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Gamete Fusion Is Required to Block Multiple Pollen Tubes from Entering an Arabidopsis Ovule

by: Kristin M. Beale, Alexander R. Leydon, Mark A. Johnson
Current Biology, Vol. 22, No. 12. (19 June 2012), pp. 1090-1094, doi:10.1016/j.cub.2012.04.041  Key: citeulike:10685991

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Abstract

In double fertilization, a reproductive system unique to flowering plants, two immotile sperm are delivered to an ovule by a pollen tube. One sperm fuses with the egg to generate a zygote, the other with the central cell to produce endosperm [1]. A mechanism preventing multiple pollen tubes from entering an ovule would ensure that only two sperm are delivered to female gametes. We use live-cell imaging [ [1] and [2]] and a novel mixed-pollination assay that can detect multiple pollen tubes and multiple sets of sperm within a single ovule to show that Arabidopsis efficiently prevents multiple pollen tubes from entering an ovule. However, when gamete-fusion defective hap2(gcs1) or duo1 sperm are delivered to ovules, as many as three additional pollen tubes are attracted. When gamete fusion fails, one of two pollen tube-attracting synergid cells persists, enabling the ovule to attract more pollen tubes for successful fertilization. This mechanism prevents the delivery of more than one pair of sperm to an ovule, provides a means of salvaging fertilization in ovules that have received defective sperm, and ensures maximum reproductive success by distributing pollen tubes to all ovules. ⺠A “block to polytubey” is triggered by gamete fusion or an event soon thereafter ⺠If defective sperm are deposited, additional pollen tubes are attracted ⺠Pollen tube-attracting synergid cells persist when defective sperm are delivered


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