dioecious plant
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Author(s):  
T. M. Kostruba ◽  
G. A. Chorna ◽  
T. V. Mamchur

The distribution of a potentially invasive species from the Cucurbitaceae family — Thladiantha dubia is considered in Ukraine. The current significant increase in the distribution of the species in many regions of Ukraine has been clarified. It was established that the species was introduced in Uman in 1964. It was found that due to vegetative propagation the species spread beyond the primary introduction site in the botanical nursery of Uman National Univer- sity of Horticulture and around it. The absence of generative reproduction in the analyzed introductory population was established, as there are only male specimens of this dioecious plant. Measures to prevent further spread of Thladiantha dubia are recommended.


CYTOLOGIA ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 86 (4) ◽  
pp. 323-328
Author(s):  
Taiki Kobayashi ◽  
Masako Takahashi ◽  
Ryo Nishijima ◽  
Ryuji Sugiyama ◽  
Kotaro Ishii ◽  
...  

CYTOLOGIA ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 86 (4) ◽  
pp. 329-338
Author(s):  
Wataru Aonuma ◽  
Hiroki Kawamoto ◽  
Yusuke Kazama ◽  
Kotaro Ishii ◽  
Tomoko Abe ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenta Shirasawa ◽  
Saki Ueta ◽  
Kyoko Murakami ◽  
Mostafa Abdelrahman ◽  
Akira Kanno ◽  
...  

Asparagus kiusianus is a disease-resistant dioecious plant species and a wild relative of garden asparagus (A. officinalis). To enhance A. kiusianus genomic resources, advance plant science, and facilitate asparagus breeding, we determined the genome sequences of the male and female lines of A. kiusianus. Genome sequence reads obtained with a linked-read technology were assembled into four haplotype-phased contig sequences (~1.6 Gb each) for the male and female lines. The contig sequences were aligned onto the chromosome sequences of garden asparagus to construct pseudomolecule sequences. Approximately 55,000 potential protein-encoding genes were predicted in each genome assembly, and ~70% of the genome sequence was annotated as repetitive. Comparative analysis of the genomes of the two species revealed structural and sequence variants between the two species as well as between the male and female lines of each species. Genes with high sequence similarity with the male-specific sex determinant gene in A. officinalis, MSE1/AoMYB35/AspTDF1, were presented in the genomes of the male line but absent from the female genome assemblies. Overall, the genome sequence assemblies, gene sequences, and structural and sequence variants determined in this study will reveal the genetic mechanisms underlying sexual differentiation in plants, and will accelerate disease-resistance breeding in garden asparagus.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carni Lipson Feder ◽  
Oded Cohen ◽  
Anna Shapira ◽  
Itay Katzir ◽  
Reut Peer ◽  
...  

In the last decades, growing evidence showed the therapeutic capabilities of Cannabis plants. These capabilities were attributed to the specialized secondary metabolites stored in the glandular trichomes of female inflorescences, mainly phytocannabinoids and terpenoids. The accumulation of the metabolites in the flower is versatile and influenced by a largely unknown regulation system, attributed to genetic, developmental and environmental factors. As Cannabis is a dioecious plant, one main factor is fertilization after successful pollination. Fertilized flowers are considerably less potent, likely due to changes in the contents of phytocannabinoids and terpenoids; therefore, this study examined the effect of fertilization on metabolite composition by crossbreeding (-)-Δ9-trans-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)- or cannabidiol (CBD)-rich female plants with different male plants: THC-rich, CBD-rich, or the original female plant induced to develop male pollen sacs. We used advanced analytical methods to assess the phytocannabinoids and terpenoids content, including a newly developed semi-quantitative analysis for terpenoids without analytical standards. We found that fertilization significantly decreased phytocannabinoids content. For terpenoids, the subgroup of monoterpenoids had similar trends to the phytocannabinoids, proposing both are commonly regulated in the plant. The sesquiterpenoids remained unchanged in the THC-rich female and had a trend of decrease in the CBD-rich female. Additionally, specific phytocannabinoids and terpenoids showed an uncommon increase in concentration followed by fertilization with particular male plants. Our results demonstrate that although the profile of phytocannabinoids and their relative ratios were kept, fertilization substantially decreased the concentration of nearly all phytocannabinoids in the plant regardless of the type of fertilizing male. Our findings may point to the functional roles of secondary metabolites in Cannabis.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joanna L Rifkin ◽  
Solomiya Hnatovzka ◽  
Meng Yuan ◽  
Bianca M Sacchi ◽  
Baharul I Choudhury ◽  
...  

There is growing evidence across diverse taxa for sex differences in the genomic landscape of recombination, but the causes and consequences of these differences remain poorly understood. Strong recombination landscape dimorphism between the sexes could have important implications for the dynamics of sex chromosome evolution and turnover because low recombination in the heterogametic sex can help favour the spread of sexually antagonistic alleles. Here, we present a sex-specific linkage map and revised genome assembly of Rumex hastatulus, representing the first characterization of sex differences in recombination landscape in a dioecious plant. We provide evidence for strong sex differences in recombination, with pericentromeric regions of highly suppressed recombination in males that cover over half of the genome. These differences are found on autosomes as well as sex chromosomes, suggesting that pre-existing differences in recombination may have contributed to sex chromosome formation and divergence. Analysis of segregation distortion suggests that haploid selection due to pollen competition occurs disproportionately in regions with low male recombination. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that sex differences in the recombination landscape contributed to the formation of a large heteromorphic pair of sex chromosomes, and that pollen competition is an important determinant of recombination dimorphism.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Othman Al‐Dossary ◽  
Bader Alsubaie ◽  
Ardashir Kharabian‐Masouleh ◽  
Ibrahim Al‐Mssallem ◽  
Agnelo Furtado ◽  
...  

eLife ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karin Schrieber ◽  
Sarah Catherine Paul ◽  
Levke Valena Höche ◽  
Andrea Cecilia Salas ◽  
Rabi Didszun ◽  
...  

We study the effects of inbreeding in a dioecious plant on its interaction with pollinating insects and test whether the magnitude of such effects is shaped by plant individual sex and the evolutionary histories of plant populations. We recorded spatial, scent, colour and rewarding flower traits as well as pollinator visitation rates in experimentally inbred and outbred, male and female Silene latifolia plants from European and North American populations differing in their evolutionary histories. We found that inbreeding specifically impairs spatial flower traits and floral scent. Our results support that sex-specific selection and gene expression may have partially magnified these inbreeding costs for females, and that divergent evolutionary histories altered the genetic architecture underlying inbreeding effects across population origins. Moreover, the results indicate that inbreeding effects on floral scent may have a huge potential to disrupt interactions among plants and nocturnal moth pollinators, which are mediated by elaborate chemical communication.


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