Xue Y; Carpenter R et al 1996
- Authors: Xue Y; Carpenter R; Dickinson HG; Coen ES
- Title: Origin of allelic diversity in antirrhinum S locus
RNases.
- Location: Plant Cell 1996 May;8(5):805-14
- Abstract: In many plant species, self-incompatibility (SI) is genetically
controlled by a single multiallelic S locus. Previous analysis of S
alleles in the Solanaceae, in which S locus ribonucleases (S RNases) are
responsible for stylar expression of SI, has demonstrated that allelic
diversity predated speciation within this family. To understand how
allelic diversity has evolved, we investigated the molecular basis of
gametophytic SI in Antirrhinum, a member of the
Scrophulariaceae, which is closely related to the Solanaceae. We have
characterized three Antirrhinum cDNAs encoding
polypeptides homologous to S RNases and shown that they are encoded by
genes at the S locus. RNA in situ hybridization revealed that the
Antirrhinum S RNase are primarily expressed in the
stylar transmitting tissue. This expression is consistent with their
proposed role in arresting the growth of self-pollen tubes. S alleles
from the Scrophulariaceae form a separate group from those of the
Solanaceae, indicating that new S alleles have been generated since these
families separated (approximately 40 million years). We propose that the
recruitment of an ancestral RNase gene into SI occurred during an early
stage of angiosperm evolution and that, since that time, new alleles
subsequently have arisen at a low rate.
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