Evolution and function of red pigmentation in land plants

Author:

Davies Kevin M1ORCID,Landi Marco2,van Klink John W3,Schwinn Kathy E1,Brummell David A1,Albert Nick W1ORCID,Chagné David1ORCID,Jibran Rubina4ORCID,Kulshrestha Samarth1,Zhou Yanfei1,Bowman John L5

Affiliation:

1. The New Zealand Institute for Plant and Food Research Limited , Private Bag 11600, Palmerston North 4442 , New Zealand

2. Department of Agriculture, Food and Environment, University of Pisa , Italy

3. The New Zealand Institute for Plant and Food Research Limited, Department of Chemistry, Otago University , Dunedin , New Zealand

4. The New Zealand Institute for Plant and Food Research Limited , Private Bag 92169, Auckland Mail Centre, Auckland 1142 , New Zealand

5. School of Biological Sciences, Monash University , Melbourne, VIC , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Background Land plants commonly produce red pigmentation as a response to environmental stressors, both abiotic and biotic. The type of pigment produced varies among different land plant lineages. In the majority of species they are flavonoids, a large branch of the phenylpropanoid pathway. Flavonoids that can confer red colours include 3-hydroxyanthocyanins, 3-deoxyanthocyanins, sphagnorubins and auronidins, which are the predominant red pigments in flowering plants, ferns, mosses and liverworts, respectively. However, some flowering plants have lost the capacity for anthocyanin biosynthesis and produce nitrogen-containing betalain pigments instead. Some terrestrial algal species also produce red pigmentation as an abiotic stress response, and these include both carotenoid and phenolic pigments. Scope In this review, we examine: which environmental triggers induce red pigmentation in non-reproductive tissues; theories on the functions of stress-induced pigmentation; the evolution of the biosynthetic pathways; and structure–function aspects of different pigment types. We also compare data on stress-induced pigmentation in land plants with those for terrestrial algae, and discuss possible explanations for the lack of red pigmentation in the hornwort lineage of land plants. Conclusions The evidence suggests that pigment biosynthetic pathways have evolved numerous times in land plants to provide compounds that have red colour to screen damaging photosynthetically active radiation but that also have secondary functions that provide specific benefits to the particular land plant lineage.

Funder

Cargill

Centre for Australian National Biodiversity Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science

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