| Literature DB >> 26047712 |
Ji Liu1, Chaoyou Pang1, Hengling Wei1, Meizhen Song1, Yanyan Meng2, Jianhui Ma3, Shuli Fan4, Shuxun Yu5.
Abstract
Male sterility is a common phenomenon in flowering plants, and it has been successfully developed in several crops by taking advantage of heterosis. Cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) is an important economic crop, used mainly for the production of textile fiber. Using a space mutation breeding technique, a novel photosensitive genetic male sterile mutant CCRI9106 was isolated from the wild-type upland cotton cultivar CCRI040029. To use CCRI9106 in cotton hybrid breeding, it is of great importance to study the molecular mechanisms of its male sterility. Here, histological and iTRAQ-facilitated proteomic analyses of anthers were performed to explore male sterility mechanisms of the mutant. Scanning and transmission electron microscopy of the anthers showed that the development of pollen wall in CCRI9106 was severely defective with a lack of exine formation. At the protein level, 6121 high-confidence proteins were identified and 325 of them showed differential expression patterns between mutant and wild-type anthers. The proteins up- or down-regulated in MT anthers were mainly involved in exine formation, protein degradation, calcium ion binding,etc. These findings provide valuable information on the proteins involved in anther and pollen development, and contribute to elucidate the mechanism of male sterility in upland cotton.Entities:
Keywords: Exine; Male sterility; Photosensitive; Pollen development; Proteome; Tapetum
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26047712 DOI: 10.1016/j.jprot.2015.05.031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Proteomics ISSN: 1874-3919 Impact factor: 4.044