24 July 2011

Sciency Answers: Variegation part 2. Stripes and splotches!


Last week I talked about the colored patterns on leaves created for some evolutionary adaptive reason. This week I'll be talking about the freaks of the plant world, the strange variegated mutants that we humans love and keep around to add color and excitement to our gardens.

Chimeras
Imagine, for a moment, that you had to get a kidney transplant. Your kidneys are failing, so a good friend donates you her kidney. It is a medical miracle, you owe your friend everything, and you are now a chimera.

The word Chimera comes originally from Greek mythology, and refers to a monster killed by Bellerophon, (who, poor fellow, no one remembers anymore, though everyone knows his cool winged horse Pegasus) which had the head of a lion, body of a goat and tail of a snake. Since the original chimera is one animal made up pieces of lots of different animals, scientists now use the term to mean any single organism with genetically different sections of cells. Like a person with a kidney transplant. All of your body has your DNA, except the the cells in the donated kidney, which have the DNA of the friend who saved your life. You wouldn't, however, pass on your donor's DNA to your children. Kidney cells only make other kidney cells, not eggs or sperm. Unlike, say, if you had an ovary transplant in which case the children you bore would be genetically the children of the ovary donor, not you.
We can become chimeras naturally as well. Imagine a developing embryo. It starts off as one single cell, which keeps dividing, and bit by bit different cells get designated to develop into your brain and skin and kidneys. If some mutation just so happened to happen in that cell that was going to become your kidney, that mutation would be in that kidney for the rest of your life, but not in the rest of your body. (For more on human chimeras, including an incredible story about a women who was not the genetic mother of her own son, check out this amazing (as always) episode of Radio Lab. Her story starts at about the 6 minute mark).

Plants, of course, are arrange a little differently, with new growth and organs coming from buds. But within the group of actively dividing cells in a plants' bud, the meristem, there are three (sometimes 2) layers of cells, called (very uncreatively) L1, L2, and L3. L1 is very outer layer of the plant, L3 the center, and L2 in between. Just as new kidney cells only come from other kidney cells in our body, new L1 cells come from other L1 cells. So, if there is a chance mutation interrupting normal chlorophyll production results in mutant white (or yellow) cells in, say, the L1 layer, you can get a plant which is a chimera – mutant albino L1 layer, but regular green for the other two.
You've seen this is hostas. Here's the cute miniature hosta, 'Blue Mouse Ears'

And here are some chimeral versions of the exact same plant. The only difference between these different varieties is which layer or layers are albino mutants:
So chimeras can create all kinds of lovely variegated plants. Seedlings from these plants won't be variegated, just as the children of a person with a kidney transplant won't have genetically different kidneys. Plant gametes (sex cells) are made by just one of the layers, so depending on which layer is variegated, the seedlings will either be all green (boring) or all white (dead).
So where do new variegated hostas come from? Well, in some cases, people just have to be patient and wait for a variegated mutant (aka sports) to pop up. But there is also a special trick that results in variegated plants that can pass on their variegation to the next generation.
Chloroplast mutants
Here is a cell.
Chloroplasts are where photosynthesis actually happens, what makes a plant green. They also, strangely enough, have a little of their own DNA. They actually  essentially little cells within a cell, doing their own dividing, reproducing, and of course, mutating. Sometimes those mutations cause them to stop making chlorophyll, and become white.
As long as a cell has mostly green chloroplasts, all is well. The white ones just hang out, dividing occasionally, doing their thing. But when a cell divides into two new cells, the chloroplasts get split up between the daughter cells. And if the parent cell has some white and some green chloroplasts, just by chance, sometimes it will make cells with all green chloroplasts, sometimes all white chloroplasts, and sometimes a mix of the two types.
 When this happens in a plant, it looks like what you see here in yet another variegated sport of the (apparently very mutation prone) hosta 'Blue Mouse Ears'
The white patches have all albino chloroplasts, while the green ones are either all green, or a mix of the two.
This type of variegation will often come true from seed, because as long as the individual cells that develop into the embryo in the seeds contain both green and white chloroplasts, the new seedling will show just the same streaky, blotchy variegated pattern.
Sometimes, though, just by chance, the cells with white chloroplasts end up isolated in one of the layers, and the green cells end up in the other layers – the irregular chloroplast mutant variegation becomes a tidy chimeral variegation. Nursery people refer to this as the variegation stabilizing. Hosta breeders make use of this all the time, using plants with unstable streaky variegation in their breeding programs to create seedlings which can stabilize into varieties with neat variegation on leaf margins or centers which they can then sell to you.
Transposons
Another, completely different way variegation can come about is through the so called jumping genes, transposons.
Genes are essentially little templates for making proteins. Proteins in cells can be incredibly complex, and act like little machines doing. They build stuff, take stuff apart, modify chemicals into other chemicals, and generally run the show. But transposons are genes that do something rather odd. Instead of making a protein that goes off and does something, the protein they make simply comes back, makes a copy of the gene that made it and sticks that copy somewhere else in the genome. Transposons are genes that can make copies of themselves, the chain letters of the genetics world.
Transposons are everywhere. In fact, almost half of the DNA in your body is actually transposons. They keep copying and copying and copying, filling up the genome. All those transposons jumping around can cause problems. As they move about the genome, they sometimes land in the middle of other genes, causing them not to work right anymore. It is like you opened your cook book to make brownies and the recipe read: “1 cup COPY ME flour COPY ME COPY ME 2 COPY ME cu COPY ME ps sug COPY ME ar.”And sometimes, the transposon moves in and out of a gene at different times in different cells as a flower or leaf develops. And then you can get this:
This poor morning glory has a transposon problem. The transposon keeps bouncing into the middle of a gene it needs to make the purple pigment for the flower. When it does, the gene stops working, so those cells are white. When the transposon moves out of the gene again, it starts working, and you get purple. Many striped flowers, and some striped leaves, are the lovely result of a poor plant with transposons moving about.
So next time you pick up a beautifully variegated plant, or admire the pattern of a striped flower, take a moment to appreciate that is happening. Two genetically different cell types living peacefully together, white and green chloroplasts getting shunted this way and that, or perhaps unruly transposons bouncing in and out of genes.

(Correction: In my original post, I described the plant as actively removing transposons from genes, which a friend who knows a LOT more about transposons corrected. Plants have no way to actively kick a transposon out of a gene, though there are various mechanisms by which transposons are inactivated so they stop moving around the genome.)

Have a question? Get a sciency answer! Just e-mail me: engeizuki at gmail dot com

15 comments:

Patrick's Garden said...

Honestly, I could only make it through chimeras but great post.

Joseph said...

Thanks, I think... :) I know it is a bit long, Patrick. I get all excited about this stuff, but it isn't everyone's thing.

Kathy2h said...

I love it. I was just thinking you should write a book (because, really, I'm sure you have tons of spare time.) Still, if there were a Sciency Answers book, I would buy it.

Thomas said...

This post reminded me of a passionflower plant I grew from seed. It came up in another pot long after I'd given up and recycled the seed mix. It had small leaves with irregular outlines, but otherwise green and healthy looking, and I didn't know what it was. Then it grew a new shoot from the base with normal leaves, and I could see it was P. vitifolia. The original 'mutant' growth eventually died back. I couldn't get it to bloom - not enough light or space. Now I wish I still had that plant. Sigh.

I didn't know that chloroplast had DNA, like mitochondria. And transposons... I think if ID'ers would put down that book every once in a while and get into a little science reading (like this), they might wonder how anyone could have designed life from a plan. Unless it was a committee, but then I guess that would be polytheism.

Anyway, thanks, Joseph.

Joseph said...

Thank you Kathy2h! I would like to do a book at some point -- we'll see how things work out.
Thomas,
Most variegations that pop up end up doing what yours did -- dying. Less chlorophyll, whatever the cause, makes a plant less vigorous. But keep your eyes open! There are more variegated sports to be found!

plantingoaks said...

Wow. So cool. I had always thought that streaky variegation like the last example always came from viruses like the rembrandt tulips. I'd never even heard of transposons. I can see how they would have similar effects.

Laurie Brown said...

Maybe you can tell me what happened here: I have a gallica rose, The Bishop. It's normally a purpley-pink. One summer, almost a third of the bush bloomed with wildly striped flowers, not any two alike. Some were white striped purple, some purple and pink, in various amounts.

This wasn't just one branch- I've had a single branch of a rose sport before and give me different colored roses than the rest of the bush- but multiple canes, although I assume they were all coming from a common spot below ground.

The next summer, those same branches gave all the regular purpley-pink solid colored roses.

I could understand a mutation, but why did it go back to it's original coloring? There were no chemicals used on the plant, no pruning, nothing out of the ordinary.

?

Riz Reyes said...

It totally isn't everybody's thing, but I applaud you for putting it out there. It was such a great refresher and I feel more informed and compelled to clarify any misinformation out there concerning variegated plants.

As a former colleague said, they're "Freaks of nature" and I totally agree. It's awesome!!!! haha

Great you used 'Blue Mouse Ears' as an example!

R

greenman said...

I have a really good time reading your posts.
These mysteries (to me anyway) of the botanical world are amazing and your posts are very interesting.

Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge.

Joseph said...

Laurie,
My best guess would be a virus. Viruses can cause striping in the flowers of gallica roses. It is odd that it would then vanish the next year never to return, because virus infections in plants are usually persistent. Do you live somewhere very hot in the summer? Because prolonged heat treatments (100+ degrees) have been used to remove viruses from roses in the past. (there is a nice article on virus striped roses here: http://www.rdrop.com/~paul/moorestripe.html) My guess would be that your rose got infected, then the heat of the summer knocked out the viruses.

Tom said...

That bit about human chimeras is fascinating. I never really considered the possibility of that happening in people.

Laurie Brown said...

I'm up in zone 4, and we rarely get days over 100 F, although it does happen occasionally. We do get runs of days in the mid-90s, though. I honestly don't remember what the weather was like that summer or the one after.

That's interesting that virus causes striping in gallicas; I'd only ever heard about the virus that causes general weakness in roses. Your articles are always so interesting!

Henry Wang said...

Dear Joseph

Thank you so much for the detail answer I really appreciated, your posts are so inspiring to me.

I have another question about polyploid breeding for you, please resolve my puzzle when you have time, I thank you in advance.

Regards,

Henry

Veronica said...

Joseph,

Amazing post!!! I so loved reading it! It made me happy to see someone talking about transposons and some of the cool things that they can do.

Veronica

Joseph said...

Veronica,
...even if I got some of it wrong! Thanks for catching my transposon ignorance!