Number of divisions required for gametogenesis

Range Male 3 (1 meiotic+2 mitotic): Female 4 (1 meiotic+3 mitotic)
Organism Thale cress Arabidopsis thaliana
Reference Takeda S, Paszkowski J. DNA methylation and epigenetic inheritance during plant gametogenesis. Chromosoma. 2006 Feb115(1):27-35 p. 27 right column and Figure 1 p. 28 link - link PubMed ID16249938
Primary Source Wilson ZA, Yang C. Plant gametogenesis: conservation and contrasts in development. Reproduction. 2004 Nov128(5):483-92. free online article p. 487 fig. 2PubMed ID15509694
Method To achieve double fertilization characteristic of seed plants, the development of male and female gametophytes requires two and three postmeiotic mitotic divisions, respectively. Male gametogenesis is initiated with the differentiation and meiotic division of diploid microspore mother cells, which originate from archespores of another primordia (McCormick 2004 PMID 15037731, primary source). After meiosis, four haploid microspores form a tetrad that later disperses free microspores (Fig. 1). The microspores undergo asymmetric mitoses, giving rise to an immature pollen grain with generative and vegetative cells. The vegetative cell ceases division, whereas the generative cell undergoes additional mitosis, leading to two sperm cells required for double fertilization (Fig. 1). The female gametophyte differentiates from diploid ovule cells by differentiation of a megaspore mother cell, which undergoes meiotic division into four megaspores (primary source fig. 2). More than 70% of flowering plants, including the model organisms Arabidopsis and rice, exhibit the polygonum type of gametophyte development in which three of four megaspores degenerate, leaving a single meiotic product as the functional haploid megaspore (Yadegari and Drews 2004 PMID 15075395) (Fig. 1). The megaspore undergoes three mitotic divisions to produce eight nuclei of the embryo sack: one of the egg cell, two of the synergid cells, three of the antipodal cells, and two polar nuclei that will undergo a fusion to form the diploid nucleus of the central cell (Fig. 1).
Comments For diagram describing male gametogenesis in Arabidopsis see Borg 2010 Life after meiosis: patterning the angiosperm male gametophyte. PMID 20298224 fig. 1 figure link - link
Entered by Uri M
ID 105643