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Genetic Barrier to Self-Pollination
Identified
Many flowering plants prevent inbreeding and increase genetic
diversity by a process called self-incompatibility, in which pollination
fails to set seed if the pollen is identified as its own by the
pistil. A research team, led by Teh-hui Kao, professor of biochemistry
and molecular biology at Penn
State, has announced, in the journal
Nature, the discovery of a gene in petunias that controls pollen
function in self-incompatibility. This discovery completes a critical
missing link in the understanding of how self-incompatibility works.
Ten years ago, Kao announced, in another paper published in Nature,
the identification of the gene, called the S-RNase gene (S for
self-incompatibility), that controls pistil function in self-incompatibility. “This
male component turned out to be much more elusive than the pistil
component,” says Kao. “Our team, as well as others,
has worked for the past ten years to find it.” The recently
identified gene, named PiSLF (for Petunia
inflata S-locus F-box),
encodes a new member of a large family of F-box proteins that are
known to mediate protein degradation in diverse organisms, including
animals, plants, and yeast.
While a species may have as many as
50 or 60 different S-alleles, each plant has only two of them,
one inherited from each parent. An allele is one of a number of
possible variants of a particular gene; for example, two alleles
exist for each of the three genes that determine eye color in humans.
Pollen grains are haploid, meaning that they contain only a single
set of chromosomes, and thus each pollen grain contains only one
of the two S-alleles of the parent plant. The pistil, on the other
hand, is diploid, meaning that it has two sets of chromosomes (one
from each parent) and therefore has both S-alleles of the parent
plant.
During pollination, if the S-allele of the pollen does not
match either of the two S-alleles in the pistil, the pollen will
germinate on the surface of the pistil to produce pollen tubes,
which will then grow through the pistil to the ovary to effect
fertilization. However, if the S-allele of the pollen matches either
of the two S-alleles in the pistil, growth of the pollen tube is
stopped about one third of the way to the ovary, preventing fertilization.
Triggering this self-incompatibility response requires an interaction
between the product of an S-allele produced in pollen and the product
of a genetic counterpart produced in the pistil. To identify the
pollen component in self-incompatibility, the team examined the
DNA sequence of a chromosomal region containing the S2-allele of
the S-RNase gene (the previously identified pistil component for
plants containing the specific S-locus allele that is labeled S2). “The
gene controlling the pollen function must be very closely linked
to the S-RNase gene to prevent recombination,” says Kao. “Otherwise,
recombination between these two genes would cause the breakdown
of self-incompatibility, which has never been observed in nature”
After
identifying the PiSLF gene, located approximately 161 kilabases
from the S-RNase gene, Kao’s team had to demonstrate that
the gene was indeed the pollen component of self-incompatibility. “Other
labs have found similar genes in the vicinity of the S-RNase gene
in various other species,” he says. “But proximity
alone is insufficient to show the relationship.” They took
advantage of a phenomenon known as competitive interaction to demonstrate
the function of the PiSLF gene in self-incompatibility.
It has
been known for some time that if pollen has two different S-alleles
(which could result when the chromosomal region containing the
pollen S-allele is duplicated in a plant), the pollen fails to
function in self-incompatibility and thus cannot be rejected by
any plant pistil. However, pollen with two identical S-alleles
(again resulting from duplication of the pollen S-allele) remains
functional in self-incompatibility.
The team carried out three
sets of experiments. In one set, the S2-allele of PiSLF was introduced
into plants of S1S1 genotype—plants
containing two identical S-locus genes of a type labeled S1—via
standard plant transformation techniques. For each transgenic plant
generated, half of the pollen produced contained the endogenous
(originating from within the plant) pollen S1-allele plus the PiSLF2
transgene (a gene that is introduced from a source outside the
plant), whereas the other half only contained the endogenous pollen
S1-allele. If PiSLF is the pollen component, the pollen that contained
PiSLF2 should contain two different pollen S-alleles, S1 from the
endogenous gene and S2 from the transgene, and based on competitive
interaction, should fail to function in self-incompatibility. However,
the pollen that contained only the endogenous pollen S1-allele
should function normally. Thus, the prediction was that the transgenic
plants would set seeds upon self-pollination (i.e., becoming self-compatible)
and that all the resulting progeny should inherit the PiSLF2 transgene.
The results from this set of experiments, as well as from two other
sets using different genotypes of plants as recipient of PiSLF2,
were completely in agreement with the prediction based on competitive
interaction and based on the assumption that PiSLF is the pollen
component.
This discovery could have commercial application for
hybrid seed production in crop plants, such as corn and soy bean,
that have lost self-incompatibility. Raising hybrid seed has been
one of the major goals of horticultural and agricultural practice,
because hybrid plants are more productive (due to hybrid vigor)
and more uniform in quality than plants derived from self-pollination
or random pollination. To raise hybrid seed, self-pollination and
sib-pollination (pollination by a plant of the same hybrid) must
be circumvented. One method is hand emasculation of the line used
as female parent, which is then naturally cross-pollinated by pollen
from the line serving as male parent and planted in an adjacent
row. However, this process is very labor intensive and invariably
expensive.
If the crop plants can be made self-incompatible by
the introduction of the genes controlling self-incompatibility,
then all seeds produced will be hybrids resulting from cross-pollination
between two different lines. This would facilitate the production
and increase the yield of hybrid seed and, at the same time, reduce
the labor costs.
In addition to Kao, the team that made this discovery
consisted of graduate students, Paja Sijacic, Xi
Wang, Andrea L.
Skirpan, Yan Wang and Peter
E. Dowd; and postdoctoral scholar,
Andrew G. McCubbin. In addition, Shihshieh Huang, a research scientist
at Monsanto and a former graduate student in Kao’s group,
participated in the project as a collaborator.
Steve Miller
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