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Plant Reproduction BIOL 304 11/21/2008-11/26/2008 1 2 Plant Reproduction • Transition to reproduction • Flower organ development • Gametogenesis and fertilization QuickTime™ and a TIFF (LZW) decompressor are needed to see this picture. 3 Transition to reproduction Flower Inflorescence Vegetative phase Reproductive phase 4 Production of flowers involves two transitions in Arabidopsis 1. Convert SAM to inflorescence meristem (infinite, making lateral organs) 2. Convert inflorescence meristem to floral meristem (terminal, flowers) SC: stem cell P: organ primordia Se: sepal 5 Factors regulating the transitions Vegetative meristem Inflorescence meristem • Genes (flowering-time genes and floral identity genes) • Light (photoperiod) • The biological clock • Temperature • Hormones Floral meristem 6 Flowering-time genes affecting the transition of vegetative growth to reproductive growth WT emf1 emf2 embryonic flower 7 Floral identity genes affecting formation of inflorescence and floral meristems Flower (from Floral meristem) Inflorescence (from Inflorescence meristem) 8 Mutations in floral identity genes terminal flower 1 (tfl1): Convert the inflorescence meristem to the flower meristem. leafy (lfy): produce more inflorescences, delayed flowering 9 Factors regulating the transition to reproduction EMF LFY Vegetative meristem Inflorescence meristem TFL Floral meristem 10 The discovery of photoperiodism Garner and Allard (1920’s) Soybeans (Glycine max) planted over a three-month period all flowered about the same time 11 Many more experiments were followed: • Eliminate a variety of environmental conditions: Nutrition, temperature, and light intensity • Relative length of day and night decides the flowering time Photoperiodism: ability of an organism to measure the proportion of daylight during a 24-hour period 12 Photoperiod Varies according to the latitude and seasonal changes. 13 Critical daylength Critical Daylength (CD) Xanthium: a short day plant, flowers when CD is LESS than 15.5 hours. Hyoscyamus: a long day plant, flowers when CD is MORE than 11 hours. 14 Plants are induced to flower by different photoperiods • • • • • • short day (SD) : plants are stimulated to flower when the length of day falls below a threshold long day (LD): plants are stimulated to flower when the length of day exceeds a threshold Day neutral (DN): plants flower indifference to the changes of day length. Long-short-day: flowering requires certain number of short days are preceded by a certain number of long days. Short-long-day: flowering requires certain number of long days are preceded by a certain number of short days. Intermediate-daylength: not flowering if the daylength is too short or too long. 15 Do plants really measure the length of the daylength? 16 Hamner and Bonner (1938): Xanthium strumarium, a SD plant with CD = 15.5 hours • Xanthium flowers when the dark period exceeds 8.5 hours. • Short interruption of dark period, even by a pulse of light as short as 1 minute delays flowering. • The relative length of dark is not the determining factor. 17 Similar results were obtained with other SD plants. For LD plants A longer dark period inhibits flowering. Light break induces flowering. 18 What tissues/organs perceive photoperiod? 19 Exp. 1: The leaf or apex of Perilla (a short day plant) was exposed to different daylength. 20 Exp. 2: Grafting experiment with Perilla 21 The flowering signal: florigen vegetative or reproductive growth? • the flowering signal is generated in the leaf SAM • the signal goes one way: from the leaf to the apex • Grafting transmittable Florigen Florigen ? Florigen 22 The biological clock • Present in plants, animals, fungi, and some photosynthetic bacteria • An internal time measuring system (“clock”) that runs on its own with a periodicity of nearly 24 hours. It can be “reset” by external signals. Temperature 23 The Arabidopsis biological clock The central oscillator: CCA1, LHY, and TOC1 (these are transcription factors) and other proteins 24 The Arabidopsis biological clock • CCA1 and LHY are expressed during the day and together repress expression of TOC1 during the day • TOC1 is expressed at night and is required for activation of CCA1 and LHY1, beginning just before morning 25 Mutations in the clock genes • Lack of the nyctinastic movement: diurnal rise and fall of leaves • Altered flowering time in some mutants • • • • cca1: early flowering lhy: early flowering toc1: early flowering Some other clock mutants can be late flowering 26 Temperature: Vernalization Vernalization: low temperature treatment can promote flowering in some plants. • The vernalization-effective temperature and duration of low temperature treatment may vary. • Vernalization is perceived by the shoot apex. • The vernalization state is grafting transmissible. 27 Cold acclimation • Can be induced quickly • Increases plant resistance to freezing stress • Does not affect flowering time. 28 Hormone GA regulates flowering time GA1: an enzyme involved in GA biosynthesis ga1: In addition to the dwarf phenotype, the mutant flowers late under LD conditions and does not flower under SD conditions. GA treatment promotes flowering time. 29 Flower development in Arabidopsis Vegetative meristem Inflorescence meristem Transition to reproduction: Genes & other factors Floral meristem Flower: sepals, petals, stamens, and carpels Flower organ development: Organ identity genes 30 Flower organs • • • • petal stamen carpel sepal 31 The flower is generated from the floral meristem QuickTime™ and a TIFF (LZW) decompressor are needed to see this picture. the floral meristem 32 Flower organs Produced in 4 concentric whorls with the same order sepal (whorl 1) petal (whorl 2) stamen (whorl 3) carpel (whorl 4) QuickTime™ and a TIFF (LZW) decompressor are needed to see this picture. 33 sepal-petal-stamen-carpel stamen-carpel-stamen-carpel (the ap1 mutant is similar) 34 wt sepal-petal-stamen-carpel apetala3 (ap3) pistillata (pi) sepal-sepal-carpel-carpel 35 sepal-petal-stamen-carpel sepal-petal-petal-sepal QuickTime™ and a TIFF (LZW) decompressor are needed to see this picture. 36 The “ABC” model for flower development A AP1, AP2 B AP3, PI C AG • The ABC genes function in the distinct fields. • The A and C genes are mutually exclusive in their expression. 37 WT ap1 or ap2 The A genes: ap1 or ap2 mutants should (and do) make carpel-stamen-stamen-carpel 38 WT ap3 or pi The B genes: ap3 or pi mutants should (and do) make sepal-sepal-carpel-carpel 39 WT ag The C genes: ag mutants should (and do) make sepal-petal-petal-sepal 40 Flower organ function: Gametogenesis and Fertilization 41 Male gametogenesis Diploid pollen mother cells undergo meiosis to produce a tetrad of haploid microspores. Each microspore develops into a pollen grain containing two haploid cells (mitosis I): • the generative cell (small) • The vegetative cell (large) generative cell 42 • the vegetative cell grows to produce the pollen tube • the generative cell produce 2 sperm cells (mitosis II) 43 Female gametogenesis an ovule primordium emerges as a bump on the inner wall (placenta) of the ovary the megasporocyte undergoes meiosis to produce 4 haploid cells, only one of which (the megaspore) survives. 44 Female gametogenesis placental wall the megaspore undergoes 3 mitotic divisions to produce 8 cells: • 3 antipodal cells • 2 synergid cells • 2 central cell nuclei • 1 egg cell (EC) 45 Female gametogenesis placental wall 46 Double fertilization Pollens land on the stigma, hydrate, and begin to germinate the pollen tube 47 Pollen tubes grow, by tip growth, down through the stigma and style and into the ovary, toward the ovules. The pollen tube navigates to the micropyle and discharges the two sperm cells. 48 Double fertilization Ovule • One sperm fertilizes the egg cell to develop into the embryo. Antipodal cells Central cell nuclei Egg Synergids Micropyle Sperms Pollen tube • the other sperm fertilizes the diploid central cell nucleus to develop into the endosperm. 49 Plant reproduction Ovule (1 to many) Ovary Silique 50 Fruit development • The ovary and other tissue together produce a fruit. • Fruit is important for seed dispersal in many species • Many foods are also called “vegetables”: tomatoes, pea pods, squash • Fruit size, texture, and sugar content are determined by genes. • Ethylene stimulates fruit ripening. 51 Life cycle of a flowering plant 2n 2n 2n 1n 2n 2n 52