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4,172
result(s) for
"gametophytes"
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Paths of Pollen
by
Stephen Humphrey
in
Botany & Plant Sciences
,
Ecology & Evolutionary Biology
,
Environmental Science
2023
A tiny organism called pollen pulls off one of nature's key
tasks: plant reproduction. Pollination involves a complex network
of different species interacting with one another and mutually
adapting to their ecosystems, which are constantly changing.
Some pollen grains require just a puff of wind to set them in
motion, but most plants depend on creatures gifted with mobility.
These might be birds, bats, reptiles, or insects including
butterflies, beetles, flies, wasps, and over twenty thousand
species of bee. In Paths of Pollen Stephen Humphrey asks
readers to imagine a tipping point where plants and pollinators can
no longer adapt to stressors such as urbanization, modern
agriculture, and global climate change. Illuminating the science of
pollination ecology through evocative encounters with biologists,
conservationists, and beekeepers, Humphrey illustrates the
significance of pollination to such diverse concerns as food
supply, biodiversity, rising global temperatures, and the
resilience of landscapes.
As human actions erase habitats and raise the planet's
temperature, plant diversity is dropping and a growing list of
pollinators faces decline or even extinction. Paths of
Pollen chronicles pollen's vital mission to spread plant
genes, from the prehistoric past to the present, while looking
towards an ecologically uncertain future.
The SeaCoRe system for large scale kelp aquaculture: a plug-and-play, compatible, open-source system for the propagation and transport of clonal gametophyte cultures
by
Pierik, Ronald
,
Bouma, Tjeerd J
,
Ebbing Alexander P J
in
Animal reproduction
,
Aquaculture
,
Bioreactors
2022
The future of large-scale kelp aquaculture is standing at a crossroad, with the diverging paths being characterized by two fundamentally different cultivation methods that differ on how well gametophyte reproduction can be controlled. The cultivation method that does not directly control gametophyte reproduction is more widely utilized at the moment, but interest in better controlling gametophyte reproduction is growing steadily. Here, we validate a bioreactor system that overcomes a number of implementation challenges for this controlled reproductive method, expanding the possibility of clonal gametophyte cultivation outside of expensive laboratory settings. The main goals of this system include (i) the maintenance of clean gametophyte clonal cultures in non-sterile environments over prolonged periods of time, (ii) the production of large numbers of juvenile sporophytes, and (iii) effective transportation of gametophytes and sporophytes. The “SeaCoRe system” consists out of three parts that correspond to these three challenges: (1) clone-reactors, (2) a clone-inducer, and (3) a transporter. The validation of the system showed that delayed Saccharina latissima and Alaria esculenta gametophytes can grow reliably for 75 days in the clone-reactors. Initial gametophyte densities of 0.4 mg DW and 0.6 mg DW gametophtyes mL−1 were optimal for S. latissima and A. esculenta, resulting in reproductive successes of 604 and 422 sporophytes mL−1, respectively. Lastly, gametophyte transport was simulated, with high reproductive success still achieved within 19 days in ~ 20 °C environments. The SeaCoRe system helps unlock the full potential of large-scale kelp cultivation using multiannual delayed clonal.
Journal Article
Reactive Oxygen Species as Mediators of Gametophyte Development and Double Fertilization in Flowering Plants
by
Sankaranarayanan, Subramanian
,
Ju, Yan
,
Kessler, Sharon A.
in
Abortion
,
Apoptosis
,
Cell death
2020
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are toxic by-products of aerobic metabolism. In plants, they also function as important signaling molecules that regulate biotic and abiotic stress responses as well as plant growth and development. Recent studies have implicated ROS in various aspects of plant reproduction. In male gametophytes, ROS are associated with germline development as well as the developmentally associated programmed cell death of tapetal cells necessary for microspore development. ROS have a role in regulation of female gametophyte patterning and maintenance of embryo sac polarity. During pollination, ROS play roles in the generation of self-incompatibility response during pollen-pistil interaction, pollen tube growth, pollen tube burst for sperm release and fertilization. In this mini review, we provide an overview of ROS production and signaling in the context of plant reproductive development, from female and male gametophyte development to fertilization.
Journal Article
The yin-yang of hormones: cytokinin and auxin interactions in plant development
by
Bishopp, Anthony
,
Schaller, G Eric
,
Kieber, Joseph J
in
apical meristems
,
auxins
,
biosynthesis
2015
The phytohormones auxin and cytokinin interact to regulate many plant growth and developmental processes. Elements involved in the biosynthesis, inactivation, transport, perception, and signaling of these hormones have been elucidated, revealing the variety of mechanisms by which signal output from these pathways can be regulated. Recent studies shed light on how these hormones interact with each other to promote and maintain plant growth and development. In this review, we focus on the interaction of auxin and cytokinin in several developmental contexts, including its role in regulating apical meristems, the patterning of the root, the development of the gynoecium and female gametophyte, and organogenesis and phyllotaxy in the shoot.
Journal Article
Auxin efflux controls orderly nucellar degeneration and expansion of the female gametophyte in Arabidopsis
by
Yuan, Li
,
Zhu, Jianchu
,
Cheung, Alice Y.
in
Animal embryos
,
Arabidopsis
,
Arabidopsis thaliana
2021
• The nucellus tissue in flowering plants provides nutrition for the development of the female gametophyte (FG) and young embryo. The nucellus degenerates as the FG develops, but the mechanism controlling the coupled process of nucellar degeneration and FG expansion remains largely unknown.
• The degeneration process of the nucellus and spatiotemporal auxin distribution in the developing ovule before fertilization were investigated in Arabidopsis thaliana.
• Nucellar degeneration before fertilization occurs through vacuolar cell death and in an ordered degeneration fashion. This sequential nucellar degeneration is controlled by the signalling molecule auxin.
• Auxin efflux plays the core role in precisely controlling the spatiotemporal pattern of auxin distribution in the nucellus surrounding the FG. The auxin efflux carrier PIN1 transports maternal auxin into the nucellus while PIN3/PIN4/PIN7 further delivers auxin to degenerating nucellar cells and concurrently controls FG central vacuole expansion. Notably, auxin concentration and auxin efflux are controlled by the maternal tissues, acting as a key communication from maternal to filial tissue.
Journal Article
A fern WUSCHEL-RELATED HOMEOBOX gene functions in both gametophyte and sporophyte generations
by
Irish, Erin E.
,
Youngstrom, Christopher E.
,
Geadelmann, Lander F.
in
Agriculture
,
Apical cells
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2019
Background
Post-embryonic growth of land plants originates from meristems. Genetic networks in meristems maintain the stem cells and direct acquisition of cell fates. WUSCHEL-RELATED HOMEOBOX (WOX) transcription factors involved in meristem networks have only been functionally characterized in two evolutionarily distant taxa, mosses and seed plants. This report characterizes a
WOX
gene in a fern, which is located phylogenetically between the two taxa.
Results
CrWOXB
transcripts were detected in proliferating tissues, including gametophyte and sporophyte meristems of
Ceratopteris richardii
. In addition,
CrWOXB
is expressed in archegonia but not the antheridia of gametophytes. Suppression of
CrWOXB
expression in wild-type RN3 plants by RNAi produced abnormal morphologies of gametophytes and sporophytes. The gametophytes of RNAi lines produced fewer cells, and fewer female gametes compared to wild-type. In the sporophyte generation, RNAi lines produced fewer leaves, pinnae, roots and lateral roots compared to wild-type sporophytes.
Conclusions
Our results suggest that
CrWOXB
functions to promote cell divisions and organ development in the gametophyte and sporophyte generations, respectively
. CrWOXB
is the first intermediate-clade WOX gene shown to function in both generations in land plants.
Journal Article
Earliest record of transfer cells in Lower Devonian plants
2022
• Key sources of information on the nature of early terrestrial ecosystems are the fossilized remains of plants and associated organic encrustations, which are interpreted as either biofilms, biological soil crusts or lichens. The hypothesis that some of these encrustations might be the remains of the thalloid gametophytes of embryophytes provided the stimulus for this investigation.
• Fossils preserved in charcoal were extracted from Devonian Period (Lochkovian Stage, c. 410–419 Myr old) sediments at a geological site in Shropshire (UK). Scanning electron micrographs (SEMs) of the fossils were compared with new and published SEMs of extant bryophytes and tracheophytes, respectively. One specimen was further prepared and imaged by transmission electron microscopy.
• Fossils of thalloid morphology were composed almost entirely of cells with labyrinthine ingrowths; these also were present in fossils of axial morphology where they were associated with putative food-conducting cells. Comparison with modern embryophytes demonstrates that these distinctive cells are transfer cells (TCs).
• Our fossils provide by far the earliest geological evidence of TCs. They also show that some organic encrustations are the remains of thalloid land plants and that these are possibly part of the life cycle of a newly recognized group of plants called the eophytes.
Journal Article
Morphological and functional evolution of gametophytes in epilithic Hymenasplenium murakami-hatanakae (Aspleniaceae): The fifth family capable of producing the independent gametophytes
by
Fujiwara, Tao
,
Yoneoka, Katsuhiro
,
Kataoka, Toshifumi
in
Aspleniaceae
,
Biological evolution
,
Chloroplast DNA
2024
The fern independent gametophytes that can maintain populations by vegetative reproduction without conspecific sporophytes have been considered an unusual phenomenon found in some epiphytic or epilithic species of Hymenophyllaceae, Pteridaceae, Lomariopsidaceae, and Polypodiaceae. By chance, the discovery of mysterious strap-like gametophytes on Izu-Oshima Island, Japan, has led to the hypothesis that Hymenasplenium murakami-hatanakae, a fern species belonging to Aspleniaceae, can also form independent gametophytes. Our investigation revealed gametophyte populations of H. murakami-hatanakae on three islands in the Izu Islands. Based on chloroplast DNA analysis of the gametophyte and sporophyte populations, the gametophytes were found to be maintained by vegetative reproduction without a new supply of spores from sporophytes. A comparison of the surrounding vegetation at the collection sites showed that environmental factors such as light and humidity may influence the maintenance of gametophyte populations. These results clearly show that H. murakami-hatanakae is one of the ferns capable of forming independent gametophytes. This is the first report of independent gametophytes from the suborder Aspleniineae (eupolypod II). The discovery of the independent gametophyte within a phylogenetic lineage previously thought not to form independent gametophytes will provide important insights into the morphological and functional evolution of gametophytes in ferns.
Journal Article
Sporogenesis, gametophyte development and embryogenesis in Glehnia littoralis
2023
Background
Glehnia littoralis
is an economic herb with both medicinal and edible uses. It also has important ecological value and special phylogenetic status as it is a monotypic genus species distributing around beach. Little information on its reproductive biology has been reported so far, which has hindered conservation and application of this species. In this study, we observed morphological changes from buds emergence to seeds formation and internal changes during sporogenesis, gametophyte development and embryo and endosperm development of
G. littoralis
using paraffin-embedded-sectioning and stereo microscope.
Results
The results showed that the stages of internal development events of
G. littoralis
corresponded to obvious external morphological changes, most of developmental features were consistent with other Apiaceae species. The development of male and female gametophytes was not synchronized in the same flower, however, exhibited temporal overlap. From mid-late April to mid-May, the anther primordial and ovule primordial developed into the trinucleate pollen grain and eight-nuclear embryo sac, respectively. From late-May to mid-July, the zygote developed into mature embryo. In addition, some defects in gynoecium or ovule development and abnormal embryo and endosperm development were found. We induced that the possible causes of abortion in
G. littoralis
were as follows: nutrient limitation, poor pollination and fertilization, and bad weather.
Conclusions
This study revealed the whole process and morphological characteristics of the development of reproductive organ in
G. littoralis
, which not only provided important data for the study of systematic and conservation biology, but also provided a theoretical basis for cross breeding.
Journal Article
On the widespread capacity for, and functional significance of, extreme inbreeding in ferns
by
James E. Watkins Jr
,
Weston L. Testo
,
Emily B. Sessa
in
Developmental stages
,
Diploidy
,
embryophytes
2016
Homosporous vascular plants utilize three different mating systems, one of which, gametophytic selfing, is an extreme form of inbreeding only possible in homosporous groups. This mating system results in complete homozygosity in all progeny and has important evolutionary and ecological implications. Ferns are the largest group of homosporous land plants, and the significance of extreme inbreeding for fern evolution has been a subject of debate for decades.
We cultured gametophytes in the laboratory and quantified the relative frequencies of sporophyte production from isolated and paired gametophytes, and examined associations between breeding systems and several ecological and evolutionary traits.
The majority of fern species studied show a capacity for gametophytic selfing, producing sporophytes from both isolated and paired gametophytes. While we did not follow sporophytes to maturity to investigate potential detrimental effects of homozygosity at later developmental stages, our results suggest that gametophytic selfing may have greater significance for fern evolution and diversification than has previously been realized.
We present evidence from the largest study of mating behavior in ferns to date that the capacity for extreme inbreeding is prevalent in this lineage, and we discuss its implications and relevance and make recommendations for future studies of fern mating systems.
Journal Article