AI Article Synopsis

  • Nuclear fusion in flowering plants occurs three times during sexual reproduction, including once in female gametogenesis and twice in double fertilization.
  • GEX1 is a conserved membrane protein crucial for these nuclear fusion processes, comparable to the yeast protein Kar5, indicating its role as a karyogamy factor.
  • GEX1-deficient female gametophytes show unfused polar nuclei, suggesting GEX1 is vital for nuclear membrane fusion, as evidenced by observations from electron microscopy and live-cell imaging.

Article Abstract

During the life cycle of flowering plants, nuclear fusion, or karyogamy, occurs three times: once during female gametogenesis, when the two polar nuclei fuse in the central cell, and twice during double fertilization. In , nuclear fusion events during sexual reproduction proceed without the breakdown of the nuclear envelope, indicating that nuclear membrane fusion is essential for the completion of this process. gamete expressed 1 (GEX1) is a membrane protein that is conserved among plant species. GEX1 shares homology with the yeast karyogamy protein Kar5, which is primarily expressed in the nuclear membrane. The GEX1 family represents a putative karyogamy factor. Herein, we show that GEX1 is required for the nuclear fusion events in reproduction. GEX1-deficient mature female gametophytes were found to contain two unfused polar nuclei in close proximity within the central cell. Electron microscopy showed that the outer membrane of the polar nuclei was connected via the endoplasmic reticulum, whereas the inner membrane remained unfused. These results indicate that GEX1 is involved in polar nuclear membrane fusion following the fusion of the outer nuclear membrane. Furthermore, sperm nuclear fusion events were defective in the fertilized egg and central cell following plasmogamy in the fertilization of female gametophytes by pollen. An analysis of GEX1 localization in the female gametophyte using a transgenic line expressing GFP-tagged GEX1 driven by the promoter showed that GEX1 is a nuclear membrane protein in the egg and central cell. Time-lapse live-cell imaging showed that in developing female gametophytes, the nuclear GFP-GEX1 signal was first detectable in the central cell shortly before the polar nuclei came in close contact, and then in the egg cell. Thus, we suggest that the GEX1-family proteins are nuclear membrane proteins involved in karyogamy in the reproduction of eukaryotes including flowering plants.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7586128PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2020.548032DOI Listing

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