Functional conservation of the meiotic genes SDS and RCK in male meiosis in the monocot rice
doi: 10.1038/cr.2009.52
pmid: 19417775
Functional conservation of the meiotic genes SDS and RCK in male meiosis in the monocot rice
The Arabidopsis SDS (SOLO DANCERS) and RCK (ROCK-N-ROLLERS) genes are important for male meiosis, but it is still unknown whether they represent conserved functions in plants. We have performed phylogenetic analyses of SDS and RCK and their respective homologs, and identified their putative orthologs in poplar and rice. Quantitative real-time RT-PCR analysis indicated that rice SDS and RCK are expressed preferentially in young flowers, and transgenic RNAi rice lines with reduced expression of these genes exhibited normal vegetative development, but showed significantly reduced fertility with partially sterile flowers and defective pollens. SDS deficiency also caused a decrease in pollen amounts. Further cytological examination of male meiocytes revealed that the SDS deficiency led to defects in homolog interaction and bivalent formation in meiotic prophase I, and RCK deficiency resulted in defective meiotic crossover formation. These results indicate that rice SDS and RCK genes have similar functions to their Arabidopsis orthologs. Because rice and Arabidopsis, respectively, are members of monocots and eudicots, two largest groups of flowering plants, our results suggest that the functions of SDS and RCK are likely conserved in flowering plants.
- Chinese Academy of Sciences China (People's Republic of)
- Pennsylvania State University United States
- Fudan University China (People's Republic of)
- Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences China (People's Republic of)
- Center for Excellence in Molecular Plant Sciences China (People's Republic of)
Arabidopsis Proteins, DNA Helicases, Oryza, Flowers, Genes, Plant, Meiosis, Fertility, Cyclins, RNA Interference, Phylogeny, Plant Proteins
Arabidopsis Proteins, DNA Helicases, Oryza, Flowers, Genes, Plant, Meiosis, Fertility, Cyclins, RNA Interference, Phylogeny, Plant Proteins
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