| Literature DB >> 33398155 |
Yang-Seok Lee1, Robert Maple1, Julius Dürr1, Alexander Dawson1, Saleh Tamim2, Charo Del Genio3, Ranjith Papareddy4, Anding Luo5, Jonathan C Lamb6,7, Stefano Amantia1, Anne W Sylvester5, James A Birchler6, Blake C Meyers4,8, Michael D Nodine9, Jacques Rouster10, Jose Gutierrez-Marcos11.
Abstract
Although plants are able to withstand a range of environmental conditions, spikes in ambient temperature can impact plant fertility causing reductions in seed yield and notable economic losses1,2. Therefore, understanding the precise molecular mechanisms that underpin plant fertility under environmental constraints is critical to safeguarding future food production3. Here, we identified two Argonaute-like proteins whose activities are required to sustain male fertility in maize plants under high temperatures. We found that MALE-ASSOCIATED ARGONAUTE-1 and -2 associate with temperature-induced phased secondary small RNAs in pre-meiotic anthers and are essential to controlling the activity of retrotransposons in male meiocyte initials. Biochemical and structural analyses revealed how male-associated Argonaute activity and its interaction with retrotransposon RNA targets is modulated through the dynamic phosphorylation of a set of highly conserved, surface-located serine residues. Our results demonstrate that an Argonaute-dependent, RNA-guided surveillance mechanism is critical in plants to sustain male fertility under environmentally constrained conditions, by controlling the mutagenic activity of transposons in male germ cells.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33398155 DOI: 10.1038/s41477-020-00818-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Plants ISSN: 2055-0278 Impact factor: 15.793