首页 | 主题 | 图库 | 问答 | 文摘 | 原创 | 百科

历史 | 地理 | 人物 | 艺术 | 体育 | 科学 | 音乐 | 电影 | 信息技术 | 世界遗产

 开放、中立,源自维基百科

Personal tools

Apomixis

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

In botany, apomixis (also called apogamy) is asexual reproduction, without fertilization. In plants with independent gametophytes (notably ferns), apomixis refers to the formation of sporophytes by parthenogenesis of gametophyte cells. Apomixis also occurs in flowering plants, where it is also called agamospermy. Apomixis in flowering plants mainly occurs in two forms: In agamogenesis (also called gametophytic apomixis), the embryo arises from an unfertilized egg that was produced without meiosis. In adventitious embryony , a nucellar embryo is formed from the surrounding nucellus tissue. Apomictically produced seeds are genetically identical to the parent plant.

As apomictic plants are genetically identical from one generation to the next, each has the characters of a true species, maintaining distinctions from other congeneric apomicts, while having much smaller differences than is normal between species of most genera. They are therefore often called microspecies. In some genera, it is possible to identify and name hundreds or even thousands of microspecies, which may be grouped together as aggregate species, typically listed in Floras with the convention "Genus species agg." (e.g., the bramble, Rubus fruticosus agg.). Good examples of apomixis can be found in the genera Crataegus (hawthorns), Amelanchier (shadbush), Sorbus (rowans and whitebeams), Rubus (brambles or blackberries), Hieracium (hawkweeds) and Taraxacum (dandelions). Although the evolutionary advantages of sexual reproduction are lost, apomixis does pass along traits fortuitous for individual evolutionary fitness.

A unique example of male apomixis has recently been discovered in the Saharan Cypress, Cupressus dupreziana, where the seeds are derived entirely from the pollen with no genetic contribution from the female "parent" (Pichot, et al., 2000, 2001).

In zoology parthenogenesis is the animal equivalent of apomixis. Recently, Matthew Meselson won the Lasker Award 2004. He and his students are probing why sex is necessary for evolution. Some small aquatic animals, bdelloid rotifers, are apomictic and have survived for millions of years without sex. They serve as an experimental model system. Meselson assumes that the advantage of sex may lie in its ability to reduce what he calls "genetic parasites" (i.e. transposable elements). These are pieces of DNA that multiply on their own and can cause genetic damage. Bdelloid rotifers don't appear to have such parasites.

Contents

See also

References in Popular Culture

The patenting of apomixis is the MacGuffin at the core of British journalist Peter Pringle's thriller The Day of the Dandelion (Simon & Shuster, 2007).

Further reading

References

de:Apomixis es:Apomixia fr:Apomixie nl:Apomixie no:Apomixis pl:Apomiksja pt:Apomixia sk:Apomixia sv:Apomixis

AD Links