Stress‐Induced Autophagy Is Essential for Microspore Cell Fate Transition to the Initial Cell of Androgenesis

Author:

Luo Pan1ORCID,Zhao Zifu2,Yang Fan1,Zhang Lai1,Li Siyuan1,Qiao Ying1,Zhang Liangxinyi1,Yang Mingchun1,Zhou Xiaotong1,Zhao Linlin2,Yang Yong1,Tang Xingchun1,Shi Ce2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Biocatalysis and Enzyme Engineering College of Life Science, Hubei University Wuhan China

2. State Key Laboratory of Hybrid Rice College of Life Sciences, Wuhan University Wuhan China

Abstract

ABSTRACTThe isolated microspores can be reprogrammed towards embryogenesis via stress treatment during in vitro culture, and produce (doubled) haploid plants as a breeding source of new genetic variability. However, the mechanism underlying the cell fate transition from gametogenesis to embryogenesis remains largely unknown. Here, we report that autophagy plays a key role in cell fate transition for microspore embryogenesis (referred to as androgenesis) in Nicotiana tabacum. Immunofluorescence and transmission electronic microscopy detection unveiled that autophagy was triggered in microspores following exposure to inductive stress, and a transient wave of the numerous autophagy‐related genes (ATGs) expression occurred before the initiation of microspore embryogenesis. Suppression or promotion of the original autophagy levels could inhibit microspore embryogenesis, indicating that stress‐induced autophagic homeostasis is essential for cell fate transition. Furthermore, quantitative proteomics analysis revealed that autophagy might be involved in lignin biosynthesis and chromatin decondensation for promoting reprogramming for androgenesis initiation. Altogether, we reveal an essential role of autophagy in the microspore cell fate transition and androgenesis initiation, providing novel insight for understanding this critical developmental process.

Funder

China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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