» Articles » PMID: 10494623

Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms of Sexual Incompatibility in Plants and Fungi

Overview
Journal Int Rev Cytol
Specialty Cell Biology
Date 1999 Sep 24
PMID 10494623
Citations 19
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Plants and fungi show an astonishing diversity of mechanisms to promote outbreeding, the most widespread of which is sexual incompatibility. Sexual incompatibility involves molecular recognition between mating partners. In fungi and algae, highly polymorphic mating-type loci mediate mating through complementary interactions between molecules encoded or regulated by different mating-type haplotypes, whereas in flowering plants polymorphic self-incompatibility loci regulate mate recognition through oppositional interactions between molecules encoded by the same self-incompatibility haplotypes. This subtle mechanistic difference is a consequence of the different life cycles of fungi, algae, and flowering plants. Recent molecular and biochemical studies have provided fascinating insights into the mechanisms of mate recognition and are beginning to shed light on evolution and population genetics of these extraordinarily polymorphic genetic systems of incompatibility.

Citing Articles

Self-incompatibility: a targeted, unexplored pre-fertilization barrier in flower crops of Asteraceae.

Bala M, Rehana S, Singh M J Plant Res. 2023; 136(5):587-612.

PMID: 37452973 DOI: 10.1007/s10265-023-01480-6.


Large-scale fungal strain sequencing unravels the molecular diversity in mating loci maintained by long-term balancing selection.

Peris D, Lu D, Kinneberg V, Methlie I, Dahl M, James T PLoS Genet. 2022; 18(3):e1010097.

PMID: 35358178 PMC: 8970355. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1010097.


Genetic diversity and structure of Saussurea polylepis (Asteraceae) on continental islands of Korea: Implications for conservation strategies and management.

Yun S, Kim S PLoS One. 2021; 16(4):e0249752.

PMID: 33831066 PMC: 8031399. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0249752.


Population genetics of self-incompatibility in a clade of relict cliff-dwelling plant species.

Silva J, Brennan A, Mejias J AoB Plants. 2016; 8.

PMID: 27154621 PMC: 4940477. DOI: 10.1093/aobpla/plw029.


Self-sterility in flowering plants: preventing self-fertilization increases family diversification rates.

Ferrer M, Good S Ann Bot. 2012; 110(3):535-53.

PMID: 22684683 PMC: 3400452. DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcs124.