S-Locus F-Box Proteins Are Solely Responsible for S-RNase-Based Self-Incompatibility of Petunia Pollen
Author(s) -
Linhan Sun,
Justin Williams,
Shu Li,
Lihua Wu,
Wasi A. Khatri,
Patrick G. Stone,
Matthew D. Keebaugh,
Tehhui Kao
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
the plant cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.324
H-Index - 341
eISSN - 1532-298X
pISSN - 1040-4651
DOI - 10.1105/tpc.18.00615
Subject(s) - biology , pollen , genetics , haplotype , gynoecium , indel , locus (genetics) , petunia , gene , allele , rnase p , botany , stamen , single nucleotide polymorphism , rna , genotype
Self-incompatibility (SI) in Petunia is regulated by a polymorphic S-locus. For each S-haplotype, the S-locus contains a pistil-specific S-RNase gene and multiple pollen-specific S-locus F-box ( SLF ) genes. Both gain-of-function and loss-of-function experiments have shown that S-RNase alone regulates pistil specificity in SI. Gain-of-function experiments on SLF genes suggest that the entire suite of encoded proteins constitute the pollen specificity determinant. However, clear-cut loss-of-function experiments must be performed to determine if SLF proteins are essential for SI of pollen. Here, we used CRISPR/Cas9 to generate two frame-shift indel alleles of S 2 - SLF1 ( SLF1 of S 2 -haplotype) in S 2 S 3 plants of P. inflata and examined the effect on the SI behavior of S 2 pollen. In the absence of a functional S 2 -SLF1, S 2 pollen was either rejected by or remained compatible with pistils carrying one of eight normally compatible S -haplotypes. All results are consistent with interaction relationships between the 17 SLF proteins of S 2 -haplotype and these eight S-RNases that had been determined by gain-of-function experiments performed previously or in this work. Our loss-of-function results provide definitive evidence that SLF proteins are solely responsible for SI of pollen, and they reveal their diverse and complex interaction relationships with S-RNases to maintain SI while ensuring cross-compatibility.
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