Abstract
Introducing asexual reproduction through seeds – apomixis – into crop species could revolutionize agriculture by allowing F1 hybrids with enhanced yield and stability to be clonally propagated. Engineering synthetic apomixis has proven feasible in inbred rice through the inactivation of three genes (MiMe), which results in the conversion of meiosis into mitosis in a line ectopically expressing the BABYBOOM1 (BBM1) parthenogenetic trigger in egg cells. However, only 10–30% of the seeds were clonal. We show here that synthetic apomixis can be induced in a F1 hybrid of rice by inducing MiMe mutations and egg cell expression of BBM1 in a single step. We generated hybrid plants that produced more than 95% of clonal seeds across multiple generations. Clonal apomictic plants maintained the phenotype of the F1 hybrid along successive generations. Our results demonstrate that there is no barrier to almost fully penetrant synthetic apomixis in an important crop species, rendering it compatible with use in agriculture.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.