Literature DB >> 24663667

Repeated evolution of tricellular (and bicellular) pollen.

Joseph H Williams1, Mackenzie L Taylor, Brian C O'Meara.   

Abstract

PREMISE OF STUDY: Male gametophytes of seed plants are sexually immature at the time they are dispersed as pollen, but approximately 30% of flowering plants have tricellular pollen containing fully formed sperm at anthesis. The classic study of Brewbaker (1967: American Journal of Botany 54: 1069-1083) provided a powerful confirmation of the long-standing hypothesis that tricellular pollen had many parallel and irreversible origins within angiosperms. We readdressed the main questions of that study with modern comparative phylogenetic methods.
METHODS: We used our own and more recent reports to greatly expand the Brewbaker data set. We modeled trait evolution for 2511 species on a time-calibrated angiosperm phylogeny using (1) Binary State Speciation and Extinction (BiSSE), which accounts for the effect of species diversification rates on character transition rates and, (2) the hidden rates model (HRM), which incorporates variation in transition rates across a phylogeny. KEY
RESULTS: Seventy percent of species had bicellular pollen. BiSSE found a 1.9-fold higher bicellular to tricellular transition rate than in the reverse direction, and bicellular lineages had a 1.8-fold higher diversification rate than tricellular lineages. HRM found heterogeneity in evolutionary rates, with bidirectional transition rates in three of four rate classes.
CONCLUSIONS: The tricellular condition is not irreversible. Pollen cell numbers are maintained at intermediate frequencies because lower net diversification rates of tricellular lineages are counterbalanced by slower state shifts to the bicellular condition. That tricellular lineages diversify slowly and give rise to bicellular lineages slowly reflects a linkage between the evolution of sporophyte lifestyles and the developmental lability of male gametophytes.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Dollo’s law; cell cycle; constraint; diversification rate; evolution of development; gametogenesis; heterochrony; parallelism; pollen germination; trade-off

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24663667     DOI: 10.3732/ajb.1300423

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Bot        ISSN: 0002-9122            Impact factor:   3.844


  13 in total

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Authors:  Said Hafidh; Jan Fíla; David Honys
Journal:  Plant Reprod       Date:  2016-01-04       Impact factor: 3.767

2.  A simple and robust protocol for immunostaining Arabidopsis pollen nuclei.

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Journal:  Plant Reprod       Date:  2019-01-22       Impact factor: 3.767

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Review 5.  The male germline of angiosperms: repertoire of an inconspicuous but important cell lineage.

Authors:  Scott D Russell; Daniel S Jones
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2015-03-20       Impact factor: 5.753

6.  Evolutionary history of callose synthases in terrestrial plants with emphasis on proteins involved in male gametophyte development.

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Review 7.  Pollen Developmental Arrest: Maintaining Pollen Fertility in a World With a Changing Climate.

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Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2019-05-24       Impact factor: 5.753

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Authors:  Daniel Gaudet; Narendra Singh Yadav; Aleksei Sorokin; Andriy Bilichak; Igor Kovalchuk
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2020-05-23

9.  Genome-wide identification of GH3 genes in Brassica oleracea and identification of a promoter region for anther-specific expression of a GH3 gene.

Authors:  Jiseong Jeong; Sunhee Park; Jeong Hui Im; Hankuil Yi
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2021-01-06       Impact factor: 3.969

10.  Quantitative DNA Analyses for Airborne Birch Pollen.

Authors:  Isabell Müller-Germann; Bernhard Vogel; Heike Vogel; Andreas Pauling; Janine Fröhlich-Nowoisky; Ulrich Pöschl; Viviane R Després
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-10-22       Impact factor: 3.240

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