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Scheben A, Hojsgaard D. Can We Use Gene-Editing to Induce Apomixis in Sexual Plants? Genes (Basel) 2020; 11:E781. [PMID: 32664641 PMCID: PMC7397034 DOI: 10.3390/genes11070781] [Citation(s) in RCA: 12] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 06/17/2020] [Revised: 07/08/2020] [Accepted: 07/09/2020] [Indexed: 12/12/2022] Open
Abstract
Apomixis, the asexual formation of seeds, is a potentially valuable agricultural trait. Inducing apomixis in sexual crop plants would, for example, allow breeders to fix heterosis in hybrid seeds and rapidly generate doubled haploid crop lines. Molecular models explain the emergence of functional apomixis, i.e., apomeiosis + parthenogenesis + endosperm development, as resulting from a combination of genetic or epigenetic changes that coordinate altered molecular and developmental steps to form clonal seeds. Apomixis-like features and synthetic clonal seeds have been induced with limited success in the sexual plants rice and maize by using gene editing to mutate genes related to meiosis and fertility or via egg-cell specific expression of embryogenesis genes. Inducing functional apomixis and increasing the penetrance of apomictic seed production will be important for commercial deployment of the trait. Optimizing the induction of apomixis with gene editing strategies that use known targets as well as identifying alternative targets will be possible by better understanding natural genetic variation in apomictic species. With the growing availability of genomic data and precise gene editing tools, we are making substantial progress towards engineering apomictic crops.
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Affiliation(s)
- Armin Scheben
- Simons Center for Quantitative Biology, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, NY 11724, USA;
| | - Diego Hojsgaard
- Department of Systematics, Biodiversity and Evolution of Plants, Albrecht-von-Haller Institute for Plant Sciences, University of Goettingen, Untere Karspuele 2, 37073 Goettingen, Germany
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Hojsgaard D, Hörandl E. The Rise of Apomixis in Natural Plant Populations. FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE 2019; 10:358. [PMID: 31001296 PMCID: PMC6454013 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2019.00358] [Citation(s) in RCA: 75] [Impact Index Per Article: 12.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 11/14/2018] [Accepted: 03/07/2019] [Indexed: 05/04/2023]
Abstract
Apomixis, the asexual reproduction via seed, has many potential applications for plant breeding by maintaining desirable genotypes over generations. Since most major crops do not express natural apomixis, it is useful to understand the origin and maintenance of apomixis in natural plant systems. Here, we review the state of knowledge on origin, establishment and maintenance of natural apomixis. Many studies suggest that hybridization, either on diploid or polyploid cytotypes, is a major trigger for the formation of unreduced female gametophytes, which represents the first step toward apomixis, and must be combined to parthenogenesis, the development of an unfertilized egg cell. Nevertheless, fertilization of endosperm is still needed for most apomictic plants. Coupling of these three steps appears to be a major constraint for shifts to natural apomixis. Adventitious embryony is another developmental pathway toward apomixis. Establishment of a newly arisen apomictic lineage is often fostered by side-effects of polyploidy. Polyploidy creates an immediate reproductive barrier against the diploid parental and progenitor populations; it can cause a breakdown of genetic self-incompatibility (SI) systems which is needed to establish self-fertility of pseudogamous apomictic lineages; and finally, polyploidy could indirectly help to establish an apomictic cytotype in a novel ecological niche by increasing adaptive potentials of the plants. This step may be followed by a phase of diversification and range expansion, mostly described as geographical parthenogenesis. The utilization of apomixis in crops must consider the potential risks of pollen transfer and introgression into sexual crop fields, which might be overcome by using pollen-sterile or cleistogamous variants. Another risk is the escape into natural vegetation and potential invasiveness of apomictic plants which needs careful management and consideration of ecological conditions.
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Kaushal P, Dwivedi KK, Radhakrishna A, Srivastava MK, Kumar V, Roy AK, Malaviya DR. Partitioning Apomixis Components to Understand and Utilize Gametophytic Apomixis. FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE 2019; 10:256. [PMID: 30906306 PMCID: PMC6418048 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2019.00256] [Citation(s) in RCA: 7] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 11/15/2018] [Accepted: 02/18/2019] [Indexed: 05/07/2023]
Abstract
Apomixis is a method of reproduction to generate clonal seeds and offers tremendous potential to fix heterozygosity and hybrid vigor. The process of apomictic seed development is complex and comprises three distinct components, viz., apomeiosis (leading to formation of unreduced egg cell), parthenogenesis (development of embryo without fertilization) and functional endosperm development. Recently, in many crops, these three components are reported to be uncoupled leading to their partitioning. This review provides insight into the recent status of our understanding surrounding partitioning apomixis components in gametophytic apomictic plants and research avenues that it offers to help understand the biology of apomixis. Possible consequences leading to diversity in seed developmental pathways, resources to understand apomixis, inheritance and identification of candidate gene(s) for partitioned components, as well as contribution towards creation of variability are all discussed. The potential of Panicum maximum, an aposporous crop, is also discussed as a model crop to study partitioning principle and effects. Modifications in cytogenetic status, as well as endosperm imprinting effects arising due to partitioning effects, opens up new opportunities to understand and utilize apomixis components, especially towards synthesizing apomixis in crops.
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Affiliation(s)
- Pankaj Kaushal
- ICAR-National Institute of Biotic Stress Management, Raipur, India
| | | | | | | | - Vinay Kumar
- ICAR-National Institute of Biotic Stress Management, Raipur, India
| | - Ajoy Kumar Roy
- ICAR-Indian Grassland and Fodder Research Institute, Jhansi, India
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Hojsgaard D. Transient Activation of Apomixis in Sexual Neotriploids May Retain Genomically Altered States and Enhance Polyploid Establishment. FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE 2018; 9:230. [PMID: 29535745 PMCID: PMC5834478 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2018.00230] [Citation(s) in RCA: 26] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 08/22/2017] [Accepted: 02/09/2018] [Indexed: 05/19/2023]
Abstract
Polyploid genomes evolve and follow a series of dynamic transfigurations along with adaptation and speciation. The initial formation of a new polyploid individual within a diploid population usually involves a triploid bridge, a two-step mechanism of cell fusions between ubiquitous (reduced) and rare (unreduced) gametes. The primary fusion event creates an intermediate triploid individual with unbalanced genome sets, a situation of genomic-shock characterized by gene expression dysregulation, high dosage sensitivity, disturbed cell divisions, and physiological and reproductive attributes drastically altered. This near-sterile neotriploid must produce (even) eupolyploids through secondary fusion events to restore genome steadiness, meiotic balance, and fertility required for the demographic establishment of a nascent lineage. Natural conditions locate several difficulties to polyploid establishment, including the production of highly unbalanced and rarely unreduced (euploid) gametes, frequency-dependent disadvantages (minority cytotype exclusion), severe fitness loss, and ecological competition with diploid parents. Persistence and adaptation of neopolyploids depend upon genetic and phenotypic novelty coupled to joint selective forces that preserve shock-induced genomic changes (subgenome homeolog partitioning) and drive meiotic (reproductive) stabilization and ecological diversification. Thus, polyploid establishment through the triploid bridge is a feasible but not ubiquitous process that requires a number of low-probability events and singular circumstances. Yet, frequencies of polyploids suggest that polyploid establishment is a pervasive process. To explain this disparity, and supported in experimental evidence, I propose that situations like hybridization and ploidy-state transitions associated to genomic shock and substantial developmental alterations can transiently activate apomixis as a mechanism to halt genomic instability and cancel factors restraining neopolyploid's sexual fertility, particularly in triploids. Apomixis -as a temporal alternative to sex- skip meiosis and syngamy, and thus can freeze genomic attributes, avoid unbalanced chromosomal segregation and increase the formation of unreduced euploid gametes, elude frequency-dependent reproductive disadvantages by parthenogenetic development of the embryo and permissive development of endosperm during seed formation, and increase the effective population size of the neopolyploid lineage favoring the formation rate of eupolyploids compared to aneuploids. The subsequent action of genome resilience mechanisms that alleviate transcriptomic shock and selection upon gene interactions might restore a stable meiosis and sexual fertility within few generations, as observed in synthetic polyploids. Alternatively, provided that resilience mechanisms fail, the neopolyploid might retain apomixis and hold genomically and transcriptionally altered states for many generations.
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Affiliation(s)
- Diego Hojsgaard
- Department of Systematics, Biodiversity and Evolution of Plants, Albrecht-von-Haller Institute for Plant Sciences, Georg August University of Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany
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Shirasawa K, Hand ML, Henderson ST, Okada T, Johnson SD, Taylor JM, Spriggs A, Siddons H, Hirakawa H, Isobe S, Tabata S, Koltunow AMG. A reference genetic linkage map of apomictic Hieracium species based on expressed markers derived from developing ovule transcripts. ANNALS OF BOTANY 2015; 115:567-80. [PMID: 25538115 PMCID: PMC4343286 DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcu249] [Citation(s) in RCA: 4] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 05/15/2023]
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS Apomixis in plants generates clonal progeny with a maternal genotype through asexual seed formation. Hieracium subgenus Pilosella (Asteraceae) contains polyploid, highly heterozygous apomictic and sexual species. Within apomictic Hieracium, dominant genetic loci independently regulate the qualitative developmental components of apomixis. In H. praealtum, LOSS OF APOMEIOSIS (LOA) enables formation of embryo sacs without meiosis and LOSS OF PARTHENOGENESIS (LOP) enables fertilization-independent seed formation. A locus required for fertilization-independent endosperm formation (AutE) has been identified in H. piloselloides. Additional quantitative loci appear to influence the penetrance of the qualitative loci, although the controlling genes remain unknown. This study aimed to develop the first genetic linkage maps for sexual and apomictic Hieracium species using simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers derived from expressed transcripts within the developing ovaries. METHODS RNA from microdissected Hieracium ovule cell types and ovaries was sequenced and SSRs were identified. Two different F1 mapping populations were created to overcome difficulties associated with genome complexity and asexual reproduction. SSR markers were analysed within each mapping population to generate draft linkage maps for apomictic and sexual Hieracium species. KEY RESULTS A collection of 14 684 Hieracium expressed SSR markers were developed and linkage maps were constructed for Hieracium species using a subset of the SSR markers. Both the LOA and LOP loci were successfully assigned to linkage groups; however, AutE could not be mapped using the current populations. Comparisons with lettuce (Lactuca sativa) revealed partial macrosynteny between the two Asteraceae species. CONCLUSIONS A collection of SSR markers and draft linkage maps were developed for two apomictic and one sexual Hieracium species. These maps will support cloning of controlling genes at LOA and LOP loci in Hieracium and should also assist with identification of quantitative loci that affect the expressivity of apomixis. Future work will focus on mapping AutE using alternative populations.
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Affiliation(s)
- Kenta Shirasawa
- Kazusa DNA Research Institute, 2-6-7 Kazusa-Kamatari, Kisarazu, Chiba 292-0818, Japan and Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO), Agriculture Flagship, Waite Campus, Hartley Grove, Urrbrae, South Australia 5064, Australia
| | - Melanie L Hand
- Kazusa DNA Research Institute, 2-6-7 Kazusa-Kamatari, Kisarazu, Chiba 292-0818, Japan and Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO), Agriculture Flagship, Waite Campus, Hartley Grove, Urrbrae, South Australia 5064, Australia
| | - Steven T Henderson
- Kazusa DNA Research Institute, 2-6-7 Kazusa-Kamatari, Kisarazu, Chiba 292-0818, Japan and Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO), Agriculture Flagship, Waite Campus, Hartley Grove, Urrbrae, South Australia 5064, Australia
| | - Takashi Okada
- Kazusa DNA Research Institute, 2-6-7 Kazusa-Kamatari, Kisarazu, Chiba 292-0818, Japan and Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO), Agriculture Flagship, Waite Campus, Hartley Grove, Urrbrae, South Australia 5064, Australia
| | - Susan D Johnson
- Kazusa DNA Research Institute, 2-6-7 Kazusa-Kamatari, Kisarazu, Chiba 292-0818, Japan and Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO), Agriculture Flagship, Waite Campus, Hartley Grove, Urrbrae, South Australia 5064, Australia
| | - Jennifer M Taylor
- Kazusa DNA Research Institute, 2-6-7 Kazusa-Kamatari, Kisarazu, Chiba 292-0818, Japan and Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO), Agriculture Flagship, Waite Campus, Hartley Grove, Urrbrae, South Australia 5064, Australia
| | - Andrew Spriggs
- Kazusa DNA Research Institute, 2-6-7 Kazusa-Kamatari, Kisarazu, Chiba 292-0818, Japan and Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO), Agriculture Flagship, Waite Campus, Hartley Grove, Urrbrae, South Australia 5064, Australia
| | - Hayley Siddons
- Kazusa DNA Research Institute, 2-6-7 Kazusa-Kamatari, Kisarazu, Chiba 292-0818, Japan and Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO), Agriculture Flagship, Waite Campus, Hartley Grove, Urrbrae, South Australia 5064, Australia
| | - Hideki Hirakawa
- Kazusa DNA Research Institute, 2-6-7 Kazusa-Kamatari, Kisarazu, Chiba 292-0818, Japan and Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO), Agriculture Flagship, Waite Campus, Hartley Grove, Urrbrae, South Australia 5064, Australia
| | - Sachiko Isobe
- Kazusa DNA Research Institute, 2-6-7 Kazusa-Kamatari, Kisarazu, Chiba 292-0818, Japan and Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO), Agriculture Flagship, Waite Campus, Hartley Grove, Urrbrae, South Australia 5064, Australia
| | - Satoshi Tabata
- Kazusa DNA Research Institute, 2-6-7 Kazusa-Kamatari, Kisarazu, Chiba 292-0818, Japan and Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO), Agriculture Flagship, Waite Campus, Hartley Grove, Urrbrae, South Australia 5064, Australia
| | - Anna M G Koltunow
- Kazusa DNA Research Institute, 2-6-7 Kazusa-Kamatari, Kisarazu, Chiba 292-0818, Japan and Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO), Agriculture Flagship, Waite Campus, Hartley Grove, Urrbrae, South Australia 5064, Australia
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Hand ML, Vít P, Krahulcová A, Johnson SD, Oelkers K, Siddons H, Chrtek J, Fehrer J, Koltunow AMG. Evolution of apomixis loci in Pilosella and Hieracium (Asteraceae) inferred from the conservation of apomixis-linked markers in natural and experimental populations. Heredity (Edinb) 2015; 114:17-26. [PMID: 25026970 PMCID: PMC4815591 DOI: 10.1038/hdy.2014.61] [Citation(s) in RCA: 33] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 01/28/2014] [Revised: 05/30/2014] [Accepted: 06/03/2014] [Indexed: 11/09/2022] Open
Abstract
The Hieracium and Pilosella (Lactuceae, Asteraceae) genera of closely related hawkweeds contain species with two different modes of gametophytic apomixis (asexual seed formation). Both genera contain polyploid species, and in wild populations, sexual and apomictic species co-exist. Apomixis is known to co-exist with sexuality in apomictic Pilosella individuals, however, apomictic Hieracium have been regarded as obligate apomicts. Here, a developmental analysis of apomixis within 16 Hieracium species revealed meiosis and megaspore tetrad formation in 1 to 7% of ovules, for the first time indicating residual sexuality in this genus. Molecular markers linked to the two independent, dominant loci LOSS OF APOMEIOSIS (LOA) and LOSS OF PARTHENOGENESIS (LOP) controlling apomixis in Pilosella piloselloides subsp. praealta were screened across 20 phenotyped Hieracium individuals from natural populations, and 65 phenotyped Pilosella individuals from natural and experimental cross populations, to examine their conservation, inheritance and association with reproductive modes. All of the tested LOA and LOP-linked markers were absent in the 20 Hieracium samples irrespective of their reproductive mode. Within Pilosella, LOA and LOP-linked markers were essentially absent within the sexual plants, although they were not conserved in all apomictic individuals. Both loci appeared to be inherited independently, and evidence for additional genetic factors influencing quantitative expression of LOA and LOP was obtained. Collectively, these data suggest independent evolution of apomixis in Hieracium and Pilosella and are discussed with respect to current knowledge of the evolution of apomixis.
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Affiliation(s)
- M L Hand
- Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO) Plant Industry, Waite Campus, Glen Osmond, SA, Australia
| | - P Vít
- Institute of Botany, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Zámek 1, Průhonice, Czech Republic
| | - A Krahulcová
- Institute of Botany, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Zámek 1, Průhonice, Czech Republic
| | - S D Johnson
- Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO) Plant Industry, Waite Campus, Glen Osmond, SA, Australia
| | - K Oelkers
- Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO) Plant Industry, Waite Campus, Glen Osmond, SA, Australia
| | - H Siddons
- Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO) Plant Industry, Waite Campus, Glen Osmond, SA, Australia
| | - J Chrtek
- Institute of Botany, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Zámek 1, Průhonice, Czech Republic
- Department of Botany, Faculty of Science, Charles University in Prague, Benátská 2, Prague, Czech Republic
| | - J Fehrer
- Institute of Botany, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Zámek 1, Průhonice, Czech Republic
| | - A M G Koltunow
- Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO) Plant Industry, Waite Campus, Glen Osmond, SA, Australia
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Rosenbaumová R, Krahulcová A, Krahulec F. The intriguing complexity of parthenogenesis inheritance in Pilosella rubra (Asteraceae, Lactuceae). ACTA ACUST UNITED AC 2012; 25:185-96. [PMID: 22710794 DOI: 10.1007/s00497-012-0190-7] [Citation(s) in RCA: 9] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 01/04/2012] [Accepted: 06/03/2012] [Indexed: 11/27/2022]
Abstract
Neither the genetic basis nor the inheritance of apomixis is fully understood in plants. The present study is focused on the inheritance of parthenogenesis, one of the basic elements of apomixis, in Pilosella (Asteraceae). A complex pattern of inheritance was recorded in the segregating F(1) progeny recovered from reciprocal crosses between the facultatively apomictic hexaploid P. rubra and the sexual tetraploid P. officinarum. Although both female and male reduced gametes of P. rubra transmitted parthenogenesis at the same rate in the reciprocal crosses, the resulting segregating F(1) progeny inherited parthenogenesis at different rates. The actual transmission rates of parthenogenesis were significantly correlated with the mode of origin of the respective F(1) progeny class. The inheritance of parthenogenesis was significantly reduced in F(1) n + n hybrid progeny from the cross where parthenogenesis was transmitted by female gametes. In F(1) n + 0 polyhaploid progeny from the same cross, however, the transmission rate of parthenogenesis was high; all fertile polyhaploids were parthenogenetic. It appeared that reduced female gametes transmitting parthenogenesis preferentially developed parthenogenetically and only rarely were fertilized in P. rubra. The fact that the determinant for parthenogenesis acts gametophytically in Pilosella and the precocious embryogenesis in parthenogenesis-transmitting megagametophytes was suggested as the most probable explanations for this observation. Furthermore, we observed the different expression of complete apomixis in the non-segregating F(1) 2n + n hybrids as compared to their apomictic maternal parent P. rubra. We suggest that this difference is a result of unspecified interactions between the parental genomes.
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Affiliation(s)
- Radka Rosenbaumová
- Department of Botany, National Museum, Cirkusová 1740, Praha 9, Horní Počernice 193 00, Czech Republic.
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