Data di Pubblicazione:
2019
Abstract:
In angiosperms, there are two pathways of reproduction through seeds: sexual, or amphimictic, and asexual, or apomictic.
The essential feature of apomixis is that an embryo in an ovule is formed autonomously. It may form from a
cell of the nucellus or integuments in an otherwise sexual ovule, a process referred to as adventitious embryony.
Alternatively, the embryo may form by parthenogenesis from an unreduced egg that forms in an unreduced embryo
sac. The latter may form from an ameiotic megasporocyte, in which case it is referred to as diplospory, or from a cell
of the nucellus or integument, in which case it is referred to as apospory. Progeny of apomictic plants are generally
identical to the mother plant. Apomixis has been seen over the years as either a gain- or loss-of-function over sexuality,
implying that the latter is the default condition. Here, we consider an additional point of view, that apomixis may
be anciently polyphenic with sex and that both reproductive phenisms involve anciently canalized components of
complex molecular processes. This polyphenism viewpoint suggests that apomixis fails to occur in obligately sexual
eukaryotes because genetic or epigenetic modifications have silenced the primitive sex apomixis switch and/or disrupted
molecular capacities for apomixis. In eukaryotes where sex and apomixis are clearly polyphenic, apomixis
exponentially drives clonal fecundity during reproductively favorable conditions, while stress induces sex for stresstolerant
spore or egg formation. The latter often guarantees species survival during environmentally harsh seasons.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Apomeiosis; apomixis; epigenetics; eukaryogenesis; meiosis; origins of sex; parthenogenesis; plant reproduction.
Elenco autori:
Pupilli, Fulvio
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