Evolutionary history of the grass gynoecium

Author:

Sokoloff Dmitry D1,Fomichev Constantin I1,Rudall Paula J2ORCID,Macfarlane Terry D3,Remizowa Margarita V1

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Biology, M.V. Lomonosov Moscow State University , 1, 12, Leninskie Gory, 119234 Moscow , Russia

2. Jodrell Laboratory, Royal Botanic Gardens , Kew, Richmond, Surrey TW9 3AB , UK

3. Western Australian Herbarium, Biodiversity and Conservation Science, Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions , Locked Bag 104, Bentley Delivery Centre WA 6983 , Australia

Abstract

Abstract The grass family (Poaceae) includes cereal crops that provide a key food source for the human population. The food industry uses the starch deposited in the cereal grain, which develops directly from the gynoecium. Morphological interpretation of the grass gynoecium remains controversial. We re-examine earlier hypotheses and studies of morphology and development in the context of more recent analyses of grass phylogenetics and developmental genetics. Taken in isolation, data on gynoecium development in bistigmatic grasses do not contradict its interpretation as a solitary ascidiate carpel. Nevertheless, in the context of other data, this interpretation is untenable. Broad comparative analysis in a modern phylogenetic context clearly demonstrates that the grass gynoecium is pseudomonomerous. A bistigmatic grass gynoecium has two sterile carpels, each producing a stigma, and a fertile carpel that lacks a stigma. To date, studies of grass developmental genetics and developmental morphology have failed to fully demonstrate the composite nature of the grass gynoecium be­cause its complex evolutionary history is hidden by extreme organ integration. It is problematic to interpret the gynoecium of grasses in terms of normal angiosperm gynoecium typology. Even the concept of a carpel becomes misleading in grasses; instead, we recommend the term pistil for descriptive purposes.

Funder

Russian Science Foundation

Russian Foundation for Basic Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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