|
|
||||||||
|
Genetic Analysis of Female Gametophyte Development and FunctionGary N. Drewsa, Diana Leea, and Cory A. Christensenaa Department of Biology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112 Correspondence to: Gary N. Drews, drews{at}bioscience.utah.edu (E-mail), 801-581-4668 (fax).
The plant life cycle alternates between a multicellular haploid generation, called the gametophyte, and a multicellular diploid generation, called the sporophyte. In plants, meiosis gives rise to haploid spores, which undergo cell proliferation and differentiation to develop into gametophytes. A major function of the gametophyte generation is to produce haploid gametes. Fusion of the egg cell with the sperm cell gives rise to the sporophyte, thereby completing the life cycle (
In many lower plants, gametophytes are the dominant and free-living generation. Angiosperms, by contrast, have dramatically reduced gametophytes, which are comprised of very few cells and are embedded within the sexual organs of the flower (
Sexual reproduction in angiosperms is initiated when pollen is transferred from anther to stigma. Shortly thereafter, the male gametophyte germinates a pollen tube and delivers its two sperm cells to the female gametophyte to effect "double" fertilization of the egg cell and the two polar nuclei of the central cell (
Gene products required for female gametophyte development and function could be encoded by genes expressed either within the female gametophyte or in the surrounding sporophytic cells of the ovule. Several sporophytic mutations disrupting ovule development and function have been isolated (
Genetic studies also suggest that female gametophyte development depends on the activities of many female gametophyte-expressed genes. For example, studies in maize have shown that most chromosomal deletions are deleterious to the female gametophyte, suggesting that genes essential for embryo sac viability are present throughout the maize genome (
The identities and specific functions of the haploid-expressed genes required by the female gametophyte are almost completely unknown. Recently, however, screens for female gametophyte mutants have been initiated in several laboratories, and mutations affecting specific steps of female gametophyte development and function have been identified. In this review, we discuss the approaches that have been used to identify female gametophyte mutants, summarize the cellular processes that are affected in these mutants, and discuss other genetic and molecular approaches that are being used to identify genes required by the female gametophyte. Comprehensive reviews of female gametophyte structure and development have been published previously (
Gametophytic Mutations Because angiosperms have two gametophytes, three classes of gametophytic mutations exist. The first class affects the female gametophyte but not the male gametophyte, the second class affects the male gametophyte but not the female gametophyte, and the third class affects both gametophytes. We refer to these classes as female gametophyte specific, male gametophyte specific, and general gametophytic, respectively.
The segregation patterns of these mutation classes are summarized in Table 1, which shows that in a self-cross of a heterozygous individual (e.g., genotype A/a), female gametophyte-specific mutations segregate 1:1 for A/A:A/a progeny (Table 1, second row). If a mutation affects both gametophytes and is fully penetrant, it cannot be transmitted to subsequent generations (Table 1, bottom row). However, many gametophytic mutations are partially penetrant (
Identification of Female Gametophyte Mutations
In segregation distortion screens, the altered segregation of female gametophyte mutants is exploited to identify this mutant class. These screens are facilitated by following the segregation of either linked visible markers (
Another criterion by which to identify female gametophyte mutants is reduced seed set. This phenotype arises because, on a plant heterozygous for a female gametophyte mutation (e.g., genotype A/a), approximately half of the female gametophytes are mutant and nonfunctional (genotype a) and because an ovule harboring a defective female gametophyte fails to undergo seed development. An ovule that fails to develop into a seed desiccates and forms a small white mass ( In theory, reduced seed set is the only criterion required to identify female gametophyte mutants. However, reduced seed set also can be caused by a variety of other factors, including adverse environmental conditions (e.g., high growth temperature or water stress), chromosomal rearrangements (e.g., reciprocal translocations or large inversions), and sporophytic mutations (e.g., female-sterile mutations with 50% penetrance). Thus, additional experiments (e.g., a segregation distortion screen) are required for the definitive identification of female gametophyte mutants.
The frequency of female gametophyte mutants among mutagenized lines can be estimated from preliminary screening data. In screens currently in progress, ~1% of T-DNA-mutagenized (C.A. Christensen, D. Lee, J. Gold, R. Brown, and G.N. Drews, unpublished data) and transposon-mutagenized (
Female Gametophyte Mutations Fall into Two Classes
Most (14/25) of the known female gametophyte mutants also affect the male gametophyte and thus fall into the general gametophytic class (Table 2). This class of mutant is also important because many fundamental cellular processes take place during the development of both male and female gametophytes. These include mitosis, vacuole formation, cell expansion, subcellular migration, cellularization, and cell wall formation (discussed below). Furthermore, mutations that affect these critical processes in the gametophyte are unlikely to become homozygous in the sporophyte (Table 1) and can therefore be isolated only in screens for gametophytic mutants.
Phenotypic Analysis of Female Gametophyte Mutants
Development of the Angiosperm Female Gametophyte
Polygonum-type female gametophyte development can be divided into two phases: megasporogenesis and megagametogenesis (
During polar nuclei migration, the embryo sac cellularizes to form the seven-celled structure depicted in Figure 1. In some species, this is the final form ( As shown in Figure 1A and Figure 1B, polarity establishment is an important feature of female gametophyte development. The ovule has a distinct axis of polarity. The micropylar pole is the end at which the integuments form a pore, and the chalazal pole is the end that joins the funiculus. The female gametophyte also has a distinct polarity, with the egg and synergid cells at the micropylar pole and the antipodal cells at the chalazal pole. Thus, to understand how female gametophyte development is regulated, many important questions must be addressed: How is female gametophyte polarity within the ovule established? How is the number of mitoses regulated? Which cytoplasmic elements mediate and control nuclear migration? How is cellularization initiated and controlled? What controls cell specification during megagametogenesis? What factors mediate fusion of the polar nuclei? How are antipodal cell death (in Arabidopsis) and proliferation (in maize) controlled? As discussed below, genetic approaches have begun to identify some of the genes involved in these processes.
Mutations Affecting Specific Steps of Megagametogenesis
Megagametogenesis is affected in 14 of the female gametophyte mutants listed in Table 2. Some of these mutants (fem2, fem3, Gf, gfa4, and gfa5) are affected at the earliest possible step, the one-nucleate stage (Table 2, and Figure 3A and Figure 3B). In these mutants, it is unclear which cellular processes are affected because developmental arrest at the one-nucleate stage can result from defects in a variety of processes, including mitosis, cell metabolism, and developmental control. Nevertheless, the existence of this mutant class clearly demonstrates that haploid-expressed genes are required very early in megagametogenesis.
Many of the megagametogenesis mutations listed in Table 2 affect steps that follow the one-nucleate stage. The main events that take place subsequent to the one-nucleate stage are nuclear division, polar nuclei migration, polar nuclei fusion, cellularization, and antipodal cell death or proliferation (Figure 2A). Nuclear division is affected in the hdd, ig, lo2, and prl mutants (Table 2). hdd mutant female gametophytes arrest at the two-, four-, or eight-nucleate stage. Some hdd mutant embryo sacs exhibit asynchrony of nuclear divisions at the two poles, suggesting that the HDD gene plays a role in coordinating nuclear division at the micropylar and chalazal poles ( The remaining megagametogenesis mutations affect steps other than nuclear division. Polar nuclei fusion is affected in the gfa2, gfa3, and gfa7 mutants (Table 2). In these mutants, the polar nuclei migrate appropriately and come to lie side by side but remain unfused (Figure 3C and Figure 3D; C.A. Christensen and G.N. Drews, unpublished data). Cellularization appears to be affected in the fem4 mutant (Table 2). In this mutant, the shapes of the egg cell and synergids are abnormal, and their vacuoles show alterations in number, size, and shape (Figure 3E and Figure 3F; C.A. Christensen and G.N. Drews, unpublished data). Maintenance of the central vacuole may be affected in the fem1 mutant (Table 2). fem1 female gametophytes develop normally until the time of cellularization, upon which the embryo sac disintegrates. In some fem1 mutant embryo sacs, most aspects of morphology are normal except that the central vacuole is not present (S. Subramanian and G.N. Drews, unpublished data). Thus, mutations affecting specific steps of megagametogenesis have already been identified. With the complement of megagametogenesis mutants already available, molecules mediating some of these steps should soon be identified. For example, isolation of the GFA2, GFA3, and GFA7 genes should identify molecules required for fusion of the polar nuclei.
Fertilization in Angiosperms
After the pollen tube arrives at the synegrid, the contents of the pollen tube, including the two sperm cells, are released into the degenerating synergid cytoplasm. Next, one sperm cell migrates to the egg cell and the other to the central cell, most likely along the F-actin bands ( This description of the angiosperm fertilization process raises several important questions: How does the pollen tube find its way to the female gametophyte? How does the male gametophyte induce the receptive synergid cell to undergo cell death? What controls reorganization of the synergid cytoskeleton and formation of the F-actin bands? What triggers release of the pollen tube contents into the female gametophyte? How is sperm cell migration along the F-actin bands initiated and controlled? What mediates sperm-egg and sperm-central cell recognition and fusion?
Genetic Analysis of Pollen Tube Guidance
A likely source of a chemoattractant is the female gametophyte itself, because this is the pollen tube's ultimate target. Evidence supporting this hypothesis initially came from the analysis of pollen tube growth in Arabidopsis ovule mutants in which female gametophytes do not form. In such mutants, pollen tube growth on the placental surface was random and pollen tubes were rarely found on mutant ovules (
Induction of Seed Development in Angiosperms This discussion of sexual and asexual seed development in angiosperms raises several important questions: What controls activation of embryo, endosperm, and seed coat development in response to fertilization? How are embryo and endosperm development induced to undergo seed development in the absence of fertilization in some species? How is embryo development activated in inappropriate cell types in some species? Does the female gametophyte play a role in controlling the induction of seed development, and if so, what is its role?
Mutations Affecting the Induction of Seed Development
Another mutation that may affect the induction of seed development is ctr1 (Table 2). The ctr1 mutation was first identified as a sporophytic mutation affecting ethylene signal transduction (
Maternal Control of Seed Development in Angiosperms
For both classes of maternal mutations, defects in embryo and/or endosperm development are not dependent on the genotypes of these two structures. Indeed, in sporophytic maternal mutants such as the Arabidopsis short integument (sin1;
Gametophytic Maternal Mutations
The only known mutations that exhibit segregation distortion and cause the 50% defective seeds phenotype are the Arabidopsis fie (
Currently, very few genes expressed in the female gametophyte have been isolated ( Identifying genes expressed in specific cells of the embryo sac has been hampered by difficulties in isolating female gametophytes, which are small and relatively inaccessible. These limitations have also frustrated molecular and biochemical experiments. However, new approaches in maize and Arabidopsis are beginning to overcome these problems.
For example, in maize, procedures for isolating large numbers of viable female gametophytes and egg cells have been developed (
In Arabidopsis, a large collection of gene-trap and enhancer-trap lines has been generated recently using transposable elements (
The female gametophyte is an absolutely essential structure for angiosperm reproduction. It produces the egg cell and central cell (which give rise to the embryo and endosperm, respectively) and mediates several reproductive processes including pollen tube guidance, fertilization, the induction of seed development, and perhaps also maternal control of embryo development. Although much has been learned about these processes at the cytological level, specific molecules mediating and controlling megagametogenesis and female gametophyte function have not been identified. A genetic approach to the identification of such molecules has been initiated in Arabidopsis and maize. Although genetic analyses are still in their infancy, mutations affecting female gametophyte function and specific steps of megagametogenesis have already been identified. Large-scale genetic screens aimed at identifying mutants affecting every step of megagametogenesis and female gametophyte function are in progress; the characterization of genes identified in these screens should go a long way toward defining the molecules that are required for female gametophyte development and function.
We thank Bob Fischer, Anna Koltunow, Nir Ohad, Crispin Taylor, Ramin Yadegari, and two anonymous reviewers for helpful comments on the manuscript. Our work on female gametophyte development was supported by National Science Foundation Grant No. IBN-9630371. Received August 8, 1997; accepted November 21, 1997.
Baker, S.C., Robinson-Beers, K., Villanueva, J.M., Gaiser, J.C., and Gasser, C.S. (1997) Interactions among genes regulating ovule development in Arabidopsis thaliana.. Genetics 145:1109-1124[Abstract] Bedinger, P., and Russell, S.D. (1994). Gametogenesis in maize. In The Maize Handbook, M. Freeling and V. Walbot, eds (New York: Springer-Verlag), pp. 48-61. Bedinger, P.A., Hardeman, K.J., and Loukides, C.A. (1994) Traveling in style: The cell biology of pollen. Trends Cell Biol. 4:132-138[CrossRef][Medline] Brink, R.A., and MacGillivray, J.H. (1924) Segregation for the waxy character in maize pollen and differential development of the male gametophyte. Am. J. Bot. 11:465-469[CrossRef][Web of Science] Buckner, B., and Reeves, S.L. (1994) Viability of female gametophytes that possess deficiencies for the region of chromosome 6 containing the Y1 gene. Maydica 39:247-254 Castle, L.A., Errampalli, D., Atherton, T.L., Franzmann, L.H., Yoon, E.S., and Meinke, D.W. (1993) Genetic and molecular characterization of embryonic mutants identified following seed transformation in Arabidopsis.. Mol. Gen. Genet. 241:504-514[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Chaudhury, A.M., Ming, L., Miller, C., Craig, S., Dennis, E.S., and Peacock, W.J. (1997) Fertilization-independent seed development in Arabidopsis thaliana.. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 94:4223-4228 Cheung, A.Y. (1996) Pollen-pistil interactions during pollen-tube growth. Trends Plant Sci. 1:45-51[CrossRef] Christensen, C.A., King, E.J., Jordan, J.R., and Drews, G.N. (1997) Megagametogenesis in Arabidopsis wild type and the Gf mutant. Sex. Plant Reprod. 10:49-64[CrossRef]
Clark, J.K., and Sheridan, W.F. (1991) Isolation and characterization of 51 embryo-specific mutations of maize. Plant Cell 3:935-951 Coe, E.H., Neuffer, M.G., and Hoisington, D.A. (1988). The genetics of corn. In Corn and Corn Improvement, 3rd ed, G.F. Sprague and J.W. Dudley, eds (Madison, WI: American Society of Agronomy), pp. 81-258. Colombo, L., Franken, J., Van der Krol, A.R., Wittich, P.E., Dons, H.J.M., and Angenent, G.C. (1997) Downregulation of ovule-specific MADS box genes from petunia results in maternally controlled defects in seed development. Plant Cell 9:703-715[Abstract] Cooper, D.C. (1937) Macrosporogenesis and embryo-sac development in Euchlaena mexicana and Zea mays.. J. Agric. Res. 55:539-551 Correns, C. (1902) Scheinbare ausnahmen von der Mendel'shen spaltungsregel fur bastarde. Ber. Dtsch. Bot. Ges. 20:159-172 Diboll, A.G. (1968) Fine structural development of the megagametophyte of Zea mays following fertilization. Am. J. Bot. 55:797-806[CrossRef] Diboll, A.G., and Larson, D.A. (1966) An electron microscopic study of the mature megagametophyte in Zea mays.. Am. J. Bot. 53:391-402 Dresselhaus, T., Lörz, H., and Kranz, E. (1994) Representative cDNA libraries from few plant cells. Plant J. 5:605-610[Web of Science][Medline]
Dumas, C., and Mogensen, H.L. (1993) Gametes and fertilization: Maize as a model system for experimental embryogenesis in flowering plants. Plant Cell 5:1337-1348 Elliot, R.C., Betzner, A.S., Huttner, E., Oakes, M.P., Tucker, W.Q.J., Gerentes, D., Perez, P., and Smyth, D.R. (1996) AINTEGUMENTA, an APETALA2-like gene of Arabidopsis with pleiotropic roles in ovule development and floral organ growth. Plant Cell 8:155-168[Abstract] Feldmann, K.A., Coury, D.A., and Christianson, M.L. (1997) Exceptional segregation of a selectable marker (KanR) in Arabidopsis identifies genes important for gametophytic growth and development. Genetics 147:1411-1422[Abstract] Felker, F.C., Peterson, D.M., and Nelson, O.E. (1985) Anatomy of immature grains of eight maternal-effect shrunken endosperm barley mutants. Am. J. Bot. 72:248-256 Gaiser, J.C., Robinson-Beers, K., and Gasser, C.S. (1995) The Arabidopsis SUPERMAN gene mediates asymmetric growth of the outer integument of ovules. Plant Cell 7:333-345[Abstract] Gilbert, S.F. (1994). Developmental Biology. (Sunderland, MA: Sinauer Associates). Grossniklaus, U., Moore, J., and Gagliano, W. (1995). Analysis of Arabidopsis ovule development and megagametogenesis using enhancer detection. In Signaling in Plant Development (Cold Spring Harbor, NY: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press), p. 138. Haig, D. (1990) New perspectives on the angiosperm female gametophyte. Bot. Rev. 56:236-275 Heslop-Harrison, J. (1987) Pollen germination and pollen-tube growth. Int. Rev. Cytol. 107:1-78[Web of Science] Huang, B.-Q., and Russell, S.D. (1992a) Female germ unit: Organization, isolation, and function. Int. Rev. Cytol. 140:233-292[Web of Science] Huang, B.-Q., and Russell, S.D. (1992b) Synergid degeneration in Nicotiana: A quantitative, fluorochromatic and chlorotetracycline study. Sex. Plant Reprod. 5:151-155 Huang, B.-Q., and Russell, S.D. (1994) Fertilization in Nicotiana tabacum: Cytoskeletal modifications in the embryo sac during synergid degeneration. Planta 194:200-214 Huang, B.-Q., and Sheridan, W.F. (1994) Female gametophyte development in maize: Microtubular organization and embryo sac polarity. Plant Cell 6:845-861[Abstract] Huang, B.-Q., and Sheridan, W.F. (1996) Embryo sac development in the maize indeterminate gametophyte1 mutant: Abnormal nuclear behavior and defective microtubule organization. Plant Cell 8:1391-1407[Abstract] Huang, B.-Q., Pierson, E.S., Russell, S.D., Tiezzi, A., and Cresti, M. (1993) Cytoskeletal organization and modification during pollen tube arrival, gamete delivery and fertilization in Plumbago zeylanica.. Zygote 1:143-154[Medline] Hülskamp, M., Schneitz, K., and Pruitt, R.E. (1995) Genetic evidence for a long-range activity that directs pollen tube guidance in Arabidopsis. Plant Cell 7:57-64[Abstract]
Jensen, W.A. (1964) Observations on the fusion of nuclei in plants. J. Cell Biol. 23:669-672 Jensen, W.A., Ashton, M.E., and Beasley, C.A. (1983). Pollen tube -embryo sac interaction in cotton. In Pollen: Biology and Implications for Plant Breeding, D.L. Mulcahy and E. Ottaviano, eds (New York: Elsevier Science Publishing), pp. 67-72.
Jones, D.F. (1924) Selective fertilization among the gametes from the same individuals. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 10:218-221 Jürgens, G., Mayer, U., Torres-Ruiz, R.A., Berleth, T., and Misera, S. (1991) Genetic analysis of pattern formation in the Arabidopsis embryo. Development (suppl.) 1:27-38 Kermicle, J.L. (1971) Pleiotropic effects on seed development of the indeterminate gametophyte gene in maize. Am. J. Bot. 58:1-7[CrossRef] Kieber, J.J., and Ecker, J.R. (1994). Molecular and genetic analysis of the constitutive ethylene response mutation ctr1. In Plant Molecular Biology: Molecular Genetic Analysis of Plant Development and Metabolism, G. Coruzzi and P. Puigdomenech, eds (Berlin: Springer-Verlag), pp. 193-201. Kieber, J.J., Rothenberg, M., Roman, G., Feldmann, K.A., and Ecker, J.R. (1993) CTR1, a negative regulator of the ethylene response pathway in Arabidopsis, encodes a member of the Raf family of protein kinases. Cell 72:427-441[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Klucher, K.M., Chow, H., Reiser, L., and Fischer, R.L. (1996) The AINTEGUMENTA gene of Arabidopsis required for ovule and female gametophyte development is related to the floral homeotic gene APETALA2.. Plant Cell 8:137-153[Abstract]
Koltunow, A.M. (1993) Apomixis: Embryo sacs and embryos formed without meiosis or fertilization in ovules. Plant Cell 5:1425-1437 Koltunow, A.M., Bicknell, R.A., and Chaudhury, A.M. (1995) Apomixis: Molecular strategies for the generation of genetically identical seeds without fertilization. Plant Physiol. 108:1345-1352[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Kranz, E., and Dresselhaus, T. (1996) In vitro fertilization with isolated higher plant gametes. Trends Plant Sci. 1:82-89 Kranz, E., Bautor, J., and Lörz, H. (1991) In vitro fertilization of single, isolated gametes of maize (Zea mays L.). Sex. Plant Reprod. 4:12-16 Lang, J.D., Ray, S., and Ray, A. (1994) sin1, a mutation affecting female fertility in Arabidopsis, interacts with mod1, its recessive modifier. Genetics 137:1101-1110[Abstract] Léon-Kloosterziel, K.M., Keijzer, C.J., and Koornneef, M. (1994) A seed shape mutant of Arabidopsis that is affected in integument development. Plant Cell 6:385-392[Abstract] Lin, B.-Y. (1978) Structural modifications of the female gametophyte associated with the indeterminate gametophyte (ig) mutant in maize. Can. J. Genet. Cytol. 20:249-257 Lin, B.-Y. (1981) Megagametogenetic alterations associated with the indeterminate gametophyte (ig) mutation in maize. Rev. Bras. Biol. 41:557-563 Maheshwari, P. (1950). An Introduction to the Embryology of Angiosperms. (New York: McGraw-Hill). Mansfield, S.G., Briarty, L.G., and Erni, S. (1991) Early embryogenesis in Arabidopsis thaliana. I. The mature embryo sac. Can. J. Bot. 69:447-460
McCormick, S. (1993) Male gametophyte development. Plant Cell 5:1265-1275 Meinke, D.W., and Sussex, I.M. (1979) Embryo-lethal mutants of Arabidopsis thaliana. A model system for genetic analysis of plant embryo development. Dev. Biol. 72:50-61[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Miller, M.E., and Chourey, P.S. (1992) The maize invertase-deficient miniature-1 seed mutation is associated with aberrant pedicle and endosperm development. Plant Cell 4:297-305 Misra, R.C. (1962) Contribution to the embryology of Arabidopsis thaliana (Gay and Monn.). Agra Univ. J. Res. Sci. 11:191-199 Modrusan, Z., Reiser, L., Feldmann, K.A., Fischer, R.L., and Haughn, G.W. (1994) Homeotic transformation of ovules into carpel-like structures in Arabidopsis. Plant Cell 6:333-349[Abstract] Moore, J.M., Calzada, J.-P.V., Gagliano, W., and Grossniklaus, U. (1998) Genetic characterization of hadad, a mutant disrupting female gametogenesis in Arabidopsis thaliana.. Cold Spring Harbor Symp. Quant. Biol. 62, in press. Murgia, M., Huang, B.-Q., Tucker, S.C., and Musgrave, M.E. (1993) Embryo sac lacking antipodal cells in Arabidopsis thaliana (Brassicaceae). Am. J. Bot. 80:824-838[CrossRef] Nadeau, J.A., Zhang, X.S., Li, J., and O'Neill, S.D. (1996) Ovule development: Identification of stage-specific and tissue-specific cDNAs. Plant Cell 8:213-239[Abstract]
Nelson, O.E., and Clary, G.B. (1952) Genetic control of semi-sterility in maize. J. Hered. 43:205-210 Newcomb, W. (1973) The development of the embryo sac of sunflower Helianthus annuus before fertilization. Can. J. Bot. 51:863-878
Niyogi, K.K., Last, R.L., Fink, G.R., and Keith, B. (1993) Suppressors of trp1 fluorescence identify a new Arabidopsis gene, TRP4, encoding the anthranilate synthase ß subunit. Plant Cell 5:1011-1027 Nogler, G.A. (1984). Gametophytic apomixis. In Embryology of Angiosperms, B.M. Johri, ed (Berlin: Springer-Verlag), pp. 159-196.
Ohad, N., Margossian, L., Hsu, Y.-C., Williams, C., Repetti, P., and Fischer, R.L. (1996) A mutation that allows endosperm development without fertilization. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 93:5319-5324 Patterson, E.B. (1978). Properties and uses of duplicate deficient chromosome compliments in maize. In Maize Breeding and Genetics, D. Walden, ed (New York: John Wiley and Sons), pp. 693-710. Patterson, E.B. (1994). Translocations as genetic markers. In The Maize Handbook, M. Freeling and V. Walbot, eds (New York: Springer-Verlag), pp. 361-363. Perry, S.E., Nichols, K.W., and Fernandez, D.E. (1996) The MADS domain protein AGL15 localizes to the nucleus during early stages of seed development. Plant Cell 8:1977-1989[Abstract] Poliakova, T.F. (1964) Development of the male and female gametophytes of Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. Issled. Genet. USSR 2:125-133 Preuss, D. (1995) Being fruitful: Genetics of reproduction in Arabidopsis.. Trends Genet. 11:147-153[CrossRef][Medline] Pruitt, R.E., and Hülskamp, M. (1994). From pollination to fertilization in Arabidopsis. In Arabidopsis, E.M. Meyerowitz and C.R. Somerville, eds (Cold Spring Harbor, NY: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press), pp. 467-483. Raven, P.H., Evert, R.F., and Eichhorn, S.E. (1992). Biology of Plants. (New York: Worth Publishers). Ray, A. (1997) Three's company: Regulatory cross-talk during seed development. Plant Cell 9:665-667[CrossRef] Ray, S., Golden, T., and Ray, A. (1996) Maternal effects of the short integument mutation on embryo development in Arabidopsis.. Dev. Biol. 180:365-369[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline] Ray, S., Park, S.-S., and Ray, A. (1997) Pollen tube guidance by the female gametophyte. Development 124:2489-2498[Abstract]
Redei, G.P. (1965) Non-Mendelian megagametogenesis in Arabidopsis.. Genetics 51:857-872
Reiser, L., and Fischer, R.L. (1993) The ovule and the embryo sac. Plant Cell 5:1291-1301
Rhoades, M.M., and Rhoades, V.H. (1939) Genetic studies with factors in the tenth chromosome in maize. Genetics 24:302-314
Robinson-Beers, K., Pruitt, R.E., and Gasser, C.S. (1992) Ovule development in wild-type Arabidopsis and two female-sterile mutants. Plant Cell 4:1237-1249 Russell, S.D. (1979) Fine structure of megagametophyte development in Zea mays.. Can. J. Bot. 57:1093-1110 Russell, S.D. (1992) Double fertilization. Int. Rev. Cytol. 140:357-388[Web of Science]
Russell, S.D. (1993) The egg cell: Development and role in fertilization and early embryogenesis. Plant Cell 5:1349-1359 Russell, S.D. (1996) Attraction and transport of male gametes for fertilization. Sex. Plant Reprod. 9:337-342[CrossRef] Schneitz, K., Hülskamp, M., and Pruitt, R.E. (1995) Wild-type ovule development in Arabidopsis thaliana: A light microscope study of cleared whole-mount tissue. Plant J. 7:731-749[CrossRef][Web of Science] Schneitz, K., Hülskamp, M., Kopczak, S.D., and Pruitt, R.E. (1997) Dissection of sexual organ ontogenesis: A genetic analysis of ovule development in Arabidopsis thaliana.. Development 124:1367-1376[Abstract]
Schulz, P., and Jensen, W.A. (1973) Capsella embryogenesis: The central cell. J. Cell Sci. 12:741-763 Sheridan, W.F., and Huang, B.-Q. (1997) Nuclear behavior is defective in the maize (Zea mays L.) lethal ovule2 female gametophyte. Plant J. 11:1029-1041[CrossRef] Singleton, W.R. (1932) Complete elimination of certain classes of gametes in Zea.. Proc. Sixth Int. Congr. Genet. 2:182-184
Singleton, W.R., and Mangelsdorf, P.C. (1940) Gametic lethals on the fourth chromosome of maize. Genetics 25:366-389 Smyth, D.R. (1997) Plant development: Attractive ovules. Curr. Biol. 7:R64-R66[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Springer, P.S., McCombie, W.R., Sundaresan, V., and Martienssen, R.A. (1995) Gene-trap tagging of PROLIFERA, an essential MCM2-3-5-like gene in Arabidopsis.. Science 268:877-880 Strasburger, E. (1879). Die Angiospermen und die Gymnospermen. (Jena, Germany: Verlag Von Gustav Fischer).
Sundaresan, V., Springer, P., Volpe, T., Haward, S., Jones, J.D.G., Dean, C., Ma, H., and Martienssen, R. (1995) Patterns of gene action in plant development revealed by enhancer-trap and gene-trap transposable elements. Genes Dev. 9:1797-1810 Van Went, J.L., and Willemse, M.T.M. (1984). Fertilization. In Embryology of Angiosperms, B.M. Johri, ed (Berlin: Springer-Verlag), pp. 273-317.
Vizir, I.Y., Anderson, M.L., Wilson, Z.A., and Mulligan, B.J. (1994) Isolation of deficiencies in the Arabidopsis genome by Vollbrecht, E., and Hake, S. (1995) Deficiency analysis of female gametogenesis in maize. Dev. Genet. 16:44-63 Waddington, C.H. (1940) The genetic control of wing development in Drosophila. J. Genet. 41:75-139[Web of Science] Wagner, V.T., Song, Y., Matthys-Rochon, E., and Dumas, C. (1988). The isolated embryo sac of Zea mays: Structural and ultrastructural observations. In Sexual Reproduction in Higher Plants, M. Cresti, P. Gori, and E. Pacini, eds (Berlin: Springer-Verlag), pp. 125-130. Weatherwax, P. (1919) Gametogenesis and fecundation in Zea mays as the basis of xenia and heredity in the endosperm. Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 46:73-90 Webb, M.C., and Gunning, B.E.S. (1990) Embryo sac development in Arabidopsis thaliana. I. Megasporogenesis, including the microtubular cytoskeleton. Sex. Plant Reprod. 3:244-256 Webb, M.C., and Gunning, B.E.S. (1994) Embryo sac development in Arabidopsis thaliana. II. The cytoskeleton during megagametogenesis. Sex. Plant Reprod. 7:153-163 Willemse, M.T.M., and Van Went, J.L. (1984). The female gametophyte. In Embryology of Angiosperms, B.M. Johri, ed (Berlin: Springer-Verlag), pp. 159-196. Wilms, H.J. (1981) Ultrastructure of the developing embryo sac of spinach. Acta Bot. Neerl. 30:75-99
This article has been cited by other articles:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| ASPB Publications | THE PLANT CELL | PLANT PHYSIOLOGY | |
|---|---|---|---|