A dual role for the s-locus receptor kinase in self-incompatibility and pistil development revealed by an arabidopsis rdr6 mutation

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Abstract

The coordinate evolution of self-incompatibility (SI) and stigma-anther separation, two mechanisms that promote crosspollination in plants, has been a long-standing puzzle in evolution and development. Using a transgenic self-incompatible Arabidopsis thaliana model, we performed screens for mutants exhibiting a modified SI response. A mutation in the RNAdependent RNA polymerase RDR6, which functions in frans-acting short interfering RNA (ta-siRNA) production, was found that simultaneously enhances SI and causes stigma exsertion, without associated increases in SRK transcript levels. While rdrtS mutants had been previously shown to exhibit stochastic stigma exsertion, our results demonstrate that the S-locus receptor kinase [SRK) gene further enhances pistil elongation and stigma exsertion in this mutant background, a process that requires SRK catalytic activity and correlates with SRK transcript levels. These results suggest that positive regulators or effectors of SI and pistil development are regulated by ta-siRNA(s). By establishing complex connections between SI and stigma exsertion through the sharing of a ta-siRNA-mediated regulatory pathway and the dual role of SRK in SI and pistil development, our study provides a molecular explanation for the coordinate evolution of these processes. © 2009 American Society of Plant Biologists.

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Tantikanjana, T., Rizvi, N., Nasrallah, M. E., & Nasrallah, J. B. (2009). A dual role for the s-locus receptor kinase in self-incompatibility and pistil development revealed by an arabidopsis rdr6 mutation. Plant Cell, 21(9), 2642–2654. https://doi.org/10.1105/tpc.109.067801

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