Wh. Cheng et Ps. Chourey, Genetic evidence that invertase-mediated release of hexoses is critical for appropriate carbon partitioning and normal seed development in maize, THEOR A GEN, 98(3-4), 1999, pp. 485-495
Cell wall-bound invertase (CWI) is spatially and temporally the first enzym
e which metabolizes the incoming sucrose in developing seed of maize (Zen m
ays). Our previous studies have shown that the cell wall-bound invertase-2
(INCW2) isozyme encoded by the wild-type gene of the Miniature1 (Mn1) seed
locus plays a critical role in seed development. Null mutations of the gene
, such as the mn1 seed mutant which lacks invertase activity, are associate
d with a loss of similar to 70-80% of the normal seed weight. We show here
that under in vitro kernel culture conditions the hexose-based medium was s
imilar to the sucrose-based medium in promoting the normal development of k
ernels of the Mn1, but not of the mutant mn1, genotype. Anatomical, biochem
ical, and immunohistological data showed that the mn1 kernels retain their
mutant phenotype regardless of the presence of sucrose or hexoses in the cu
lture media. The most drastic changes in the mn1 seed mutant were associate
d with a significant reduction in the size of the endosperm, but not in the
pattern or the level of starch localization. Because Mn1 expression was te
mporally coincident with the endosperm cell divisions, INCW2 must play a cr
itical role in providing hexose sugars for mitotic division, and only a min
or role in generating carbon skeletal substrates for starch biosynthesis in
the early stages of endosperm development. Furthermore, a lack of the wild
-type seed phenotype of the mn1 mutant in hexose media suggests that a meta
bolic release of hexoses catalyzed by INCW2, rather than an exogenous sourc
e, is critical for both generating appropriate sugar-sensing signals for ge
ne expression and for normal endosperm development.