A Nuclear restorer-of-fertility Mutation Disrupts Accumulation of Mitochondrial ATP Synthase Subunit α in Developing Pollen of S Male-Sterile Maize

Author:

Wen Lanying1,Ruesch Kimberly L1,Ortega Victor M1,Kamps Terry L1,Gabay-Laughnan Susan2,Chase Christine D1

Affiliation:

1. Horticultural Sciences Department, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611-0690

2. Department of Plant Biology, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801

Abstract

Abstract Mitochondrial biogenesis and function depend upon the interaction of mitochondrial and nuclear genomes. Forward genetic analysis of mitochondrial function presents a challenge in organisms that are obligated to respire. In the S-cytoplasmic male sterility (CMS-S) system of maize, expression of mitochondrial open reading frames (orf355-orf77) conditions collapse of developing haploid pollen. Nuclear restorer-of-fertility mutations that circumvent pollen collapse are often homozygous lethal. These spontaneous mutations potentially result from disruption of nuclear genes required for mitochondrial gene expression, in contrast to homozygous-viable restorer-of-fertility alleles that function to block or compensate for the expression of mitochondrial CMS genes. Consistent with this hypothesis, the homozygous-lethal restoring allele historically designated RfIII was shown to be recessive in diploid pollen produced by tetraploid CMS-S plants. Accordingly, the symbol for this allele has been changed to restorer-of-fertility  lethal  1 (rfl1). In haploid rfl1 pollen, orf355-orf77 transcripts and mitochondrial transcripts encoding the α-subunit of the ATP synthase (ATPA) were decreased in abundance. Haploid rfl1 pollen failed to accumulate wild-type levels of ATPA protein, indicating that functional requirements for mitochondrial protein accumulation are relaxed in maize pollen. The CMS-S system and rfl mutations therefore allow for the selection of nuclear mutations disrupting mitochondrial biogenesis in a multicellular eukaryote.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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