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Press Release Date: JULY 9, 2007
Contact:
Dr. Peter Endress
pendress@systbot.uzh.ch
Brian Hyps
bhyps@aspb.org
301-251-0560, ext. 114
Beatrice Grabowski
bgrabowski@earthlink.net
301-871-1962
Size and Positioning of Floral Anthers Facilitates Pollen Collection by
Bees
Subtitle:
Decoding the Evolution of Flowers: from Genomes to Petals
Summary:
CHICAGO -- In their work, Dr. Peter Endress and his colleagues found that the
sizes and positioning of the anthers facilitates pollen collection by buzz-pollinating
bees. The male floral structures, anthers, release the pollen gradually, like
tiny gumball dispensers. All of these characteristics--size, shape, placement,
and timing-may be controlled by networks of genes as well as by regulatory sequences
that do not encode proteins.
Full Text:
Unlike moths and butterflies that are often brilliantly colored to warn potential
predators that they carry toxins, flowers and the fruits they produce have brilliant
colors and unusual shapes because they want to attract the attention of pollinators
and frugivores who will disperse their pollen and seed, thus guaranteeing the
next generation. In their work, Dr. Endress and his colleagues found that the
sizes and positioning of the anthers facilitates pollen collection by buzz-pollinating
bees. The male floral structures, anthers, release the pollen gradually, like
tiny gumball dispensers. All of these characteristics--size, shape, placement,
and timing-may be controlled by networks of genes as well as by regulatory sequences
that do not encode proteins. Slight changes in these networks or in the non-coding
sequences can change the developmental pattern of a flower and thus its morphology-either
dooming it if its pollinators can no longer "fit" properly or guaranteeing
the success of the species if it acquires new pollinators. This type of information
is becoming ever more critical as we struggle to understand, maintain, and modify
the plant and pollinator systems that we depend on for life.
Evo-Devo, or the linking of evolution and development is a shift in the paradigm
of how organisms evolved and diversified. In a symposium at the joint annual
meeting of the American Society of Plant Biologists and the Botanical Society
of America (July 7-11), Dr. Peter Endress of the Institute of Systematic Botany
at the University of Zurich will present his work on the functional architecture
of flowers and the role of development in floral evolution.
Charles Darwin, who observed closely the productions of breeders of pigeons,
dogs, and flowers, understood that explaining the evolution and diversity of
living organisms, from mosses to elephants, would require an understanding of
development. In his presentation at a joint ASPB and BSA symposium on evolutionary
development at the annual meeting in Chicago (July 9, 2007, 2PM) Dr. Peter Endress
will address the need to compare developmental patterns across many taxa of
flowering plants to gain insight into flower evolution. In a study reported
in the International Journal of Plant Science, Dr. Endress and his coauthors
Brigitte Marazzi and Elena Conti, compared floral structures across numerous
species of the genus Senna in the pea family. These flowers are specialized
to be pollinated by bees that release the pollen through vibrations caused by
their buzzing. Endress and his coworkers found a diversity of floral structures
that may represent different strategies for pollen dispersal, even in the same
genus.
The diversification of flowering plants on earth about 130 million years ago
had a profound effect on the evolution of many other kinds of organisms like
insects, birds, and mammals, who became the pollinators and consumers of those
plants, thus ensuring the continuity of both the plant and its animal partner.
Scientists are beginning to understand just how intimate and important these
interactions are, as both plants and pollinators are threatened by extinction
due to habitat loss and pollution from human activities. The recent alarm over
the collapse of honeybee colonies has underscored the importance of insect pollinators
not only to crops consumed by humans but also to plants that support the ecosystems
we depend on.
Flower architecture has great evolutionary and economic importance. Minute
differences in the size and placement of the male and female reproductive parts
of a flower can determine how those flowers are pollinated--by insects, birds,
animals, wind, or the flowers themselves. Genetic programs determine how the
embryos will grow, when the fruit opens to disperse the seed, how the fruit
is positioned to attract potential dispersers or when it falls to the ground.
The method and timing of pollen dispersal from a plant can determine whether
or not a plant modified to resist an insect pest will also have an effect on
other more beneficial insects. Scientists are racing to understand these minute
differences and interactions, even as habitat loss and climate change threaten
the existence of many plants as well as their pollinators. The Floral Genome
Project is a consortium of labs in the United States and abroad whose goal is
to construct a database that will contain comparative data on the expression
patterns for a large number of genes across many different families of flowering
plants.
Starting with Linnaeus, plants and animals were formally classified on the
basis of their physical characteristics-their morphology. With the revolution
in DNA sequencing, or genomics, plants and animals are also classified on the
basis of their gene sequences. These two areas of systematics often produced
conflicting results, but as more genomes are sequenced and the functions of
numerous genes studied, both zoologists and plant biologists have begun to understand
that gene sequences alone cannot explain diversity. Within the last few years,
scientists have begun to identify groups of genes, called networks, which control
complex programs that determine an organism's final form. In addition, the parts
of the genome that do not code for proteins, the non-coding regions, are assuming
greater importance in explaining the diversity found in different species of
plants and animals.
ASPB, headquartered in Rockville, Maryland, was founded in 1924. This professional
society has a membership of nearly 5,000 plant scientists from the United States
and more than 50 other nations. ASPB publishes two of the most widely cited
plant science journals in the world: The Plant Cell and Plant Physiology.
# # # # # #
The article cited in this release was published in 2007 in The International
Journal of Plant Science, Vol 168, Issue 4, pp. 371-391.
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