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Degradation of S-RNase in compatible pollen tubes of<i>Solanum chacoense</i>inferred by immunogold labeling
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Citations
14
References
2014
Year
BiologyPlant BiologyIncompatible ReactionRna ProcessingPlant Molecular BiologyMedicineGeneticsNatural SciencesPlant ReproductionRna BiologyMolecular BiologyIncompatible CrossesCompatible Pollen TubesMolecular GeneticsGene ExpressionH Post PollinationImmunogold LabelingPlant Physiology
The flowering plant Solanum chacoense uses an S-RNase-based self-incompatibility system in order to reject pollen that shares the same genes at the S-locus (S-haplotype) with the style (an incompatible reaction). Two different models have been advanced to explain how compatible pollen tubes are protected from the cytotoxic effects of the S-RNase, sequestration of the S-RNase in a vacuolar compartment or degradation of the S-RNase in the cytoplasm. Here, we examine the subcellular distribution of an S11-RNase 18 and 24 h post pollination (hpp) in compatible and incompatible crosses by immunogold labeling and transmission electron microscopy. We find that the S-RNase is present in the cytoplasm of both compatible and incompatible crosses by 18 hpp, but that almost all the cytoplasmic S-RNase is degraded by 24 hpp in compatible crosses. These results provide compelling evidence that S-RNases are degraded in compatible but not in incompatible pollen tubes.
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