4.4 Article

Male reproductive development: gene expression profiling of maize anther and pollen ontogeny

Journal

GENOME BIOLOGY
Volume 9, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/gb-2008-9-12-r181

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. The National Science Foundation [98-72657, 07-0701880]
  2. National Library of Medicine Genome Training Grant
  3. NIH-NRSA Ruth L Kirschstein post-doctoral award [1 F32 GM07696801]
  4. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF GENERAL MEDICAL SCIENCES [F32GM076968] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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Background: During flowering, central anther cells switch from mitosis to meiosis, ultimately forming pollen containing haploid sperm. Four rings of surrounding somatic cells differentiate to support first meiosis and later pollen dispersal. Synchronous development of many anthers per tassel and within each anther facilitates dissection of carefully staged maize anthers for transcriptome profiling. Results: Global gene expression profiles of 7 stages representing 29 days of anther development are analyzed using a 44 K oligonucleotide array querying approximately 80% of maize protein-coding genes. Mature haploid pollen containing just two cell types expresses 10,000 transcripts. Anthers contain 5 major cell types and express >24,000 transcript types: each anther stage expresses approximately 10,000 constitutive and approximately 10,000 or more transcripts restricted to one or a few stages. The lowest complexity is present during meiosis. Large suites of stage-specific and co-expressed genes are identified through Gene Ontology and clustering analyses as functional classes for pre-meiotic, meiotic, and post-meiotic anther development. MADS box and zinc finger transcription factors with constitutive and stage-limited expression are identified. Conclusions: We propose that the extensive gene expression of anther cells and pollen represents the key test of maize genome fitness, permitting strong selection against deleterious alleles in diploid anthers and haploid pollen. Because flowering plants show a substantial bias for male-sterile compared to female-sterile mutations, we propose that this fitness test is general. Because both somatic and germinal cells are transcriptionally quiescent during meiosis, we hypothesize that successful completion of meiosis is required to trigger maturation of anther somatic cells.

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