Publication | Open Access
ZmMS1/ZmLBD30-orchestrated transcriptional regulatory networks precisely control pollen exine development
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Citations
76
References
2023
Year
Plant GeneticsGeneticsMolecular GeneticsGene Regulatory NetworkPlant GenomicsEpigeneticsPlant Molecular BiologyTranscriptional RegulationMedicineExine FormationGene ExpressionPlant HormonePlant Male FertilityBiologyDevelopmental BiologyNatural SciencesPollen Exine DevelopmentGene RegulationTranscription RegulationPlant Physiology
Because of its significance for plant male fertility and, hence, direct impact on crop yield, pollen exine development has inspired decades of scientific inquiry. However, the molecular mechanism underlying exine formation and thickness remains elusive. In this study, we identified that a previously unrecognized repressor, ZmMS1/ZmLBD30, controls proper pollen exine development in maize. Using an ms1 mutant with aberrantly thickened exine, we cloned a male-sterility gene, ZmMs1, which encodes a tapetum-specific lateral organ boundary domain transcription factor, ZmLBD30. We showed that ZmMs1/ZmLBD30 is initially turned on by a transcriptional activation cascade of ZmbHLH51-ZmMYB84-ZmMS7, and then it serves as a repressor to shut down this cascade via feedback repression to ensure timely tapetal degeneration and proper level of exine. This activation-feedback repression loop regulating male fertility is conserved in maize and sorghum, and similar regulatory mechanism may also exist in other flowering plants such as rice and Arabidopsis. Collectively, these findings reveal a novel regulatory mechanism of pollen exine development by which a long-sought master repressor of upstream activators prevents excessive exine formation.
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