Evolutionary assembly of the plant terrestrialization toolkit from protein domains

Author:

Dhabalia Ashok Amra1ORCID,de Vries Sophie1ORCID,Darienko Tatyana1ORCID,Irisarri Iker123ORCID,de Vries Jan124ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Applied Bioinformatics, University of Goettingen, Institute for Microbiology and Genetics, Goldschmidtstr. 1, Goettingen 37077, Germany

2. University of Goettingen, Campus Institute Data Science (CIDAS), Goldschmidstr. 1, Goettingen 37077, Germany

3. Section Phylogenomics, Centre for Molecular biodiversity Research, Leibniz Institute for the Analysis of Biodiversity Change (LIB), Museum of Nature Hamburg, Martin-Luther-King-Platz 3, Hamburg 20146, Germany

4. Department of Applied Bioinformatics, University of Goettingen, Goettingen Center for Molecular Biosciences (GZMB), Goldschmidtstr. 1, Goettingen 37077, Germany

Abstract

Land plants (embryophytes) came about in a momentous evolutionary singularity: plant terrestrialization. This event marks not only the conquest of land by plants but also the massive radiation of embryophytes into a diverse array of novel forms and functions. The unique suite of traits present in the earliest land plants is thought to have been ushered in by a burst in genomic novelty. Here, we asked the question of how these bursts were possible. For this, we explored: (i) the initial emergence and (ii) the reshuffling of domains to give rise to hallmark environmental response genes of land plants. We pinpoint that a quarter of the embryophytic genes for stress physiology are specific to the lineage, yet a significant portion of this novelty arises not de novo but from reshuffling and recombining of pre-existing domains. Our data suggest that novel combinations of old genomic substrate shaped the plant terrestrialization toolkit, including hallmark processes in signalling, biotic interactions and specialized metabolism.

Funder

H2020 European Research Council

International Max Planck Research School

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Göttingen Graduate Center for Neurosciences, Biophysics, and Molecular Biosciences

Publisher

The Royal Society

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