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Abstract
Key message
Pollen tubes from closely related species and mutants lacking pollen tube MYB transcription factors are able to initiate FER/LRE-dependent synergid cell calcium oscillations.
Reproductive isolation leads to the evolution of new species; however, the molecular mechanisms that maintain reproductive barriers between sympatric species are not well defined. In flowering plants, sperm cells are immotile and are delivered to female gametes by the pollen grain. After landing on the stigmatic surface, the pollen grain germinates a polarized extension, the pollen tube, into floral tissue. After growing via polar extension to the female gametes and shuttling its cargo of sperm cells through its cytoplasm, the pollen tube signals its arrival and identity to synergid cells that flank the egg. If signaling is successful, the pollen tube and receptive synergid cell burst, and sperm cells are released for fusion with female gametes. To better understand cell–cell recognition during reproduction and how reproductive barriers are maintained between closely related species, pollen tube-initiated synergid cell calcium ion dynamics were examined during interspecific crosses. It was observed that interspecific pollen tubes successfully trigger synergid cell calcium oscillations—a hallmark of reproductive success—but signaling fails downstream of key signaling genes and sperm are not released. This work further defines pollen tube–synergid cell signaling as a critical block to interspecific hybridization and suggests that the FERONIA/LORELEI signaling mechanism plays multiple parallel roles during pollen tube reception.
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1 University of Arizona, Department of Plant Sciences, Tucson, USA (GRID:grid.134563.6) (ISNI:0000 0001 2168 186X); Brown University, Department of Molecular Biology, Cell Biology, and Biochemistry, Providence, USA (GRID:grid.40263.33) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 9094)
2 Brown University, Department of Molecular Biology, Cell Biology, and Biochemistry, Providence, USA (GRID:grid.40263.33) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 9094)