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Genome-scale analysis and comparison of gene expression profiles in developing and germinated pollen in Oryza sativa

BACKGROUND: Pollen development from the microspore involves a series of coordinated cellular events, and the resulting mature pollen has a specialized function to quickly germinate, produce a polar-growth pollen tube derived from the vegetative cell, and deliver two sperm cells into the embryo sac f...

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Autores principales: Wei, Li Q, Xu, Wen Y, Deng, Zhu Y, Su, Zhen, Xue, Yongbiao, Wang, Tai
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2895629/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20507633
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-11-338
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author Wei, Li Q
Xu, Wen Y
Deng, Zhu Y
Su, Zhen
Xue, Yongbiao
Wang, Tai
author_facet Wei, Li Q
Xu, Wen Y
Deng, Zhu Y
Su, Zhen
Xue, Yongbiao
Wang, Tai
author_sort Wei, Li Q
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Pollen development from the microspore involves a series of coordinated cellular events, and the resulting mature pollen has a specialized function to quickly germinate, produce a polar-growth pollen tube derived from the vegetative cell, and deliver two sperm cells into the embryo sac for double fertilization. The gene expression profiles of developing and germinated pollen have been characterised by use of the eudicot model plant Arabidopsis. Rice, one of the most important cereal crops, has been used as an excellent monocot model. A comprehensive analysis of transcriptome profiles of developing and germinated pollen in rice is important to understand the conserved and diverse mechanism underlying pollen development and germination in eudicots and monocots. RESULTS: We used Affymetrix GeneChip(® )Rice Genome Array to comprehensively analyzed the dynamic changes in the transcriptomes of rice pollen at five sequential developmental stages from microspores to germinated pollen. Among the 51,279 transcripts on the array, we found 25,062 pollen-preferential transcripts, among which 2,203 were development stage-enriched. The diversity of transcripts decreased greatly from microspores to mature and germinated pollen, whereas the number of stage-enriched transcripts displayed a "U-type" change, with the lowest at the bicellular pollen stage; and a transition of overrepresented stage-enriched transcript groups associated with different functional categories, which indicates a shift in gene expression program at the bicellular pollen stage. About 54% of the now-annotated rice F-box protein genes were expressed preferentially in pollen. The transcriptome profile of germinated pollen was significantly and positively correlated with that of mature pollen. Analysis of expression profiles and coexpressed features of the pollen-preferential transcripts related to cell cycle, transcription, the ubiquitin/26S proteasome system, phytohormone signalling, the kinase system and defense/stress response revealed five expression patterns, which are compatible with changes in major cellular events during pollen development and germination. A comparison of pollen transcriptomes between rice and Arabidopsis revealed that 56.6% of the rice pollen preferential genes had homologs in Arabidopsis genome, but 63.4% of these homologs were expressed, with a small proportion being expressed preferentially, in Arabidopsis pollen. Rice and Arabidopsis pollen had non-conservative transcription factors each. CONCLUSIONS: Our results demonstrated that rice pollen expressed a set of reduced but specific transcripts in comparison with vegetative tissues, and the number of stage-enriched transcripts displayed a "U-type" change during pollen development, with the lowest at the bicellular pollen stage. These features are conserved in rice and Arabidopsis. The shift in gene expression program at the bicellular pollen stage may be important to the transition from earlier cell division to later pollen maturity. Pollen at maturity pre-synthesized transcripts needed for germination and early pollen tube growth. The transcription regulation associated with pollen development would have divergence between the two species. Our results also provide novel insights into the molecular program and key components of the regulatory network regulating pollen development and germination.
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spelling pubmed-28956292010-07-02 Genome-scale analysis and comparison of gene expression profiles in developing and germinated pollen in Oryza sativa Wei, Li Q Xu, Wen Y Deng, Zhu Y Su, Zhen Xue, Yongbiao Wang, Tai BMC Genomics Research Article BACKGROUND: Pollen development from the microspore involves a series of coordinated cellular events, and the resulting mature pollen has a specialized function to quickly germinate, produce a polar-growth pollen tube derived from the vegetative cell, and deliver two sperm cells into the embryo sac for double fertilization. The gene expression profiles of developing and germinated pollen have been characterised by use of the eudicot model plant Arabidopsis. Rice, one of the most important cereal crops, has been used as an excellent monocot model. A comprehensive analysis of transcriptome profiles of developing and germinated pollen in rice is important to understand the conserved and diverse mechanism underlying pollen development and germination in eudicots and monocots. RESULTS: We used Affymetrix GeneChip(® )Rice Genome Array to comprehensively analyzed the dynamic changes in the transcriptomes of rice pollen at five sequential developmental stages from microspores to germinated pollen. Among the 51,279 transcripts on the array, we found 25,062 pollen-preferential transcripts, among which 2,203 were development stage-enriched. The diversity of transcripts decreased greatly from microspores to mature and germinated pollen, whereas the number of stage-enriched transcripts displayed a "U-type" change, with the lowest at the bicellular pollen stage; and a transition of overrepresented stage-enriched transcript groups associated with different functional categories, which indicates a shift in gene expression program at the bicellular pollen stage. About 54% of the now-annotated rice F-box protein genes were expressed preferentially in pollen. The transcriptome profile of germinated pollen was significantly and positively correlated with that of mature pollen. Analysis of expression profiles and coexpressed features of the pollen-preferential transcripts related to cell cycle, transcription, the ubiquitin/26S proteasome system, phytohormone signalling, the kinase system and defense/stress response revealed five expression patterns, which are compatible with changes in major cellular events during pollen development and germination. A comparison of pollen transcriptomes between rice and Arabidopsis revealed that 56.6% of the rice pollen preferential genes had homologs in Arabidopsis genome, but 63.4% of these homologs were expressed, with a small proportion being expressed preferentially, in Arabidopsis pollen. Rice and Arabidopsis pollen had non-conservative transcription factors each. CONCLUSIONS: Our results demonstrated that rice pollen expressed a set of reduced but specific transcripts in comparison with vegetative tissues, and the number of stage-enriched transcripts displayed a "U-type" change during pollen development, with the lowest at the bicellular pollen stage. These features are conserved in rice and Arabidopsis. The shift in gene expression program at the bicellular pollen stage may be important to the transition from earlier cell division to later pollen maturity. Pollen at maturity pre-synthesized transcripts needed for germination and early pollen tube growth. The transcription regulation associated with pollen development would have divergence between the two species. Our results also provide novel insights into the molecular program and key components of the regulatory network regulating pollen development and germination. BioMed Central 2010-05-28 /pmc/articles/PMC2895629/ /pubmed/20507633 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-11-338 Text en Copyright ©2010 Wei et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Wei, Li Q
Xu, Wen Y
Deng, Zhu Y
Su, Zhen
Xue, Yongbiao
Wang, Tai
Genome-scale analysis and comparison of gene expression profiles in developing and germinated pollen in Oryza sativa
title Genome-scale analysis and comparison of gene expression profiles in developing and germinated pollen in Oryza sativa
title_full Genome-scale analysis and comparison of gene expression profiles in developing and germinated pollen in Oryza sativa
title_fullStr Genome-scale analysis and comparison of gene expression profiles in developing and germinated pollen in Oryza sativa
title_full_unstemmed Genome-scale analysis and comparison of gene expression profiles in developing and germinated pollen in Oryza sativa
title_short Genome-scale analysis and comparison of gene expression profiles in developing and germinated pollen in Oryza sativa
title_sort genome-scale analysis and comparison of gene expression profiles in developing and germinated pollen in oryza sativa
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2895629/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20507633
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-11-338
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