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CHAPTER 38 PLANT REPRODUCTION Sexual Reproduction & Biotechnology

CHAPTER 38 PLANT REPRODUCTION Sexual Reproduction & Biotechnology

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Page 1: CHAPTER 38 PLANT REPRODUCTION Sexual Reproduction & Biotechnology

CHAPTER 38 PLANT REPRODUCTION

Sexual Reproduction & Biotechnology

Page 2: CHAPTER 38 PLANT REPRODUCTION Sexual Reproduction & Biotechnology

Floral Organs

Page 3: CHAPTER 38 PLANT REPRODUCTION Sexual Reproduction & Biotechnology

• Sepals and petals are nonreproductive organs.

• Sepals: enclose and protect the floral bud before it opens; usually green and more leaf-like in appearance.

• In many angiosperms, the petals are brightly colored to attract pollinators.

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Stamens: male reproductive organs

• Stalk: the filament

• Anther: pollen sacs.

- The pollen sacs produce pollen.

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Carpels: female reproductive organs• Ovary- base of the carpel

- Ovules

- Egg cell - Embryo Sac (female

gametophyte), i.e., seed

• Stigma- platform for pollen grain

• Style- slender neck, connects ovary and stigma

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• The stamens and carpels of flowers contain sporangia, within which the spores and then gametophytes develop.

• The male gametophytes are sperm-producing structures called pollen grains, which form within the pollen sacs of anthers.

• The female gametophytes are egg-producing structures called embryo sacs, which form within the ovules in ovaries.

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• Pollination begins the process by which the male and female gametophytes are brought together so that their gametes can unite.

• Pollination- when pollen released from anthers lands on a stigma.

• Each pollen grain produces a pollen tube, which grows down into the ovary via the style and discharges sperm into the embryo sac, fertilizing the egg.

• The zygote gives rise to an embryo.

• The ovule develops into a seed and the entire ovary develops into a fruit containing one or more seeds.

• Fruits disperse seeds away from the source plant where the seed germinates.

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Function of Flowers

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Classification of Flowers

• Complete Versus Incomplete Flowers

• Complete: possess sepals, petals, stamens, and carpels

• Incomplete: lack one or more of these components

• Perfect Versus Imperfect Flowers

• Perfect: possess both stamens and carpels

• Imperfect: possess either stamens (staminate) or carpels (carpelate), but not both

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Complete Flower

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Monoecious Versus Dioecious

• Monoecious: both staminate and carpellate flowers are found together on the same plant (e.g., corn).

• Dioecious: staminate flowers occur on separate plants from those that carry carpellate flowers (e.g., date palms).

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Monoecious

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Dioecious

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Angiosperm Life Cycle

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Important Things to Note About Angiosperm Life Cycles

• Mature pollen grains are entire haploid male gametophyte plants.

• Microsporangia in anthers produce microsporocytes that undergo meiosis and become haploid microspores.

• Each microspore undergoes mitosis to produce two-celled male gametophyte plants (pollen grains).

• One cell is the generative cell while the other is the tube cell.

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Important Things to Note About Angiosperm Life Cycles

• Entire mature female gametophyte plants spend their entire lives supported by the parent sporophyte.

• Megasporangia in ovules produce megasporocytes that each undergo meiosis and become four haploid megaspores.

• Only one of these four cells become functional megaspores, the remaining three degenerating.

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Important Things to Note About Angiosperm Life Cycles

• The haploid nucleus of the megaspore undergoes three mitotic divisions to produce a multinucleate cell with eight haploid nuclei.

• Cytokinesis divides these nuclei into seven cells: three antipodal cells, two synergids, one egg cell, and one binucleate central cell.

• Together these cells form the mature female gametophyte or embryo sac.

Page 18: CHAPTER 38 PLANT REPRODUCTION Sexual Reproduction & Biotechnology

Important Things to Note About Angiosperm Life Cycles

• Fertilization involves a double fertilization event.

• After attachment to the stigma, the haploid generative cell of a pollen grain undergoes mitosis to produce two sperm nuclei.

• The two sperm nuclei migrate down the pollen tube as it elongates through the style to the ovary containing the ovules.

• One sperm nucleus enters the egg cell; the other enters the binucleate central cell of the female gametophyte.

Page 19: CHAPTER 38 PLANT REPRODUCTION Sexual Reproduction & Biotechnology

Important Things to Note About Angiosperm Life Cycles

• The central cell is trinucleate for a while.

• Fusion of all three haploid nucleus yield one triploid nucleus.

• Mitosis of the triploid central cell produces the multinucleate triploid endosperm tissue.

• This endosperm tissue represents a source of stored organic energy to be used by the developing sporophyte embryo (derived from the zygote) and to be used during seed germination.

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• The development of angiosperm gametophytes involves meiosis and mitosis.

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• The male gametophyte begins its development within the sporangia (pollen sacs) of the anther.

• Within the sporangia are microsporocytes, each of which will from four haploid microspores through meiosis.

• Each microspore can eventually give rise to a haploid male gametophyte.

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• A microspore divides once by mitosis and produces a generative cell and a tube cell.

• The generative cell forms sperm.

• The tube cell, enclosing the generative cell, produces the pollen tube, which delivers sperm to the egg.

Page 23: CHAPTER 38 PLANT REPRODUCTION Sexual Reproduction & Biotechnology

Pollen Tubes

Page 24: CHAPTER 38 PLANT REPRODUCTION Sexual Reproduction & Biotechnology

Pollen Grains• This is a pollen grain, an immature male gametophyte.

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Barriers to Self-Fertilization• Stamens and carpels may mature at different times.

• Self-incompatibility- plant rejects its own pollen

• Plant design prevents an animal pollinator from transferring pollen from the anthers to the stigma of the same flower.

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The Genetic Basis for the Inhibition of Self-Fertilization

S-genes: self-incompatibility gene

• If a pollen grain and the carpel’s stigma have matching alleles at the S-locus, then the pollen grain fails to initiate or complete the formation of a pollen tube.

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Pollen Tube Formation and Double Fertilization

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Seed Development

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Release of Sugars from the Endosperm During Germination

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Fate of the Endosperm• Typical Monocot (e.g., corn)

• endosperm present in substantial quantities in mature seed.

• cotyledon absorbs nutrients from endosperm during seed germination.

• Typical Dicot (e.g, garden bean)

• endosperm completely absorbed into cotyledons during seed maturation.

• Other Dicots (e.g., castor bean)

• endosperm only partially absorbed by cotyledons during seed maturation.

• remainder of endosperm absorbed by cotyledons during germination.

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Seed Structure

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Relationship of the Flower to the Fruit

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• As the seeds are developing from ovules, the ovary of the flower is developing into a fruit, which protects the enclosed seeds and aids in their dispersal by wind or animals.

• Pollination triggers hormonal changes that cause the ovary to begin its transformation into a fruit.

• If a flower has not been pollinated, fruit usually does not develop, and the entire flower withers and falls away.

The ovary develops into a fruit adapted for seed dispersal

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Fruit Formation

• The ovary wall becomes the pericarp, the thickened wall of the fruit

• Other flower parts wither and are shed.

• However, in some angiosperms, other floral parts contribute to what we call a fruit.

Development of a pea fruit (pod)

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Functions of the Fruit

• Protection of the enclosed seed (e.g., pea pods).

• Facilitating dispersal.

• wings for wind dispersal (e.g., maple).

• hocks and barbs for attachment to animal fur or avian feathers (e.g., cocklebur).

• sweet, fleshy fruit encouraging ingestion and dispersal of seeds by animals (e.g., cherry).

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Fruits

QuickTime™ and a Cinepak decompressor are needed to see this picture.

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Types of Fruits

Simple Fruits

Aggregate Fruits

Multiple Fruits

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Seed Dormancy

• Function: allows seeds to germinate at the most optimal time.

• Length of dormancy

• Signals triggering the end of dormancy.

• occurrence of water

• period of cold temperature

• fire

• light

• scarification

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Germination of Bean

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Germination of a Pea

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Germination of Corn

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Genet Concept

Asexual and Sexual Reproduction in the Life

Histories of Plants

Asexual and Sexual Reproduction in the Life

Histories of Plants

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Types of Asexual Reproduction in Plants

• Vegetative Reproduction

• consequence of the existence of meristematic tissues and indeterminate growth in plants

• typically involves fragmentation

• Apomixis

• =production of seeds without fertilization

• diploid cell in ovule develops into embryo

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Asexual Propagation

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Asexual Propagation of Plants in Agriculture

• Shoot or stem cuttings generate roots.

• Cloning from single leaves.

• Potato eyes used to generate whole potato plants.

• Grafting.

• Plant tissue culture.

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Plant Tissue Culture: Cloning from Individual Cells

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Plant Tissue Culture: Plant biotechnologists have

adopted in vitro methods to create and clone novel plants varieties.

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Genetic Engineering Applications of Plant Tissue Culture

• Injecting foreign DNA into host cells

• Protoplast fusion

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A DNA Gun

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Protoplasts

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MonocultureRisks and Benefits

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Humans as Genetic Engineers

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Some Definitions Related to Plant Development

development

• the sum of all of the changes that progressively elaborate an organism’s body; involves growth, morphogenesis, and cellular differentiation

growth

• an irreversible increase in size resulting from increases in cell number and size

morphogenesis

• the development of form

cellular differentiation

• the specialization of cells into different types with different functions

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Plant and Animal Development

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Lifelong Morphogenesis

• Indeterminant growth in plants means that morphogenesis is a continuous, never-ending process.

• Plant morphogenesis involves oriented cell division and growth but not the migration of cells to different parts of the plant body.

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Role of the Cytoskeleton in the Orientation of Cell Division

• Ring of microtubles (preprophase band) in the cortex of the cell determines the division plane.

• Preprophase band of microtubules disappears, leaving an imprint of actin microfilaments.

• hold nucleus in place until spindle apparatus forms.

• directs the movements of cell plate vesicles.

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Orientation of Mitosis

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Cell Growth Depends upon the Orientation of Cellulose Microfibrils in the Cell Wall

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Hypothetical Mechanism for the Orientation of Cellulose Microfibrils

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Cellular Differentiation in Plants

• Involves changes in gene expression, not in the genomic information of the cells.

• Pattern Formation.

• development of specific structures in specific locations

• depends upon positional information of the cells

• also related to positional consequences of cell division and elongation

• Clonal analysis.

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Genetic Basis for Pattern Formation in Flower Development

Genetic Basis for Pattern

Formation in Flower

Development

Genetic Basis for Pattern

Formation in Flower

Development