Bioenergetic Activity is Correlated with Apomeiosis in Sorghum Ovules
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ABSTRACT: Apomixis in angiosperms terminates sexual reproduction and produces a clonal egg (apomeiosis), which undergoes parthenogenesis, and an embryo sac, which produces endosperm with or without fertilization. Progeny of apomictic plants are maternal, a property viewed by seed producers as a potential tool for producing hybrid seed. Apomixis does not occur in major crops, but sexual termination and apomeiosis (aposporous embryo sac formation) do occur in certain sorghum lines at low frequencies. We identified in sorghum differentially expressed genes (DEG) and significant gene ontology (GO) categories that differentiated ovules of an aposporous (13.6 %) F2 sib from those of a sexual F2 sib at the megasporocyte to early embryo sac formation stages. GO terms indicated that ovules of the aposporous sib experienced elevated glucose levels. These induced ethylene and glucose signaling cascades that appeared to activate the growth modulator TORC1 by silencing the energy sensor SnRK1 and by producing reactive oxygen species scavengers that silenced the stress sensor SnRK2.
ORGANISM(S): Sorghum bicolor
PROVIDER: GSE125849 | GEO | 2019/01/30
REPOSITORIES: GEO
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