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1.
Curr Biol ; 32(1): 164-175.e8, 2022 01 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34798048

ABSTRACT

To survive fluctuating water availability on land, terrestrial plants must be able to sense water stresses, such as drought and flooding. The plant hormone abscisic acid (ABA) and plant-specific SNF1-related protein kinase 2 (SnRK2) play key roles in plant osmostress responses. We recently reported that, in the moss Physcomitrium patens, ABA and osmostress-dependent SnRK2 activation requires phosphorylation by an upstream RAF-like kinase (ARK). This RAF/SnRK2 module is an evolutionarily conserved mechanism of osmostress signaling in land plants. Surprisingly, ARK is also an ortholog of Arabidopsis CONSTITUTIVE RESPONSE 1 (CTR1), which negatively regulates the ethylene-mediated submergence response of P. patens, indicating a nexus for cross-talk between the two signaling pathways that regulate responses to water availability. However, the mechanism through which the ARK/SnRK2 module is activated in response to water stress remains to be elucidated. Here, we show that a group of ethylene-receptor-related sensor histidine kinases (ETR-HKs) is essential for ABA and osmostress responses in P. patens. The intracellular kinase domain of an ETR-HK from P. patens physically interacts with ARK at the endoplasmic reticulum in planta. Moreover, HK disruptants lack ABA-dependent autophosphorylation of the critical serine residue in the activation loop of ARK, leading to loss of SnRK2 activation in response to ABA and osmostress. Collectively with the notion that ETR-HKs participate in submergence responses, our present data suggest that the HK/ARK module functions as an integration unit for environmental water availability to elicit optimized water stress responses in the moss P. patens.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins , Arabidopsis , Bryopsida , Abscisic Acid/metabolism , Arabidopsis/genetics , Arabidopsis/metabolism , Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Bryopsida/metabolism , Dehydration , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Histidine/metabolism , Histidine Kinase/genetics , Histidine Kinase/metabolism
2.
Plant Physiol ; 169(1): 283-98, 2015 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26243614

ABSTRACT

Land plants have evolved adaptive regulatory mechanisms enabling the survival of environmental stresses associated with terrestrial life. Here, we focus on the evolution of the regulatory CONSTITUTIVE TRIPLE RESPONSE1 (CTR1) component of the ethylene signaling pathway that modulates stress-related changes in plant growth and development. First, we compare CTR1-like proteins from a bryophyte, Physcomitrella patens (representative of early divergent land plants), with those of more recently diverged lycophyte and angiosperm species (including Arabidopsis [Arabidopsis thaliana]) and identify a monophyletic CTR1 family. The fully sequenced P. patens genome encodes only a single member of this family (PpCTR1L). Next, we compare the functions of PpCTR1L with that of related angiosperm proteins. We show that, like angiosperm CTR1 proteins (e.g. AtCTR1 of Arabidopsis), PpCTR1L modulates downstream ethylene signaling via direct interaction with ethylene receptors. These functions, therefore, likely predate the divergence of the bryophytes from the land-plant lineage. However, we also show that PpCTR1L unexpectedly has dual functions and additionally modulates abscisic acid (ABA) signaling. In contrast, while AtCTR1 lacks detectable ABA signaling functions, Arabidopsis has during evolution acquired another homolog that is functionally distinct from AtCTR1. In conclusion, the roles of CTR1-related proteins appear to have functionally diversified during land-plant evolution, and angiosperm CTR1-related proteins appear to have lost an ancestral ABA signaling function. Our study provides new insights into how molecular events such as gene duplication and functional differentiation may have contributed to the adaptive evolution of regulatory mechanisms in plants.


Subject(s)
Abscisic Acid/metabolism , Arabidopsis/metabolism , Ethylenes/metabolism , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Arabidopsis/genetics , Bryophyta/genetics , Bryophyta/growth & development , Evolution, Molecular , Gene Duplication , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Gene Knockout Techniques , Genome, Plant , Models, Biological , Phylogeny , Protein Binding , Protein Kinases/metabolism , Receptors, Cell Surface/metabolism
3.
Plant J ; 72(6): 947-59, 2012 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23046428

ABSTRACT

Colonization of the land by multicellular green plants was a fundamental step in the evolution of life on earth. Land plants evolved from fresh-water aquatic algae, and the transition to a terrestrial environment required the acquisition of developmental plasticity appropriate to the conditions of water availability, ranging from drought to flood. Here we show that extant bryophytes exhibit submergence-induced developmental plasticity, suggesting that submergence responses evolved relatively early in the evolution of land plants. We also show that a major component of the bryophyte submergence response is controlled by the phytohormone ethylene, using a perception mechanism that has subsequently been conserved throughout the evolution of land plants. Thus a plant environmental response mechanism with major ecological and agricultural importance probably had its origins in the very earliest stages of the colonization of the land.


Subject(s)
Bryopsida/genetics , Ethylenes/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Plant Growth Regulators/metabolism , Plant Proteins/genetics , Receptors, Cell Surface/genetics , Base Sequence , Biological Evolution , Bryopsida/physiology , Droughts , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutation , Phylogeny , Plant Leaves/genetics , Plant Leaves/physiology , Plant Shoots/genetics , Plant Shoots/physiology , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Stress, Physiological , Water/physiology
4.
Plant Cell ; 21(5): 1328-39, 2009 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19470587

ABSTRACT

The phytohormone gibberellin (GA) has long been known to regulate the growth, development, and life cycle progression of flowering plants. However, the molecular GA-GID1-DELLA mechanism that enables plants to respond to GA has only recently been discovered. In addition, studies published in the last few years have highlighted previously unsuspected roles for the GA-GID1-DELLA mechanism in regulating growth response to environmental variables. Here, we review these advances within a general plant biology context and speculate on the answers to some remaining questions. We also discuss the hypothesis that the GA-GID1-DELLA mechanism enables flowering plants to maintain transient growth arrest, giving them the flexibility to survive periods of adversity.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins/physiology , Arabidopsis/growth & development , Gibberellins/physiology , Plant Growth Regulators/physiology , Receptors, Cell Surface/physiology , Adaptation, Physiological , Arabidopsis/genetics , Arabidopsis/metabolism , Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Models, Biological , Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex/metabolism , Receptors, Cell Surface/genetics , Signal Transduction
5.
New Phytol ; 183(1): 133-141, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19383092

ABSTRACT

* The development of photosynthetic competence is a key requirement for all land plants and many aquatic algae. Previous work has demonstrated that a pair of Golden2-like (GLK) transcription factors regulates chloroplast development in diverse land plants, in that recessive glk1;glk2 mutants are pale green and fail to accumulate components of the light-harvesting machinery. To determine the extent to which the GLK pathway has diverged in land plants, we compared GLK gene function in the flowering plant Arabidopsis thaliana and the moss Physcomitrella patens. * Cross-species complementation experiments were carried out to assess the ability of AtGLK1 to activate downstream targets in P. patens Ppglk1;glk2 double mutants, and the ability of upstream components in A. thaliana to activate PpGLK promoter::AtGLK1 coding region fusions in Atglk1;glk2 double mutants. * The results demonstrate that expression of the A. thaliana AtGLK1 gene cannot rescue the Ppglk1;glk2 mutant phenotype and that P. patens GLK promoter sequences are not activated in A. thaliana. * In combination with previous work which demonstrated partial complementation of A. thaliana double mutants by PpGlk1, this work provides an example of unidirectional complementation between the two species. This situation infers specialization of the GLK pathway during land plant evolution.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Arabidopsis/genetics , Bryopsida/genetics , Chloroplasts/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Genes, Plant , Transcription Factors/genetics , Arabidopsis/metabolism , Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Bryopsida/metabolism , Gene Expression , Mutation , Phenotype , Promoter Regions, Genetic , Transcription Factors/metabolism
6.
Curr Biol ; 17(14): 1225-30, 2007 Jul 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17627823

ABSTRACT

Angiosperms (flowering plants) evolved relatively recently and are substantially diverged from early land plants (bryophytes, lycophytes, and others [1]). The phytohormone gibberellin (GA) adaptively regulates angiosperm growth via the GA-DELLA signaling mechanism [2-7]. GA binds to GA receptors (GID1s), thus stimulating interactions between GID1s and the growth-repressing DELLAs [8-12]. Subsequent 26S proteasome-mediated destruction of the DELLAs promotes growth [13-17]. Here we outline the evolution of the GA-DELLA mechanism. We show that the interaction between GID1 and DELLA components from Selaginella kraussiana (a lycophyte) is GA stimulated. In contrast, GID1-like (GLP1) and DELLA components from Physcomitrella patens (a bryophyte) do not interact, suggesting that GA-stimulated GID1-DELLA interactions arose in the land-plant lineage after the bryophyte divergence ( approximately 430 million years ago [1]). We further show that a DELLA-deficient P. patens mutant strain lacks the derepressed growth characteristic of DELLA-deficient angiosperms, and that both S. kraussiana and P. patens lack detectable growth responses to GA. These observations indicate that early land-plant DELLAs do not repress growth in situ. However, S. kraussiana and P. patens DELLAs function as growth-repressors when expressed in the angiosperm Arabidopsis thaliana. We conclude that the GA-DELLA growth-regulatory mechanism arose during land-plant evolution and via independent stepwise recruitment of GA-stimulated GID1-DELLA interaction and DELLA growth-repression functions.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Gibberellins/metabolism , Plant Development , Plant Growth Regulators/metabolism , Transcription Factors/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Arabidopsis/growth & development , Arabidopsis/metabolism , Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Bryopsida/genetics , Bryopsida/growth & development , Bryopsida/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Plants/genetics , Plants/metabolism , Receptors, Cell Surface/metabolism , Selaginellaceae/genetics , Selaginellaceae/growth & development , Selaginellaceae/metabolism , Signal Transduction/physiology , Transcription Factors/genetics
7.
Plant Cell ; 17(7): 1894-907, 2005 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15923345

ABSTRACT

Land plant chloroplasts evolved from those found in the green algae. During land plant evolution, nuclear regulatory mechanisms have been modified to produce morphologically and functionally diverse chloroplasts in distinct developmental contexts. At least some of these mechanisms evolved independently in different plant lineages. In angiosperms, GOLDEN2-LIKE (GLK) transcription factors regulate the development of at least three chloroplast types. To determine whether GLK-mediated regulation of chloroplast development evolved within angiosperms or is a plesiomorphy within land plants, gene function was examined in the moss Physcomitrella patens. Gene expression patterns and loss-of-function mutant phenotypes suggested that GLK gene function is conserved between P. patens and Arabidopsis thaliana, species that diverged >400 million years ago. In support of this suggestion, moss genes partially complement Arabidopsis loss-of-function mutants. Therefore, GLK-mediated regulation of chloroplast development defines one of the most ancient conserved regulatory mechanisms identified in the plant kingdom.


Subject(s)
Bryopsida/genetics , Cell Nucleus/genetics , Chloroplasts/genetics , Conserved Sequence , Evolution, Molecular , Transcription Factors/genetics , Arabidopsis/genetics , Bryopsida/metabolism , Cell Differentiation/genetics , Cell Nucleus/metabolism , Chloroplasts/metabolism , Chloroplasts/ultrastructure , Conserved Sequence/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant/genetics , Genome, Plant , Light-Harvesting Protein Complexes/genetics , Light-Harvesting Protein Complexes/metabolism , Magnoliopsida/genetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutation/genetics , Phenotype , Photosynthesis/genetics , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid , Thylakoids/genetics , Thylakoids/metabolism , Thylakoids/ultrastructure
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