Evolution of cytosolic and organellar invertases empowered the colonization and thriving of land plants

Author:

Wan Hongjian1ORCID,Zhang Youjun23ORCID,Wu Limin4ORCID,Zhou Guozhi1,Pan Luzhao1,Fernie Alisdair R23ORCID,Ruan Yong-Ling56ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory for Managing Biotic and Chemical Threats to the Quality and Safety of Agro-Products, Institute of Vegetables, Zhejiang Academy of Agricultural Sciences , Hangzhou 310021 , China

2. Center for Plant Systems Biology and Biotechnology , Plovdiv 4000 , Bulgaria

3. Department of Molecular Physiology, Max Planck Institute of Molecular Plant Physiology , Potsdam-Golm 14476 , Germany

4. Food and Agriculture, CSIRO , ACT, Canberra 2601 , Australia

5. State Key Laboratory of Crop Stress Biology in Arid Areas and College of Horticulture, Northwest A&F University , Xianyang 712100 , China

6. Division of Plant Sciences, Research School of Biology, The Australian National University , Canberra, ACT 2601 , Australia

Abstract

Abstract The molecular innovation underpinning efficient carbon and energy metabolism during evolution of land plants remains largely unknown. Invertase-mediated sucrose cleavage into hexoses is central to fuel growth. Why some cytoplasmic invertases (CINs) function in the cytosol, whereas others operate in chloroplasts and mitochondria, is puzzling. We attempted to shed light on this question from an evolutionary perspective. Our analyses indicated that plant CINs originated from a putatively orthologous ancestral gene in cyanobacteria and formed the plastidic CIN (α1 clade) through endosymbiotic gene transfer, while its duplication in algae with a loss of its signal peptide produced the β clade CINs in the cytosol. The mitochondrial CINs (α2) were derived from duplication of the plastidic CINs and coevolved with vascular plants. Importantly, the copy number of mitochondrial and plastidic CINs increased upon the emergence of seed plants, corresponding with the rise of respiratory, photosynthetic, and growth rates. The cytosolic CIN (β subfamily) kept expanding from algae to gymnosperm, indicating its role in supporting the increase in carbon use efficiency during evolution. Affinity purification mass spectrometry identified a cohort of proteins interacting with α1 and 2 CINs, which points to their roles in plastid and mitochondrial glycolysis, oxidative stress tolerance, and the maintenance of subcellular sugar homeostasis. Collectively, the findings indicate evolutionary roles of α1 and α2 CINs in chloroplasts and mitochondria for achieving high photosynthetic and respiratory rates, respectively, which, together with the expanding of cytosolic CINs, likely underpin the colonization of land plants through fueling rapid growth and biomass production.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Australian National University

Northwest A&F University

Key Research and Development Program of Zhejiang

State Key Laboratory for Managing Biotic and Chemical Threats to the Quality and Safety of Agro-products

Agricultural Science and Technology Projects of New Varieties Breeding

China Agriculture Research System

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Genetics,Physiology

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