PRK1, a Receptor-like Kinase from Petunia inflata, is Essential for Post-meiotic Development of Pollen and Embryo Sac

  • Pai, Hyun-Sook (Plant Cell and Molecular Biology Research Unit.) ;
  • Karunanandaa, Balasulojini (Interocollege Graduate Program in Plant Physiology) ;
  • Gilroy, Simon (Interocollege Graduate Program in Plant Physiology, Department of Biology, The Pennsylvania State University) ;
  • Kao, Teh-Hui (Department of Biochemistry and Moecular Biology, Intercollege Graduate Program in Plant Physiology)
  • Published : 1996.07.01

Abstract

We previously identified and characterized a predominantly pollen-expressed gene of Petunia inflata that encodes a receptor-like kinase named PRK1. The extracellular domain of PRK1 contains leucine-rich repeats which have been implicated in protein-protein interactions, and the cytoplasmic domain was found to autophosphorylate on serine and tyrosine. To investigate the function PRK1 in pollen development, we transformed P. inflata plants with a construct containing the promoter of a predominantly pollen-expressed gene of tomato, LAT52, fused to an antisense PRK1 cDNA corresponding to part of the extracellular domain of PRK1, There transgenic plants were found to each produce approximately equal amounts of normal and aborted pollen. Analysis of the inheritance of the transgene inserts in two of the transgenic plants, ASRK-13 and ASRK-20, to their progeny revealed that certain transgene inserts cosegregated with the pollen abortion phenotype. Microscopic examination of the aborted pollen grains showed that their outer wall, the exine, was essentially normal, but that their cytoplasm contained only starch-like granules. Staining of the nuclei of the microspores at different stages of uninucleate stage. However, at subsequent stages half of the microspores completed mitosis and developed into normal binucleate pollen, but the other half initially remained uninucleate, then lost their nucleio. Analysis of the amounts of PRK1 mRNA and the antisense PRK1 transcript suggested that the pollen abortion phenotype most likely resulted from down-regulation of the PRK1 gene by the antisense PRK1 transgene. These results suggest that PRK1 plays an essential role in a signal transduction pathway that mediates post-meiotic development of microspores.

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