Assessing the redundancy of MADS-box genes during carpel and ovule development
Carpels are essential for sexual plant reproduction because they house the ovules and subsequently develop into fruits that protect, nourish and ultimately disperse the seeds. The AGAMOUS ( AG ) gene is necessary for plant sexual reproduction because stamens and carpels are absent from ag mutant flo...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature (London) 2003-07, Vol.424 (6944), p.85-88 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Carpels are essential for sexual plant reproduction because they house the ovules and subsequently develop into fruits that protect, nourish and ultimately disperse the seeds. The
AGAMOUS
(
AG
) gene is necessary for plant sexual reproduction because stamens and carpels are absent from
ag
mutant flowers
1
,
2
. However, the fact that sepals are converted into carpelloid organs in certain mutant backgrounds even in the absence of
AG
activity indicates that an
AG
-independent carpel-development pathway exists
2
.
AG
is a member of a monophyletic clade of MADS-box genes that includes
SHATTERPROOF1
(
SHP1
),
SHP2
and
SEEDSTICK
(
STK
)
3
, indicating that these four genes might share partly redundant activities. Here we show that the
SHP
genes are responsible for
AG
-independent carpel development. We also show that the
STK
gene is required for normal development of the funiculus, an umbilical-cord-like structure that connects the developing seed to the fruit, and for dispersal of the seeds when the fruit matures. We further show that all four members of the
AG
clade are required for specifying the identity of ovules, the landmark invention during the course of vascular plant evolution that enabled seed plants to become the most successful group of land plants
4
. |
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ISSN: | 0028-0836 1476-4687 |
DOI: | 10.1038/nature01741 |