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Showing papers on "Endosperm published in 2000"


Journal ArticleDOI
14 Jan 2000-Science
TL;DR: Recombinant DNA technology was used to improve the nutritional value of rice, and a combination of transgenes enabled biosynthesis of provitamin A in the endosperm.
Abstract: Rice (Oryza sativa), a major staple food, is usually milled to remove the oil-rich aleurone layer that turns rancid upon storage, especially in tropical areas. The remaining edible part of rice grains, the endosperm, lacks several essential nutrients, such as provitamin A. Thus, predominant rice consumption promotes vitamin A deficiency, a serious public health problem in at least 26 countries, including highly populated areas of Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Recombinant DNA technology was used to improve its nutritional value in this respect. A combination of transgenes enabled biosynthesis of provitamin A in the endosperm.

2,149 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The promoters of MEA, FIS2, and FIE genes, genes that repress seed development in the absence of pollination, were fused to beta-glucuronidase (GUS) to study their activity pattern, suggesting that these proteins operate in the same system of control of seed development.
Abstract: The promoters of MEA (FIS1), FIS2, and FIE (FIS3), genes that repress seed development in the absence of pollination, were fused to β-glucuronidase (GUS) to study their activity pattern. The FIS2∷GUS product is found in the embryo sac, in each of the polar cell nuclei, and in the central cell nucleus. After pollination, the maternally derived FIS2∷GUS protein occurs in the nuclei of the cenocytic endosperm. Before cellularization of the endosperm, activity is terminated in the micropylar and central nuclei of the endosperm and subsequently in the nuclei of the chalazal cyst. MEA∷GUS has a pattern of activity similar to that of FIS2∷GUS, but FIE∷GUS protein is found in many tissues, including the prepollination embryo sac, and in embryo and endosperm postpollination. The similarity in mutant phenotypes; the activity of FIE, MEA, and FIS2 in the same cells in the embryo sac; and the fact that MEA and FIE proteins interact in a yeast two-hybrid system suggest that these proteins operate in the same system of control of seed development. Maternal and not paternal FIS2∷GUS, MEA∷GUS, and FIE∷GUS show activity in early endosperm, so these genes may be imprinted. When fis2, mea, and fie mutants are pollinated, seed development is arrested at the heart embryo stage. The seed arrest of mea and fis2 is avoided when they are fertilized by a low methylation parent. The wild-type alleles of MEA or FIS2 are not required. The parent-of-origin-determined differential activity of MEA, FIS2, and FIE is not dependent on DNA methylation, but methylation does control some gene(s) that have key roles in seed development.

454 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The essential characteristics of cereal endosperm PCD are now known, the molecular mechanisms responsible for its execution remain to be identified and ethylene and abscisic acid are key to mediating PCD in cerealendosperm.
Abstract: The endosperm of cereals functions as a storage tissue in which the majority of starch and seed storage proteins are synthesized. During its development, cereal endosperm initiates a cell death program that eventually affects the entire tissue with the exception of the outermost cells, which differentiate into the aleurone layer and remain living in the mature seed. To date, the cell death program has been described for maize and wheat endosperm, which exhibits common and unique elements for each species. The progression of endosperm programmed cell death (PCD) in both species is accompanied by an increase in nuclease activity and the internucleosomal degradation of nuclear DNA, hallmarks of apoptosis in animals. Moreover, ethylene and abscisic acid are key to mediating PCD in cereal endosperm. The progression of the cell death program in developing maize endosperm follows a highly organized pattern whereas in wheat endosperm, PCD initiates stochastically. Although the essential characteristics of cereal endosperm PCD are now known, the molecular mechanisms responsible for its execution remain to be identified.

297 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The rapid induction of HvSUT1 gene expression in caryopses at approximately 5-6 days after fertilization coincides with increasing levels of sucrose as well as sucrose synthase mRNA and activity, and occurs immediately before the onset of rapid starch accumulation within the endosperm.
Abstract: In order to understand sucrose transport in developing seeds of cereals at the molecular level, we cloned from a caryopses library two cDNAs encoding sucrose transporters, designated HvSUT1 and HvSUT2. Sucrose uptake activity was confirmed by heterologous expression in yeast. Both transporter genes are expressed in maternal as well as filial tissues. In a series of in situ hybridizations we analysed the cell type-specific expression in developing seeds. HvSUT1 is preferentially expressed in caryopses in the cells of the nucellar projection and the endospermal transfer layer, which represent the sites of sucrose exchange between the maternal and the filial generation and are characterized by transfer cell formation. HvSUT2 is expressed in all sink and source tissues analysed and may have a general housekeeping role. The rapid induction of HvSUT1 gene expression in caryopses at approximately 5-6 days after fertilization coincides with increasing levels of sucrose as well as sucrose synthase mRNA and activity, and occurs immediately before the onset of rapid starch accumulation within the endosperm. Starch biosynthesis requires sucrose to be imported into the endosperm, as direct precursor for starch synthesis and to promote storage-associated processes. We discuss the possible role of HvSUT1 as a control element for the endospermal sucrose concentration.

291 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
M. Yamamori, S. Fujita1, K. Hayakawa, J. Matsuki, T. Yasui 
TL;DR: The results suggest that SGP-1 is responsible for amylopectin synthesis, which can be used to expand variation in wheat starch since the S GP-1 null wheat produced novel starch which has not been described before.
Abstract: A starch granule protein, SGP-1, is a starch synthase bound to starch granules in wheat endosperm. A wheat lacking SGP-1 was produced by crossing three variants each deficient in one of three SGP-1 classes, namely SGP-A1, -B1 or -D1. This deficient wheat (SGP–1 null wheat) showed some alterations in endosperm starch, meaning that SGP-1 is involved in starch synthesis. Electrophoretic experiments revealed that the levels of two starch granule proteins, SGP-2 and -3, decreased considerably in the SGP-1 null wheat though that of the waxy protein (granule-bound starch syn- thase I) did not. The A-type starch granules were deformed. Apparent high amylose level (30.8–37.4%) was indicated by colorimetric measurement, amperometric titration, and the concanavalin A method. The altered structure of amylopectin was detected by both high- performance size-exclusion chromatography and high-performance anion exchange chromatography. Levels of amylopectin chains with degrees of polymerization (DP) 6–10 increased, while DP 11–25 chains decreased. A low starch crystallinity was shown by both X-ray diffraction and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) analyses because major peaks were absent. Abnormal crystallinity was also suggested by the lack of a polarized cross in SGP-1 null starch. The above results suggest that SGP-1 is responsible for amylopectin synthesis. Since the SGP-1 null wheat produced novel starch which has not been described before, it can be used to expand variation in wheat starch.

262 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that FIE and MEA polycomb proteins interact physically, suggesting that the molecular partnership of WD and SET domainpolycomb proteins has been conserved during the evolution of flowering plants.
Abstract: In flowering plants, two cells are fertilized in the haploid female gametophyte. Egg and sperm nuclei fuse to form the embryo. A second sperm nucleus fuses with the central cell nucleus, which replicates to generate the endosperm, a tissue that supports embryo development. The FERTILIZATION-INDEPENDENT ENDOSPERM (FIE) and MEDEA (MEA) genes encode WD and SET domain polycomb proteins, respectively. In the absence of fertilization, a female gametophyte with a loss-of-function fie or mea allele initiates endosperm development without fertilization. fie and mea mutations also cause parent-of-origin effects, in which the wild-type maternal allele is essential and the paternal allele is dispensable for seed viability. Here, we show that FIE and MEA polycomb proteins interact physically, suggesting that the molecular partnership of WD and SET domain polycomb proteins has been conserved during the evolution of flowering plants. The overlapping expression patterns of FIE and MEA are consistent with their suppression of gene transcription and endosperm development in the central cell as well as their control of seed development after fertilization. Although FIE and MEA interact, differences in maternal versus paternal patterns of expression, as well as the effect of a recessive mutation in the DECREASE IN DNA METHYLATION1 (DDM1) gene on mutant allele transmission, indicate that fie and mea mutations cause parent-of-origin effects on seed development by distinct mechanisms.

244 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is hypothesize that LeEXP4 is involved in the regulation of seed germination by contributing to cell wall disassembly associated with endosperm cap weakening.
Abstract: Expansins are extracellular proteins that facilitate cell wall extension, possibly by disrupting hydrogen bonding between hemicellulosic wall components and cellulose microfibrils. In addition, some expansins are expressed in non-growing tissues such as ripening fruits, where they may contribute to cell wall disassembly associated with tissue softening. We have identified at least three expansin genes that are expressed in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) seeds during germination. Among these, LeEXP4 mRNA is specifically localized to the micropylar endosperm cap region, suggesting that the protein might contribute to tissue weakening that is required for radicle emergence. In gibberellin (GA)-deficient (gib-1) mutant seeds, which germinate only in the presence of exogenous GA, GA induces the expression of LeEXP4 within 12 hours of imbibition. When gib-1 seeds were imbibed in GA solution combined with 100 microM abscisic acid, the expression of LeEXP4 was not reduced, although radicle emergence was inhibited. In wild-type seeds, LeEXP4 mRNA accumulation was blocked by far-red light and decreased by low water potential but was not affected by abscisic acid. The presence of LeEXP4 mRNA during seed germination parallels endosperm cap weakening determined by puncture force analysis. We hypothesize that LeEXP4 is involved in the regulation of seed germination by contributing to cell wall disassembly associated with endosperm cap weakening.

227 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The grain of the self-pollinating diploid barley species offers two modes of producing recombinant enzymes or other proteins, one uses the promoters of genes with aleurone-specific expression during germination and the signal peptide code for export of the protein into the endosperm.
Abstract: The grain of the self-pollinating diploid barley species offers two modes of producing recombinant enzymes or other proteins. One uses the promoters of genes with aleurone-specific expression during germination and the signal peptide code for export of the protein into the endosperm. The other uses promoters of the structural genes for storage proteins deposited in the developing endosperm. Production of a protein-engineered thermotolerant (1, 3–1, 4)-β-glucanase with the D hordein gene (Hor3–1) promoter during endosperm development was analyzed in transgenic plants with four different constructs. High expression of the enzyme and its activity in the endosperm of the mature grain required codon optimization to a C+G content of 63% and synthesis as a precursor with a signal peptide for transport through the endoplasmic reticulum and targeting into the storage vacuoles. Synthesis of the recombinant enzyme in the aleurone of germinating transgenic grain with an α-amylase promoter and the code for the export signal peptide yielded ≈1 μg⋅mg−1 soluble protein, whereas 54 μg⋅mg−1 soluble protein was produced on average in the maturing grain of 10 transgenic lines with the vector containing the gene for the (1, 3–1, 4)-β-glucanase under the control of the Hor3–1 promoter.

223 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A cDNA from waxy wheat is isolated that encodes GBSSII, which is thought to be responsible for the elongation of amylose chains in non-storage tissues, and gel-blot analysis indicated that genes related to GBSsII also occur in barley, rice, and maize.
Abstract: Studies of waxy mutations in wheat and other cereals have shown that null mutations in genes encoding granule-bound starch synthase I (GBSSI) result in amylose-free starch in endosperm and pollen grains, whereas starch in other tissues may contain amylose. We have isolated a cDNA from waxy wheat that encodes GBSSII, which is thought to be responsible for the elongation of amylose chains in non-storage tissues. The deduced amino acid sequences of wheat GBSSI and GBSSII were almost 66% identical, while those of wheat GBSSII and potato GBSSI were 72% identical. GBSSII was expressed in leaf, culm, and pericarp tissue, but transcripts were not detected in endosperm tissue. In contrast, GBSSI expression was high in endosperm tissue. The expression of GBSSII mRNA in pericarp tissue was similar at the midpoints of the day and night periods. The GBSSII genes were mapped to chromosomes 2AL, 2B, and 2D, whereas GBSSI genes are located on group 7 chromosomes. Gel-blot analysis indicated that genes related to GBSSII also occur in barley, rice, and maize. The possible role of GBSSII in starch synthesis is discussed.

222 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The endosperm of a sorghum mutant cultivar, with high in vitro uncooked and cooked protein digestibilities, was examined by transmission electron microscopy and alpha-, beta-, and gamma-kafirins (storage proteins) were localized within its protein bodies.
Abstract: The endosperm of a sorghum mutant cultivar, with high in vitro uncooked and cooked protein digestibilities, was examined by transmission electron microscopy and α-, β-, and γ-kafirins (storage proteins) were localized within its protein bodies. Transmission electron microscopy micrographs revealed that these protein bodies had a unique microstructure related to high protein digestibility. They were irregular in shape and had numerous invaginations, often reaching to the central area of the protein body. Protein bodies from normal cultivars, such as P721N studied here, with much lower uncooked and cooked digestibilities are spherical and contain no invaginations. Immunocytochemistry results showed that the relative location of α- and β-kafirins within the protein bodies of the highly digestible genotype were similar to the normal cultivar, P721N. γ-Kafirin, however, was concentrated in dark-staining regions at the base of the folds instead of at the protein body periphery, as is typical of normal cultivars. The resulting easy accessibility of digestive enzymes to α-kafirin, the major storage protein, in addition to the increased surface area of the protein bodies of the highly digestible cultivar appear to account for its high in vitro protein digestibility.

202 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A cDNA from imbibed tomato seeds (LeMAN2) is isolated that shares 77% deduced amino acid sequence similarity with a post-germinative tomato mannanase (Le MAN1), and when expressed in Escherichia coli, the protein encoded by LeMAN2 cDNA was recognized by anti-mannanase antibody and exhibited endo-beta-mannAnase activity, confirming the identity of the gene.
Abstract: Endo-b-mannanase (EC 3.2.1.78) is involved in hydrolysis of the mannan-rich cell walls of the tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) endosperm during germination and post-germinative seedling growth. Different electrophoretic isoforms of endo-b-mannanase are expressed sequentially in different parts of the endosperm, initially in the micropylar endosperm cap covering the radicle tip and subsequently in the remaining lateral endosperm surrounding the rest of the embryo. We have isolated a cDNA from imbibed tomato seeds (LeMAN2) that shares 77% deduced amino acid sequence similarity with a post-germinative tomato mannanase (LeMAN1). When expressed in Escherichia coli, the protein encoded by LeMAN2 cDNA was recognized by anti-mannanase antibody and exhibited endo-b-mannanase activity, confirming the identity of the gene. LeMAN2 was expressed exclusively in the endosperm cap tissue of tomato seeds prior to radicle emergence, whereas LeMAN1 was expressed only in the lateral endosperm after radicle emergence. LeMAN2 mRNA accumulation and mannanase activity were induced by gibberellin in gibberellin-deficient gib-1 mutant seeds but were not inhibited by abscisic acid in wild-type seeds. Distinct mannanases are involved in germination and post-germinative growth, with LeMAN2 being associated with endosperm cap weakening prior to radicle emergence, whereas LeMAN1 mobilizes galactomannan reserves in the lateral endosperm.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Progress in understanding programmed cell death (PCD) in the cereal aleurone is described and the hallmarks of apoptosis, including internucleosomal DNA cleavage, plasma membrane and nuclear blebbing and formation of apoptotic bodies, are not observed.
Abstract: Progress in understanding programmed cell death (PCD) in the cereal aleurone is described. Cereal aleurone cells are specialized endosperm cells that function to synthesize and secrete hydrolytic enzymes that break down reserves in the starchy endosperm. Unlike the cells of the starchy endosperm, aleurone cells are viable in mature grain but undergo PCD when germination is triggered or when isolated aleurone layers or protoplasts are incubated in gibberellic acid (GA). Abscisic acid (ABA) slows down the process of aleurone cell death and isolated aleurone protoplasts can be kept alive in media containing ABA for up to 6 months. Cell death in barley aleurone occurs only after cells become highly vacuolated and is manifested in an abrupt loss of plasma membrane integrity. Aleurone cell death does not follow the apoptotic pathway found in many animal cells. The hallmarks of apoptosis, including internucleosomal DNA cleavage, plasma membrane and nuclear blebbing and formation of apoptotic bodies, are not observed in dying aleurone cells. PCD in barley aleurone cells is accompanied by the accumulation of a spectrum of nuclease and protease activities and the loss of organelles as a result of cellular autolysis.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that a functional Aspergillus phytase can be produced in significant amounts in wheat grains and may be of relevance for improving the phytate-phosphorus digestibility when wheat grains are used for non-ruminant animal feed.
Abstract: The Aspergillus niger phytase-encoding gene (phyA) has been constitutively expressed in wheat. Transgenic wheat lines were generated by microprojectile bombardment of immature embryos, using the bar-Bialaphos selection system. The bar and the phyA gene expression were controlled by the maize ubiquitin-1 promoter. To ensure secretion and glycosylation of the microbial phytase, an expression cassette was designed (Ubi-SP-Phy) where an α-amylase signal peptide sequence was inserted between the promoter and the phytase coding region. A similar cassette was constructed without the signal peptide sequence (Ubi-Phy). Five lines of fertile wheat transformed with the Ubi-SP-Phy were generated and two lines with the Ubi-Phy construct. The inheritance of the phyA gene was monitored through three generations. Western blotting of leaf and seed derived protein revealed the presence of an immunoreacting polypeptide of the size expected for the Aspergillus phytase. Up to 25 days after pollination, the heterologous phytase was exclusively present in the pericarp-seed coat-aleurone fraction. Thereafter, it accumulated in the endosperm in amounts exceeding that found in the seed coat and aleurone. The phyA mRNA and derived protein could at no stage be detected in the embryo. The Ubi-SP-Phy transgenic seeds exhibited up to 4-fold increase of phytase activity while up to 56% increase was found in Ubi-Phy plants. It is concluded that a functional Aspergillus phytase can be produced in significant amounts in wheat grains. This may be of relevance for improving the phytate-phosphorus digestibility when wheat grains are used for non-ruminant animal feed.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Treatment of developing wild-type endosperm with fluridone, an inhibitor of ABA biosynthesis, recapitulated the increase in ethylene production and accelerated execution of the PCD program that was observed in the ABA mutant kernels, suggesting that a balance between ABA and ethylene establishes the appropriate onset and progression of programmed cell death during maize endos sperm development.
Abstract: Cereal endosperm undergoes programmed cell death (PCD) during its development, a process that is controlled, in part, by ethylene Whether other hormones influence endosperm PCD has not been investigated Abscisic acid (ABA) plays an essential role during late seed development that enables an embryo to survive desiccation To examine whether ABA is also involved in regulating the onset of PCD during endosperm development, we have used genetic and biochemical means to disrupt ABA biosynthesis or perception during maize kernel development The onset and progression of cell death, as determined by viability staining and the appearance of internucleosomal DNA fragmentation, was accelerated in developing endosperm of ABA-insensitive vp1 and ABA-deficient vp9 mutants Ethylene was synthesized in vp1 and vp9 mutant kernels at levels that were 2–4-fold higher than in wild-type kernels Moreover, the increase and timing of ethylene production correlated with the premature onset and accelerated progression of internucleosomal fragmentation in these mutants Treatment of developing wild-type endosperm with fluridone, an inhibitor of ABA biosynthesis, recapitulated the increase in ethylene production and accelerated execution of the PCD program that was observed in the ABA mutant kernels These data suggest that a balance between ABA and ethylene establishes the appropriate onset and progression of programmed cell death during maize endosperm development

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Events occurring until late development caused aleurone cells to switch fate to starchy endosperm indicating that cell fate is not fixed, and positional cues are required to specify and maintain aleur one fate and Dek1 function is required to respond to these cues.
Abstract: A genetic analysis of maize aleurone development was conducted. Cell lineage was examined by simultaneously marking cells with C1 for anthocyanin pigmentation in the aleurone and wx1 for amylose synthesis in the starchy endosperm. The aleurone and starchy endosperm share a common lineage throughout development indicating that positional cues specify aleurone fate. Mutants in dek1 block aleurone formation at an early stage and cause peripheral endosperm cells to develop as starchy endosperm. Revertant sectors of a transposon-induced dek1 allele showed that peripheral endosperm cells remain competent to differentiate as aleurone cells until late in development. Ds-induced chromosome breakage was used to generate Dek1 loss-of-function sectors. Events occurring until late development caused aleurone cells to switch fate to starchy endosperm indicating that cell fate is not fixed. Thus, positional cues are required to specify and maintain aleurone fate and Dek1 function is required to respond to these cues. An analysis of additional mutants that disrupt aleurone differentiation suggests a hierarchy of gene functions to specify aleurone cell fate and then control aleurone differentiation. These mutants disrupt aleurone differentiation in reproducible patterns suggesting a relationship to endosperm pattern formation.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Activity-stained SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) gels and western blots probed with PPO antibodies suggested the existence of a 67 kDa PPO which is susceptible to proteolytic cleavage that generates a 45 kDa active form.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: New questions are posed about the localization and timing of CK synthesis, the significance of translocation, and the role(s) of CK forms in reproductive development as well as synthesis in situ.
Abstract: A comprehensive range of cytokinins (CK) was identified and quantified by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry in tissues of and in xylem and phloem serving developing white lupine (Lupinus albus) fruits. Analyses were initiated at anthesis and included stages of podset, embryogenesis, and seed filling up to physiological maturation 77 d post anthesis (DPA). In the first 10 DPA, fertilized ovaries destined to set pods accumulated CK. The proportion of cis-CK:trans-CK isomers was initially 10:1 but declined to less than 1:1. In ovaries destined to abort, the ratio of cis-isomers to trans-isomers remained high. During early podset, accumulation of CK (30-40 pmol ovary(-1)) was accounted for by xylem and phloem translocation, both containing more than 90% cis-isomers. During embryogenesis and early seed filling (40-46 DPA), translocation accounted for 1% to 14% of the increases of CK in endosperm (20 nmol fruit(-1)) and seed coat (15 nmol fruit(-1)), indicating synthesis in situ. High CK concentrations in seeds (0.6 micromol g(-1) fresh weight) were transient, declining rapidly to less than 1% of maximum levels by physiological maturity. These data pose new questions about the localization and timing of CK synthesis, the significance of translocation, and the role(s) of CK forms in reproductive development.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results indicate that the cereal grain expression system may provide an economic means for large scale production of feed enzymes in the future.
Abstract: The feasibility of producing plant cell wall polysaccharide-hydrolysing feed enzymes in the endosperm of barley grain was investigated. The coding region of a modified xylanase gene (xynA) from the rumen fungus, Neocallimastix patriciarum, linked with an endosperm-specific promoter from cereal storage protein genes was introduced into barley by Agrobacterium-mediated transformation. Twenty-four independently transformed barley lines with the xylanase gene were produced and analysed. The fungal xylanase was produced in the developing endosperm under the control of either the rice glutelin B-1 (GluB-1) or barley B1 hordein (Hor2-4) promoter. The rice GluB-1 promoter provided an apparently higher expression level of recombinant proteins in barley grain than the barley Hor2-4 promoter in both transient and stable expression experiments. In particular, the mean value for the fungal xylanase activity driven by the GluB-1 promoter in the mature grains of transgenic barley was more than twice that with the Hor2-4 promoter. Expression of the xylanase transgene under these endosperm-specific promoters was not observed in the leaf, stem and root tissues. Accumulation of the fungal xylanase in the developing grains of transgenic barley followed the pattern of storage protein deposition. The xylanase was stably maintained in the grain during grain maturation and desiccation and post-harvest storage. These results indicate that the cereal grain expression system may provide an economic means for large scale production of feed enzymes in the future.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This approach has provided an insight into the complex nature of endosperm protein heterogeneity and provides a basis for the future examination of the effects of environmental variation on protein composition.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The endosperm of hexaploid wheat was shown to contain a high molecular weight starch synthase analogous to the product of the maize du1 gene, starch synthases III (SSIII; DU1).
Abstract: The endosperm of hexaploid wheat (Triticum aestivum [L.]) was shown to contain a high molecular weight starch synthase (SS) analogous to the product of the maize du1 gene, starch synthase III (SSIII; DU1). cDNA and genomic DNA sequences encoding wheat SSIII were isolated and characterized. The wheat SSIII cDNA is 5,346 bp long and contains an open reading frame that encodes a 1,628-amino acid polypeptide. A putative N-terminal transit peptide, a 436-amino acid C-terminal catalytic domain, and a central 470-amino acid SSIII-specific domain containing three regions of repeated amino acid similarity were identified in the wheat gene. A fourth region between the transit peptide and the SSIII-specific domain contains repeat motifs that are variable with respect to motif sequence and repeat number between wheat and maize. In dicots, this N-terminal region does not contain repeat motifs and is truncated. The gene encoding wheat SSIII, designated ss3, consists of 16 exons extending over 10 kb, and is located on wheat chromosome I. Expression of ss3 mRNA in wheat was detected in leaves, pre-anthesis florets, and from very early to middle stage of endosperm development. The entire N-terminal variable repeat region and the majority of the SSIII-specific domain are encoded on a single 2,703-bp exon. A gene encoding a class III SS from the Arabidopsis genome sequencing project shows a strongly conserved exon structure to the wheat ss3 gene, with the exception of the N-terminal region. The evolutionary relationships of the genes encoding monocot and dicot class III SSs are discussed.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is reported that sexual mutant fie-1 endosperms fail to cellularize and overproliferate, consistent with the hypothesis that embryo abortion may be due, at least in part, to a defect in endosperm development.
Abstract: In most flowering plants, fertilization is necessary for development of the central cell into endosperm, but in the fie-1 mutant of Arabidopsis, the central cell can proliferate autonomously. However, autonomous fie-1 endosperms do not develop completely: They have fewer nuclei than sexually produced endosperms, cellularization does not take place, and no clear distinction is seen between the different endosperm compartments. Here, we show that autonomous endosperm develop much further in hypomethylated than normally methylated fie-1 mutants, undergoing cellularization and regional specification to resemble endosperm in sexually produced wild-type seeds. Therefore, the combination of maternal hypomethylation and loss of FIE function enables formation of differentiated endosperm without fertilization. A maternal fie-1 mutation is also lethal to sexual seeds, even if the pollen donor is wild type. We report that sexual mutant fie-1 endosperms fail to cellularize and overproliferate, consistent with the hypothesis that embryo abortion may be due, at least in part, to a defect in endosperm development. Finally, we show that pollen from hypomethylated plants rescues fie-1 mutant seeds provided that it also donates a wild-type paternal FIE allele. These results are discussed in light of models for parent-of-origin effects on seed development.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The formation of small starch granules in wheat endosperm cells was studied and protrusions emanating from A-type granules-containing amyloplasts and the presence of B-type starch granule in these evaginations were demonstrated, suggesting a possible role of these protrusion in interplastid communication.
Abstract: Starch granules in mature wheat endosperm show a bimodal size distribution. The formation of small starch granules in wheat endosperm cells was studied by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) after expression and targeting of fluorescent protein into amyloplasts. Both techniques demonstrated the presence of protrusions emanating from A-type granules-containing amyloplasts and the presence of B-type starch granules in these evaginations. Moreover, CLSM recordings demonstrated the interconnection of the amyloplasts by these protrusions, suggesting a possible role of these protrusions in interplastid communication.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It was concluded that (a) endosperm cap weakening is a biphasic process and (b) inhibition of germination by ABA is through the second step in the endos sperm cap weakening process.
Abstract: The role of abscisic acid (ABA) in the weakening of the endosperm cap prior to radicle protrusion in tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. cv. Moneymaker) seeds was studied. The endosperm cap weakened substantially in both water and ABA during the first 38 h of imbibition. After 38 h the force required for endosperm cap puncturing was arrested at 0.35 N in ABA, whereas in water a further decrease occurred until the radicle protruded. During the first 2 d of imbibition endo-beta-mannanase activity was correlated with the decrease in required puncture force and with the appearance of ice-crystal-induced porosity in the cell walls as observed by scanning electron microscopy. Prolonged incubation in ABA resulted in the loss of endo-beta-mannanase activity and the loss of ice-crystal-induced porosity, but not in a reversion of the required puncture force. ABA also had a distinct but minor effect on the growth potential of the embryo. However, endosperm cap resistance played the limiting role in the completion of germination. It was concluded that (a) endosperm cap weakening is a biphasic process and (b) inhibition of germination by ABA is through the second step in the endosperm cap weakening process.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Two starch granule-bound proteins (SGP) were preferentially associated with A-type starch granules in developing and mature wheat (Triticum aestivum) kernels and Immunoblotting and N-terminal sequencing suggested that the two proteins were different variants of SBEIc, a 152-kD isoform of wheat starch-branching enzyme.
Abstract: Two starch granule-bound proteins (SGP), SGP-140 and SGP-145, were preferentially associated with A-type starch granules (>10 μm) in developing and mature wheat (Triticum aestivum) kernels. Immunoblotting and N-terminal sequencing suggested that the two proteins were different variants of SBEIc, a 152-kD isoform of wheat starch-branching enzyme. Both SGP-140 and SGP-145 were localized to the endosperm starch granules but were not found in the endosperm soluble fraction or pericarp starch granules younger than 15 d post anthesis (DPA). Small-size starch granules ( 10 μm). In contrast, small-size starch granules harvested after 15 DPA contained only low amounts of SGP-140 and SGP-145 and developed mainly into B-type starch granules (<10 μm). Polypeptides of similar mass and immunologically related to SGP-140 and/or SGP-145 were also preferentially incorporated into A-type starch granules of barley (Hordeum vulgare), rye (Secale cereale), and triticale (× Triticosecale Wittmack) endosperm, which like wheat endosperm have a bimodal starch granule size distribution.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The temporal expression of swCDPK during somatic/zygotic embryogenesis, seed maturation, and germination suggests involvement of the enzyme in these developmental processes.
Abstract: Western-blot analysis and protein kinase assays identified two Ca2+-dependent protein kinases (CDPKs) of 55 to 60 kD in soluble protein extracts of embryogenic cultures of sandalwood (Santalum album L.). However, these sandalwood CDPKs (swCDPKs) were absent in plantlets regenerated from somatic embryos. swCDPKs exhibited differential expression (monitored at the level of the protein) and activity in different developmental stages. Zygotic embryos, seedlings, and endosperm showed high accumulation of swCDPK, but the enzyme was not detected in the soluble proteins of shoots and flowers. swCDPK exhibited a temporal pattern of expression in endosperm, showing high accumulation and activity in mature fruit and germinating stages; the enzyme was localized strongly in the storage bodies of the endosperm cells. The study also reports for the first time to our knowledge a post-translational inhibition/inactivation of swCDPK in zygotic embryos during seed dormancy and early stages of germination. The temporal expression of swCDPK during somatic/zygotic embryogenesis, seed maturation, and germination suggests involvement of the enzyme in these developmental processes.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is discovered that differential developmental fate of chalazal and micropylar domains is a common pattern among the endosperms of all basal angiosperm taxa and suggested that this may be a feature of endosperm development in all angiosperms.
Abstract: A phylogenetically based comparative investigation of endosperm development was undertaken in a sample of 13 basal angiosperm taxa. The specific goals were to (1) provide a full developmental analysis of all aspects of endosperm in each species, (2) compare patterns among taxa to determine phylogenetic character distribution, (3) reconstruct the ancestral developmental pattern for angiosperms, and (4) explore scenarios of ontogenetic evolution that occurred during the early radiation of flowering plants. Five taxa, Acorus calamus, Cabomba caroliniana, Ceratophyllum demersum, Drimys winteri, and Platanus racemosa, are described in detail. Data from an additional eight taxa were analyzed and compared with these five. Endosperm ontogeny can be conceived of as a series of stages (characters) during which differential patterns of development occur among taxa (character states). We discovered that differential developmental fate of chalazal and micropylar domains is a common pattern among the endosperms of all ...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results provide direct evidence that betaGLU I contributes to endosperm rupture and suggest that regulation of betaGLu I by ABA signalling pathways might have a key role in after-ripening.
Abstract: 'Coat-enhanced' seed dormancy of many dicotyledonous species, including tobacco, is released during after-ripening. Rupture of the endosperm, which is the limiting step in tobacco seed germination, is preceded by induction of class I beta-1,3-glucanase (betaGLU I) in the micropylar endosperm where the radicle will penetrate. Treating after-ripened tobacco seeds with abscisic acid (ABA) delays endosperm rupture and inhibits betaGLU I induction. Sense transformation with a chimeric ABA-inducible betaGLU I transgene resulted in over-expression of betaGLU I in seeds and promoted endosperm rupture of mature seeds and of ABA-treated after-ripened seeds. Taken together, these results provide direct evidence that betaGLU I contributes to endosperm rupture. Over-expression of betaGLU I during germination also replaced the effects of after-ripening on endosperm rupture. This suggests that regulation of betaGLU I by ABA signalling pathways might have a key role in after-ripening.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The (α,β,δ)-zeins located in the protein bodies should limit the accessibility of starch granules to ruminal micro-organisms and, as a consequence, the ruminal starch degradability.
Abstract: This study was aimed at determining the influence of the protein distribution of maize endosperm on ruminal starch degradation using 14 maizes differing in endosperm texture (eight dent and six flint maizes) Ruminal starch degradability was determined by an in situ technique on ground samples with a particle size of 3 mm The distribution of endosperm proteins was assayed by a method based on their differential solubilities in solvents The (α,β,δ)-zeins and the true glutelins were the predominant proteins in the endosperm The (α,β,δ)-zeins (661 and 701 g kg−1 of recovered protein for dent and flint types respectively) and the true glutelins (218 and 184 g kg−1 of recovered protein for dent and flint types respectively) were related to the vitreousness, ie the ratio of vitreous to floury endosperm Ruminal starch degradability averaged 619 and 462 g kg−1 for dent and flint maizes respectively It was correlated negatively with the (α,β,δ)-zeins and positively with the true glutelins The (α,β,δ)-zeins located in the protein bodies should limit the accessibility of starch granules to ruminal micro-organisms and, as a consequence, the ruminal starch degradability © 2000 Society of Chemical Industry

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TL;DR: It is suggested that either uptake or perception of sugar(s) in endosperm cells at 5-10 DAP determines the rgf1 kernel phenotype, which exhibits striking morphological similarities to the mn1 mutant.
Abstract: The maize cob presents an excellent opportunity to screen visually for mutations affecting assimilate partitioning in the developing kernel. We have identified a defective kernel mutant termed rgf1, reduced grain filling, with a final grain weight 30% of the wild type. In contrast with most defective endosperm mutants, rgf1 shows gene dosage-dependent expression in the endosperm. rgf1 kernels possess a small endosperm incompletely filling the papery pericarp, but embryo development is unaffected and the seeds are viable. The mutation conditions defective pedicel development and greatly reduces expression of endosperm transfer layer-specific markers. rgf1 exhibits striking morphological similarities to the mn1 mutant, but maps to a locus approximately 4 cM away from mn1 on chromosome 2 of maize. Despite reduced starch accumulation in the mutant, no obvious lesion in starch biosynthesis has been detected. Free sugar levels are unaltered in rgf1 endosperm. Rates of sugar uptake, measured over short (8 h) periods in cultured kernels, are increased in rgf1 compared to the wild type. rgf1 and wild-type kernels, excised at 5 DAP and cultured in vitro also develop differently in response to variations in sugar regime: glucose concentrations above 1% arrest placentochalazal development of rgf1 kernels, but have no effect on cultured wild-type kernels. These findings suggest that either uptake or perception of sugar(s) in endosperm cells at 5-10 DAP determines the rgf1 kernel phenotype.

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TL;DR: It is the interaction of these structural motifs combined with the molecular regulatory mechanisms that ensure the appropriate timing and positioning of hydrolase production and endosperm reserve mobilization that ensure an extended release of nutrients to fuel early seedling growth.
Abstract: Cereal grain germination and early seedling growth involve the co-ordinated action of endosperm and embryo tissues to mobilize the storage reserves of the starchy endosperm. This mobilization is accomplished by hydrolases secreted from the aleurone and scutellar tissues. The breakdown products are then transported to the growing seedling by the scutellum. This resource-harvesting system is regulated at multiple levels. One well-defined aspect of control is brought about by the hormone gibberellin (GA). Gibberellin is released from the embryo upon imbibition and activates the aleurone cells. The secretory apparatus of the aleurone then proliferates, supporting increased hydrolase synthesis and secretion to degrade the starchy endosperm. The molecules that regulate this response to GA are now being increasingly characterized. Elements such as cGMP, calcium, calmodulin and protein kinases are well known as regulators in other eukaryotic cell types and are emerging as key control factors in the aleurone hormone response. However, superimposed upon this molecular regulatory system is another level of control, the structural pattern of tissues and stored macro- molecules that was laid down during grain development. It is the interaction of these structural motifs combined with the molecular regulatory mechanisms that ensure the appropriate timing and positioning of hydrolase production and endosperm reserve mobilization. This integrated control system ensures an extended release of nutrients to fuel early seedling growth.