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Publications (2)3.11 Total impact

  • Article: Pollen development in Annona cherimola Mill. (Annonaceae). Implications for the evolution of aggregated pollen
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    ABSTRACT: Abstract Background In most flowering plants, pollen is dispersed as monads. However, aggregated pollen shedding in groups of four or more pollen grains has arisen independently several times during angiosperm evolution. The reasons behind this phenomenon are largely unknown. In this study, we followed pollen development in Annona cherimola , a basal angiosperm species that releases pollen in groups of four, to investigate how pollen ontogeny may explain the rise and establishment of this character. We followed pollen development using immunolocalization and cytochemical characterization of changes occurring from anther differentiation to pollen dehiscence. Results Our results show that, following tetrad formation, a delay in the dissolution of the pollen mother cell wall and tapetal chamber is a key event that holds the four microspores together in a confined tapetal chamber, allowing them to rotate and then bind through the aperture sites through small pectin bridges, followed by joint sporopollenin deposition. Conclusion Pollen grouping could be the result of relatively minor ontogenetic changes beneficial for pollen transfer or/and protection from desiccation. Comparison of these events with those recorded in the recent pollen developmental mutants in Arabidopsis indicates that several failures during tetrad dissolution may convert to a common recurring phenotype that has evolved independently several times, whenever this grouping conferred advantages for pollen transfer.
    BMC Plant Biology. 01/2009;
  • Article: Genes encoding chitinase-antifreeze proteins are regulated by cold and expressed by all cell types in winter rye shoots.
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    ABSTRACT: One group of antifreeze proteins (AFPs) is composed of two chitinases that accumulate in the apoplast of winter rye leaves during cold acclimation. In this study, the 28- and 35-kDa chitinase-AFPs were localized in nonacclimated and cold-acclimated rye leaves by immunoelectron microscopy with an antiserum produced against the purified winter rye 35-kDa chitinase-AFP. In cold-acclimated winter rye leaves, labelled chitinase-AFPs were abundant in the walls of epidermal, parenchymal sheath and mesophyll cells and xylem vessels, while less label was present in walls of vascular parenchyma cells. In contrast, chitinase labelling was essentially absent in the nonacclimated cells except in xylem vessels. As shown by RNA blotting, the transcripts of chitinase-AFPs accumulated to a high level in rye leaves during cold acclimation, to a lesser extent in crowns and were not detectable in roots. mRNA transcripts of the 28-kDa chitinase-AFP were localized in rye leaves by in situ hybridization. The chitinase-AFP transcripts were found in the same cell types as the protein itself. We conclude that all metabolically active cell types in cold-acclimated winter rye leaves and crowns are able to synthesize chitinase-AFPs and secrete them into adjacent cell walls, where they may interact with ice to delay its propagation through the plant and modify its growth.
    Physiologia Plantarum 08/2001; 112(3):359-371. · 3.11 Impact Factor