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Contacts:
Dr. Kirsten Bomblies
kirsten.bomblies@tuebingen.mpg.de
Brian Hyps
bhyps@aspb.org
301-251-0560, ext. 114
Dr. Beatrice Grabowski
bgrabowski@earthlink.net
301-871-1962
Title: Rapid Evolution of Defense Genes in Plants May Produce Hybrid Incompatibility,
Leading to Speciation in Plant Populations
Subtitle: How One Species Becomes Two: Molecular Mechanisms of Speciation
in Plants
Summary
Species are kept separate in plants and animals through barriers to gene flow.
However, the exact mechanisms of speciation have only been explained within
the last 20 years. Dr. Detlef Weigel and colleagues found that one mechanism,
hybrid necrosis, is associated with a plant defense gene. Different forms of
these rapidly evolving genes in parent plants can cause autoimmune responses
leading to offspring inviability and may represent a molecular pathway to speciation
unique to plants.
Full Release
One of the basic tenets of evolution is speciation in which populations of the
same species become so genetically and morphologically variable that they can
be classified as two different species. Individuals of these species may be
capable of mating, but they may not produce offspring, and if offspring are
produced, they will be sterile or so defective that they die before they are
able to reproduce. Although speciation has been observed and studied since Darwin
and Wallace first proposed their theory, the complex molecular mechanisms responsible
are not yet fully known. One of these molecular mechanisms, hybrid necrosis,
was studied by Dr. Detlef Weigel and his colleagues at the Max Planck Institute
for Developmental Biology in Germany. Dr. Kirsten Bomblies will present their
results at the President's symposium at the annual meeting of the American Society
of Plant Biologists (July 11, 2PM). Bomblies and Weigel observed hybrid necrosis
in crosses of thale cress, Arabidopsis thaliana, a member of the mustard family,
and found that it is associated with plant genes that respond to pathogen attack.
Plants must frequently cope with environmental stresses such as heat, cold,
high acidity or salinity, or attack by pathogens such as viruses or insect predators.
Such stresses mobilize defense genes that initiate physiological responses that
help the plants to survive. One such response is programmed cell death, which
occurs in response to invasion by viruses or bacteria. The cells invaded by
the pathogens are quickly marked by the plant for death so that the microbe
cannot use them to replicate and spread to the rest of the plant. These types
of genes have been shown to evolve rapidly, giving plants the capability to
adapt to changing conditions and pathogens. Bomblies and Weigel found that the
same type of gene is involved in hybrid incompatibility in Arabidopsis. Because
these genes evolve so rapidly, there are likely to be different forms present
in the population, and when two of these are joined in a hybrid, they can cause
fatal defects in the hybrid offspring.
A biological species is defined as a population of individuals that can interbreed
among each other freely, but not with members of other species. What finally
establishes two populations as different species is that gene flow between them
stops. However, this does not happen suddenly. Rather, it is a gradual process
in which one barrier after another is raised between two species, including
inviable embryos and defective and sterile adults, as well as genetic incompatibilities
that prevent even the formation of an embryo. The hybrid incompatibility identified
by Bomblies and Weigel is an example of the kind of genetic incompatibility
that can result in speciation.
Because plant reproduction often requires an outside agent like a pollinator
or the wind, which spreads pollen far from the parent plant, the offspring can
be hybrids between parents from two different populations or even from two different
although closely related species. Such hybrid offspring can be successful but
may also be prevented or defective because some of the parents' genes are not
compatible. In their survey of 900 first generation hybrid offspring among 293
strains of thale cress, Bomblies and Detlef found that 2% of the offspring were
severely defective. They call this phenomenon "hybrid necrosis" or
"hybrid weakness," and identified the gene responsible for the incompatibility
as a disease resistance gene that has different forms in the two parents.
Some of the molecular mechanisms that prevent hybridization between species
are well-known in both animals and plants. There are a number of gene flow barriers
in plants that are similar to those of animals-among them are ecological factors
such as reproductive season, morphological differences, and hybrid sterility.
However, hybrid necrosis produced by autoimmune responses due to pathogen resistance
genes has not been observed in animals and may represent a molecular pathway
to speciation unique to plants. Knowledge of these mechanisms is important not
only in the study of the evolutionary history of plants but can also provide
tools for ensuring the safety of genetically engineered crops. If incompatibility
genes can be bred into a GE crop, it might be possible to prevent the formation
of superweeds and to lessen the probability that harmful genes can be spread
to other species.
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