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The polyketide synthase OsPKS2 is essential for pollen exine and Ubisch body patterning in rice
Author(s) -
Zhu Xiaolei,
Yu Jing,
Shi Jianxin,
Tohge Takayuki,
Fernie Alisdair R.,
Meir Sagit,
Aharoni Asaph,
Xu Dawei,
Zhang Dabing,
Liang Wanqi
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of integrative plant biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.734
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1744-7909
pISSN - 1672-9072
DOI - 10.1111/jipb.12574
Subject(s) - sporopollenin , biology , polyketide synthase , pollen , mutant , arabidopsis , botany , polyketide , stamen , atp synthase , arabidopsis thaliana , biosynthesis , gene , biochemistry
Lipid and phenolic metabolism are important for pollen exine formation. In Arabidopsis , polyketide synthases (PKSs) are essential for both sporopollenin biosynthesis and exine formation. Here, we characterized the role of a polyketide synthase (OsPKS2) in male reproduction of rice ( Oryza sativa ). Recombinant OsPKS2 catalyzed the condensation of fatty acyl‐CoA with malonyl‐CoA to generate triketide and tetraketide α‐pyrones, the main components of pollen exine. Indeed, the ospks2 mutant had defective exine patterning and was male sterile. However, the mutant showed no significant reduction in sporopollenin accumulation. Compared with the WT (wild type) , ospks2 displayed unconfined and amorphous tectum and nexine layers in the exine, and less organized Ubisch bodies. Like the pksb/lap5 mutant of the Arabidopsis ortholog, ospks2 showed broad alterations in the profiles of anther‐related phenolic compounds. However, unlike pksb/lap5 , in which most detected phenolics were substantially decreased, ospks2 accumulated higher levels of phenolics. Based on these results and our observation that OsPKS2 is unable to fully restore the exine defects in the pksb/lap5 , we propose that PKS proteins have functionally diversified during evolution. Collectively, our results suggest that PKSs represent a conserved and diversified biochemical pathway for anther and pollen development in higher plants.

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