Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Polymerase IV Plays a Crucial Role in Pollen Development in <i>Capsella</i>

61

Citations

73

References

2020

Year

Abstract

In Arabidopsis (<i>Arabidopsis thaliana</i>), DNA-dependent RNA polymerase IV (Pol IV) is required for the formation of transposable element (TE)-derived small RNA transcripts. These transcripts are processed by DICER-LIKE3 into 24-nucleotide small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) that guide RNA-directed DNA methylation. In the pollen grain, Pol IV is also required for the accumulation of 21/22-nucleotide epigenetically activated siRNAs, which likely silence TEs via post-transcriptional mechanisms. Despite this proposed role of Pol IV, its loss of function in Arabidopsis does not cause a discernible pollen defect. Here, we show that the knockout of <i>NRPD1</i>, encoding the largest subunit of Pol IV, in the Brassicaceae species Capsella (<i>Capsella rubella</i>), caused postmeiotic arrest of pollen development at the microspore stage. As in Arabidopsis, all TE-derived siRNAs were depleted in Capsella <i>nrpd1</i> microspores. In the wild-type background, the same TEs produced 21/22-nucleotide and 24-nucleotide siRNAs; these processes required Pol IV activity. Arrest of Capsella <i>nrpd1</i> microspores was accompanied by the deregulation of genes targeted by Pol IV-dependent siRNAs. TEs were much closer to genes in Capsella compared with Arabidopsis, perhaps explaining the essential role of Pol IV in pollen development in Capsella. Our discovery that Pol IV is functionally required in Capsella microspores emphasizes the relevance of investigating different plant models.

References

YearCitations

1998

22K

2009

12K

2011

5.6K

2015

3.2K

2004

1.6K

2015

1.1K

2003

1K

2009

1K

2002

770

2006

755

Page 1