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Molecular Physiology of Endosperm-limited Seed Germination - Gene Function and Regulation in the Endosperm of Brassicaceae Species

Fachliche Zuordnung Pflanzenphysiologie
Förderung Förderung von 2005 bis 2014
Projektkennung Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Projektnummer 20436173
 
Erstellungsjahr 2014

Zusammenfassung der Projektergebnisse

The mature seeds of most angiosperm species are endospermic and our work shows that micropylar endosperm (CAP) weakening is an important process preceeding the completion of seed germination by radicle protrusion. The completion of germination by endosperm rupture is requires the interaction of the key seed compartments CAP and RAD (lower hypocotyl/radicle axis, embryo growth zone), and as the CAP must weaken the RAD . Using a cross-species approach with the Lepidium sativum (big seeds) and Arabidopsis thaliana (tiny seeds) we provide compelling direct and indirect evidence that endosperm weakening is an important trait of these Brassicaceae species. Using direct biomechanical quantification by the puncture force method we demonstrate that L. sativum CAP weakening is promoted by gibberellins (GA) and ethylene, and inhibited by abscisic acid (ABA), jasmonates and the allelochemical myrigalone A (MyA). We provide evidence that the molecular downstream mechanisms underlying endosperm weakening and rupture are mediated by cell-wall remodelling proteins expressed in the CAP, including expansins, XTHs, pectin-related enzymes and proteins which generate apoplastic reactive oxygen species (aROS). Their expression is regulated, at least in part, by GA signalling via the GID1-type GA receptors. Molecular phylogenetic analysis of angiosperm GID1 proteins reveald that they cluster into two eudicot (GID1ac, GID1b) groups and one monocot group. Eudicots have at least one gene from each of these two groups and our cross-species work with L. sativum and A. thaliana mutants demonstrates that the GID1ac and GID1b pathways fulfil distinct roles during Brassicaceae seed germination. We identified and characterised seed-tissue specific gene expression in L. sativum seeds but the analysis of their promoters will be conducted when the genome sequence is completed. Myrigalone A (MyA), a rare flavonoid, is secreted by Myrica gale fruits and is an allelochemical and phytotoxin which inhibits seed germination and seedling growth of target species including L. sativum. We investigated its mode of action and found that it interferes with RAD elongation by inhibiting the production of aROS and endoduplication required for cell expansion growth and embryo growth. It enhances testa permeability and water uptake by imbibition, but inhibits GA3 oxidase and thereby the production of bioactive GAs, and it inhibits CAP weakening and endosperm rupture required for seed germination. Our work shows that transcription and translation is required for CAP weakening and CAP hole formation by autolysis. We published "A Guideline to Family-wide Comparative State-of-the-art qRT-PCR Analysis Exemplified with a Brassicaceae Crossspecies Seed Germination Case Study" as a Plant Cell Front Section Feature which is a milestone in seed biology also because it identified superior cross-species reference genes may be used for family-wide comparative qRT-PCR analysis of seed germination for wide use. We generated transgenic L. sativum seeds to further directly test the importance of CAP weakening and RAD growth as key processes in seed endosperm rupture. Taken together, the works conducted in DFG project has established L. sativum as the rosid model system for the interdisciplinary investigation of CAP weakening.

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