Germination of Pollen
Key Features of Pollen Germination in Cereals
Genetic and Proteomic Screening for Key Factors in Pollen Germination
Key Pathways Identified for Pollen Germination in Cereals
Concluding Remarks
References
Germination of Pollen
In flowering plants, the distribution of pollen (see Glossary) across land by wind and/or animals drives the spread of genetic variation within a species. Agriculturally, successful fertilization of flowers in an increasingly harsh and unpredictable climate is the key determinant of grain production and yield in cereal crops [1]. Mature pollen usually contains only two cell types – sperm cells and the much larger vegetative (or tube) cell – and desiccates before release from the anther. On adhering to a compatible stigma, pollen grains respond to signals from the mother plant and become active, undergoing cytoplasmic reorganization and activation of stored RNA and protein to produce a pollen tube originating from the vegetative cell. The pollen tube elongates within the pistil until it reaches the egg cell, where the sperm cell divides to enable the double-fertilization event typical of plants (Figure 1, Key Figure).
The factors that control successful pollen germination have been the focus of plant reproduction, evolution, and breeding research to increase crop yield and to overcome hybridization barriers [1,2]. Barriers to fertilization include interspecific incompatibility as well as self-incompatibility, which maintains genetic diversity within a local population. However, overcoming some of these constraints in a breeding environment can contribute to the production of novel elite lines for specific end-uses. Since 2003, pollen transcriptomic studies, together with identified mutants, have rapidly expanded our knowledge of the regulatory mechanisms that govern the fertilization process, including signaling pathways and cytoskeleton proteins [3–11]. However, most of this research has occurred in model plant species such as arabidopsis; despite massive agronomic and economic interest, relatively little is known about these molecular processes in cereal crops (the Poaceae). This review focuses on the unique characteristics of pollen grain adhesion, hydration, germination, and pollen tube growth in monocot cereals, and provides an overview of our current understanding of the regulators governed by the male gametophyte in the best-studied species, rice (Oryza sativa) and maize (Zea mays) (Figure 1C).