International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Mar 2020)

A Silent Exonic Mutation in a Rice Integrin-α FG-GAP Repeat-Containing Gene Causes Male-Sterility by Affecting mRNA Splicing

  • Ting Zou,
  • Dan Zhou,
  • Wenjie Li,
  • Guoqiang Yuan,
  • Yang Tao,
  • Zhiyuan He,
  • Xu Zhang,
  • Qiming Deng,
  • Shiquan Wang,
  • Aiping Zheng,
  • Jun Zhu,
  • Yueyang Liang,
  • Huainian Liu,
  • Aijun Wang,
  • Lingxia Wang,
  • Ping Li,
  • Shuangcheng Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms21062018
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 6
p. 2018

Abstract

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Pollen development plays crucial roles in the life cycle of higher plants. Here we characterized a rice mutant with complete male-sterile phenotype, pollen-less 1 (pl1). pl1 exhibited smaller anthers with arrested pollen development, absent Ubisch bodies, necrosis-like tapetal hypertrophy, and smooth anther cuticular surface. Molecular mapping revealed a synonymous mutation in the fourth exon of PL1 co-segregated with the mutant phenotype. This mutation disrupts the exon-intron splice junction in PL1, generating aberrant mRNA species and truncated proteins. PL1 is highly expressed in the tapetal cells of developing anther, and its protein is co-localized with plasma membrane (PM) and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) signal. PL1 encodes an integrin-α FG-GAP repeat-containing protein, which has seven β-sheets and putative Ca2+-binding motifs and is broadly conserved in terrestrial plants. Our findings therefore provide insights into both the role of integrin-α FG-GAP repeat-containing protein in rice male fertility and the influence of exonic mutation on intronic splice donor site selection.

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