AT LAST: ‘The sequence becomes clear now' — We know how plants make eggs

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Graphic shows eight undifferentiated nuclei in a plant's embryo sac, and labels one as an egg.
A gradient (red) in the concentration of auxin, a plant hormone, determines that only one of the eight undifferentiated nuclei in a plant's embryo sac will become an egg. (In this image, a large vacuole dominates the central section of the embryo sac.)

A UC Davis team has solved the long-standing mystery surrounding a fundamental process in plant biology, discovering that a plant hormone called auxin is responsible for egg production.

This is the first definitive report of a plant hormone acting as a morphogen, that is, a substance that directs the pattern of development of cells based on its concentration.

The study’s results provide tantalizing new insights into the evolutionary pathway that flowering plants took 135 million years ago when they split off from gymnosperms, the “naked-seed” plant group that includes conifers, cycads and ginkgo trees.

Also, the researchers used their discovery to make additional egg cells within plant reproductive structures, raising the prospects that these techniques may someday be used for enhancing the reproduction and fertility of crop plants.

“So the sequence becomes clear now,” said Venkatesan Sundaresan, the professor of plant biology and plant sciences who led the study. “The plant triggers auxin synthesis at one end of the female reproductive unit called the embryo sac, creating an auxin gradient. The eight nuclei in the sac are then exposed to different levels of auxin, but only the nucleus in the correct position in the gradient becomes an egg cell. And that cell is subsequently fertilized to make the next generation.”

A paper describing the study was due for posting June 4 on Science Express, in advance of the study’s publication in the journal Science later this month.

Development of sperm and egg cells in plants

In humans and other animals, the germ cells for production of eggs and sperm are established at birth. But cells in flowering plants are assigned more or less randomly to become reproductive units when the plant reaches sexual maturity. Within the flower, sperm cells are produced by pollen at the tips of stamens, while egg cells develop in ovules, tiny structures embedded in the ovary at the base of the pistil.

At the start of the process of egg-cell development, a "mother cell" in the ovule divides several times, in a sequence involving both meiosis and mitotic divisions. These divisions result in the creation of an oblong, cell-like structure called the embryo sac, which contains eight nuclei, three of which are clustered near the open end of the ovule.

Within hours cell membranes start forming, eventually, creating seven cells: the all-important egg cell near the ovule opening where pollen will enter, and six other supporting cells, with essential functions for seed formation.

“The big question in our field for the past 50 years or more has been: How does this process happen in such a beautifully orchestrated pattern?” Sundaresan said. “It’s been clear that there’s a program here telling the plants exactly what to do, and that it is working not on cells, but on nuclei.”

Auxin concentrations determine fate of nuclei

Two years ago, Sundaresan and post-doctoral researcher Gabriela Pagnussat used genetic tools to shift the position of a single nucleus at one end of an embryo sac in the plant Arabidopsis. When they examined the mature sac, they found that it had produced two egg cells instead of one.

Sundaresan recognized that a pattern shift like this was similar to the response that had been reported two decades earlier in Drosophila fruit flies in experiments that provided the first direct evidence for the existence of morphogens.

This prompted him to begin searching for a substance in Arabadopsis that might be acting as a morphogen. When the group discovered that auxin was accumulating at the open end of the ovule, they turned their attention to this ubiquitous hormone, which is known to play myriad signaling roles in plant growth and behavioral processes. (Charles Darwin first guessed the hormone's existence when he was studying how plants grow toward light.)

After many tests, Sundaresan and his group found that during embryo sac formation, auxin concentrations did indeed follow a gradient, and that the eight nuclei in the sac developed into different cell types depending on the hormone concentration they were exposed to.

To test the theory that this gradient was determining the fate of nuclei in the sac, Sundaresan and his group created a series of genetically manipulated Arabadopsis plants. In some plants they ratcheted up production of auxin in the embryo sac, and in others they decreased the sac's sensitivity to auxin, creating the same effect that a decline in auxin would make.

When they examined these experimental plants, their hypothesis was confirmed: Auxin concentrations determined the fate of the nuclei. Knowing whether auxin levels were high or low, it became possible to predict the appearance or disappearance of egg cells at different positions within the embryo sac.

Finally, the group employed a long series of bio-manipulative techniques to determine that the auxin gradient they had discovered within the embryo sac was due to on-site synthesis rather than transport from a source outside the sac.

"What we have found about the way auxin works here is amazing," Sundaresan said. "The idea that you can have a small molecule like this being maintained in a gradient within this eight-nucleate structure through synthesis alone is mind-boggling."

Implications for flowering plant evolution

Development of the embryo sac is arguably the key element in the evolution from gymnosperms to flowering plants, also known as angiosperms.

Yet the fossil record reveals very little about the stages that led from gymnosperm seed production to angiosperm seed production when the transition occurred around 135 million years ago. Darwin labeled as "an abominable mystery" the rapid expansion of flowering plants and their eventual domination of the Earth's vegetation.

By elucidating the mechanism of embryo sac development, Sundaresan and his team have opened the door to new work into the evolutionary pathway between these two major plant groups. The discovery supports what is known as the modular theory, which posits that the first angiosperms underwent a drastic reduction of their female reproductive unit compared to the gymnosperms, allowing flowering plants to reproduce more efficiently and eventually supplant their naked-seed forebears.

Most remarkably, perhaps, the new work suggests that the eight nuclei of the angiosperm embryo sac have retained developmental plasticity in their evolution from gymnosperms. "It's amazing that even though the split supposedly happened over a hundred million years ago," Sundaresan said, "all these nuclei still have the capacity to become egg cells."

Study contributors: Pagnussat (lead author) and Monica Alandete-Saez, both of whom were postdoctoral researchers with Sundaresan when they did the work; and John L. Bowman, a professor of plant biology at UC Davis at the time of the study, now at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia.

Grants from the National Science Foundation supported the work.

Media Resources

Dave Jones, Dateline, 530-752-6556, dljones@ucdavis.edu

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