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Sex Determination in Dioecious Silene Iatifolia (Effects of the Y Chromosome and the Parasitic Smut Fungus (Ustilago violacea) on Gene Expression during Flower Development)
Author(s) -
Charles P. Scutt,
Yicun Li,
Sharon E. Robertson,
Malcolm Willis,
Philip M. Gilmartin
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
plant physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.554
H-Index - 312
eISSN - 1532-2548
pISSN - 0032-0889
DOI - 10.1104/pp.114.3.969
Subject(s) - biology , ustilago , gene , smut , botany , genetics , fungus , silene , dioecy , chromosome , caryophyllaceae , pollen
We have embarked on a molecular cloning approach to the investigation of sex determination in Silene latifolia Poiret, a dioecious plant species with morphologically distinguishable sex chromosomes. One of our key objectives was to define a range of genes that are up-regulated in male plants in response to Y chromosome sex-determination genes. Here we present the characterization of eight male-specific cDNA sequences and classify these according to their expression dynamics to provide a range of molecular markers for dioecious male flower development. Genetically female S. latifolia plants undergo a partial sex reversal in response to infection by the parasitic smut fungus Ustilago violacea. This phenomenon has been exploited in these studies; male-specific cDNAs have been further categorized as inducible or noninducible in female plants by smut fungus infection. Analysis of the organ-specific expression of male-specific probes in male and female flowers has also identified a gene that is regulated in a sex-specific manner in nonreproductive floral tissues common to both male and female plants. This observation provides, to our knowledge, the first molecular marker for dominant effect of the Y chromosome in nonreproductive floral organs.

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