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Endosperm

About: Endosperm is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 8774 publications have been published within this topic receiving 282070 citations.


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01 Jan 1980
TL;DR: A Note from the Publisher Objectives Description and Botanical Relationship Contrast of Maydeae and Andropogoneae Origin of Corn The Life Cycle of Corn Development and Structure of Vegetative Parts The Kernel or Seed Seed Germination and Seedling Development The Root System Initials of root tissues Differentiation ofRoot tissues Origin of root branches The Stem Internodes Nodes The Leaf leaves of the embryo Leaves of the seedling and mature plant
Abstract: A Note from the Publisher Objectives Description and Botanical Relationship Contrast of Maydeae and Andropogoneae Origin of Corn The Life Cycle of Corn Development and Structure of Vegetative Parts The Kernel or Seed Seed Germination and Seedling Development The Root System Initials of root tissues Differentiation of root tissues Origin of root branches The Stem Internodes Nodes The Leaf Leaves of the embryo Leaves of the seedling and mature plant Parts of a leaf Development of the sheath and blade of the leaf Arrangement of tissue The epidermis Distribution of stomata Origin and development of stomata Development and Structure of the Reproductive Organs Development of Tassel and Staminate Spikelets Differentiation of tissues Reduction-division Microspores or pollen grains Shedding of pollen Amount of pollen produced Development of the Ear Shoot and Pistillate Inflorescence Differentiation of the tissues Reduction-division Development of the embryo sac Reproduction and Kernel Development Pollination and Germination of Pollen Fertilization Development of the Endosperm The Antipodal Cells in Later Stages of Kernel Development Development of the Embryo The Mature Kernel Inheritance in Corn Genes Xenia Maternal Inheritance Chromosomal Aberrations Inbreeding and Heterosis Corn Breeding Breeding procedure Hybrid seed production Literature Cited Index

462 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results showed that different milled fractions of wheat have different profiles of both hydrophilic and lipophilic phytochemicals, which provide information necessary for evaluating contributions to good health and disease prevention from whole-wheat consumption.
Abstract: The health-promoting effects of whole-grain consumption have been attributed in part to their unique phytochemical contents and profiles that complement those found in fruits and vegetables. Wheat is an important component of the human diet; however, little is known about the phytochemical profiles and total antioxidant activities of milled fractions of different wheat varieties. The objectives of this study were to investigate the distribution of phytochemicals (total phenolics, flavonoids, ferulic acid, and carotenoids) and to determine hydrophilic and lipophilic antioxidant activity in milled fractions (endosperm and bran/germ) of three different wheat varieties, two of which were grown in two environments. Grain samples of each of the wheat varieties were milled into endosperm and bran/germ fractions. Each fraction was extracted and analyzed for total phenolics, ferulic acid, flavonoids, carotenoid contents, and hydrophilic and lipophilic antioxidant activities. Total phenolic content of bran/germ fra...

454 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: Cloning of the Arabidopsis FERTILIZATION-INDEPENDENT ENDOSPERM (FIE) gene suggests that the FIE Polycomb protein functions to suppress a critical aspect of early plant reproduction, namely, endosperm development, until fertilization occurs.
Abstract: A fundamental problem in biology is to understand how fertilization initiates reproductive development. Higher plant reproduction is unique because two fertilization events are required for sexual reproduction. First, a sperm must fuse with the egg to form an embryo. A second sperm must then fuse with the adjacent central cell nucleus that replicates to form an endosperm, which is the support tissue required for embryo and/or seedling development. Here, we report cloning of the Arabidopsis FERTILIZATION-INDEPENDENT ENDOSPERM (FIE) gene. The FIE protein is a homolog of the WD motif-containing Polycomb proteins from Drosophila and mammals. These proteins function as repressors of homeotic genes. A female gametophyte with a loss-of-function allele of fie undergoes replication of the central cell nucleus and initiates endosperm development without fertilization. These results suggest that the FIE Polycomb protein functions to suppress a critical aspect of early plant reproduction, namely, endosperm development, until fertilization occurs.

447 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that Sus plays a rate-limiting role in the initiation and elongation of the single-celled fibers and that suppression of Sus only in the maternal seed tissue represses fiber development without affecting embryo development and seed size.
Abstract: Cotton is the most important textile crop as a result of its long cellulose-enriched mature fibers. These single-celled hairs initiate at anthesis from the ovule epidermis. To date, genes proven to be critical for fiber development have not been identified. Here, we examined the role of the sucrose synthase gene (Sus) in cotton fiber and seed by transforming cotton with Sus suppression constructs. We focused our analysis on 0 to 3 days after anthesis (DAA) for early fiber development and 25 DAA, when the fiber and seed are maximal in size. Suppression of Sus activity by 70% or more in the ovule epidermis led to a fiberless phenotype. The fiber initials in those ovules were fewer and shrunken or collapsed. The level of Sus suppression correlated strongly with the degree of inhibition of fiber initiation and elongation, probably as a result of the reduction of hexoses. By 25 DAA, a portion of the seeds in the fruit showed Sus suppression only in the seed coat fibers and transfer cells but not in the endosperm and embryo. These transgenic seeds were identical to wild-type seeds except for much reduced fiber growth. However, the remaining seeds in the fruit showed Sus suppression both in the seed coat and in the endosperm and embryo. These seeds were shrunken with loss of the transfer cells and were <5% of wild-type seed weight. These results demonstrate that Sus plays a rate-limiting role in the initiation and elongation of the single-celled fibers. These analyses also show that suppression of Sus only in the maternal seed tissue represses fiber development without affecting embryo development and seed size. Additional suppression in the endosperm and embryo inhibits their own development, which blocks the formation of adjacent seed coat transfer cells and arrests seed development entirely.

443 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023220
2022456
2021223
2020218
2019234
2018224