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Nature 451, 1121-1124 (28 February 2008) | doi:10.1038/nature06557; Received 15 October 2007; Accepted 20 December 2007; Published online 13 February 2008

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Gamete formation without meiosis in Arabidopsis

Maruthachalam Ravi1, Mohan P. A. Marimuthu1 & Imran Siddiqi1

  1. Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology, Uppal Road, Hyderabad 500007, India

Correspondence to: Imran Siddiqi1 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to I.S. (Email: imran@ccmb.res.in).

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Apomixis, the formation of asexual seeds in plants, leads to populations that are genetically uniform maternal clones. The transfer of apomixis to crop plants holds great promise in plant breeding for fixation of heterozygosity and hybrid vigour because it would allow the propagation of hybrids over successive generations1, 2. Apomixis involves the production of unreduced (diploid) female gametes that retain the genotype of the parent plant (apomeiosis), followed by parthenogenetic development of the egg cell into an embryo and the formation of functional endosperm3. The molecular mechanisms underlying apomixis are unknown. Here we show that mutation of the Arabidopsis gene DYAD/SWITCH1 (SWI1)4, 5, a regulator of meiotic chromosome organization, leads to apomeiosis. We found that most fertile ovules in dyad plants form seeds that are triploid and that arise from the fertilization of an unreduced female gamete by a haploid male gamete. The unreduced female gametes fully retain parental heterozygosity across the genome, which is characteristic of apomeiosis. Our results show that the alteration of a single gene in a sexual plant can bring about functional apomeiosis, a major component of apomixis.

  1. Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology, Uppal Road, Hyderabad 500007, India

Correspondence to: Imran Siddiqi1 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to I.S. (Email: imran@ccmb.res.in).

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