Transcription factor MYB26 is key to spatial specificity in anther secondary thickening formation
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Published version
Author(s)
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Successful fertilisation relies on the production and effective release of viable pollen. Failure of anther opening (dehiscence), results in male sterility although the pollen may be fully functional. MYB26 regulates the formation of secondary thickening in the anther endothecium, which is critical for anther dehiscence and fertility. Here we show that the although the MYB26 transcript shows expression in multiple floral organs the MYB26 protein is localised specifically to the anther endothecium nuclei and that it directly regulates two NAC domain genes, NST1 and NST2, which are critical for the induction of secondary thickening biosynthesis genes. However there is a complex relationship of regulation between these genes and MYB26. Using DEX-inducible MYB26 lines and overexpression in the various mutant backgrounds we have shown that MYB26 up-regulates both NST1 and NST2 expression. Surprisingly normal thickening and fertility rescue does not occur in the absence of MYB26, even with constitutively induced NST1 and NST2, suggesting an additional essential role for MYB26 in this regulation. However, combined overexpression of NST1 and NST2 in myb26 facilitates limited ectopic thickening in the anther epidermis, but not in the endothecium and thus fails to rescue dehiscence. By this series of regulatory controls, secondary thickening is formed specifically within the endothecium; this specificity is essential for anther opening.
Date Issued
2017-08-31
Date Acceptance
2017-07-17
Citation
Plant Physiology, 2017, 175, pp.333-350
ISSN
1532-2548
Publisher
American Society of Plant Biologists
Start Page
333
End Page
350
Journal / Book Title
Plant Physiology
Volume
175
Copyright Statement
[CC-BY]Article free via Creative Commons CC-BY 4.0 license.
www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.17.00719
www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.17.00719
Subjects
06 Biological Sciences
07 Agricultural And Veterinary Sciences
Plant Biology & Botany