Further analysis revealed a distinctive rabbit-shaped tissue structure that functions as a gateway. This structure, named the "Kasahara Gateway" in honor of its discoverer, represents the first new plant tissue identified since the mid-19th century.
The signal Kasahara observed resulted from callose deposition, which blocks the flow of nutrients and hormones into unfertilized seeds. Closure of the gateways led to the seeds not receiving nutrients and dying. The researchers termed this the "closed state." On the other hand, when fertilization occurs, the hypocotyl detects this success and dissolves the callose, allowing nutrients to flow into the seed and enabling growth. The researchers called this the "open state."
"When the flow of nutrients was compared between successfully fertilized and unsuccessful embryos, it was found that the inflow of nutrients was observed only in the successful embryos, whereas it was completely blocked in the unsuccessful ones," Kasahara explained. "This limits the amount of resources wasted on unviable seeds."
The gateway's ability to switch between open-and-closed states suggested genetic regulation. The researchers examined fertilized plant hypocotyls to identify potential genetic controls.
They identified a gene called AtBG_ppap that was upregulated exclusively in fertilized hypocotyls and identified its role in dissolving callose. When they modified hypocotyls to overexpress AtBG_ppap, the gateway remained permanently in the open gate state, increasing nutrient uptake.
"This led us to the realization that keeping the gateway permanently open could enlarge seeds," Kasahara said. "When we tested this theory with rice seeds, we made seeds that were 9% bigger. With seeds from other species, we succeeded in increases of as much as 16.5%."
Their findings represent a significant advancement in seed enhancement in plant breeding. Maintaining a permanently open state could substantially increase yields of important crops.
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