Received November 14, 2002
Accepted December 24, 2002
Structural and Transcriptional Analysis of the Self-Incompatibility Locus of Almond:
Identification of a Pollen-Expressed F-Box Gene with Haplotype-Specific Polymorphism
Koichiro Ushijima 1, Hidenori Sassa 2*, Abhaya M. Dandekar 3, Thomas M. Gradziel 3, Ryutaro Tao 1, and Hisashi Hirano 2
1
Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan
2
Kihara Institute for Biological Research and Graduate School of Integrated Science,
Yokohama City University, Yokohama 244-0813, Japan
3
Department of Pomology, University of California, Davis, California 95616
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: sassa{at}yokohama-cu.ac.jp.
Gametophytic self-incompatibility in Rosaceae, Solanaceae, and Scrophulariaceae is
controlled by the S locus, which consists of an S-RNase gene and an unidentified
"pollen S" gene. An
70-kb segment of the S locus
of the rosaceous species almond, the S haplotype-specific region containing
the S-RNase gene, was sequenced completely. This region was found to contain two
pollen-expressed F-box genes that are likely candidates for pollen S genes.
One of them, named SFB (S haplotype-specific F-box protein),
was expressed specifically in pollen and showed a high level of S haplotype-specific
sequence polymorphism, comparable to that of the S-RNases. The other is unlikely
to determine the S specificity of pollen because it showed little allelic
sequence polymorphism and was expressed also in pistil. Three other S haplotypes
were cloned, and the pollen-expressed genes were physically mapped. In all four cases,
SFBs were linked physically to the S-RNase genes and were located at the
S haplotype-specific region, where recombination is believed to be
suppressed, suggesting that the two genes are inherited as a unit. These features
are consistent with the hypothesis that SFB is the pollen S gene.
This hypothesis predicts the involvement of the ubiquitin/26S proteasome proteolytic
pathway in the RNase-based gametophytic self-incompatibility system.