During seed development, coordinated developmental programs lead to the formation of the embryo, endosperm and seed coat. The maternal effects of the genes affected in the fertilisation-independent seed class of mutants play an important role in seed development. The plant Polycomb proteins MEDEA and FERTILIZATION-INDEPENDENT ENDOSPERM physically interact and form a complex, in a manner similar to that of their counterparts in animals. Maternal-effect phenotypes can result from regulation by genomic imprinting, a phenomenon of critical importance for both sexual and apomictic seed development
In higher plants, seed development requires maternal gene activity in the haploid (gametophytic) as ...
SummaryEndosperm gene imprinting has long been speculated to control nutrient allocation to seeds. F...
In angiosperms, seed development initiates after a double fertilization event in the female gametoph...
Genomic imprinting, the parent-of-origin-specific expression of genes, plays an important role in th...
Reproductive isolation is considered to play a key part in evolution, and plants and animals have de...
Seed development requires coordinated expression of embryo and endosperm and has contributions from ...
Sexual reproduction in flowering plants is fundamental to seed formation. After fertilization, the e...
In developing progeny of mammals the two parental genomes are differentially expressed according to ...
In sexually reproducing flowering plants both embryo and endosperm development is initated by fertil...
Author Summary Crosses between plants of different ploidy often fail because seed development does n...
Gene imprinting, the differential expression of maternal and paternal alleles, independently evolved...
Balanced maternal and paternal genome contributions are a requirement for successful seed developmen...
Balanced maternal and paternal genome contributions are a requirement for successful seed developmen...
Seed development in angiosperms is dependent on the interplay among different transcriptional progra...
AbstractRecent studies have shown that the Arabidopsis MEDEA gene is imprinted, so that paternally a...
In higher plants, seed development requires maternal gene activity in the haploid (gametophytic) as ...
SummaryEndosperm gene imprinting has long been speculated to control nutrient allocation to seeds. F...
In angiosperms, seed development initiates after a double fertilization event in the female gametoph...
Genomic imprinting, the parent-of-origin-specific expression of genes, plays an important role in th...
Reproductive isolation is considered to play a key part in evolution, and plants and animals have de...
Seed development requires coordinated expression of embryo and endosperm and has contributions from ...
Sexual reproduction in flowering plants is fundamental to seed formation. After fertilization, the e...
In developing progeny of mammals the two parental genomes are differentially expressed according to ...
In sexually reproducing flowering plants both embryo and endosperm development is initated by fertil...
Author Summary Crosses between plants of different ploidy often fail because seed development does n...
Gene imprinting, the differential expression of maternal and paternal alleles, independently evolved...
Balanced maternal and paternal genome contributions are a requirement for successful seed developmen...
Balanced maternal and paternal genome contributions are a requirement for successful seed developmen...
Seed development in angiosperms is dependent on the interplay among different transcriptional progra...
AbstractRecent studies have shown that the Arabidopsis MEDEA gene is imprinted, so that paternally a...
In higher plants, seed development requires maternal gene activity in the haploid (gametophytic) as ...
SummaryEndosperm gene imprinting has long been speculated to control nutrient allocation to seeds. F...
In angiosperms, seed development initiates after a double fertilization event in the female gametoph...