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Current Biology, Vol. 12, R424–R426, June 25, 2002, ©2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved. Self-incompatibility: How to Stay Incompatible Deborah Charlesworth Plant self-incompatibility is controlled by different genes for the recognition reactions of pollen and stigmas, yet correct association of the two genes have been maintained in two Brassica species. The self-incompatibility genes of flowering plants control recognition reactions that allow self-incompatible plants to reject their own pollen, ensuring that their ovules are available for outcrossing. The Brassica system (Figure 1) involves a pollen surface protein, known as SCR or SP11 [1,2], which is recognised by a a receptor kinase, SRK, present on the surface of stigmatic papillae [3] where pollen grains must germinate to grow down to the ovary and fertilise the ovules. Incompatible pollen grains are generally blocked before germination in Brassica, but the stigma remains available to compatible pollen from other individuals. Pollen carrying rare alleles of self-incompatibility genes can pollinate a higher fraction of the population than those carrying common alleles, which will often arrive on a recipient plant whose stigma expresses the same incompatibility type and consequently be rejected. There is thus an advantage for new specificities to arise, and once present, alleles are only rarely eliminated from a species. As a result, the self-incompatibility (S) loci are highly polymorphic, with tens of alleles whose sequences are extremely diverged from one another. The most similar SP11 alleles within Brassica species rarely differ in fewer than 10% of their amino acids, and usually they are much more diverged than this [4–6] (Figure 2), showing that they have been maintained for extremely long times, probably longer than the age of the species in which they are now studied. One would predict that, during this time, the correct association must be maintained between each gene for a pollen SCR ‘key’ and the cognate gene for the respective stigma SRK ‘lock’. This prediction has now been investigated for the first time in Brassica [5,6]. It has long been assumed that suppressed recombination in S-locus regions maintains correct relationships between the two components of the system. A recombinant haplotype, with the pollen allele of one incompatibility type and the stigma allele of a different one, would be a self-compatibility mutation, which would probably quickly be eliminated from self-incompatible populations. There is some circumstantial evidence for suppressed recombination in the S-locus region. Sequence divergence is high between different Institute of Cell, Animal and Population Biology, University of Edinburgh, Ashworth Laboratory, King’s Buildings, West Mains Road, Edinburgh EH9 3JT, UK. PII S0960-9822(02)00915-6 Dispatch haplotypes, particularly in the regions outside the Slocus [7,8] and the haplotypes have different gene arrangements (Figure 1). On the other hand, analyses of patterns of diversity in S-locus sequence data, particularly the observation that linkage disequilibrium between polymorphic sites decays with distance between the sites, suggest that some recombination occurs in the region of the S-locus [9–11]. It is now becoming possible to test the prediction that the pollen and stigma genes are maintained in particular co-adapted combinations, and that recombinant haplotypes are absent from populations. Plants with the same incompatibility type should have similar sequences at both the SP11 and SRK loci, while haplotypes from different incompatibility types should differ at both loci. Conversely, the presence of very similar SRK or SP11 sequences would imply the same specificity. This is true for fungal incompatibility types [12], but because incompatibility testing is laborious in plants — especially in sporophytic self-incompatibility systems such as that in Brassica, with recessive alleles — sequence similarity is often simply assumed to imply functional identity. SRK and SP11 sequences are available from several Brassicas, including B. oleracea (cabbages and kale) and B. rapa (or campestris, the turnip and rape). Some sequences are very similar in both species. SRK allele 7 of B. oleracea differs by only 5% of amino acids from B. rapa allele 46. Now their SP11 sequences have also been compared and, as predicted, they are also unusually similar (Figure 2). Testing incompatibility between species is difficult because, in addition to self-incompatibility, stigmas reject foreign species’ pollen, but the specificities of these alleles were shown to be the same [6]. Thus, not only has this Sallele been preserved since before these species separated, but the two component genes, SRK and SP11, have maintained their association. Other alleles probably also pre-date the split of these species. Among the twenty two B. rapa SP11 alleles sequenced, four are highly similar to sequences from B. oleracea (Figure 2) [4–6]. There are no data from other genes whose divergence might suggest how long these species have been separated, but alleles with similar sequences must descend from a common ancestral allele, and differences between them probably arose since the species diverged. Despite their striking overall similarity, the B. oleracea allele 7 and B. rapa allele 46 haplotypes differ greatly in some regions, probably because of insertions in B. oleracea (Figure 1B). Even excluding rearranged regions, nucleotide divergence is about 2% to 9% in different regions, and amino acid site differences in the exons range from 4% to 8% [5,6] implying a separation of roughly 2–3 million years (though there is no reliable molecular clock for plants). A similar estimate comes from camparison of the most similar SP11 pair, B. rapa allele 40 and B. oleracea Figure 1. (A) Various Brassica oleracea and B. rapa S-gene haplotypes, showing the stigmaexpressed S-domain genes, SRK and SLG, the anther/pollen expressed SCR/SP11 gene, and other genes not labelled individually. Genes are shown as arrows, with the arrowhead indicating the directions of transcription (different in different haplotypes). Grey lines indicate genes not detected in the B. rapa S46 haplotype. (B) Regions of the SRK and SCR/SP11 genes whose sequences have been compared [6]. Green triangles indicate insertions of sequence in B. oleracea. SLG9 SRK9 A SCR SP11 Current Biology R425 oleracea S9 oleracea S8 13kb rapa-S46 Regions of sequence compared S-domain SRK promoter SRK SP11 SP11 promoter 1kb B allele 5, whose protein products have just five amino acid differences and no synonymous differences. Within B. rapa, recessive alleles are moderately diverged from one another, but there is a large excess of DNA sequence changes that cause amino acid differences over synonymous ones, clear evidence that selection has favoured variants with amino acid replacements, presumably new SP11 specificities [5]. How new specificities can arise in a two-locus system remains a mystery, as a change in just one component of the haplotype will not produce a new functional specificity, but merely self-compatibility [13–15]. The sequence similarity among the recessive alleles — and lesser, but still appreciable, similarities among dominant alleles — compared with the gulf between dominant and recessive sets, suggests that new Brassica alleles arise from pre-existing ones with the same dominance. This implies that new specificities do not require major sequence changes, such as exchanges between very different sequences (which certainly seem unlikely to occur between such different haplotypes). It also 100 90 80 Current Biology implies that dominance and specificity are determined by separate sequence features. Indeed, control of expression of the pollen gene is turning out to have surprising features. In Brassica and Arabidopsis lyrata, a distantly related self-incompatible species in the Brassica family, homozygous dominant alleles are expressed sporophytically in tapetal cells of the anthers and gametophytically in pollen, while recessive alleles have only sporophytic expression [16]. In heterozygotes with dominant alleles, however, expression of the recessive allele was undetectable [5,16]. It is remarkable that the dominance of different alleles is apparently the result of suppressed mRNA expression of recessive pollen alleles in the presence of dominant ones. This extraordinary feature can explain the old puzzle of how dominance can differ between the pollen and stigmatic incompatibility reactions in many self-incompatible plants. In Brassica, it may reflect the ancient origins of these two classes of Salleles, in which their entire haplotypes, including presumably the regions that control expression, differ between alleles, though such differences would never have been predicted. As so often in the history of selfincompatibility, a new result has led to more new interesting questions. It will be fascinating to discover the mechanism, and test whether systems with more than two levels of dominance behave in this manner. 70 60 Amino acid 50 identity 40 (%) 30 20 10 7 12 32 40 Within B. oleracea 46 47 46 47 8 5 7 0 8 5 Within B. rapa 40 12 32 Between species Current Biology Figure 2. Results of comparing sequences of SCR/SP11 alleles from haplotypes with different specificities — indicated on the horizontal axes — within B. oleracea and B. rapa (blue columns) contrasted with the similar sequences of some alleles between the two species (pink columns). References 1. Schopfer, C.R., Nasrallah, M.E. and Nasrallah, J.B. (1999). The male determinant of self-incompatibility in Brassica. Science 286, 1697–1700. 2. Suzuki, G., Kai, N., Hirose, T., Fukui, K., Nishio, T., Takayama, S., Isogai, A., Watanabe, M. and Hinata, K. (1999). Genomic organization of the S locus: identification and characterization of genes in SLG/SRK region of S9 haplotype of Brassica campestris (syn. rapa). Genetics 153, 391–400. 3. Takasaki, T., Hatakeyama, K., Watanabe, M., Toriyama, K. and Isogai, A. (1999). Introduction of SLG (S locus glycoprotein) alters the phenotype of endogenous S haplotype, but confers no new S haplotype specificity in Brassica rapa L. Plant Mol. Biol. 40, 659–668. 4. Watanabe, M., Ito, A., Takada, Y., Ninomiya, C., Kakizaki, T., Takahata, Y., Hatakeyama, K., Hinata, K., Suzuki, G., Takasaki, T. et al. (2000). Highly divergent sequences of the pollen self-incompatibility (S) gene in class-I haplotypes of Brassica campestris (syn. rapa) L. FEBS Lett. 473, 139–144. 5. Shiba, H., Iwano, M., Entani, T., Ishimoto, K., Che, F.-S., Satta, Y., Ito, A., Takada, Y., Watanabe, M., Isogai, A. et al. (2002). The dominance of alleles controlling self-incompatibility in Brassica pollen is regulated at the RNA level. Plant Cell 14, 491–504. Dispatch R426 6. Kimura, R., Sato, K., Fujimoto, R. and Nishio, T. (2002). Recognition specificity of self-incompatibility maintained after the divergence of Brassica oleracea and Brassica rapa. Plant J. 29, 215–223. 7. Boyes, D.C., Nasrallah, M.E., Vrebalov, J. and Nasrallah, J.B. (1997). The self-incompatibility (S) haplotypes of Brassica contain highly divergent and rearranged sequences of ancient origin. Plant Cell 9, 237–247. 8. Coleman, C.A. and Kao, T.-H. (1992). The flanking regions of Petunia inflata S alleles are heterogeneous and contain repetitive sequences. Plant Mol. Biol. 18, 725–737. 9. Awadalla, P. and Charlesworth, D. (1999). Recombination and selection at Brassica self-incompatibility loci. Genetics 152, 413–425. 10. Kusaba, M., Nishio, T., Satta, Y., Hinata, K. and Ockendon, D. (1997). Striking similarity in inter- and intra-specific comparisons of class I SLG alleles from Brassica oleracea and Brassica campestris: Implications for the evolution and recognition mechanism. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 94, 7673–7678. 11. Wang, X., Hughes, A.L., Tsukamoto, T., Ando, T. and Kao, T.H. (2001). Evidence that intragenic recombination contributes to allelic diversity of the S-RNase gene at the self-incompatibility (S) locus in Petunia inflata. Plant Physiol. 125, 1012–1022. 12. Wu, J., Saupe, S.J. and Glass, N.L. (1998). Evidence for balancing selection operating at the het-c heterokaryon incompatibility locus in filamentous fungi. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 95, 12398–12402. 13. Uyenoyama, M.K. and Newbigin, E. (2000). Evolutionary dynamics of dual-specificity self-incompatibility alleles. Plant Cell 12, 310–312. 14. Charlesworth, D. (2000). How can two-gene models of self-incompatibility generate new specificities? A comment on: Production of an S RNase with dual specificity suggests a novel hypothesis for the generation of new S alleles. Plant Cell 12, 309–310. 15. Uyenoyama, M.K. and Newbigin, E. (2001). On the origin of selfincompatibility haplotypes: Transition through self-compatible intermediates. Genetics 157, 1805–1817. 16. Kusaba, M., Tung, C.W., Nasrallah, M.E. and Nasrallah, J.B. (2002). Monoallelic expression and dominance interactions in anthers of self-incompatible Arabidopsis lyrata. Plant Physiol. 128, 17–20.