Paper of the month
 

Paper of the month (January 2013)

 

.

 

An exciting research article in Developmental Cell has shed light and provided convincing evidence in support of interactions between egg cell and central cells of the female gametophyte during functional maturation.

 

Mitochondrial GCD1 Dysfunction Reveals Reciprocal Cell-to-Cell Signaling during the Maturation of Arabidopsis Female Gametes

Wu JJ*, Peng XB*, Li WW, He R, Xin HP, Sun MX.

Department of Cell and Development Biology, College of Life Science, State Key Laboratory of Plant Hybrid Rice, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430072, China.

*, these authors contributed equally to this work

Reference: Wu-Peng et al (2012) Dev Cell 23(5): 1043-58

doi: 10.1016/j.devcel.2012.09.011.

Abstract

Cell-to-cell communication in embryo sacs is thought to regulate the development of female gametes in flowering plants, but the details remain poorly understood. Here, we report a mitochondrial protein, GAMETE CELL DEFECTIVE 1 (GCD1), enriched in gametophytes that is essential for final maturation of female gametes. Using Arabidopsis gcd1 mutants, we found that final maturation of the egg and central cells is not required for double fertilization but is necessary for embryogenesis initiation and endosperm development. Furthermore, nonautonomous effects, observed when GCD1 or AAC2 function is disrupted, suggest that mitochondrial function influences reciprocal signaling between central and egg cells to regulate maturation of the partner (egg or central) cell. Our findings confirm that cell-to-cell communication is important in functional maturation of female gametic cells and suggest that both egg and central cells sense and transmit their mitochondrial metabolic status as an important cue that regulates the coordination of gamete maturation.

 

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Click here for previously featured paper of the month.