not shown, for details see Albertini et al. 2005). Signal is then present during embryo sac development (b, c) and embryo development (d). e Expression patterns and level of transcripts encoded by APOSTART6 in apomictic (dark blue), sexual (red), and parthenogenic recombinant (light blue) genotypes of P. pratensis (for details see Marconi et al. 2013). Delay of expression in apomictic and parthenogenetic genotypes suggests an involvement of APOSTART6 in parthenogenesis. f, g Longitudinal sections of H. perforatum ovules at the stage of female meiosis showing hybridization signals of ARIADNE7 transcripts (arrows) in correspondence with nucellar tissues next to megaspores; h negative control (courtesy of Giulio Galla, University of Padova). i Expression levels of the ARIADNE7 transcripts in young buds, anthers, pistils, and sepals and petals: this gene was found preferentially expressed in pistils and young buds of apomictic genotypes. Specificity of expression domain in apomictic and aposporic genotypes suggests an involvement of ARIADNE7 in apospory
General information on the mutants miming apomictic components and genes showing apomictic phenotypes in sexual model plants along with references
| Plant phenotype | Gene/mutant | Species | Gene product/molecular function | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apomeiosis | ||||
| Multiple archesporial cells |
| Maize | n.d. | Sheridan et al. ( |
|
| Rice | LRR receptor-like kinase | Nonomura et al. ( | |
|
| Rice | Small extracellular protein (unknown function) | Zhao et al. ( | |
| Diplospory-like (switch/turning meiosis into mitosis) |
| Arabidopsis | Meiosis-specific chromatin-associated protein | Ravi et al. ( |
|
| Arabidopsis | Meiosis-specific (synaptic) proteins and cell cycle-progression proteins | d’Erfurth et al. ( | |
| Diplospory-like (restitutional meiosis) |
| Maize | Putative chromatin remodeling factor | Rhoades and Dempsey ( |
|
| Maize | ARGONAUTE protein catalytic component of the RNA-induced protein complex of gene silencing | Singh et al. ( | |
|
| Alfalfa Arabidopsis | Protein involved in cell proliferation, cell death and cell polarity | Citterio et al. ( | |
|
| DNA methyl-transferases | Garcia-Aguilar et al. ( | ||
| Apospory-like (aposporic initials and embryo sacs) |
| Arabidopsis | ARGONAUTE protein (see above) | Olmedo-Monfil et al. ( |
|
| Arabidopsis | RNA-dependent RNA polymerase | ||
|
| Arabidopsis | RNA binding protein suppressor of gene silencing | ||
|
| Arabidopsis | DEAD/DEAH-box RNA helicase | Schmidt et al. ( | |
| Parthenogenesis/embryogenesis | ||||
| Haploid parthenogenesis and facultative pseudogamy |
| Barley | n.d. | Hagberg and Hagberg ( |
| Autonomous seed development, including parthenogenesis |
| Arabidopsis | WD40 domain protein; part of polycomb group complex (PRC2) | Guitton and Berger ( |
| Haploid parthenogenesis and polyembryony |
| Maize | LOB domain protein DNA-binding transcription factors | Evans ( |
| Embryogenesis (embryo development) |
| Arabidopsis | CCAAT box-binding factor (HAP3 subunit) | Lotan et al. ( |
|
| Arabidopsis | LRR receptor-like kinase | Hecht et al. ( | |
|
| Arabidopsis and Brassica | AP2 domain transcription factor | Boutilier et al. ( | |
| Endosperm development | ||||
| Autonomous endosperm development |
| Arabidopsis | SET domain Polycomb protein | Grossniklaus et al. ( |
|
| Arabidopsis | WD domain Polycomb protein | Ohad et al. ( | |
|
| Arabidopsis | C2H2 zinc-finger protein part of polycomb group complex | Luo et al. ( | |
|
| Arabidopsis | Component of the MEA/FIE Polycomb group complex | Köhler et al. ( | |