PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Pollination with precision: How flowers do it

Pollination with precision: How flowers do it
2012-05-18
(Press-News.org) PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — Next Mother's Day, say it with an evolved model of logistical efficiency — a flower. A new discovery about how nature's icons of romance manage the distribution of sperm among female gametes with industrial precision helps explain why the delicate beauties have reproduced prolifically enough to dominate the earth.

In pollination, hundreds of sperm-carrying pollen grains stick to the stigma suspended in the middle of a flower and quickly grow a tube down a long shaft called a style toward clusters of ovules, which hold two female sex cells. This could be a chaotic frenzy, but for the plant to succeed, exactly two fertile sperm should reach the two cells in each ovule — no more, no less. No ovule should be left out, either because too many tubes have gone elsewhere, or because the delivered sperm don't work.

In the journal Current Biology, Brown University biologists report that flowers have evolved an elegant safeguard system to ensure that only the minimum necessary number of pollen tubes will reach each ovule.

"There is a mechanism that prevents too many pollen tubes from delivering too many sperm," said Mark Johnson, associate professor of biology at Brown and senior author on a new paper detailing the discovery. "But the other cool thing is that there is also a way to salvage fertilization if the first father is a dud."

Essentially the successful fusion of sperm and female gametes immediately terminates the signaling that attracts pollen tubes to the ovule, a finding by first author Kristin Beale, a graduate student in Johnson's lab.

"Previous models had said that pollen tube entry was sufficient — that once one pollen tube entered, others would be repelled," Beale said. "But we show it's the process of gamete fusion."

Added Johnson: "Until fusion has happened, there's no guarantee that you'll have successful seed formation."

A mystery solved with mutants

Although scientists have studied plant reproduction for centuries, the tools to make Beale's finding have only become available in the last few years, Johnson said. Armed with these new capabilities, the team, including second author Alexander Leydon, conducted a series of experiments in Arabidopsis plants, a model plant for research.

The most important tool was a pollen mutant the team had discovered called hap2. The mutant grows a pollen tube to an ovule and bursts to release sperm, a normal course of events. But hap2's sperm can't fuse with the female gametes. It is a convenient dud. The team also employed new techniques that allow pollen tubes and the sperm they carry to fluoresce as green or red. That way they could watch as different tubes interacted with the ovules.

In their first experiment, the team sent in healthy sperm, half of which were carried by red-tagged tubes and half of which by green-tagged tubes. With nothing but healthy sperm in the mix, only about 1 percent of ovules ended up with multiple pollen tubes (a phenomenon that Beale calls "polytubey"). Ovules could block polytubey in the vast majority of cases.

Then the team unleashed a sampling of sperm in which one in four were duds. Polytubey increased tenfold. One unfortunate ovule ended up attracting four tubes, indicating polytubey is allowed until a fertile sperm comes along.

In another experiment with mutant sperm tagged red and normal, or "wild-type" pollen tubes tagged green, the researchers saw polytubey only where there was a red glow under the microscope.

"We did not observe ovules that were targeted by two pollen tubes carrying wild-type sperm," they wrote in the journal. "Ovules first targeted by defective sperm can attract additional pollen tubes; but when wild-type sperm are attracted, subsequent pollen tubes are blocked."

In the paper the team also showed that one of two cells responsible for attracting pollen tubes will persist in the ovule until gamete fusion occurs. While the team didn't identify the exact signaling molecule responsible for blocking polytubey after gamete fusion, Johnson said, the study does help scientists determine what that signaling molecule must be like. He said it must be fast-acting and potent.

Johnson said the research may eventually have applications in agriculture, either because it could aid fertilization when it is hindered, for instance by bad environmental conditions, or commercial corn breeding. Seed companies create hybrids by fertilizing corn with hand-collected pollen, and to do this they need varieties where male fertility can be controlled.

Nature's own system, however, appears to guarantee that virtually every ovule will have exactly the right amount of healthy sperm. By employing this newly understood mechanism, flowers thereby become the most prolific moms they can be.

INFORMATION:

The National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health Brown University Initiative to Maximize Student Development funded the work.

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Pollination with precision: How flowers do it

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Open heart surgery for kidney disease patients

2012-05-18
Highlight One type of open heart surgery is safer than the other—in terms of both health and survival—for chronic kidney disease patients. Heart disease is the leading cause of death in individuals with chronic kidney disease. Washington, DC (May 17, 2012) — One type of open heart surgery is likely safer than the other for chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients, according to a study appearing in an upcoming issue of the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (JASN). Open heart, or coronary artery bypass, surgery can be done two ways: on-pump or off-pump, ...

Simple procedure lowers blood pressure in kidney disease patients

2012-05-18
Highlights A minimally invasive procedure called renal denervation, which disrupts certain nerves in the kidneys, lowers blood pressure in patients with chronic kidney disease and hypertension. The procedure may help protect the kidneys and reduce heart risks in patients with chronic kidney disease. 60 million people globally have chronic kidney disease. Washington, DC (May 17, 2012) — Disrupting certain nerves in the kidneys can safely and effectively lower blood pressure in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) and hypertension, according to a study appearing ...

Pain relief through distraction -- it's not all in your head

2012-05-18
Mental distractions make pain easier to take, and those pain-relieving effects aren't just in your head, according to a report published online on May 17 in Current Biology, a Cell Press publication. The findings based on high-resolution spinal fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging) as people experienced painful levels of heat show that mental distractions actually inhibit the response to incoming pain signals at the earliest stage of central pain processing. "The results demonstrate that this phenomenon is not just a psychological phenomenon, but an active neuronal ...

When you eat matters, not just what you eat

2012-05-18
When it comes to weight gain, when you eat might be at least as important as what you eat. That's the conclusion of a study reported in the Cell Press journal Cell Metabolism published early online on May 17th. When mice on a high-fat diet are restricted to eating for eight hours per day, they eat just as much as those who can eat around the clock, yet they are protected against obesity and other metabolic ills, the new study shows. The discovery suggests that the health consequences of a poor diet might result in part from a mismatch between our body clocks and our ...

New study shows that workplace inspections save lives, don't destroy jobs

2012-05-18
Research to be published in Science on May 18, 2012, sheds light on a hot-button political issue: the role and effectiveness of government regulation. Does it kill jobs or protect the public? The new study, co-authored by Harvard Business School Professor Michael Toffel, Professor David Levine of the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley, and Boston University doctoral student Matthew Johnson, examines workplace safety inspections conducted by California's Division of Occupational Safety and Health (Cal/OSHA). The authors carried out the first ...

Religion is a potent force for cooperation and conflict, research shows

2012-05-18
ANN ARBOR, Mich.--- Across history and cultures, religion increases trust within groups but also may increase conflict with other groups, according to an article in a special issue of Science. "Moralizing gods, emerging over the last few millennia, have enabled large-scale cooperation and sociopolitical conquest even without war," says University of Michigan anthropologist Scott Atran, lead author of the article with Jeremy Ginges of the New School for Social Research. "Sacred values sustain intractable conflicts like those between the Israelis and the Palestinians ...

Google goes cancer: Researchers use search engine algorithm to find cancer biomarkers

2012-05-18
The strategy used by Google to decide which pages are relevant for a search query can also be used to determine which proteins in a patient's cancer are relevant for the disease progression. Researchers from Dresden University of Technology, Germany, have used a modified version of Google's PageRank algorithm to rank about 20,000 proteins by their genetic relevance to the progression of pancreatic cancer. In their study, published in PLoS Computational Biology, they found seven proteins that can help to assess how aggressive a patient's tumor is and guide the clinician ...

Researchers reveal an RNA modification influences thousands of genes

2012-05-18
### Weill Cornell Medical College Weill Cornell Medical College, Cornell University's medical school located in New York City, is committed to excellence in research, teaching, patient care and the advancement of the art and science of medicine, locally, nationally and globally. Physicians and scientists of Weill Cornell Medical College are engaged in cutting-edge research from bench to bedside, aimed at unlocking mysteries of the human body in health and sickness and toward developing new treatments and prevention strategies. In its commitment to global health and ...

Untangling the development of breast cancer

2012-05-18
In two back-to-back reports published online on 17 May in Cell, researchers have sequenced the genomes of 21 breast cancers and analysed the mutations that emerged during the tumours' development. The individual results are described below. Led by researchers from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, the team created a catalogue of all the mutations in the genomes of the 21 cancer genomes and identified the mutational processes that lead to breast cancer. They found that these mutations accumulate in breast cells over many years, initially rather slowly, but picking up ...

Resolving the ortholog conjecture

2012-05-18
Researchers at the SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics and the EMBL-European Bioinformatics Institute have confirmed the long-held conjecture that studying the genes we share with other animals is a viable means of extrapolating information about human biology. The study, published in the open access journal PLoS Computational Biology, shows how bioinformatics makes it possible to test the conjecture. Scientists have long looked to model species – mice, for example – to understand human biology. This is at the root of what is called the 'ortholog conjecture': the idea ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

JNM publishes procedure standard/practice guideline for fibroblast activation protein PET

What to do with aging solar panels?

Scientists design peptides to enhance drug efficacy

Collaboration to develop sorghum hybrids to reduce synthetic fertilizer use and farmer costs

Light-activated ink developed to remotely control cardiac tissue to repair the heart

EMBARGOED: Dana-Farber investigators pinpoint keys to cell therapy response for leukemia

Surgeon preference factors into survival outcomes analyses for multi- and single-arterial bypass grafting

Study points to South America – not Mexico – as birthplace of Irish potato famine pathogen

VR subway experiment highlights role of sound in disrupting balance for people with inner ear disorder

Evolution without sex: How mites have survived for millions of years

U. of I. team develops weight loss app that tracks fiber, protein content in meals

Progress and challenges in brain implants

City-level sugar-sweetened beverage taxes and changes in adult BMI

Duration in immigration detention and health harms

COVID-19 pandemic and racial and ethnic disparities in long-term nursing home stay or death following hospital discharge

Specific types of liver immune cells are required to deal with injury

How human activity has shaped Brazil Nut forests’ past and future

Doctors test a new way to help people quit fentanyl 

Long read sequencing reveals more genetic information while cutting time and cost of rare disease diagnoses

AAAS and ASU launch mission-driven collaborative to strengthen scientific enterprise

Medicaid-insured heart transplant patients face higher risk of post-transplant complications

Revolutionizing ammonia synthesis: New iron-based catalyst surpasses century-old benchmark

A groundbreaking approach: Researchers at The University of Texas at San Antonio chart the future of neuromorphic computing

Long COVID, Italian scientists discovered the molecular ‘fingerprint’ of the condition in children's blood

Battery-powered electric vehicles now match petrol and diesel counterparts for longevity

MIT method enables protein labeling of tens of millions of densely packed cells in organ-scale tissues

Calculating error-free more easily with two codes

Dissolving clusters of cancer cells to prevent metastases

A therapeutic HPV vaccine could eliminate precancerous cervical lesions

Myth busted: Healthy habits take longer than 21 days to set in

[Press-News.org] Pollination with precision: How flowers do it