One tissue, two fates: Different roles of megagametophyte cells during Scots pine embryogenesis

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Abstract

In the Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) seed, embryos grow and develop within the corrosion cavity of the megagametophyte, a maternally derived haploid tissue, which houses the majority of the storage reserves of the seed. In the present study, histochemical methods and quantification of the expression levels of the programmed cell death (PCD) and DNA repair processes related genes (MCA, TAT-D, RAD51, KU80, and LIG) were used to investigate the physiological events occurring in the megagametophyte tissue during embryo development. It was found that the megagametophyte was viable from the early phases of embryo development until the early germination of mature seeds. However, the megagametophyte cells in the narrow embryo surrounding region (ESR) were destroyed by cell death with morphologically necrotic features. Their cell wall, plasma membrane, and nuclear envelope broke down with the release of cell debris and nucleic acids into the corrosion cavity. The occurrence of necrotic-like cell death in gymnosperm embryogenesis provides a favourable model for the study of developmental cell death with necrotic-like morphology and suggests that the mechanism underlying necrotic cell death is evolutionary conserved.

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Vuosku, J., Sarjala, T., Jokela, A., Sutela, S., Sääskilahti, M., Suorsa, M., … Häggman, H. (2009). One tissue, two fates: Different roles of megagametophyte cells during Scots pine embryogenesis. In Journal of Experimental Botany (Vol. 60, pp. 1375–1386). https://doi.org/10.1093/jxb/erp020

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