Genetics. Published Articles Ahead of Print: September 14, 2008, Copyright © 2008
doi:10.1534/genetics.108.094896


A more recent version of this article appeared on November 1, 2008.


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EXPORTIN1 Genes are Essential for Development and Function of the Gametophytes in Arabidopsis thaliana

1 USDA; University of California, Berkeley

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: robertab{at}berkeley.edu.

Submitted on August 7, 2008
Revised on September 2, 2008
Accepted on 12 September 2008


Abstract

Gametes are produced in plants through mitotic divisions in the haploid gametophytes. We investigated the role of EXPORTIN1 (XPO1) genes during the development of both female and male gametophytes of Arabidopsis. Exportins exclude target proteins from the nucleus and are also part of a complex recruited at the kinetochores during mitosis. Here we show that double mutants in Arabidopsis XPO1A and XPO1B are gametophytic-defective. In homozygous-heterozygous plants, 50% of the ovules were arrested at different stages according to the parental genotype. Double mutant female gametophytes of xpo1a-3/+; xpo1b-1/xpo1b-1 plants failed to undergo all the mitotic divisions, or failed to complete embryo sac maturation. Double mutant female gametophytes of xpo1a-3/xpo1a-3; xpo1b-1/+ plants had normal mitotic divisions and fertilization occurred; in most of these embryo sacs the endosperm started to divide but an embryo failed to develop. Distortions in male transmission correlated with the occurrence of smaller pollen grains, poor pollen germination, and shorter pollen tubes. Our results show that mitotic divisions are possible without XPO1 during the haploid phase, but that XPO1 is crucial for the maternal to embryonic transition.

Key Words: embryo sac, nucleo-cytoplamic partitioning, pollen