Lipids are required for directional pollen-tube growth
- 1 April 1998
- journal article
- letter
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 392 (6678) , 818-821
- https://doi.org/10.1038/33929
Abstract
Successful pollination and fertilization are absolute requirements for sexual reproduction in higher plants. Pollen hydration, germination and penetration of the stigma by pollen tubes are influenced by the exudate on wet stigmas1 and by the pollen coat in species with dry stigmas2,3,4,5. The exudate allows pollen tubes to grow directly into the stigma, whereas the pollen coat establishes the contact with the stigma. Pollen tubes then grow into the papillae, which are covered by a cuticle. The components of the exudate or pollen coat that are responsible for pollen tube penetration are not known. To discover the role of the exudate, we tested selected compounds for their ability to act as functional substitutes for exudate in the initial stages of pollen-tube growth on transgenic stigmaless tobacco plants1 that did not produce exudate. Here we show that lipids are the essential factor needed for pollen tubes to penetrate the stigma, and that, in the presence of these lipids, pollen tubes will also penetrate leaves. We propose that lipids direct pollen-tube growth by controlling the flow of water to pollen in species with dry and wet stigmas.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Molecular mechanics of smart stigmasTrends in Plant Science, 1997
- POLLEN GERMINATION AND TUBE GROWTHAnnual Review of Plant Biology, 1997
- Identification of pollen components regulating pollination‐specific responses in the stigmatic papillae of Brassica oleraceaNew Phytologist, 1996
- Identification of genes required for pollen‐stigma recognition in Arabidopsis thalianaThe Plant Journal, 1995
- Simply a social disease?Nature, 1994
- Pollen dressed for successNature, 1993
- Pollination in species with dry stigmas: the nature of the early stigmatic response and the pathway taken by pollen tubesNew Phytologist, 1992
- Axon Guidance by Gradients of a Target-Derived ComponentScience, 1992
- A Study of Phospholipids and Galactolipids in Pollen of Two Lines of Brassica napus L. (Rapeseed) with Different Ratios of Linoleic to Linolenic AcidPlant Physiology, 1990
- Stigma of Nicotiana: Ultrastructural and Biochemical StudiesAmerican Journal of Botany, 1986