A group-1 grass pollen allergen influences the outcome of pollen competition in maize.

Worldwide, 400 million people suffer from hay fever and seasonal asthma. The major causative agents of these allergies are pollen specific proteins called the group-1 grass pollen allergens. Although details of their antigenicity have been studied for 40 years with an eye towards immunotherapy, thei...

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Main Authors: Elene R Valdivia, Yajun Wu, Lian-Chao Li, Daniel J Cosgrove, Andrew G Stephenson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2007-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1764715?pdf=render
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author Elene R Valdivia
Yajun Wu
Lian-Chao Li
Daniel J Cosgrove
Andrew G Stephenson
author_facet Elene R Valdivia
Yajun Wu
Lian-Chao Li
Daniel J Cosgrove
Andrew G Stephenson
author_sort Elene R Valdivia
collection DOAJ
description Worldwide, 400 million people suffer from hay fever and seasonal asthma. The major causative agents of these allergies are pollen specific proteins called the group-1 grass pollen allergens. Although details of their antigenicity have been studied for 40 years with an eye towards immunotherapy, their function in the plant has drawn scant attention. Zea m 1 constitutes a class of abundant grass pollen allergens coded for by several genes that loosen the walls of grass cells, including the maize stigma and style. We have examined the impact of a transposon insertion into one of these genes (EXPB1, the most abundant isoform of Zea m 1) on the production of Zea m 1 protein, pollen viability, and pollen tube growth, both in vitro and in vivo. We also examined the effect of the insertional mutation on the competitive ability of the pollen by experimentally varying the sizes of the pollen load deposited onto stigmas using pollen from heterozygous plants and then screening the progeny for the presence of the transposon using PCR. We found that the insertional mutation reduced the levels of Zea m 1 in maize pollen, but had no effect on pollen viability, in vitro pollen tube growth or the proportion of progeny sired when small pollen loads are deposited onto stigmas. However, when large pollen loads are deposited onto the stigmas, the transposon mutation is vastly underrepresented in the progeny, indicating that this major pollen allergen has a large effect on pollen tube growth rates in vivo, and plays an important role in determining the outcome of the pollen-pollen competition for access to the ovules. We propose that the extraordinary abundance (4% of the extractable protein in maize pollen) of this major pollen allergen is the result of selection for a trait that functions primarily in providing differential access to ovules.
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spelling doaj.art-a33407b4e81e401dbb95b550c33e63c42022-12-21T19:38:00ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032007-01-0121e15410.1371/journal.pone.0000154A group-1 grass pollen allergen influences the outcome of pollen competition in maize.Elene R ValdiviaYajun WuLian-Chao LiDaniel J CosgroveAndrew G StephensonWorldwide, 400 million people suffer from hay fever and seasonal asthma. The major causative agents of these allergies are pollen specific proteins called the group-1 grass pollen allergens. Although details of their antigenicity have been studied for 40 years with an eye towards immunotherapy, their function in the plant has drawn scant attention. Zea m 1 constitutes a class of abundant grass pollen allergens coded for by several genes that loosen the walls of grass cells, including the maize stigma and style. We have examined the impact of a transposon insertion into one of these genes (EXPB1, the most abundant isoform of Zea m 1) on the production of Zea m 1 protein, pollen viability, and pollen tube growth, both in vitro and in vivo. We also examined the effect of the insertional mutation on the competitive ability of the pollen by experimentally varying the sizes of the pollen load deposited onto stigmas using pollen from heterozygous plants and then screening the progeny for the presence of the transposon using PCR. We found that the insertional mutation reduced the levels of Zea m 1 in maize pollen, but had no effect on pollen viability, in vitro pollen tube growth or the proportion of progeny sired when small pollen loads are deposited onto stigmas. However, when large pollen loads are deposited onto the stigmas, the transposon mutation is vastly underrepresented in the progeny, indicating that this major pollen allergen has a large effect on pollen tube growth rates in vivo, and plays an important role in determining the outcome of the pollen-pollen competition for access to the ovules. We propose that the extraordinary abundance (4% of the extractable protein in maize pollen) of this major pollen allergen is the result of selection for a trait that functions primarily in providing differential access to ovules.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1764715?pdf=render
spellingShingle Elene R Valdivia
Yajun Wu
Lian-Chao Li
Daniel J Cosgrove
Andrew G Stephenson
A group-1 grass pollen allergen influences the outcome of pollen competition in maize.
PLoS ONE
title A group-1 grass pollen allergen influences the outcome of pollen competition in maize.
title_full A group-1 grass pollen allergen influences the outcome of pollen competition in maize.
title_fullStr A group-1 grass pollen allergen influences the outcome of pollen competition in maize.
title_full_unstemmed A group-1 grass pollen allergen influences the outcome of pollen competition in maize.
title_short A group-1 grass pollen allergen influences the outcome of pollen competition in maize.
title_sort group 1 grass pollen allergen influences the outcome of pollen competition in maize
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC1764715?pdf=render
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