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All organisms undergo dramatic shifts in gene expression patterns during early development, particularly at fertilization when the zygotic program is initiated. In flowering plants, fertilization launches four distinct developmental programs that lead to the formation of the embryo, endosperm, seed coat, and mature fruit. Coordination of all four programs most likely requires the exchange of multiple developmental signals and precise control of gene expression. Now, recent investigations by three laboratories reveal that in Arabidopsis, the dramatic developmental shifts that accompany seed formation require proteins of the polycomb groupchromatin silencing factors known to regulate early development in mammals, insects, and nematodes.
Each Arabidopsis ovule contains a haploid female gametophyte,
consisting of an egg, two synergid cells, three antipodal cells,
and a diploid central cell (reviewed in ![]()
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Recently, mutations that shift the balance between embryo and
endosperm development have been described. Mutations in FIE (FERTILIZATION-INDEPENDENT ENDOSPERM; ![]()
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In a recent set of papers, cloning of FIE (![]()
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Polycomb group proteins form a complex that regulates gene expression through epigenetic silencing (![]()
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The discovery of polycomb proteins in Arabidopsis provides an exciting opportunity to investigate the function of these complexes in plants. A large collection of FIE, FIS2, and MEDEA alleles has been cloned, making it possible to discern the loss-of-function phenotype. Of five fie alleles, three alter splice junctions and two result in early stop codons (![]()
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The similarity of the mutant phenotypes, along with the resemblance to polycomb group proteins, implies that wild-type FIE, MEDEA, and possibly FIS2 silence gene expression programs during plant development. These genes are clearly required to restrict the growth of endosperm cells until after fertilization; their roles in other tissues could be direct or indirect. For example, these wild-type polycomb genes might restrict seed coat or fruit development until after fertilization; alternatively, development of those tissues may initiate in response to endosperm growth. Similarly, defects in these polycomb genes cause embryo lethality, but that lethality could be a consequence of aberrant partitioning of resources between the embryo and the hypertrophic endosperm. Such issues can be resolved by investigating the cell autonomy of the FIE, FIS2, and MEDEA genes.
One of the most intriguing aspects of FIE, FIS, and MEDEA is their apparent requirement only in reproductive development. This was clearly established for medea (![]()
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How do endosperm and embryo development depend on the inheritance of a wild-type allele from a female but not a male gametophyte? One explanation is that the FIE, FIS, and MEDEA alleles may be silenced in the paternal genome, or that sperm cells contain inhibitors of these genes. Alternatively, the activity of FIE, FIS, and MEDEA could be required before fertilization or before alleles contributed by the sperm cells can be expressed. Interestingly, Drosophila E(z) mutants and Caenorhabditis elegans MES-2 (similar to MEDEA) and MES-6 (similar to FIE) mutants all display maternal-effect phenotypes (![]()
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Although 10 polycomb proteins have been identified to date in Drosophila, the total size of the polycomb group is estimated at 30 (![]()
An understanding of the polycomb complex is only the first step toward understanding other components required for polycomb-mediated silencing. Like that of Drosophila, the Arabidopsis genome probably contains binding sites for the polycomb complex; these PREs likely reside near genes that are regulated by FIE and MEDEA. A large-scale comparison of messages expressed in wild-type and mutant ovules may reveal these target genes and a comparison of their upstream regions may reveal plant PREs. Presumably, after binding to PREs, the Arabidopsis polycomb complex modulates gene expression; whether this occurs in a methylation-independent manner, like that observed in Drosophila, remains to be tested. If methylation is required for polycomb silencing in plants, fie, fis, or medea phenotypes may be revealed by examining mutants defective in DNA methylation. Finally, polycomb complexes have been shown in Drosophila to interact with each other and to stabilize interactions between homologous transgenes, resulting in gene silencing (![]()
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FOOTNOTES |
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1 E-mail dpreuss@midway.uchicago.edu; fax 773-702-9270. ![]()
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REFERENCES |
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Chaudhury, A.M., Ming, L., Miller, C., Craig, S., Dennis, E.S., and Peacock, W.J. (1997) Fertilization-independent seed development in Arabidopsis thaliana.. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 94:4223-4228[Medline].
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Ohad, N., Yadegari, R., Margossian, L., Hannon, M., Michaeli, D., Harada, J.J., Goldberg, R.B., and Fischer, R.L. (1999) Mutations in FIE, a WD polycomb group gene, allow endosperm development without fertilization. Plant Cell 11:407-416 [Abstract/Full Text].
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Tie, F., Furuyama, T., and Harte, P.J. (1998) The Drosophila polycomb group proteins ESC and E(Z) bind directly to each other and co-localize at multiple chromosomal sites. Development 125:3483-3496 [Medline].
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