International audienceSelf-incompatibility (SI) is the flowering plant reproductive system in which self pollen tube growth is inhibited, thereby preventing self-fertilization. SI has evolved independently in several different flowering plant lineages. In all Brassicaceae species in which the molecular basis of SI has been investigated in detail, the product of the S-locus receptor kinase (SRK) gene functions as receptor in the initial step of the self pollen-rejection pathway, while that of the S-locus cysteine-rich (SCR) gene functions as ligand. Here we examine the hypothesis that the S locus in the Brassicaceae genus Leavenworthia is paralogous with the S locus previously characterized in other members of the family. We also test the hy...
AbstractSelf-incompatibility (SI) enables flowering plants to discriminate between self- and non-sel...
International audienceEvolutionary transitions between mating systems have occurred repetitively and...
Selfing is a frequent evolutionary trend in angiosperms, and is a suitable model for studying the re...
Self-incompatibility (SI) is the flowering plant reproductive system in which self pollen tube growt...
Self-incompatibility (SI) is the flowering plant reproductive system in which self pollen tube growt...
International audienceFlowering plants possess self-incompatibility (SI) mechanisms that promote out...
International audienceSelf-incompatibility (SI) is a genetic system that prevents self-fertilization...
The S locus, a single polymorphic locus, is responsible for self-incompatibility (SI) in the Brassic...
The adoption of self-fertilization from an ancestral outcrossing state is one of the most common evo...
Self-incompatibility (SI) is a genetic mechanism that allows plants to enforce outcrossing by reject...
Self-incompatibility in Brassica species is regulated by a set of S-locus genes: SLG, SRK, and SP11/...
The evolutionary transition from outcrossing to self-fertilization (selfing) through the loss of sel...
Transitions from cross-fertilizing to self-fertilizing mating systems have oc-curred frequently in n...
In higher plants, the self-incompatibility mechanism is important for inhibition of self-fertilizati...
International audienceThe self-incompatibility (SI) response in Brassica involves recognition of sel...
AbstractSelf-incompatibility (SI) enables flowering plants to discriminate between self- and non-sel...
International audienceEvolutionary transitions between mating systems have occurred repetitively and...
Selfing is a frequent evolutionary trend in angiosperms, and is a suitable model for studying the re...
Self-incompatibility (SI) is the flowering plant reproductive system in which self pollen tube growt...
Self-incompatibility (SI) is the flowering plant reproductive system in which self pollen tube growt...
International audienceFlowering plants possess self-incompatibility (SI) mechanisms that promote out...
International audienceSelf-incompatibility (SI) is a genetic system that prevents self-fertilization...
The S locus, a single polymorphic locus, is responsible for self-incompatibility (SI) in the Brassic...
The adoption of self-fertilization from an ancestral outcrossing state is one of the most common evo...
Self-incompatibility (SI) is a genetic mechanism that allows plants to enforce outcrossing by reject...
Self-incompatibility in Brassica species is regulated by a set of S-locus genes: SLG, SRK, and SP11/...
The evolutionary transition from outcrossing to self-fertilization (selfing) through the loss of sel...
Transitions from cross-fertilizing to self-fertilizing mating systems have oc-curred frequently in n...
In higher plants, the self-incompatibility mechanism is important for inhibition of self-fertilizati...
International audienceThe self-incompatibility (SI) response in Brassica involves recognition of sel...
AbstractSelf-incompatibility (SI) enables flowering plants to discriminate between self- and non-sel...
International audienceEvolutionary transitions between mating systems have occurred repetitively and...
Selfing is a frequent evolutionary trend in angiosperms, and is a suitable model for studying the re...