Recent advances in understanding of meiosis initiation and the apomictic pathway in plants

Meiosis, a specialized cell division to produce haploid cells, marks the transition from a sporophytic to a gametophytic generation in the life cycle of plants. In angiosperms, meiosis takes place in sporogenous cells that develop de novo from somatic cells in anthers or ovules. A successful transit...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chung-Ju Rachel Wang, Ching-Chih eTseng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-09-01
Series:Frontiers in Plant Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2014.00497/full
id doaj-eb9d7a32938e44d68d151e4ba63152cb
record_format Article
spelling doaj-eb9d7a32938e44d68d151e4ba63152cb2020-11-24T22:39:59ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Plant Science1664-462X2014-09-01510.3389/fpls.2014.00497110392Recent advances in understanding of meiosis initiation and the apomictic pathway in plantsChung-Ju Rachel Wang0Ching-Chih eTseng1Ching-Chih eTseng2Academia SinicaAcademia SinicaNational Taiwan UniversityMeiosis, a specialized cell division to produce haploid cells, marks the transition from a sporophytic to a gametophytic generation in the life cycle of plants. In angiosperms, meiosis takes place in sporogenous cells that develop de novo from somatic cells in anthers or ovules. A successful transition from the mitotic cycle to the meiotic program in sporogenous cells is crucial for sexual reproduction. By contrast, when meiosis is bypassed or a mitosis-like division occurs to produce unreduced cells, followed by the development of an embryo sac, clonal seeds can be produced by apomixis, an asexual reproduction pathway found in 400 species of flowering plants. An understanding of the regulation of entry into meiosis and molecular mechanisms of apomictic pathway will provide vital insight into reproduction for plant breeding. Recent findings suggest that AM1/SWI1 may be the key gene for entry into meiosis, and increasing evidence has shown that the apomictic pathway is epigenetically controlled. However, the mechanism for the initiation of meiosis during sexual reproduction or for its omission in the apomictic pathway still remains largely unknown. Here we review the current understanding of meiosis initiation and the apomictic pathway and raised several questions that are awaiting further investigation.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2014.00497/fullApomixisplant reproductionRNA-directed DNA methylationmeiosis initiationameiotic1
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chung-Ju Rachel Wang
Ching-Chih eTseng
Ching-Chih eTseng
spellingShingle Chung-Ju Rachel Wang
Ching-Chih eTseng
Ching-Chih eTseng
Recent advances in understanding of meiosis initiation and the apomictic pathway in plants
Frontiers in Plant Science
Apomixis
plant reproduction
RNA-directed DNA methylation
meiosis initiation
ameiotic1
author_facet Chung-Ju Rachel Wang
Ching-Chih eTseng
Ching-Chih eTseng
author_sort Chung-Ju Rachel Wang
title Recent advances in understanding of meiosis initiation and the apomictic pathway in plants
title_short Recent advances in understanding of meiosis initiation and the apomictic pathway in plants
title_full Recent advances in understanding of meiosis initiation and the apomictic pathway in plants
title_fullStr Recent advances in understanding of meiosis initiation and the apomictic pathway in plants
title_full_unstemmed Recent advances in understanding of meiosis initiation and the apomictic pathway in plants
title_sort recent advances in understanding of meiosis initiation and the apomictic pathway in plants
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Plant Science
issn 1664-462X
publishDate 2014-09-01
description Meiosis, a specialized cell division to produce haploid cells, marks the transition from a sporophytic to a gametophytic generation in the life cycle of plants. In angiosperms, meiosis takes place in sporogenous cells that develop de novo from somatic cells in anthers or ovules. A successful transition from the mitotic cycle to the meiotic program in sporogenous cells is crucial for sexual reproduction. By contrast, when meiosis is bypassed or a mitosis-like division occurs to produce unreduced cells, followed by the development of an embryo sac, clonal seeds can be produced by apomixis, an asexual reproduction pathway found in 400 species of flowering plants. An understanding of the regulation of entry into meiosis and molecular mechanisms of apomictic pathway will provide vital insight into reproduction for plant breeding. Recent findings suggest that AM1/SWI1 may be the key gene for entry into meiosis, and increasing evidence has shown that the apomictic pathway is epigenetically controlled. However, the mechanism for the initiation of meiosis during sexual reproduction or for its omission in the apomictic pathway still remains largely unknown. Here we review the current understanding of meiosis initiation and the apomictic pathway and raised several questions that are awaiting further investigation.
topic Apomixis
plant reproduction
RNA-directed DNA methylation
meiosis initiation
ameiotic1
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpls.2014.00497/full
work_keys_str_mv AT chungjurachelwang recentadvancesinunderstandingofmeiosisinitiationandtheapomicticpathwayinplants
AT chingchihetseng recentadvancesinunderstandingofmeiosisinitiationandtheapomicticpathwayinplants
AT chingchihetseng recentadvancesinunderstandingofmeiosisinitiationandtheapomicticpathwayinplants
_version_ 1725706555014250496