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1.
Sci Rep ; 7(1): 15092, 2017 11 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29118334

ABSTRACT

Recent reports in model plant species have highlighted a role for DNA methylation pathways in the regulation of the somatic-to-reproductive transition in the ovule, suggesting that apomixis (asexual reproduction through seeds) likely relies on RdDM downregulation. Our aim was therefore to explore this hypothesis by characterizing genes involved in DNA methylation in the apomictic grass Eragrostis curvula. We explored floral transcriptomes to identify homologs of three candidate genes, for which mutations in Arabidopsis and maize mimic apomixis (AtAGO9/ZmAGO104, AtCMT3/ZmDMT102/ZmDMT105, and AtDDM1/ZmCHR106), and compared both their spatial and temporal expression patterns during reproduction in sexual and apomictic genotypes. Quantitative expression analyses revealed contrasting expression patterns for the three genes in apomictic vs sexual plants. In situ hybridization corroborated these results for two candidates, EcAGO104 and EcDMT102, and revealed an unexpected ectopic pattern for the AGO gene during germ line differentiation in apomicts. Although our data partially support previous results obtained in sexual plant models, they suggest that rather than an RdDM breakdown in the ovule, altered localization of AtAGO9/ZmAGO104 expression is required for achieving diplospory in E. curvula. The differences in the RdDM machinery acquired during plant evolution might have promoted the emergence of the numerous apomictic paths observed in plants.


Subject(s)
DNA Methylation , Flowers/genetics , Gene Expression Profiling/methods , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Genes, Plant/genetics , Apomixis/genetics , Arabidopsis/genetics , Genotype , Mutation , Reproduction/genetics , Seeds/genetics , Zea mays/genetics
2.
Trends Genet ; 17(10): 597-604, 2001 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11585667

ABSTRACT

Some higher plants reproduce asexually by apomixis, a natural way of cloning through seeds. Apomictic plants produce progeny that are an exact genetic replica of the mother plant. The replication is achieved through changes in the female reproductive pathway such that female gametes develop without meiosis and embryos develop without fertilization. Although apomixis is a complex developmental process, genetic evidence suggests that it might be inherited as a simple mendelian trait - a paradox that could be explained by recent data derived from apomictic species and model sexual organisms. The data suggest that apomixis might rely more on a global deregulation of sexual reproductive development than on truly new functions, and molecular mechanisms for such a global deregulation can be proposed. This new understanding has direct consequences for the engineering of apomixis in sexual crop species, an application that could have an immense impact on agriculture.


Subject(s)
Plant Development , Plants/genetics , Agriculture , Genes, Plant , Genomic Imprinting , Models, Genetic , Plant Physiological Phenomena , Polyploidy , Reproduction, Asexual/genetics
3.
Heredity (Edinb) ; 80 ( Pt 1): 33-9, 1998 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9474774

ABSTRACT

Polyploids in Tripsacum, a wild relative of maize, reproduce through the diplosporous type of apomixis, an asexual mode of reproduction through seeds. Diplosporous apomixis involves both the failure of meiosis and the parthenogenetic development of the unreduced gametes, resulting in progenies that are exact genetic copies of the mother plant. Apomixis is believed to be controlled by one single dominant allele, responsible for the whole developmental process. Construction of a linkage map for the chromosome controlling diplosporous apomixis in Tripsacum was carried out in both tetraploid-apomictic and diploid-sexual Tripsacum species using maize restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) probes. A high level of collinearity was observed between the Tripsacum chromosome carrying the control of apomixis and a duplicated segment in the maize genome. In the apomictic tetraploid, there was a strong restriction to recombination, as compared to the corresponding genomic segment in sexual plants and maize. This suggests that apomixis, although inherited as a single Mendelian allele, might really be controlled by a cluster of linked loci. The analysis also revealed the tetrasomic nature of the inheritance of the chromosomal segment controlling apomixis, which contradicts the usually accepted hypothesis of an allopolyploid origin of apomictic species. The implications of these data for the transfer of apomixis into cultivated crops are discussed, and a new approach to studying the genetics of apomixis, based on comparative mapping, is proposed.


Subject(s)
Chromosome Mapping , Edible Grain/genetics , Genes, Plant , Polyploidy
4.
Heredity (Edinb) ; 80 ( Pt 1): 40-7, 1998 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9474775

ABSTRACT

Apomixis is a mode of asexual reproduction through seeds. The apomictic process bypasses both meiosis and egg cell fertilization, producing offspring that are exact genetic replicas of the mother plant. In the Tripsacum agamic complex, all polyploids reproduce through the diplosporous type of apomixis, and diploids are sexual. In this paper, molecular markers linked with diplospory were used to analyse various generations of maize-Tripsacum hybrids and backcross derivatives and to derive a model for the inheritance of diplosporous reproduction. The results suggest that the gene or genes controlling apomixis in Tripsacum are linked with a segregation distorter-type system promoting the elimination of the apomixis alleles when transmitted through haploid gametes. Hence, this model offers an explanation of the relationship between apomixis and polyploidy. The evolutionary importance of this mechanism, which protects the diploid level from being invaded by apomixis, is discussed.


Subject(s)
Edible Grain/genetics , Genes, Plant , Zea mays/genetics , Chimera , Genetic Markers , Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length , Reproduction
5.
Theor Appl Genet ; 90(7-8): 1198-203, 1995 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24173084

ABSTRACT

Polyploid plants in the genus Tripsacum, a wild relative of maize, reproduce through gametophytic apomixis of the diplosporous type, an asexual mode of reproduction through seed. Moving gene(s) responsible for the apomictic trait into crop plants would open new areas in plant breeding and agriculture. Efforts to transfer apomixis from Tripsacum into maize at CIMMYT resulted in numerou intergeneric F1 hybrids obtained from various Tripsacum species. A bulk-segregant analysis was carried out to identify molecular markers linked to diplospory in T. dactyloides. This was possible because of numerous genome similarities among related species in the Andropogoneae. On the basis of maize RFLP probes, three restriction fragments co-segregating with diplospory were identified in one maize-Tripsacum dactyloides F1 population that segregated 1∶1 for the mode of reproduction. The markers were also found to be linked in the maize RFLP map, on the distal end of the long arm of chromosome 6. These results support a simple inheritance of diplospory in Tripsacum. Manipulation of the mode of reproduction in maize-Tripsacum backcross generations, and implications for the transfer of apomixis into maize, are discussed.

7.
J Appl Physiol ; 40(4): 644-7, 1976 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6423

ABSTRACT

A new type of pH sensor suitable for chronic intra-vascular implantation by virtue of its small size, flexibility, and ruggedness was constructed and evaluated. The pH-sensitive element was a thin film of an elastromeric polymer made ion permselective to proteons by adding a lipophilic, specific H+-ion carrier. This was coated onto small diameter silver wires to form sensors. In preliminary trials in anesthetized dogs, the sensors permitted continuous, accurate in vivo blood pH measurement with rapid response (less than 0.1 s).


Subject(s)
Blood , Electrodes, Implanted , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Membranes, Artificial , Blood Vessels , Membrane Potentials , Methods , Polymers
8.
J Membr Biol ; 4(1): 227-51, 1971 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24174241

ABSTRACT

Detailed experimental data for conductivity and membrane potentials are presented for lecithin/cholesterol/decane bilayers in the presence of the uncoupler carbonylcyanidem-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP). These compare favorably with a theoretical model derived to explain the mechanism of action of uncouplers on bilayers. The model assumes that the weak acid uncoupler HA and its anion A(-) are the sole species which permeate the membrane. Its key feature is the recognition of the existence of unstirred aqueous layers on either side of the membrane. The model accounts for, among other things, a maximum in the transmembrane conductivity at a pH to the alkaline side of the uncoupler pK a and saturating current-voltage characteristics at high pH, both phenomena being found for CCCP. From a quantitative fit of model to data, values of 2.0×10(-3) and 11 cm/sec are deduced for the permeability coefficients of the CCCP anion and the undissociated CCCP molecule, respectively.

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