Establishment of a cell-to-cell communication pathway between separate carpels during gynoecium development
1995
Schoot, C van der | Dietrich, M.A. | Storms, M. | Verbeke, J.A. | Lucas, W.J.
In the evolutionarily advanced angiosperm flower, postgenital fusion is often involved in the formation of the female reproductive organ, the gynoecium. In the present study, we report on the early establishment of a cytoplasmic cell-to-cell communication pathway between the two fusing carper primordia in Catharanthus roseus L. (periwinkle). Upon carper contact, diffusible factors move between the two carpers to initiate the rapid redifferentiation of epidermal cells into parenchymatous cells, resulting in carper fusion. Microinjection of the lipid-impermeable molecule, Lucifer Yellow CH (LYCH), into cells on either side of the epidermal fusion plane revealed that cytoplasmic continuity was established very early in this redifferentiation process. Electron-microscopic analysis confirmed that this inter-carpel cytoplasmic coupling was established by the formation of plasmodesmata produced between the contacting epidermal cells. The evolution of and role for this inter-carpel communication pathway is discussed in terms of the coordinate development of the gynoecium and its overall effect on reproductive fitness.
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