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Genetic control of male fertility in Arabidopsis thaliana : structural analysis of premeiotic developmental mutants

journal contribution
posted on 1994-01-01, 00:00 authored by A Chaudhury, S Craig, E Dennis, M Lavithis, Philip Taylor, M Singh, R Knox, E Signer
We have taken a mutational approach to identify genes important for male fertility in Arabidopsis thaliana and have isolated a number of nuclear male/ sterile mutants in which vegetative growth and female fertility are not altered. Here we describe detailed developmental analyses of four mutants, each of which defines a complementation group and has a distinct developmental end point. All four mutants represent premeiotic developmental lesions. In ms3, tapetum and middle layer hypertrophy result in the degeneration of microsporocytes. In ms4, microspore dyads persist for most of anther development as a result of impaired meiotic division. In ms5, degeneration occurs in all anther cells at an early stage of development. In ms15, both the tapetum and microsporocytes degenerate early in anther development. Each of these mutants had shorter filaments and a greater number of inflorescences than congenic male-fertile plants. The differences in the developmental phenotypes of these mutants, together with the non-allelic nature of the mutations indicate that four different genes important for pollen development, have been identified.

History

Journal

Sexual plant reproduction

Volume

7

Issue

1

Pagination

17 - 28

Publisher

Springer

Location

Heidelberg, Germany

ISSN

0934-0882

eISSN

1432-2145

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

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