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Plant Physiology 149:14-26 (2009) © 2009 American Society of Plant Biologists The Development of Endosperm in Grasses1Department of Plant Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721
The grass seed or caryopsis originates from a monocarpellary ovary with a single ovule and contains the main storage tissue, the endosperm. For most grass crop species (i.e. cereals), the value of the crop is largely determined by the endosperm, both in quantitative and qualitative terms. The endosperm is the result of the fertilization of two polar nuclei in the central cell of the embryo sac by one sperm cell nucleus, which generates a triploid (3n, 3C) nucleus, whereas the diploid (2n, 2C) embryo originates from fertilization of the egg cell by the second sperm cell nucleus. The main function of the endosperm is to provide nutrients to the developing and, later, germinating embryo. In contrast to many species, including Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), the grass endosperm is a persistent seed structure. It is the foremost source of calories for human and livestock nutrition and provides the raw material for countless manufactured foods, goods, and biofuels.
In spite of the importance of the grass endosperm, its development has not been thoroughly investigated in many crop species, much less in noncrop species. There is considerable uniformity in the development of the endosperm among grasses, especially during its early stages (Weatherwax, 1930
Among grasses, endosperm development is by far best characterized in maize (Zea mays) for historical, economic, anatomical, and genetic reasons; therefore, we will primarily refer to knowledge obtained from this cereal as a paradigm for grass endosperm development. Wherever appropriate and possible, differences between maize and other grass species will be highlighted and discussed. Here, we provide an overview of the phases of endosperm development, including the unique features of genetic, molecular, and cell regulatory mechanisms. The reader interested in an in-depth discussion of different aspects of endosperm development in grasses is referred to several previous works (Kiesselbach, 1949
Development of the endosperm in grasses has several distinct phases that can overlap considerably (Fig. 1 ). These are distinguished as follows: early development, comprising double fertilization, syncytium formation, and cellularization; differentiation, which includes the formation of the main cell types (transfer cells, aleurone, starchy endosperm, and embryo-surrounding cells), the periods of mitosis and endoreduplication, and the accumulation of storage compounds; and maturation, which includes programmed cell death (PCD), dormancy, and desiccation.
Double Fertilization
In many species, including maize (Kiesselbach, 1949
Grass endosperm follows a frequently encountered mode of endosperm development, the nuclear (or coenocytic) type (Lopes and Larkins, 1993
For about 1 d after pollination (DAP), all endosperm nuclei appear synchronous with respect to cell cycle stages. Subsequently, developmental gradients are formed in which neighboring nuclei proliferate synchronously. These developmental gradients, from the domain adjacent to the embryo to the chalazal region, appear to invert between 1 and 2 DAP in Triticeae (Bennett et al., 1975
In cereals, the coenocytic endosperm undergoes cellularization by the formation of internuclear radial microtubule systems and an open-ended alveolation process that proceeds from the periphery of the endosperm toward the central vacuole (Brown et al., 1994
Among grasses, endosperm development is best understood in cereals. Four major cell types constitute the cereal endosperm: transfer cells, aleurone cells, starchy endosperm cells, and embryo-surrounding region (ESR) cells.
Several cell layers of the cereal endosperm, near the placenta, stop dividing and differentiate early, sometimes before cellularization is completed, into transfer cells. These cells have extensive cell wall invaginations and increased plasma membrane surface, which facilitate nutrient (primarily Suc and amino acids) uptake by the endosperm. Transfer cells have been described in some detail in several grass species (references cited in Charlton et al., 1995
The END1 gene has been linked to transfer cell fate specification in barley, and its pattern of transcript accumulation has been interpreted as a marker for gene expression in a specific domain of the coenocytic endosperm that will differentiate transfer cells (Doan et al., 1996
Aleurone cells form a sheet generally comprising one (maize, wheat, and rice [Oryza sativa]) to three (barley) or several (rice) layers of cells that surround the endosperm except in the transfer cell region. In maize, the aleurone differentiates between 6 and 10 DAP from the outer layers of endosperm cells, which noticeably tend to accumulate spherosomes and protein bodies and become cuboidal. Because aleurone cells have preprophase bands and other cytoskeletal structures typical of meristematic cells, their fate is believed to be specified soon after alveolation and the first periclinal division of the cellularized endosperm (Brown et al., 1994
Differentiation of aleurone cells seems to be independent from that of transfer cells, as shown by the maize dek1 mutant, which lacks aleurone but displays a normal layer of transfer cells (Becraft et al., 2002
In several mutants, such as crinkly4 (cr4), dek1, and sal1, the aleurone layer is defective, absent, and supernumerary, respectively (for review, see Olsen, 2004
Cereal seeds are one of the most important sources of food calories worldwide, because they contain about 70% starch in terms of dry weight. Starch is made of two
Because the cereal endosperm is such a phenomenal energy sink, an important aspect of its development concerns the role of carbon metabolism, sugar partitioning and signaling, nutrient fluxes, and the regulation of energy states (Wobus and Weber, 1999b
The transition from the cell division phase into the storage phase of endosperm development is accompanied by extensive reprogramming of gene expression patterns (Sreenivasulu et al., 2004
A likely candidate for the integration of sugar and abscisic acid (ABA) signaling and the onset of starch biosynthesis appears to be SnRK1, a gene encoding a protein kinase closely related to yeast SNF1 (Suc nonfermenting 1) and AMPK (AMP-activated protein kinase) in mammals. SnRK1 was originally cloned from rye endosperm and functionally complements yeast snf1 mutants that otherwise would not grow on substrates lacking Glc (Alderson et al., 1991
It has been estimated that cereals are the main source of protein in livestock feed worldwide and are the principal food protein source in certain regions (Shewry, 2000
Prolamins are rich in Pro and Gln and are generally deficient in charged amino acids, in particular the essential amino acids Lys and Trp. They derive their peculiar amino acid composition from the reiteration of Pro- and Gln-rich repeats in their sequences. Prolamins represent 50% to 60% of total endosperm proteins in the genera Hordeum (barley), Pennisetum (millet), Secale (rye), Sorghum (sorghum), Triticum (wheat), and Zea (maize) but account for only 5% to 10% of endosperm proteins in Oryza (rice) and Avena (oat), in which most storage proteins consist of 11S globulin. In contrast, Brachypodium distachyon (purple false brome) endosperm primarily accumulates storage proteins that resemble maize 7S and oat 12S globulins (Laudencia-Chingcuanco and Vensel, 2008
Both prolamins and globulins form insoluble accretions called protein bodies in the lumen of the rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER; Fig. 2). In wheat and related grasses, these accretions are trafficked to large protein storage vacuoles. In maize and other panicoid cereals, as well as rice, the prolamin-containing protein bodies are retained within the RER through an unknown mechanism (Herman and Larkins, 1999
Although there are exceptions, generally prolamin genes are organized into multigenic loci (Wilson and Larkins, 1984
Among the cereals, the ESR has been best characterized in maize (Cossegal et al., 2007
Three different types of cell cycles occur during endosperm development: one is acytokinetic mitosis, which results in a syncytium; the second is mitosis coupled to cell division, which produces most cells comprising the mature endosperm; and the third is endoreduplication, which entails reiterated rounds of DNA replication without chromatin condensation, sister chromatid segregation, or cytokinesis, resulting in endopolyploid cells. As discussed above, information about the regulation of syncytial nuclear proliferation and the ensuing cellularization is scarce and primarily descriptive, whereas the latter two types of cell cycles have been characterized in some detail in maize.
A phase of mitotic cell division occurs after cellularization of the endosperm and is largely responsible for generating the final population of endosperm cells. This period lasts until 8 to 12 DAP in the central endosperm but continues until approximately 20 to 25 DAP in the aleurone and subaleurone layers (Kowles and Phillips, 1988
From approximately 8 to 10 DAP, maize endosperm cells gradually and asynchronously switch from a mitotic to an endoreduplication cell cycle, in which seemingly complete and reiterated rounds of DNA synthesis take place without chromatin condensation, sister chromatid segregation, and cytokinesis (Kowles and Phillips, 1985
Because of the spatial/temporal pattern of the mitosis/endoreduplication switch mentioned above, a gradient in nuclear size is observed in tissue sections, with the smallest nuclei (3C and 6C) located at the periphery of the endosperm and increasingly larger nuclei in the inner central region. DNA content, nuclear size, and cell size are clearly correlated (Kowles and Phillips, 1988
The endoreduplication cycle results in loosely polytenic chromosomes (Kowles and Phillips, 1988
Endoreduplication during endosperm development appears ubiquitous in cereals (Chojecki et al., 1986a
Although several possible functions have been proposed for endoreduplication in the endosperm, including (1) a mechanism to provide more gene templates to support high transcription rates, (2) driving cell expansion and tissue growth without cell division, and (3) enhancing the pool of nucleotides utilized by the embryo during germination (Sabelli and Larkins, 2008
The roles of different cell cycle genes have been intensely investigated, such as those of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) and their cyclin partners, CDK inhibitors, and retinoblastoma-related (RBR) proteins, all of which play crucial but distinct roles in cell cycle regulation (Larkins et al., 2001
Increasing evidence also implicates RBRs in endosperm development. RBRs are a conserved family of proteins that primarily prevent cells from entering S phase by inhibiting E2F transcription factors, the activity of which is required for the expression of many S-phase genes. Grasses may be unique in that their genomes encode at least two distinct RBR genes, in maize termed RBR1 and RBR3 (Sabelli et al., 2005a
Besides the activity of key cell cycle regulators, both the cell cycle and the development of the endosperm depend significantly on hormonal and environmental factors, which have been reviewed elsewhere (Sabelli et al., 2005b
PCD plays an important role in cereal endosperm development, and it is thought to facilitate nutrient hydrolysis and uptake by the embryo at germination (Nguyen et al., 2007
A great deal is known about how seed maturation, dormancy, and desiccation are regulated in dicots and the critical role played by ABA signaling and gene regulation networks (Wobus and Weber, 1999a
Deviation from the normal 2:1 maternal:paternal genome dosage is deleterious for endosperm and seed development (Cooper, 1951 -tubulin (Lund et al., 1995b
Although substantial progress has been made in unraveling developmental patterns, cell proliferation, and differentiation patterns, the molecular factors that control these processes, as well as key aspects such as polarity, cell division, cell shape, endoreduplication, and the accumulation of storage compounds, remain unknown. Certain developmental transitions are dramatic and abrupt, such as cellularization of the syncytium. This suggests that gene expression patterns become globally and rapidly reprogrammed, possibly as a result of the activation of feedback regulatory loops and/or extensive chromatin modifications. The onset of cellularization in many syncytial nuclear domains occurs synchronously, suggesting homogenously distributed molecular signals that exceed a critical threshold and/or cross talk among the nuclear domains of many cells to coordinate the whole process. Several important questions remain to be answered. What signals trigger the major endosperm developmental transitions? How do cells know when they need to stop dividing and engage in endoreduplication and cell expansion? What signals coordinate peripheral/surface growth of the endosperm with its inner expansion? Does endoreduplication precede the biosynthesis and accumulation of storage compounds in individual cells, and is it necessary for these processes? How are sugar metabolism and signaling coordinated with cell proliferation, cell expansion, and the accumulation of storage compounds? How is endosperm development in grasses controlled by epigenetic pathways? Many questions ultimately relate to the mechanisms that ensure the coordination of different pathways and events. This reflects the fact that the endosperm is far from an "amorphous" and simple tissue stocked with starch and proteins. On the contrary, endosperm is a sophisticated tissue with highly specialized cell types, and it undergoes many of the canonical steps encountered during the development of more complex tissues and organs, including cell proliferation, cell fate specification, patterning, differentiation, and senescence. The ability of grasses to reproduce depends on the successful execution of these processes. The few grasses that have been domesticated and cultivated were essential for the development of human civilization. Likewise, they will sustain the current and future world population and its standard of living. Understanding the factors responsible for converting the insignificant (from a human consumption perspective) endosperm of wild grasses into the remarkable energy sinks of modern cereals, which occurred through domestication and breeding, is important and could help us enhance the current pool of cereal species to provide enough food for the future. Received September 5, 2008; accepted October 18, 2008; published January 7, 2009.
1 This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy (grant no. DE–FG02–96ER20242). The author responsible for distribution of materials integral to the findings presented in this article in accordance with the policy described in the Instructions to Authors (www.plantphysiol.org) is: Brian A. Larkins (larkins{at}ag.arizona.edu). www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.108.129437 * Corresponding author; e-mail larkins{at}ag.arizona.edu.
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