Plant and Cell Physiology Advance Access originally published online on July 14, 2008
Plant and Cell Physiology 2008 49(10):1484-1494; doi:10.1093/pcp/pcn102
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Special Issue - Mini Review |
Genome Barriers between Nuclei and Mitochondria Exemplified by Cytoplasmic Male Sterility
Graduate School of Agricultural Science, Tohoku University, Sendai, 981-8555 Japan
*Corresponding author: E-mail, torikin{at}bios.tohoku.ac.jp; Fax, +81-22-717-8834
| Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Since plants retain genomes of an extremely large size in mitochondria (200–2,400 kb), and mitochondrial protein complexes are comprised of chimeric structures of nuclear- and mitochondrial-encoded subunits, coordination of gene expression between the nuclei and mitochondria is indispensable for sound plant development. It has been well documented that the nucleus regulates organelle gene expression. This regulation is called anterograde regulation. On the other hand, recent studies have demonstrated that signals emitted from organelles regulate nuclear gene expression. This process is known as retrograde signaling. Incompatibility caused by genome barriers between a nucleus and foreign mitochondria destines the fate of pollen to be dead in cytoplasmic male sterility (CMS), and studies of CMS confirm that pollen fertility is associated with anterograde/retrograde signaling. This review summarizes the current perspectives in CMS and fertility restoration, mainly from the viewpoint of anterograde/retrograde signaling.
Keywords: Anterograde signaling - Cytoplasmic male sterility - Mitochondria - Retrograde signaling
Abbreviations: AOX, alternative oxidase; CMS, cytoplasmic male sterility; MCAG, mitochondrial CMS-associated gene; PCD, programmed cell death; Rf, fertility restorer gene.
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Since its first observation in maize (Rhoades 1931
| Unique gene structures found in mitochondrial genome of CMS lines |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The common rules of MCAGs at present are as follows: (i) is unique in CMS mitochondria, and (ii) receives post-transcriptional/translational regulation by nuclear-encoded fertility restorer gene(s). Details on (ii) are mentioned in the later sections. The first evidence of MCAG obtained is T-urf13, a gene encoding a 13 kDa protein found only in T mitochondrial genome in maize (Dewey et al. 1987
A similar MCAG was also found in petunia. Male fertile and sterile lines with recombinant mitochondrial DNA caused by somatic hybrids were used to identify the pcf (petunia CMS-associated fused) locus (Boeshore et al. 1985
). PCF protein was later shown to be expressed as 45 kDa protein and processed into the 19-kDa form, and proteins in both forms were present in soluble fractions or loosely attached to membrane (Nivison et al. 1994
). A parallel situation was found in I-12 CMS derived from wild beet cytoplasm, in which a unique 12-kDa polypeptide was found by an in organello protein translation experiment (Yamamoto et al. 2008
). As in the case of petunia PCF, 12-kDa polypeptide designated as ORF129 was loosely associated with mitochondrial membrane and was also found in the matrix fraction.
Unique MCAG features were found in the same sugar beet species but from a different strain, Owen CMS. The 5' leader sequence of an ATP synthase subunit encoding atp6 was found to encode a variant 35-kDa polypeptide only in Owen CMS mitochondria (Yamamoto et al. 2005
). This 35-kDa polypeptide, designated as preSatp6, was found to be membrane localized, and BN-PAGE analysis concluded that it would form a pentamer or hexamer within the inner membrane (Yamamoto et al. 2005
).
Genes unique in the CMS lines of radish, sunflower and rice have also been identified. In the case of Ogura CMS, the presence of a 19-kDa protein, ORF138, has been reported to be correlated with CMS (Bonhomme et al. 1992
, Grelon et al. 1994
). An orthologous sequence has been found from Kosena CMS radish, which strain carried 13 amino acid-truncated ORF125 (Iwabuchi et al. 1999
). Sunflower PET1-CMS line has been reported to carry an ORF comprised of 522 amino acids (orf522), and the 15-kD protein product of the ORF was only detected in the CMS lines (Moneger et al. 1994
, Horn et al. 1996
). Rice BT-type CMS plants have been known to contain an additional copy of atp6 (designated as B-atp6), and B-atp6 was co-transcribed with an ORF of 79 amino acids (Iwabuchi et al. 1993
, Akagi et al. 1994
).
Candidates for MCAG are found in variable species other than the ones stated in the above paragraphs (reviewed in Schnable and Wise 1998
, Hanson and Bentolila 2004
). However, it is often difficult to determine whether these candidate MCAGs are actually responsible for CMS because; (i) CMS mitochondrial genomic sequences frequently contain novel ORFs that are not present in normal mitochondria, and (ii) mitochondrial transformation is currently unavailable in higher plants, hence the direct assessment of MCAG involvement in male sterility is impossible. Recent genomic works have shown that the genomic organization of CMS mitochondria is largely reorganized compared to that of normal plant mitochondrial genomic sequences (Satoh et al. 2004
, Allen et al. 2007
). Several studies have attempted to introduce MCAG into the nuclear genome, fused with N-terminal mitochondrial targeting pre-sequence (Wintz et al. 1995
, Chaumont et al. 1995
, He et al. 1996
, Duroc et al. 2006
, Kim et al. 2007
, Yamamoto et al. 2008
). Three studies succeeded in producing tobacco or Arabidopsis transgenic lines disrupted in pollen development (He et al. 1996
, Kim et al. 2007
, Yamamoto et al. 2008
), whereas three others failed to identify linkages between the introduced gene and male sterility (Wintz et al. 1995
, Chaumont et al. 1995, Duroc et al. 2006
). Although Wintz et al. (1995
) introduced pcf into its original species, they could not observe correlations between male defects and pcf expression. The results do not conclude that these candidate MCAG proteins were not causes of CMS, instead these works might suggest that accumulation of these MCAG proteins at proper spatial or temporal development stages, and correct sorting of these proteins within mitochondria are required to induce male sterility. It is even unclear how MCAG proteins produced in the cytoplasm get imported into mitochondria and distributed inside mitochondria. The establishment of a mitochondrial gene introduction system will be required to verify the toxicity of MCAG protein in male development.
| Nuclear Restorer-of-fertility (Rf) genes revert male viability to a CMS plant |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Molecular components in charge of the fertility restoration process are cloned from different species. The first Rf cloned, although still in argument (Touzet 2002
Rf was first cloned from petunia, RfPPR592, which encoded a protein with 11 continuous PPR motifs (Bentolila et al. 2002
). RfPPR592 was targeted to mitochondria, and was also found to eliminate the CMS-specific protein PCF, which we described in the prior section. Later, Gillman et al. (2007
) introduced RfPPR592 fused with FLAG epitope tag at its C-terminus into a CMS plant, and RfPPR592 was shown to reside within a mitochondrial membrane-associated, RNase-sensitive high-molecular-weight protein complex. RfPPR592 immunoprecipitated with pcf RNA, suggesting that RfPPR592 interacts with pcf directly or indirectly.
Rfs cloned from Kosena/Ogura radish also encoded a 687 amino acid PPR protein (Brown et al. 2003
, Desloire et al. 2003
, Koizuka et al. 2003
). Transgenic CMS plants carrying Rf-orf687 exhibited reduction of the MCAG gene product, ORF138 (Koizuka et al. 2003
). Rf1a cloned from rice also encoded a PPR protein (Kazama and Toriyama 2003
, Komori et al. 2004
, Akagi et al. 2004
, Wang et al. 2006
), and Rf1a was shown to promote processing of a MCAG, B-atp6-B-orf79, dicistronic transcript into a monocistronic B-atp6 and B-orf79 (Kazama and Toriyama 2003
, Wang et al. 2006
). Rf1b was also cloned as the fertility restorer for the same CMS type in rice, and Rf1b was highly identical to Rf1a in the amino acid level (Wang et al. 2006
). Unlike Rf1a, Rf1b totally diminishes the B-orf79 part from the B-atp6-B-orf79 transcript instead of processing it. Interestingly, the biochemical function of Rf1a was epistatic to Rf1b, suggesting that Rf1b is unable to digest processed B-orf79 transcript (Wang et al. 2006
). A recent work suggests that B-orf79 transcripts processed by the effect of Rf1a were not associated with polysomes, and would not be translated (Kazama et al. 2008
).
There is an intriguing parallel with these Rfs cloned from independent plant species that should not be ignored, other than the fact that they all encode a PPR protein. These Rf loci all contain a cluster of similar PPRs within the region (Fig. 1). For example, petunia RfPPR592 was flanked by a 93% identical RfPPR591 (Bentolila et al. 2002
) (Fig. 1). This locus included complex genome duplications and recombination in promoter regions and 3'UTR of RfPPR591 and RfPPR592. Radish Rfo (PPR-B) was present between two similar genes, PPR-A and PPR-C, three of which are at least 72% identical with each other (Desloire et al. 2003
, Brown et al. 2003
) (Fig. 1). Rice Rf1a was followed by two or three (depending on the Rf-containing lines) other identical PPR-encoding genes, and Rf1b could be counted as one of them (Kazama and Toriyama 2003
, Komori et al. 2004
, Akagi et al. 2004
, Wang et al. 2006
) (Fig. 1). Including Rf1b, Wang et al. (2006
) identified nine Rf1a homologous PPRs in Rf1 locus. Taking advantage of the completely sequenced rice genome (IRGSP 2005), we found that there are at least 15 Rf1a-like PPR genes (including pseudo-genes) near the Rf1a locus, even though the sequenced cultivar Nipponbare does not possess Rf1a (our unpublished data). It is also noteworthy that only one of these clustered PPRs is functional as Rf (referred to as Rf-PPR in subsequent sentences) (Koizuka et al. 2003
, Kazama and Toriyama 2003
). This phenomenon could not be considered as a random coincidence. One fact it indicates is that PPR functions are strictly dependent on their amino acid sequence, because even genes that are over 93.2% identical with Rf1a did not complement CMS phenotype to fertility restoration in rice (Kazama and Toriyama 2003
). It is also worthwhile to mention that these PPRs located close to Rf-PPRs may possess other housekeeping functions, and it is likely that CMS cytoplasm and the Rf locus co-evolved through many trial and errors to generate Rf-PPRs that are functional against MCAGs. It seems that The chicken or the egg dilemma exists between the rise of Rf-PPRs and the presence of MCAGs, and deeper phylogenetic analysis would reveal their relationships.
|
These PPR-class Rfs are considered to function dominantly against CMS. However, since CMS is caused by the incompatibility between mitochondria and nucleus, it is also possible that recessive Rfs exist, namely, nuclear genes that should not be functional under CMS conditions. This loss-of-function type of fertility Rf locus was reported in maize S-CMS (Wen et al. 2003
| Retrograde signaling in CMS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
It is widely accepted that mitochondrial genotype influe-nces nuclear gene expression in eukaryotes. For example, mitochondrial DNA-depleted or respiratory-deficient yeast strains change the expressional patterns of large numbers of nuclear genes (Parikh et al. 1987
Involvement of retrograde signaling in CMS has been implicated from the studies of alloplasmic type CMS, a type of CMS that is derived from the inter-species or inter-genera crosses. Alloplasmic CMS plants often exhibit morphological changes in flower development, and in most cases the stamens are converted into other floral organs (reviewed in Zubko 2004
, Linke and Börner 2005
, Carlsson et al. 2008
). These CMS phenotypes resemble those of mutants impaired in genes related in the ABC model (Coen and Myerowitz 1991
), especially the class B and C mutants that do not produce male organs. As expected, a homeotic function B gene in tobacco alloplasmic CMS lines was down-regulated (Zubko et al. 2001
). APETALA3 homolog was considerably down-regulated in alloplasmic wheat (Murai et al. 2002
), and GLOBOSA and DEFICIENS homologs were down-regulated in CMS carrots (Linke et al. 2003
). APETALA3 gene was expressed ectopically in CMS B. napus (Geddy et al. 2004
), and Teixeira et al. (2005
) found that the expression levels of various homeotic genes are changed in the CMS cytoplasmic background. Although these studies still lack genetic evidences, misregulations of these genes could be directly involved in the induction of homeotic CMS phenotypes.
Recently, comprehensive transcript or protein expression studies on CMS have been performed by several groups to determine the factors regulated by the cytoplasmic genomes. Hochholdinger et al. (2004
) compared the mitochondrial protein abundance status of plants carrying normal and T-CMS cytoplasm. They found that at least 27 proteins accumulate predominantly in the background of each cytoplasm, and these include such proteins as the F1 subunit of ATPase. Microarray-based transcriptomic studies have been performed on rice (Fujii et al. 2007
) and B. napus (Carlsson et al. 2007
). In the former study, 140 genes were differentially regulated between the CW-CMS line and its nuclear isogenic line Taichung 65. Rice CW-CMS plants exhibited a curious phenotype, in which the pollen developed normally to a mature state but failed to germinate tubes on stigma after anthesis (Fujii and Toriyama 2005
). RNAi knockdown of Down-regulated in CW-CMS 11 (DCW11), one of the suppressed genes in the CW-CMS background, in wild-type Taichung 65, resulted in a pollen sterility phenotype that resembles that of CW-CMS (Fujii and Toriyama 2008
). DCW11 is predicted to encode a mitochondrial protein phosphatase 2C protein, and this implies that the CW-CMS system could connote a phosphorylation process. Arabidopsis flower-specific cDNA microarray enabled identification of 244 differentially expressed genes in B. napus CMS line (Carlsson et al. 2007
). They found at least 19 genes encoded a mitochondrial protein (of 244), and these included
-MPP and β-MPP, proteins involved in the cleavage of mitochondrial targeting signals (reviewed by Glaser and Dessi 1999
), and mitochondrial outer membrane protein TOM40 (Lister et al. 2004
, Lister et al. 2007
). They concluded that reduction of these proteins may result in reduced ATP synthesis and lead to CMS induction. Based on a cDNA subtraction study on wheat pistillody CMS lines, AGC group protein kinase was shown to be up-regulated in the young spikes of the CMS line (Saraike et al. 2007
). A lipid transfer protein gene was found to be strongly down-regulated in a sugar beet CMS line (Matsuhira et al. 2007
). It is still difficult to determine whether these gene products are the direct cause of CMS, or the result of CMS, but we are sure that CMS signaling possesses the potential to enfold a complex protein–protein, and metabolite network.
Then what are the molecular components known in model cases of retrograde signaling? In yeast, RTG signaling has been elucidated extensively in mitochondrial DNA- depleted cells (reviewed in Butow and Avadhani 2004
, Liu and Butow 2006
) (Fig. 2A). Basic-helix-loop-helix transcription factors RTG1 and RTG3 have been shown to migrate to the nucleus to up-regulate citrate synthase 2 gene under mitochondrial stress conditions, whereas they are phosphorylated and remain in the cytoplasm in normal conditions (Liao and Butow 1993
, Jia et al. 1997
, Sekito et al. 2000
). In the upstream of RTG1 and RTG3, ATP-binding motif-containing RTG2 positively regulates these transcription factors in RTG signaling (Liao and Butow 1993
, Sekito et al. 2000
). RTG2 was shown to bind to MKS1, an unknown protein which negatively regulates RTG signaling in the upstream of RTG1 and RTG3, and positively regulates RTG signaling by taking MKS1 out of the RTG pathway (Sekito et al. 2002
, Liu et al. 2003
). In parallel with RTG signaling, yeast when exposed to mitochondrial stress emits calcium ions to the cytoplasm. These calcium ions are sensed by factors such as calcium ion-dependent protein kinase C, and the signaling is passed downstream as a phospho-relay (Amuthan et al. 2001
, Butow and Avadhani 2004
). Proper retrograde signaling is known to be essential for progressing the cell cycle from the G1 phase to the S phase in the development of the compound eye in Drosophila melanogaster (Mandal et al. 2005
, Owusu-Ansah et al. 2008
) (Fig. 2B). In Drosophila lines without fully functional mitochondrial complex IV, ATP production is dropped and the AMP kinase-involving pathway is activated. AMP kinase positively regulates p53 and as a result, G1 to S phase cell cycle-promoting cyclinE expression is reduced (Mandal et al. 2005
, Owusu-Ansah et al. 2008
). On the other hand, Drosophila suffering from mitochondrial complex I deficiency accumulates reactive oxygen species (ROS) five times more than that of the wild-type, and ROS activates the p27 pathway which negatively regulates cyclinE-CDK2 complex (Owusu-Ansah et al. 2008
).
|
Arabidopsis plastid-to-nucleus signaling is currently the model for plant retrograde signaling (reviewed by Woodson and Chory 2008
| Tissue specificity in CMS, why? |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Although the mitochondrion is a ubiquitous organelle, male-specific deficiency is observed in CMS. In addition, most MCAG products accumulate throughout plant development, and are not male specific (reviewed in Chase 2007
As mentioned before, most mitochondrial loss-of-functional mutants exhibit severe growth defect phenotypes. As far as we know, there are no mitochondrial mutants that show male-specific dysfunction. However, there are a few mutants that show defects in haploid development. A mutant with T-DNA inserted in the mitochondrial complex II succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) subunit suffers complete male sterility, namely no transmission of T-DNA-inserted allele from the male parent (Leon et al. 2007
). When the SDH1-1/sdh1-1 hemizygous line was used as the female parent, transmission efficiency of the T-DNA inserted allele decreased to 60%. Thus, sdh1-1 mutation caused complete loss of pollen viability, and partial loss of ability of female gametophyte. Recent analysis on mitochondrial Miro GTPase homologue in Arabidopsis also presents quite interesting data (Yamaoka and Leaver 2008
). Miro1/miro1 exhibits normal growth and develops morphologically normal pollen; however, pollen germination was impaired and male transmission efficiency of the mutant allele was significantly reduced. Homozygous miro1 mutant aborts embryogenesis at the zygote stage. The inheritance trait of these two mitochondrial mutant alleles tells us that the function of mitochondria differs between male and female gametophyte development, and it seems that pollen development is more sensitive to mitochondrial dysfunction than female gametophyte development.
Above we mentioned the gametogenesis type mitochondrial mutants. There are also mitochondrial gene knockdown studies that report tapetum deficiency. The antisense suppression of mitochondrial Alternative Oxidase (AOX) under the control of tapetum-specific promoter resulted in reduced pollen viability in tobacco plants (Kitashiba et al. 1998
). Tapetum-specific suppression of mitochondrial pyruvate dehydrogenase resulted in abnormal vacuolated cell progression in tobacco, and mimicked the sugar beet CMS phenotype (Yui et al. 2003
). The key to these research findings is the specific suppression of mitochondrial genes in tapetum, strongly suggesting that mitochondrial functions in tapetum cells are special.
Although there have been great advancements in genetic tools to identify in planta gene functions in Arabidopsis, mysteries of organ specific mitochondrial gene products remain unsolved. The pollen-specific isoform of ATP synthase subunit b was found in diploid tobacco Nicotiana sylvestris L. (De Paepe et al. 1993
), and later, a single gene corresponding to the subunit was isolated and confirmed to be bi-cellular pollen-specific (Lalanne et al. 1998
). Mitochondrial Rieske proteins are preferentially increased in flowers compared to leaves along with the increase in the mitochondrial number during flower development (Huang et al. 1994
). Unfortunately the destinies of plants that suffer impairments to these genes are still unknown, although functions of these proteins could provide a hint to solving male specificity of CMS.
| Concluding remarks |
|---|
|
|
|---|
A unique, male-specific dysfunction feature of CMS reveals two things; (i) male organ development is dependent on cytoplasmic genotypes, and (ii) there is more significance to mitochondria in plant development other than just energy production. An incongruity exists when considering that only the loss in quantity of mitochondrial functions causes CMS. Rather, it seems more unassuming to consider that changes in quality of mitochondrial functions cause CMS, and probably revealing factors involved in retrograde signaling from mitochondria to nucleus during CMS induction and fertility restoration could help shed light on the mysterious function of mitochondria and help tell the full story of genome barriers between mitochondria and the nucleus.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The authors appreciate Ms. Hisayo Kojima and Mr. Takushi Toda for helpful discussions.
This work was partially supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Special Research on Priority Areas (No. 18075002) from the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports and Culture, Japan. S.F. is the recipient of Research Fellowships of the Japan Society for the promotion of Science for Young Scientists.
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Akagi H, Nakamura A, Yokozeki-Misono Y, Inagaki A, Takahashi H, Mori K, et al. Positional cloning of the rice Rf-1 gene, a restorer of BT-type cytoplasmic male sterility that encodes a mitochondria-targeting PPR protein. Ther. Appl. Genet (2004) 108:1449–1457.[CrossRef]
Akagi H, Sakamoto M, Shinjyo C, Shimada H, Fujimura T. A unique sequence located downstream from the rice mitochondrial atp6 may cause male sterility. Curr. Genet (1994) 25:52–58.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Allen JO, Fauron CM, Minx P, Roark L, Oddiraju S, Ning Lin G, et al. Comparisons among two fertile and three male-sterile mitochondrial genomes of maize. Genetics (2007) 177:1173–1192.
Amuthan G, Biswas G, Zhang SY, Klein-Szanto A, Vijayasarathy C, Avadhani NG. Mitochondria-to-nucleus stress signaling induces phenotypic changes, tumor progression and cell invasion. EMBO J (2001) 20:1910–1920.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Andrés C, Lurin C, Small ID. The multifarious roles of PPR proteins in plant mitochondrial gene expression. Physiol. Plant (2007) 129:14–22.[CrossRef]
Balk J, Leaver CJ. The PET1-CMS mitochondrial mutation in sunflower is associated with premature programmed cell death and cytochrome c release. Plant Cell (2001) 13:1803–1818.
Bentolila S, Alfonso AA, Hanson MR. A pentatricopeptide repeat-containing gene restores fertility to cytoplasmic male-sterile plants. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA (2002) 99:10887–10892.
Boeshore ML, Hanson MR, Izhar S. A variant mitochondrial DNA arrangement specific to Petunia stable sterile somatic hybrids. Plant Mol. Biol (1985) 4:125–132.[CrossRef][Web of Science]
Bonhomme S, Budar F, Lancelin D, Small I, Defrance MC, Pelletier G. Sequence and transcript analysis of the Nco2.5 Ogura-specific fragment correlated with cytoplasmic male sterility in Brassica cybrids. Mol. Gen. Genet (1992) 235:340–348.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Brangeon J, Sabar M, Gutierres S, Combettes B, Bove J, Gendy C, et al. Defective splicing of the first nad4 intron is associated with lack of several complex I subunits in the Nicotiana sylvestris NMS1 nuclear mutant. Plant J (2000) 21:269–280.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Brown GG, Formanova N, Jin H, Wargachuk R, Dendy C, Patil P, et al. The radish Rfo restorer gene of Ogura cytoplasmic male sterility encodes a protein with multiple pentatricopeptide repeats. Plant J (2003) 35:262–272.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Butow RA, Avadhani NG. Mitochondrial signaling: the retrograde response. Mol. Cell (2004) 14:1–15.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Cai J, Yang J, Jones DP. Mitochondrial control of apoptosis: the role of cytochrome c. Biochim. Biophys. Acta (1998) 1366:139–149.[Medline]
Carlsson J, Lagercrantz U, Sundström J, Teixeira R, Wellmer F, Meyerowitz EM, et al. Microarray analysis reveals altered expression of a large number of nuclear genes in developing cytoplasmic male sterile Brassica napus flowers. Plant J (2007) 49:452–462.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Carlsson J, Leino M, Sohlberg J, Sundström JF, Glimelius K. Mitochondrial regulation of flower development. Mitochondrion (2008) 8:74–86.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Chase CD. Cytoplasmic male sterility: a window to the world of plant mitochondrial-nuclear interactions. Trends Plant Sci (2007) 23:81–90.
Chaumont F, Bernier B, Buxant R, Williams ME, Levings CS III, Boutry M. Targeting the maize T-urf13 product into tobacco mitochondria confers methomyl sensitivity to mitochondrial respiration. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA (1995) 92:1167–1171.
Chetrit P, Rios R, De Paepe R, Vitart V, Gutierres S, Vedel F. Cytoplasmic male sterility is associated with large deletions in the mitochondrial DNA of two Nicotiana sylvestris protoclones. Curr. Genet (1992) 21:131–137.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Coen ES, Meyerowitz EM. The war of the whorls: genetic interactions controlling flower development. Nature (1991) 353:31–37.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Cui X, Wise RP, Schnable PS. The rf2 nuclear restorer gene of male-sterile T-cytoplasm maize. Science (1996) 272:1334–1336.[Abstract]
De Paepe R, Forchioni A, Chetrit P, Vedel F. Specific mitochondrial proteins in pollen: presence of an additional ATP synthase beta subunit. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA (1993) 90:5934–5938.
Desloire S, Gherbi H, Laloui W, Marhadour S, Clouet V, Cattolico L, et al. Identification of the fertility restoration locus, Rfo, in radish, as a member of the pentatricopeptide-repeat protein family. EMBO Rep (2003) 4:588–594.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Dewey RE, Siedow JN, Timothy DH, Levings CS III. A 13-kilodalton maize mitochondrial protein in E. coli confers sensitivity to Bipolaris maydis toxin. Science (1988) 239:293–295.
Dewey RE, Timothy DH, Levings CS III. A mitochondrial protein associated with cytoplasmic male sterility in the T cytoplasm of maize. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA (1987) 84:5374–5378.
Duroc Y, Gaillard C, Hiard S, Tinchant C, Berthome R, Pelletier G, et al. Nuclear expression of a cytoplasmic male sterility gene modifies mitochondrial morphology in yeast and plant cells. Plant Sci (2006) 170:755–767.[CrossRef][Web of Science]
Epstein CB, Waddle JA, Hale WIV, Dave V, Thornton J, Macatee TL, et al. Genome-wide responses to mitochondrial dysfunction. Mol. Biol. Cell (2001) 12:297–308.
Fisk DG, Walker MB, Barkan A. Molecular cloning of the maize gene crp1 reveals similarity between regulators of mitochondrial and chloroplast gene expression. EMBO J (2000) 18:2621–2630.[CrossRef][Web of Science]
Falcon de Longevialle A, Meyer EH, Andrés C, Taylor NL, Lurin C, Millar H, et al. The pentatricopeptide repeat gene OTP43 Is required for trans-splicing of the mitochondrial nad1 intron 1 in Arabidopsis thaliana. Plant Cell (2007) 19:3256–3265.
Fujii S, Komatsu S, Toriyama K. Retrograde regulation of nuclear gene expression in CW-CMS of rice. Plant Mol. Biol (2007) 63:405–417.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Fujii S, Toriyama K. Molecular mapping of the fertility restorer gene for ms-CW-type cytoplasmic male sterility of rice. Theor. Appl. Genet (2005) 111:696–701.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Fujii S, Toriyama K. DCW11, down-regulated gene 11 in CW-type cytoplasmic male sterile rice, encoding mitochondrial protein phosphatase 2c is related to cytoplasmic male sterility. Plant Cell Physiol (2008) 49:633–640.
Geddy R, Mahe L, Brown GG. Cell-specific regulation of a Brassica napus CMS-associated gene by a nuclear restorer with related effects on a floral homeotic gene promoter. Plant J (2004) 41:333–345.[Web of Science]
Gillman JD, Bentolila S, Hanson MR. The petunia restorer of fertility protein is part of a large mitochondrial complex that interacts with transcripts of the CMS-associated locus. Plant J (2007) 49:217–227.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Glaser E, Dessi P. Integration of the mitochondrial-processing peptidase into the cytochrome bc1 complex in plants. J. Bioenerg. Biomembr (1999) 31:259–274.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Grelon M, Budar F, Bonhomme S, Pelletier G. Ogura cytoplasmic male-sterility (CMS)-associated orf138 is translated into a mitochondrial membrane polypeptide in male-sterile Brassica cybrids. Mol. Gen. Genet (1994) 243:540–547.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Gutierres S, Sabar M, Lelandais C, Chetrit P, Diolez P, Degand H, et al. Lack of mitochondrial and nuclear-encoded subunits of complex I and alteration of the respiratory chain in Nicotiana sylvestris mitochondrial deletion mutants. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA (1997) 94:3436–3441.
Hack E, Lin C, Yang H, Horner H. T-URF 13 protein from mitochondria of Texas male-sterile maize (Zea mays L.) : Its purification and submitochondrial localization, and immunogold labeling in anther tapetum during microsporogenesis. Plant Physiol (1991) 95:861–870.
Hanson MR, Bentolila S. Interactions of mitochondrial and nuclear genes that affect male gametophyte development. Plant Cell (2004) 16:S1109–1120.
Hattori M, Miyake H, Sugita M. A Pentatricopeptide repeat protein is required for RNA processing of clpP pre-mRNA in moss chloroplasts. J. Biol. Chem (2007) 282:10773–10782.
He S, Abad AR, Gelvin SB, Mackenzie SA. A cytoplasmic male sterility-associated mitochondrial protein causes pollen disruption in transgenic tobacco. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA (1996) 93:11763–11768.
Hochholdinger F, Guo L, Schnable PS. Cytoplasmic regulation of the accumulation of nuclear-encoded proteins in the mitochondrial proteome of maize. Plant J (2004) 37:199–208.[Web of Science][Medline]
Horn R, Hustedt JEG, Horstmeyer A, Hahnen J, Zetsche K, Friedt W. The CMS-associated 16 kDa protein encoded by orfH522 in the PET1 cytoplasm is also present in other male-sterile cytoplasms of sunflower. Plant Mol. Biol (1996) 30:523–538.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Huang J, Struck F, Matzinger DF, Levings CS III. Flower-enhanced expression of a nuclear-encoded mitochondrial respiratory protein is associated with changes in mitochondrion number. Plant Cell (1994) 6:439–448.[Abstract]
Iwabuchi M, Koizuka N, Fujimoto H, Sakai T, Imamura J. Identification and expression of the kosena radish (Raphanus sativus cv. Kosena) homologue of the ogura radish CMS-associated gene, orf138. Plant Mol. Biol (1999) 39:183–188.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Iwabuchi M, Kyozuka N, Shimamoto K. Processing followed by complete editing of an altered mitochondrial atp6 RNA restores fertility of cytoplasmic male sterile rice. EMBO J (1993) 12:1437–1446.[Web of Science][Medline]
Jia Y, Rothermel B, Thornton J, Butow RA. A basic helix-loop-helix-leucine zipper transcription complex in yeast functions in a signaling pathway from mitochondria to the nucleus. Mol. Cell Biol (1997) 17:1110–1117.[Abstract]
Kawanabe T, Ariizumi T, Kawai-Yamada M, Uchimiya H, Toriyama K. Abolition of the tapetum suicide program ruins microsporogenesis. Plant Cell Physiol (2006) 47:784–787.
Kazama T, Nakamura T, Watanabe M, Sugita M, Toriyama K. Suppression mechanism of mitochondrial ORF79 accumulation by Rf1 protein in BT-type cytoplasmic male sterile rice. Plant J (2008) 55:619–628.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Kazama T, Toriyama K. A pentatricopeptide repeat-containing gene that promotes the processing of aberrant atp6 RNA of cytoplasmic male-sterile rice. FEBS Lett (2003) 544:99–102.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Kim DH, Kang JG, Kim BD. Isolation and characterization of the cytoplasmic male sterility-associated orf456 gene of chili pepper (Capsicum annuum L.). Plant Mol. Biol (2007) 63:519–532.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Kitashiba H, Kitazawa E, Kishitani S, Toriyama K. Partial male sterility in transgenic tobacco carrying an antisense gene for alternative oxidase under the control of a tapetum-specific promoter. Mol. Breed (1998) 5:209–218.[CrossRef]
Klein RR, Klein PE, Mullet JE, Minx P, Rooney WL, Schertz KF. Fertility restorer locus Rf1 [corrected] of sorghum (Sorghum bicolor L.) encodes a pentatricopeptide repeat protein not present in the colinear region of rice chromosome 12. Theor. Appl. Genet (2005) 111:994–1012.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Koizuka N, Imai R, Fujimoto R, Hayakawa H, Kimura Y, Kohno-Murase J, et al. Genetic characterization of a pentatri-copeptide repeat protein gene, orf687, that restores fertility in the cytoplasmic male-sterile Kosena radish. Plant J (2003) 34:407–415.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Komori T, Ohta S, Murai N, Takakura Y, Kuraya Y, Suzuki S, et al. Map-based cloning of a fertility restorer gene, Rf-1, in rice (Oryza sativa L.). Plant J (2004) 37:315–325.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Koussevitzky S, Nott A, Mockler TC, Hong F, Sachetto-Martins G, Surpin M, Lim J, Mittler R, Chory J. Signals from chloroplasts converge to regulate nuclear gene expression. Science (2007) 316:715–719.
Kotera E, Tasaka M, Shikanai T. A pentatricopeptide repeat protein is essential for RNA editing in chloroplasts. Nature (2004) 433:326–330.[CrossRef][Web of Science]
Lalanne E, Mathieu C, Vedel F, De Paepe R. Tissue-specific expression of genes encoding isoforms of the mitochondrial ATPase beta subunit in Nicotiana sylvestris. Plant Mol. Biol (1998) 38:885–888.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Larkin RM, Alonso JM, Ecker JR, Chory J. GUN4, a regulator of chlorophyll synthesis and intracellular signaling. Science (2003) 299:902–906.
Lee SJ, Warmke HE. Organelle size and number in fertile and T-cytoplasmic male-sterile corn. Am. J. Bot (1979) 66:141–148.[CrossRef][Web of Science]
Leon G, Holuigue L, Jordana X. Mitochondrial complex II Is essential for gametophyte development in Arabidopsis. Plant Physiol (2007) 143:1534–1546.
Levings CS, Pring DR. Restriction endonuclease analysis of mitochondrial DNA from normal and Texas cytoplasmic male-sterile maize. Science (1976) 193:158–160.
Liao X, Butow RA. RTG1 and RTG2: two yeast genes required for a novel path of communication from mitochondria to the nucleus. Cell (1993) 72:61–71.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Linke B, Börner T. Mitochondrial effects on flower and pollen development. Mitochondrion (2005) 5:389–402.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Linke B, Nothnagel T, Borner T. Flower development in carrot CMS plants: mitochondria affect the expression of MADS box genes homologous to GLOBOSA and DEFICIENS. Plant J (2003) 34:27–37.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Liu F, Cui X, Horner HT, Weiner H, Schnable PS. Mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase activity is required for male fertility in maize. Plant Cell (2001) 13:1063–1078.
Lurin C, Andrés C, Aubourg S, Bellaoui M, Bitton F, Bruyere C, et al. Genome-wide analysis of Arabidopsis pentatricopeptide repeat proteins reveals their essential role in organelle biogenesis. Plant Cell (2004) 16:2089–2103.
Lister R, Carrie C, Duncan O, Ho LHM, Howell KA, Murcha MW, et al. Functional definition of outer membrane proteins involved in preprotein import into mitochondria. Plant Cell (2007) 19:3739–3759.
Lister R, Chew O, Lee MN, Heazlewood JL, Clifton R, Parker KL, Millar AH, et al. A transcriptomic and proteomic characterization of the Arabidopsis mitochondrial protein import apparatus and its response to mitochondrial dysfunction. Plant Physiol (2004) 134:777–789.
Liu Z, Butow RA. Mitochondrial retrograde signaling. Annu. Rev. Genet (2006) 40:159–185.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Liu Z, Sekito T, Spirek M, Thornton J, Butow RA. Retrograde signaling is regulated by the dynamic interaction between Rtg2p and Mks1p. Mol. Cell (2003) 12:401–411.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Mandal S, Guptan P, Owusu-Ansah E, Banerjee U. Mitochondrial regulation of cell cycle progression during development as revealed by the tenured mutation in Drosophila. Dev. Cell (2005) 9:843–854.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Matsuhira H, Shinada H, Yui-Kurino R, Hamano N, Umeda M, Mikami T, et al. An anther-specific lipid transfer protein gene in sugar beet: its expression is strongly reduced in male-sterile plants with Owen cytoplasm. Physiol. Plant (2007) 129:407–414.[CrossRef]
Merchant SS, Prochnik SE, Vallon O, Harris EH, Karpowicz SJ, Witman GB, et al. The Chlamydomonas genome reveals the evolution of key animal and plant functions. Science (2007) 318:245–50.
Miller RJ, Koeppe DE. Southern corn leaf blight: Susceptible and resistant mitochondria. Science (1971) 174:67–69.
Mochizuki N, Brusslan JA, Larkin R, Nagatani A, Chory J. Arabidopsis genomes uncoupled 5 (GUN5) mutant reveals the involvement of Mg-chelatase H subunit in plastid-to-nucleus signal transduction. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA (2001) 98:2053–2058.
Moneger F, Smart CJ, Leaver CJ. Nuclear restoration of cytoplasmic male sterility in sunflower is associated with the tissue-specific regulation of a novel mitochondrial gene. EMBO J (1994) 13:8–17.[Web of Science][Medline]
Murai K, Takumi S, Koga H, Ogihara Y. Pistillody, homeotic transformation of stamens into pistil-like structures, caused by nuclear-cytoplasm interaction in wheat. Plant J (2002) 29:169–181.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Nakagawa N, Sakurai N. A mutation in At-nMat1a, which encodes a nuclear gene having high similarity to group II intron maturase, causes impaired splicing of mitochondrial NAD4 transcript and altered carbon metabolism in Arabidopsis thaliana. Plant Cell Physiol (2006) 47:772–883.
Nakamura T, Meirhoff K, Westhoff P, Schuster G. RNA-binding properties of HCF152, an Arabidopsis PPR protein involved in the processing of chloroplast RNA. Eur. J. Biochem (2003) 270:4070–4081.[Web of Science][Medline]
Newton KJ, Knudsen C, Gabay-Laughnan S, Laughnan JR. An abnormal growth mutant in maize has a defective mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase gene. Plant Cell (1990) 2:107–113.
Newton KJ, Mariano JM, Gibson CM, Kuzmin E, Gabay-Laughnan S. Involvement of S2 episomal sequences in the generation of NCS4 deletion mutation in maize mitochondria. Dev. Genet (1996) 19:277–286.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Nivison HT, Sutton CA, Wilson RK, Hanson MR. Sequencing, processing, and localization of the petunia CMS-associated mitochondrial protein. Plant J (1994) 5:613–623.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Oelmuller R, Mohr H. Photooxidative destruction of chloroplasts and its consequences for expression of nuclear genes. Planta (1986) 106–113.
Okuda K, Myouga F, Motohashi R, Shinozaki K, Shikanai T. Conserved domain structure of pentatricopeptide repeat proteins involved in chloroplast RNA editing. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA (2007) 104:8178–8183.
Okuda K, Nakamura T, Sugita M, Shimizu T, Shikanai T. A pentatricopeptide repeat protein is a site recognition factor in chloroplast RNA editing. J. Biol. Chem (2006) 281:37661–37667.
OToole N, Hattori M, Andrés C, Iida K, Lurin C, Schmitz-Linneweber C, et al. On the expansion of the penta-tricopeptide repeat gene family in plants. Mol. Biol. Evol (2008) 25:1120–1128.
Owusu-Ansah E, Yavari A, Mandal S, Banerjee U. Distinct mitochondrial retrograde signals control the G1-S cell cycle checkpoint. Nat. Genet (2008) 40:356–361.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Parikh VS, Morgan MM, Scott R, Clements LS, Butow RA. The mitochondrial genotype can influence nuclear gene expression in yeast. Science (1987) 235:576–80.
Piffanelli P, Murphy DJ. Novel organelles and targeting mechanisms in the anther tapetum. Trends Plant Sci (1998) 3:250–253.[CrossRef][Web of Science]
Rand DM. Mitochondrial genetics of aging: intergenomic conflict resolution. Sci. Aging Knowledge Environ (2005) 45:re5.
Rand DM, Fry A, Sheldahl L. Nuclear-mitochondrial epistasis and drosophila aging: introgression of Drosophila simulans mtDNA modifies longevity in D. melanogaster nuclear backgrounds. Genetics (2006) 172:329–341.
Rhoades MM. Cytoplasmic inheritance of male sterility in Zea Mays. Science (1931) 73:340–341.
Pla M, Mathieu C, De Paepe R, Chétrit P, Vedel F. Deletion of the last two exons of the mitochondrial nad7 gene results in lack of the NAD7 polypeptide in a Nicotiana sylvestris CMS mutant. Mol. Gen. Genet (1995) 248:79–88.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Rottman WH, Brears T, Hodge TP, Lonsdale D. A mitochondrial gene is lost via homologous recombination during reversion of CMS T maize to fertility. EMBO J (1987) 6:1541–1546.[Web of Science][Medline]
Saraike T, Shitsukawa N, Yamamoto Y, Hagita H, Iwasaki Y, Takumi S, et al. Identification of a protein kinase gene associated with pistillody, homeotic transformation of stamens into pistil-like structures, in alloplasmic wheat. Planta (2007) 227:211–221.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Sarria R, Lyznik A, Vallejos CE, Mackenzie SA. A cytoplasmic male sterility-associated mitochondrial peptide in common bean is post-translationally regulated. Plant Cell (1998) 10:1217–1228.
Satoh M, Kubo T, Nishizawa S, Estiati A, Ichoda N, Mikami T. The cytoplasmic male-sterile type and normal type mitochondrial genomes of sugar beet share the same complement of genes of known function but differ in the content of expressed ORFs. Mol. Gen. Genome (2004) 272:247–256.[CrossRef]
Schmitz-Linneweber C, Williams-Carrier R, Barkan A. RNA immunoprecipitation and microarray analysis show a chloroplast pentatricopeptide repeat protein to be associated with the 5' region of mRNAs whose translation it activates. Plant Cell (2005) 17:2791–2804.
Schnable PS. Is rf2 a restorer gene of CMS-T in maize? Trends Plant Sci (2002) 7:434.[Web of Science][Medline]
Schnable PS, Wise RP. The molecular basis of cytoplasmic male sterility. Trends Plant Sci (1998) 3:175–180.[CrossRef][Web of Science]
Sekito T, Liu Z, Thornton J, Butow RA. RTG-dependent mitochondria-to-nucleus signaling is regulated by MKS1 and is linked to formation of yeast prion [URE3]. Mol. Biol. Cell (2002) 13:795–804.
Sekito T, Thornton J, Butow RA. Mitochondria-to-nuclear signaling is regulated by the subcellular localization of the transcription factors Rtg1p and Rtg3p. Mol. Biol. Cell (2000) 11:2103–2115.
Small ID, Peeters N. The PPR motif – a TPR-related motif prevalent in plant organellar proteins. Trends Biochem. Sci (2000) 25:46–47.[Web of Science][Medline]
Susek RE, Ausubel FM, Chory J. Signal transduction mutants of Arabidopsis uncouple nuclear CAB and RBCS gene expression from chloroplast development. Cell (1993) 74:787–799.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Tang Z, Wang X, Hu Z, Yang Z, Xu C. Genetic dissection of cytonuclear epistasis in line crosses. Genetics (2007) 177:669–672.
Teixeira RT, Farbos I, Glimelius K. Expression levels of meristem identity and homeotic genes are modified by nuclear-mitochondrial interactions in alloplasmic male-sterile lines of Brassica napus. Plant J (2005) 42:731–742.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Touzet P. Is rf2 a restorer gene of CMS-T in maize? Trends Plant Sci (2002) 7:434.[Web of Science][Medline]
Traven A, Wong JMS, Xu D, Sopta M, Ingles CJ. Interorganellar communication. Altered nuclear gene expression profiles in a yeast mitochondrial dna mutant. J. Biol. Chem (2001) 276:4020–4027.
Wang Z, Zou Y, Li X, Zhang Q, Chen L, Wu H, et al. Cytoplasmic male sterility of rice with boro II cytoplasm is caused by a cytotoxic peptide and is restored by two related PPR motif genes via distinct modes of mRNA silencing. Plant Cell (2006) 18:676–687.
Warmke HE, Lee SLJ. Mitochondrial degeneration in Texas cytoplasmic male-sterile corn anthers. J. Hered (1977) 68:213–222.
Wen L, Ruesch KL, Ortega VM, Kamps TL, Gabay-Laughnan S, Chase CD. A nuclear restorer-of-fertility mutation disrupts accumulation of mitochondrial ATP synthase subunit alpha in developing pollen of S male-sterile maize. Genetics (2003) 165:771–779.
Wintz H, Chen HC, Sutton CA, Conley CA, Cobb A, Ruth D, et al. Expression of the CMS-associated urfS sequence in transgenic petunia and tobacco. Plant Mol. Biol (1995) 28:83–92.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Wise RP, Fliss AE, Pring DR, Gengenbach BG. urf13-T of T cytoplasm maize mitochondria encodes a 13 kD polypeptide. Plant Mol. Biol (1987) 9:121–126.[CrossRef][Web of Science]
Woodson JD, Chory J. Coordination of gene expression between organellar and nuclear genomes. Nat. Rev. Genet (2008) 9:383–395.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Yamamoto MP, Kubo T, Mikami T. The 5'-leader sequence of sugar beet mitochondrial atp6 encodes a novel polypeptide that is characteristic of Owen cytoplasmic male sterility. Mol. Gen. Genom (2005) 273:342–349.[CrossRef]
Yamamoto MP, Shinada H, Onodera Y, Komaki C, Mikami T, Kubo T. A male sterility-associated mitochondrial protein in wild beets causes pollen disruption in transgenic plants. Plant J (2008) 54:1027–1036.[CrossRef][Web of Science]
Yamaoka S, Leaver CJ. EMB2473/MIRO1, an Arabidopsis Miro GTPase, is required for embryogenesis and influences mitochondrial morphology in pollen. Plant Cell (2008) 20:589–601.
Yamato KT, Newton KJ. Heteroplasmy and homoplasmy for maize mitochondrial mutants: a rare homoplasmic nad4 deletion mutant plant. J. Hered (1999) 90:369–373.
Yui R, Iketani S, Mikami T, Kubo T. Antisense inhibition of mitochondrial pyruvate dehydrogenase E1alpha subunit in anther tapetum causes male sterility. Plant J (2003) 34:57–66.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Zarkovic J, Anderson SL, Rhoads DM. A reporter gene system used to study developmental expression of alternative oxidase and isolate mitochondrial retrograde regulation mutants in Arabidopsis. Plant Mol. Biol (2005) 57:871–888.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Zubko M. Mitochondrial tuning fork in nuclear homeotic functions. Trends Plant Sci (2004) 9:61–64.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
Zubko MK, Zubko EI, Ruban AV, Adler K, Mock HP, Misera S, et al. Extensive developmental and metabolic alterations in cybrids Nicotiana tabacum (+ Hyoscyamus niger) are caused by complex nucleo-cytoplasmic incompatibility. Plant J (2001) 25:627–639.[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]
(Received June 23, 2008; Accepted July 9, 2008)
![]()
CiteULike
Connotea
Del.icio.us What's this?
Related articles in PCP:
- Towards a Comprehensive Understanding of Molecular Mechanisms of Sexual Reproduction in Higher Plants
- Masao Watanabe
PCP 2008 49: 1404-1406.[Extract] [FREE Full Text]
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||

