Matton D P, Nass N, Clarke A E, Newbigin E
Plant Cell Biology Research Centre, School of Botany, Melbourne University, Parkville, Victoria, Australia.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1994 Mar 15;91(6):1992-7. doi: 10.1073/pnas.91.6.1992.
In some families of flowering plants, a single self-incompatibility (S) locus prevents the fertilization of flowers by pollen from the same plant. Self-incompatibility of this type involves the interaction of molecules produced by the S locus in pollen with those present in the female tissues (pistil). Until recently, the pistil products of the S locus were known in only two families, the Brassicaceae (which includes the cabbages and mustards) and Solanaceae (potatoes and tomatoes). A paper in this issue of the Proceedings describes the molecules associated with self-incompatibility in a third family, the Papaveraceae (poppies). We review current research on self-incompatibility in these three families and discuss the implications of the latest findings in poppy on the likely evolution of self-incompatibility in flowering plants. We also compare research into self-incompatibility with recent progress in understanding the mechanisms by which plants overcome infection by certain pathogens.
在一些开花植物家族中,单个自交不亲和(S)位点可阻止同一植株的花粉使花朵受精。这种类型的自交不亲和涉及S位点在花粉中产生的分子与雌蕊组织(雌蕊)中存在的分子之间的相互作用。直到最近,仅在两个家族中发现了S位点的雌蕊产物,即十字花科(包括卷心菜和芥菜)和茄科(土豆和番茄)。本期《论文集》中的一篇论文描述了与第三个家族罂粟科(罂粟)自交不亲和相关的分子。我们回顾了目前对这三个家族自交不亲和的研究,并讨论了罂粟最新研究结果对开花植物自交不亲和可能进化的影响。我们还将自交不亲和的研究与植物克服某些病原体感染机制的最新进展进行了比较。