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Causes and consequences of cytonuclear incompatibility in hybrids of flowering plants.

PubMed · 2026-06-24

When plants from different species mate or double their chromosomes, the genetic machinery inside their cells can fall out of sync — leading to pale leaves, sterile seeds, or outright failure. This review maps how plants cope with that mismatch, and how breeders exploit it to produce hybrid crops.

1

Cytonuclear mismatches disrupt the assembly of multi-protein complexes critical for photosynthesis and respiration, with visible symptoms including chlorosis (yellowing) and seed sterility.

2

Plants buffer incompatibility through multiple layers — biased retention of maternal gene copies, gene conversion, altered DNA methylation, changes in splicing and translation rates, and accelerated protein degradation — indicating the response is system-wide, not a single fix.

3

Cytoplasmic male sterility, a direct product of cytonuclear conflict, is a cornerstone commercial tool in hybrid crop breeding, underlining that evolutionary incompatibility has been harnessed for large-scale agricultural innovation.

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