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Functional delineation of rice MADS29 reveals its role in embryo and endosperm development by affecting hormone homeostasis

Rice MADS29 has recently been reported to cause programmed cell death of maternal tissues, the nucellus, and the nucellar projection during early stages of seed development. However, analyses involving OsMADS29 protein expression domains and characterization of OsMADS29 gain-of-function and knockdow...

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Autores principales: Nayar, Saraswati, Sharma, Rita, Tyagi, Akhilesh Kumar, Kapoor, Sanjay
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3808311/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23929654
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jxb/ert231
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author Nayar, Saraswati
Sharma, Rita
Tyagi, Akhilesh Kumar
Kapoor, Sanjay
author_facet Nayar, Saraswati
Sharma, Rita
Tyagi, Akhilesh Kumar
Kapoor, Sanjay
author_sort Nayar, Saraswati
collection PubMed
description Rice MADS29 has recently been reported to cause programmed cell death of maternal tissues, the nucellus, and the nucellar projection during early stages of seed development. However, analyses involving OsMADS29 protein expression domains and characterization of OsMADS29 gain-of-function and knockdown phenotypes revealed novel aspects of its function in maintaining hormone homeostasis, which may have a role in the development of embryo and plastid differentiation and starch filling in endosperm cells. The MADS29 transcripts accumulated to high levels soon after fertilization; however, protein accumulation was found to be delayed by at least 4 days. Immunolocalization studies revealed that the protein accumulated initially in the dorsal-vascular trace and the outer layers of endosperm, and subsequently in the embryo and aleurone and subaleurone layers of the endosperm. Ectopic expression of MADS29 resulted in a severely dwarfed phenotype, exhibiting elevated levels of cytokinin, thereby suggesting that cytokinin biosynthesis pathway could be one of the major targets of OsMADS29. Overexpression of OsMADS29 in heterologous BY2 cells was found to mimic the effects of exogenous application of cytokinins that causes differentiation of proplastids to starch-containing amyloplasts and activation of genes involved in the starch biosynthesis pathway. Suppression of MADS29 expression by RNAi severely affected seed set. The surviving seeds were smaller in size, with developmental abnormalities in the embryo and reduced size of endosperm cells, which also contained loosely packed starch granules. Microarray analysis of overexpression and knockdown lines exhibited altered expression of genes involved in plastid biogenesis, starch biosynthesis, cytokinin signalling and biosynthesis.
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spelling pubmed-38083112013-10-26 Functional delineation of rice MADS29 reveals its role in embryo and endosperm development by affecting hormone homeostasis Nayar, Saraswati Sharma, Rita Tyagi, Akhilesh Kumar Kapoor, Sanjay J Exp Bot Research Paper Rice MADS29 has recently been reported to cause programmed cell death of maternal tissues, the nucellus, and the nucellar projection during early stages of seed development. However, analyses involving OsMADS29 protein expression domains and characterization of OsMADS29 gain-of-function and knockdown phenotypes revealed novel aspects of its function in maintaining hormone homeostasis, which may have a role in the development of embryo and plastid differentiation and starch filling in endosperm cells. The MADS29 transcripts accumulated to high levels soon after fertilization; however, protein accumulation was found to be delayed by at least 4 days. Immunolocalization studies revealed that the protein accumulated initially in the dorsal-vascular trace and the outer layers of endosperm, and subsequently in the embryo and aleurone and subaleurone layers of the endosperm. Ectopic expression of MADS29 resulted in a severely dwarfed phenotype, exhibiting elevated levels of cytokinin, thereby suggesting that cytokinin biosynthesis pathway could be one of the major targets of OsMADS29. Overexpression of OsMADS29 in heterologous BY2 cells was found to mimic the effects of exogenous application of cytokinins that causes differentiation of proplastids to starch-containing amyloplasts and activation of genes involved in the starch biosynthesis pathway. Suppression of MADS29 expression by RNAi severely affected seed set. The surviving seeds were smaller in size, with developmental abnormalities in the embryo and reduced size of endosperm cells, which also contained loosely packed starch granules. Microarray analysis of overexpression and knockdown lines exhibited altered expression of genes involved in plastid biogenesis, starch biosynthesis, cytokinin signalling and biosynthesis. Oxford University Press 2013-11 2013-08-08 /pmc/articles/PMC3808311/ /pubmed/23929654 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jxb/ert231 Text en © The Author 2013. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Experimental Biology. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Nayar, Saraswati
Sharma, Rita
Tyagi, Akhilesh Kumar
Kapoor, Sanjay
Functional delineation of rice MADS29 reveals its role in embryo and endosperm development by affecting hormone homeostasis
title Functional delineation of rice MADS29 reveals its role in embryo and endosperm development by affecting hormone homeostasis
title_full Functional delineation of rice MADS29 reveals its role in embryo and endosperm development by affecting hormone homeostasis
title_fullStr Functional delineation of rice MADS29 reveals its role in embryo and endosperm development by affecting hormone homeostasis
title_full_unstemmed Functional delineation of rice MADS29 reveals its role in embryo and endosperm development by affecting hormone homeostasis
title_short Functional delineation of rice MADS29 reveals its role in embryo and endosperm development by affecting hormone homeostasis
title_sort functional delineation of rice mads29 reveals its role in embryo and endosperm development by affecting hormone homeostasis
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3808311/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23929654
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jxb/ert231
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