Science, Vol.272, No.5266, 1334-1336, 1996
The Rf2 Nuclear Restorer Gene of Male-Sterile T-Cytoplasm Maize
The T cytoplasm of maize serves as a model for the nuclear restoration of cytoplasmic male sterility. The rf2 gene, one of two nuclear genes required for fertility restoration in male-sterile T-cytoplasm (cmsT) maize, was cloned. The protein predicted by the rf2 sequence is a putative aldehyde dehydrogenase, which suggests several mechanisms that might explain Rf2-mediated fertility restoration in cmsT maize. Aldehyde dehydrogenase may be involved in the detoxification of acetaldehyde produced by ethanolic fermentation during pollen development, may play a role in energy metabolism or may interact with URF13, the mitochondrial protein associated with male sterility in cmsT maize.
Keywords:ZEA-MAYS L;PROTEIN;PLANTS;MITOCHONDRIA;MICROSPOROGENESIS;DEHYDROGENASE;LOCALIZATION;DISEASE;ENCODES;T-URF13