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Knockout of OsSWEET15 impairs rice embryo formation and seed-setting.

Zhi HuZhenjia TangJing YangShuhui BaoYuanyuan ZhangLai MaQingsong ZhengFang YangDechun ZhangShu-Bin SunYi Bing Hu
Published in: Plant & cell physiology (2022)
We show that the knockout of a sugar transporter gene OsSWEET15 led to a significant drop in rice fertility with around half of the knockout mutant's spikelets bearing blighted or empty grains. The rest of the spikelets bore fertile grains with slightly reduced weight. Notably, the ovaries in the blighted grains of the ossweet15 mutants expanded after flowering but terminated their development before the endosperm cellularization stage, and subsequently aborted. GUS and GFP reporter lines representing OsSWEET15 expression showed that the gene was expressed in the endosperm tissues surrounding the embryo, which supposedly supplies nutrients to sustain embryo development. These results together with the protein's demonstrated sucrose transport capacity and plasma membrane localization suggest that OsSWEET15 plays a prominent role during the caryopsis formation stage, probably by releasing sucrose from the endosperm to support embryo development. By contrast, the empty grains were probably caused by the reduced pollen viability of the ossweet15 mutants. Investigation of ossweet11 mutant grains revealed similar phenotypes to those observed in the ossweet15 mutants. These results indicate that both OsSWEET15 and OsSWEET11 play important and similar roles in rice pollen development, caryopsis formation, and seed-setting, in addition to their function in seed-filling that was demonstrated previously.
Keyphrases
  • wild type
  • copy number
  • body mass index
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • genome wide
  • pregnancy outcomes
  • binding protein
  • pregnant women
  • heavy metals
  • young adults
  • single cell
  • long non coding rna
  • transcription factor