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Featured researches published by Wakana Uchida.


Planta | 2003

Morphological development of anthers induced by the dimorphic smut fungus Microbotryum violaceum in female flowers of the dioecious plant Silene latifolia

Wakana Uchida; Sachihiro Matsunaga; Ryuji Sugiyama; Yusuke Kazama; Shigeyuki Kawano

When inoculated with the dimorphic smut fungus Microbotryum violaceum (Pers.) G. Deml and Oberwinkler, the female flower of the dioecious plant Silene latifolia (Miller) E.H.L. Krause develops anther-like structures filled with spores instead of pollen grains. Using natural scanning electron microscopy, Nomarski interference microscopy, and fluorescence microscopy, we investigated the morphological modifications of the host plant resulting from this parasitism and the localization of smut hyphae in the flower bud. Flowers of infected plants lasted significantly longer than those of healthy plants, probably because the infection strengthened floral organs, such as the flower base and the anther filaments. Smut hyphae were observed throughout all organs of the young flower buds of infected plants, including sepals, petals, stamens, and pistil primordia. In healthy female flowers, anthers initiated sporogenous cell formation, but lacked parietal cell layers. By contrast, the parietal cell layers of infected female flowers differentiated into tapetal tissue, middle cell layers, and endothecial layers, as in the anthers of healthy male flowers. Smut spore formation in the infected anther was initiated in intercellular regions between the sporogenous cells, resulting in degeneration of premature sporogenous cells, tapetal tissue, and middle cell layers. The development of the endothecial layers and epidermis in the infected anther were morphologically normal.


Chromosoma | 2002

Distribution of interstitial telomere-like repeats and their adjacent sequences in a dioecious plant, Silene latifolia

Wakana Uchida; Sachihiro Matsunaga; Ryuji Sugiyama; Fukashi Shibata; Yusuke Kazama; Yutaka Miyazawa; Masahiro Hizume; Shigeyuki Kawano

Abstract. The dioecious plant Silene latifolia has large, heteromorphic X and Y sex chromosomes that are thought to be derived from rearrangements of autosomes. To reveal the origin of the sex chromosomes in S. latifolia, we isolated and characterized telomere-homologous sequences from intra-chromosomal regions (interstitial telomere-like repeats; ITRs) and ITR-adjacent sequences (IASs). Nine genomic DNA fragments with degenerate 84- to 175-bp ITRs were isolated from a genomic library and total genome of male plants. Comparing the nucleotide sequences, the IASs of the nine ITRs were classified into seven elements (IAS-a, IAS-b, IAS-c, IAS-d, IAS-e, IAS-f, and IAS-g) by sequence similarity. The ITRs were grouped into two classes (class-I and -II ITRs) according to the classification of IASs. The class-I ITRs were sub-grouped into three subclasses (subclasses-IA, -IB, and -IC ITRs) based on the arrangement of IAS elements. By contrast, the class-II ITR was located between two different IASs (IAS-f and IAS-g). Genomic Southern analyses showed that both the male and female genomes contained six (IAS-f) to 153 (IAS-d) copies of each IAS per haploid genome. Fluorescence in situ hybridization analyses showed that one IAS element, IAS-d, was distributed in the interstitial and proximal regions of the sex chromosomes of S. latifolia. The distribution of IAS-d is important evidence for past telomere-mediated chromosome rearrangements during the evolution of the sex chromosomes of S. latifolia.


Protoplasma | 2005

Ultrastructural analysis of the behavior of the dimorphic fungus Microbotryum violaceum in fungus-induced anthers of female Silene latifolia flowers

Wakana Uchida; Sachihiro Matsunaga; Shigeyuki Kawano

Summary.The development of male organs is induced in female flowers of the dioecious plant Silene latifolia by infection with the fungus Microbotryum violaceum. Stamens in a healthy female flower grow only to stage 6, whereas those in an infected female flower develop to the mature stage (stage 12), at which the stamens are filled with fungal teliospores instead of pollen grains. To investigate these host–parasite interactions, young floral buds and fungus-induced anthers of infected female flowers were examined by electron microscopy following fixation by a high-pressure freezing method. Using this approach, we found that parasitic hyphae of this fungus contain several extracellular vesicles and have a consistent appearance up to stage 8. At that stage, parasitic hyphae are observed adjacent to dying sporogenous cells in the infected female anther. At stage 9, an increased number of dead and dying sporogenous cells is observed, among which the sporogenous hyphae of the fungus develop and form initial teliospores. Several types of electron-dense material are present in proximity to some fungi at this stage. The initial teliospores contain two types of vacuoles, and the fungus cell wall contains abundant carbohydrate, as revealed by silver protein staining. The sporogenous cell is probably sensitive to infection by the fungus, resulting in disruption. In addition, the fungus accelerates cell death in the anther and utilizes constituents of the dead host cell to form the mature teliospore.


Sexual Plant Reproduction | 2004

Characterization of two SEPALLATA MADS-box genes from the dioecious plant Silene latifolia

Sachihiro Matsunaga; Wakana Uchida; Eduard Kejnovsky; Erika Isono; Françoise Monéger; Boris Vyskot; Shigeyuki Kawano

Two SEPALLATA orthologs, SlSEP1 and SlSEP3, were isolated from male flower buds of the dioecious plant Silene latifolia. Both genes are located on autosomes and not on the sex chromosomes. SlSEP1 and SlSEP3 transcripts were detected specifically in male and female flower buds. Quantitative RT-PCR and in situ hybridization revealed that both genes were expressed in young flower meristems, developing petals, male anthers, and female ovules. However, neither transcript was detected in suppressed gynoecia of male flower buds or suppressed anthers of female flower buds. The genes were differentially expressed during anther development, with the SlSEP1 transcript accumulating in anther walls and tapetal cells, and the SlSEP3 transcript accumulating in tetrads as well as anther walls and tapeta. Transcripts of both genes were also detected in flower buds of mutants with deletions of some parts of the Y chromosome, suggesting that neither gene is directly involved in sex determination.


Genes & Genetic Systems | 2002

Interstitial telomere-like repeats in the Arabidopsis thaliana genome

Wakana Uchida; Sachihiro Matsunaga; Ryuji Sugiyama; Shigeyuki Kawano


Genome | 2002

LTR retrotransposons in the dioecious plant Silene latifolia.

Sachihiro Matsunaga; Fumi Yagisawa; Maki Yamamoto; Wakana Uchida; Shunsuke Nakao; Shigeyuki Kawano


Journal of Plant Research | 2003

Organization of the KpnI family of chromosomal distal-end satellite DNAs in Silene latifolia

Yusuke Kazama; Ryuji Sugiyama; Sachihiro Matsunaga; Fukashi Shibata; Wakana Uchida; Masahiro Hizume; Shigeyuki Kawano


Genome | 2006

The clustering of four subfamilies of satellite DNA at individual chromosome ends in Silene latifolia

Yusuke Kazama; Ryuji Sugiyama; Yumiko Suto; Wakana Uchida; Shigeyuki Kawano


Plant and Cell Physiology | 2005

Expression of the Floral B-Function Gene SLM2 in Female Flowers of Silene latifolia Infected with the Smut Fungus Microbotryum violaceum

Yusuke Kazama; Ayako Koizumi; Wakana Uchida; Amr Ageez; Shigeyuki Kawano


Plant and Cell Physiology | 2004

Sex-Specific Cell Division during Development of Unisexual Flowers in the Dioecious Plant Silene latifolia

Sachihiro Matsunaga; Wakana Uchida; Shigeyuki Kawano

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