Abstract
Recognition of “self” pollen in the self-incompatibility (SI) response of the Brassicaceae is determined by allele-specific interaction between the S-locus receptor kinase (SRK), a transmembrane protein of the stigma epidermis, and its ligand, the pollen coat-localized S-locus cysteine-rich (SCR) protein. The current model for SRK-mediated signaling proposes a central role for the plant U-box (PUB) Armadillo repeat-containing protein ARC1, an E3 ligase that interacts with, and is phosphorylated by, the kinase domain of SRK. According to the model, activated ARC1 causes the degradation of factors required for successful pollen tube growth. However, Arabidopsis thaliana plants transformed with functional SRK and SCR genes isolated from self-incompatible A. lyrata can express an intense SI response despite lacking a functional ARC1 gene. Here, we tested the possibility that a different member of the A. thaliana PUB protein family might have assumed the role of ARC1 in SI. Toward this end, we analyzed the AtPUB2 gene, which is annotated as being highly expressed in stigmas. Our functional analysis of a T-DNA insertion pub2 allele, together with yeast two-hybrid interaction assays and reporter analysis of AtPUB2 promoter activity, demonstrates that AtPUB2 does not function in SI. The results leave open the question of whether the proposed model of ARC1-mediated signaling applies to transgenic SRK–SCR self-incompatible A. thaliana plants.
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Acknowledgments
We thank Tiffany Stauderman for assistance with growth of plants and Tengfang Huang for construction of the SRKb kinase domain constructs used for yeast interaction assays. J.Z. was supported by the China Scholarship Council. This article is based upon work supported by National Science Foundation Grant IOS-1146725. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
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Communicated by Teh-hui Kao.
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Zhang, J., Rea, A.C., Fu, T. et al. Exploring the role of a stigma-expressed plant U-box gene in the pollination responses of transgenic self-incompatible Arabidopsis thaliana . Plant Reprod 27, 59–68 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00497-014-0240-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00497-014-0240-4