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Anna Daneva

University of Sunderland

ORCID: 0000-0001-6072-0163

Publishes on Photosynthetic Processes and Mechanisms, Plant Reproductive Biology, Plant Stress Responses and Tolerance. 7 papers and 422 citations.

7Publications
422Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Functions and Regulation of Programmed Cell Death in Plant Development
Anna Daneva, Zhen Gao, Matthias Van Durme et al.|Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology|2016
Cited by 251

Programmed cell death (PCD) is a collective term for diverse processes causing an actively induced, tightly controlled cellular suicide. PCD has a multitude of functions in the development and health of multicellular organisms. In comparison to intensively studied forms of animal PCD such as apoptosis, our knowledge of the regulation of PCD in plants remains limited. Despite the importance of PCD in plant development and as a response to biotic and abiotic stresses, the complex molecular networks controlling different forms of plant PCD are only just beginning to emerge. With this review, we provide an update on the considerable progress that has been made over the last decade in our understanding of PCD as an inherent part of plant development. We highlight both functions of developmental PCD and central aspects of its molecular regulation.

KIL1 terminates fertility in maize by controlling silk senescence
Cited by 40Open Access

Plant flowers have a functional life span during which pollination and fertilization occur to ensure seed and fruit development. Once flower senescence is initiated, the potential to set seed or fruit is irrevocably lost. In maize, silk strands are the elongated floral stigmas that emerge from the husk-enveloped inflorescence to intercept airborne pollen. Here we show that KIRA1-LIKE1 (KIL1), an ortholog of the Arabidopsis NAC (NAM (NO APICAL MERISTEM), ATAF1/2 (Arabidopsis thaliana Activation Factor1 and 2) and CUC (CUP-SHAPED COTYLEDON 2)) transcription factor KIRA1, promotes senescence and programmed cell death (PCD) in the silk strand base, ending the window of accessibility for fertilization of the ovary. Loss of KIL1 function extends silk receptivity and thus strongly increases kernel yield following late pollination. This phenotype offers new opportunities for possibly improving yield stability in cereal crops. Moreover, despite diverging flower morphologies and the substantial evolutionary distance between Arabidopsis and maize, our data indicate remarkably similar principles in terminating floral receptivity by PCD, whose modulation offers the potential to be widely used in agriculture.

Identification of a role for an <i>E6-like 1</i> gene in early pollen-stigma interactions in <i>Arabidopsis thaliana</i>
Jennifer Doucet, Christina Truong, Elizabeth Frank-Webb et al.|bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)|2019
Cited by 2

Abstract In Arabidopsis , successful pollen-stigma interactions are dependent on rapid recognition of compatible pollen by the stigmatic papillae located on the surface of the pistil and the subsequent regulation of pollen hydration and germination, and followed by the growth of pollen tubes through the stigma surface. Here we have described the function of a novel gene, E6-like 1 ( E6L1 ), that was identified through the analysis of transcriptome datasets, as one of highest-expressed genes in the stigma, and furthermore, its expression was largely restricted to the stigma and trichomes. The first E6 gene was initially identified as a highly-expressed gene during cotton fiber development, and related E6-like predicted proteins are found throughout the Angiosperms. To date, no orthologous genes have been assigned a biological function. Both the Arabidopsis E6L1 and cotton E6 proteins are predicted to be secreted, and this was confirmed using an E6L1:RFP fusion construct. To further investigate E6L1 ’s function, one T-DNA and two independent CRISPR-generated mutants were analyzed for compatible pollen-stigma interactions, and pollen hydration, pollen adhesion and seed set were mildly impaired for the e6l1 mutants. This work identifies E6L1 as a novel stigmatic factor that plays a role during the early post-pollination stages in Arabidopsis . Key Message We describe a function for a novel Arabidopsis gene, E6-like 1 ( E6L1 ), that was identified as a highly-expressed gene in the stigma and plays a role in early post-pollination stages.