School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol, Woodland Road, Bristol BS8 1UG, UK.
Ann Bot. 2011 Sep;108(4):687-98. doi: 10.1093/aob/mcr147. Epub 2011 Jul 12.
Pollen-pistil interactions are an essential prelude to fertilization in angiosperms and determine compatibility/incompatibility. Pollen-pistil interactions have been studied at a molecular and cellular level in relatively few families. Self-incompatibility (SI) is the best understood pollen-pistil interaction at a molecular level where three different molecular mechanisms have been identified in just five families. Here we review studies of pollen-pistil interactions and SI in the Asteraceae, an important family that has been relatively understudied in these areas of reproductive biology.
We begin by describing the historical literature which first identified sporophytic SI (SSI) in species of Asteraceae, the SI system later identified and characterized at a molecular level in the Brassicaceae. Early structural and cytological studies in these two families suggested that pollen-pistil interactions and SSI were similar, if not the same. Recent cellular and molecular studies in Senecio squalidus (Oxford ragwort) have challenged this belief by revealing that despite sharing the same genetic system of SSI, the Brassicaceae and Asteraceae molecular mechanisms are different. Key cellular differences have also been highlighted in pollen-stigma interactions, which may arise as a consequence of the Asteraceae possessing a 'semi-dry' stigma, rather than the 'dry' stigma typical of the Brassicaceae. The review concludes with a summary of recent transcriptomic analyses aimed at identifying proteins regulating pollen-pistil interactions and SI in S. squalidus, and by implication the Asteraceae. The Senecio pistil transcriptome contains many novel pistil-specific genes, but also pistil-specific genes previously shown to play a role in pollen-pistil interactions in other species.
Studies in S. squalidus have shown that stigma structure and the molecular mechanism of SSI in the Asteraceae and Brassicaceae are different. The availability of a pool of pistil-specific genes for S. squalidus offers an opportunity to elucidate the molecular mechanisms of pollen-pistil interactions and SI in the Asteraceae.
花粉-柱头相互作用是被子植物受精的重要前奏,决定了亲和性/不亲和性。在相对较少的几个科中,已经从分子和细胞水平研究了花粉-柱头相互作用。自交不亲和性(SI)是分子水平上研究最为深入的花粉-柱头相互作用,在仅仅五个科中已经确定了三种不同的分子机制。在这里,我们综述了在菊科中花粉-柱头相互作用和 SI 的研究进展,菊科是生殖生物学这些领域中相对研究较少的一个重要科。
我们首先描述了历史文献,该文献首次在菊科物种中鉴定出孢子体自交不亲和性(SSI),随后在十字花科中鉴定和表征了该 SSI 系统。这两个科的早期结构和细胞学研究表明,花粉-柱头相互作用和 SSI 相似,如果不是相同的话。最近在千里光属(Oxford ragwort)中的细胞和分子研究挑战了这一观点,揭示了尽管具有相同的 SSI 遗传系统,但十字花科和菊科的分子机制是不同的。在花粉-柱头相互作用中也突出了关键的细胞差异,这可能是由于菊科具有“半干性”柱头,而不是十字花科典型的“干性”柱头所致。综述最后总结了最近的转录组分析,旨在鉴定调控千里光属花粉-柱头相互作用和 SI 的蛋白质,并暗示了菊科。千里光属的柱头转录组包含许多新的柱头特异性基因,但也包含先前在其他物种中表明在花粉-柱头相互作用中起作用的柱头特异性基因。
千里光属的研究表明,菊科和十字花科的柱头结构和 SSI 的分子机制是不同的。千里光属大量的柱头特异性基因的可用性为阐明菊科花粉-柱头相互作用和 SI 的分子机制提供了机会。