Nature Communications (Nov 2023)

A toxin-antidote system contributes to interspecific reproductive isolation in rice

  • Shimin You,
  • Zhigang Zhao,
  • Xiaowen Yu,
  • Shanshan Zhu,
  • Jian Wang,
  • Dekun Lei,
  • Jiawu Zhou,
  • Jing Li,
  • Haiyuan Chen,
  • Yanjia Xiao,
  • Weiwei Chen,
  • Qiming Wang,
  • Jiayu Lu,
  • Keyi Chen,
  • Chunlei Zhou,
  • Xin Zhang,
  • Zhijun Cheng,
  • Xiuping Guo,
  • Yulong Ren,
  • Xiaoming Zheng,
  • Shijia Liu,
  • Xi Liu,
  • Yunlu Tian,
  • Ling Jiang,
  • Dayun Tao,
  • Chuanyin Wu,
  • Jianmin Wan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-43015-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Breakdown of reproductive isolation facilitates flow of useful trait genes into crop plants from their wild relatives. Hybrid sterility, a major form of reproductive isolation exists between cultivated rice (Oryza sativa) and wild rice (O. meridionalis, Mer). Here, we report the cloning of qHMS1, a quantitative trait locus controlling hybrid male sterility between these two species. Like qHMS7, another locus we cloned previously, qHMS1 encodes a toxin-antidote system, but differs in the encoded proteins, their evolutionary origin, and action time point during pollen development. In plants heterozygous at qHMS1, ~ 50% of pollens carrying qHMS1-D (an allele from cultivated rice) are selectively killed. In plants heterozygous at both qHMS1 and qHMS7, ~ 75% pollens without co-presence of qHMS1-Mer and qHMS7-D are selectively killed, indicating that the antidotes function in a toxin-dependent manner. Our results indicate that different toxin-antidote systems provide stacked reproductive isolation for maintaining species identity and shed light on breakdown of hybrid male sterility.