Abstract:
The life cycle of flowering plants alternates between a diploid sporophytic and a haploid
gametophytic phase. Successful reproduction depends on fate specification of the
gametic cells within the embryo sac and on double fertilization. This double fertilization
event is initiated by fusion of the central cell with one of the two sperm cells as well as
fusion of the egg cell with the other sperm cell, which gives rise to the endosperm and
the embryo, respectively. However, the molecular mechanisms of cell fate specification
during female gametophyte development remain elusive and gene expression
programs in different cell types of early embryos are largely unknown. Here, we show
that ALTERED MERISTEM PROGRAM 1 (AMP1) is required to prevent cell fate
substitution within the embryo sac in Arabidopsis. Loss-of-function mutations in AMP1
result in supernumerary egg cells at the expense of synergid cells allowing for twin
embryo formation. However, generation of twin embryos usually precludes endosperm
formation, which eventually leads to ovule abortion. Remarkably, in such a case, ovule
abortion can be overcome by delivering functional supernumerary sperm cells in
tetraspore (tes) pollen, thereby enabling the formation of twin plants. AMP1 expression
in sporophytic tissue is sufficient to suppress the formation of supernumerary egg cells
and the twin-embryo phenotype, indicating that one or more mobile factors are involved
in synergid fate specification and that the surrounding tissue can contribute to the
patterning process of the female gametophyte. This work highlights the importance of
specifying two synergids and only one egg cell within the female gametophyte to
ensure successful reproduction.
The second part of this thesis includes a technique that integrates nuclear sorting by
flow cytometry and subsequent microarray analysis to generate transcriptome datasets
of different cell types in the Arabidopsis early embryo. The results presented indicate
that the majority of genes are similarly expressed in the pro-embryo and the suspensor
but that a number of genes with supposedly important functions during embryogenesis
showed different expression patterns. This technique and the resource presented will
assist further studies of early embryogenesis. In addition, this technique can also be
applicable to other inaccessible tissues with a limited number of cells.