Journal article

RNase-based self-incompatibility: Puzzled by Pollen S

E Newbigin, T Paape, JR Kohn

Plant Cell | AMER SOC PLANT BIOLOGISTS | Published : 2008

Abstract

Many plants have a genetically determined self-incompatibility system in which the rejection of self pollen grains is controlled by alleles of an S locus. A common feature of these S loci is that separate pollen- and style-expressed genes (pollen S and style S, respectively) determine S allele identity. The long-held view has been that pollen S and style S must be a coevolving gene pair in order for allelic recognition to be maintained as new S alleles arise. In at least three plant families, the Solanaceae, Rosaceae, and Plantaginaceae, the style S gene has long been known to encode an extracellular ribonuclease called the S-RNase. Pollen S in these families has more recently been identifie..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by U.S. National Science Foundation


Funding Acknowledgements

This work is supported by grants from the Australian Research Council to E.N. and the U.S. National Science Foundation (DEB 0639984) to J.R.K.