Studies of Physcomitrella patens reveal that ethylene-mediated submergence responses arose relatively early in land-plant evolution.

Yasumura Y, Pierik R, Fricker MD, Voesenek LACJ, Harberd NP

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.

Keywords:

Physcomitrella patens

,

ethylene

,

evolution

,

phytohormones

,

submergence

,

water relations

,

Base Sequence

,

Biological Evolution

,

Bryopsida

,

Droughts

,

Ethylenes

,

Gene Expression Regulation, Plant

,

Molecular Sequence Data

,

Mutation

,

Phylogeny

,

Plant Growth Regulators

,

Plant Leaves

,

Plant Proteins

,

Plant Shoots

,

Receptors, Cell Surface

,

Sequence Analysis, DNA

,

Stress, Physiological

,

Water