| Literature DB >> 35185968 |
Abstract
In flowering plants, the female gametophyte (FG) initiates from the formation of the megaspore mother cell (MMC). Among a pool of the somatic cells in the ovule primordium, only one hypodermal cell undergoes a transition of cell fate to become the MMC. Subsequently, the MMC undergoes a series of meiosis and mitosis to form the mature FG harboring seven cells with eight nuclei. Although SPL/NZZ, the core transcription factor for MMC formation, was identified several decades ago, which and why only one somatic cell is chosen as the MMC have long remained mysterious. A growing body of evidence reveal that MMC formation is associated with epigenetic regulation at multiple layers, including dynamic distribution of histone variants and histone modifications, small RNAs, and DNA methylation. In this review, we summarize the progress of epigenetic regulation in the MMC formation, emphasizing the roles of chromosome condensation, histone variants, histone methylation, small RNAs, and DNA methylation.Entities:
Keywords: DNA methylation; MMC; epigenetic regulation; ovule development epigenetic regulation in MMC; small RNA
Year: 2022 PMID: 35185968 PMCID: PMC8850924 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2021.826871
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
FIGURE 1Developmental schematic of MMC formation. In the early ovule (left), several pioneer transcription factors, mainly SPL/NZZ and WUS, play an important role in promoting MMC formation. The spatial distribution of SPL, WUS and WRKY28 away from the centered position of the nucellus region is the prerequisite of MMC specification and MMC differentiation, respectively. KNU, a widely used MMC marker. Once the MMC specification is finished, the KRP-CDKA;1-RBR1 pathway plays a key role to ensure the MMC into meiotic rather than mitotic competency by inhibiting the expansion of WUS into the MMC. L1 cell, light green; L2 cell, orange; MMC, megaspore mother cell, red; FM, functional megaspore, red. Other distal somatic cells are indicated in light white.
FIGURE 2Epigenetic regulation of MMC formation. During early ovule development of the wild type plants (left), small RNA, mainly tasiRNA and siRNA, are widely produced. On one hand, tasiRNAs impede the surrounding somatic cells to activate their potential germline identity by inhibiting ARF3 to the nucellus region; on the other hand, siRNAs reinforce the repressive chromatin status of the surrounding cells by guarding DNA methylation and/or histone modification. Meanwhile, several inactive histone modifications, such as H1, H3K9me2, and H3K27me3, facilitate the maintenance of repressive chromatin status in the surrounding cells. In contrast, the MMC shows a higher level of active histone modifications, for example, H3K4me3, thus keeping a permissive chromatin state. When the activities of small RNAs or DNA methylation are disrupted (right), the surrounding somatic cells adjacent to the MMC obtain a permissive chromatin state, and switch to the germline cell identity. This epigenetic dimorphism between the surrounding somatic cells and the MMC might ensure the establishment of a permission chromatin status in the MMC. L1 cell, light green; L2 cell, orange; MMC, megaspore mother cell, red.