Author:
Zhao Yong-Yao,Lyu Mingju Amy,Miao FenFen,Chen Genyun,Zhu Xin-Guang
Abstract
AbstractC4 photosynthesis optimizes plants carbon and water relations, allowing high photosynthetic rate with low stomatal conductance. Stomata have long been believed as a part of C4 syndrome. However, it remains unclear how stomata traits evolved along the path from C3 to C4. Stomatal patterning was examined in Flaveria genus, a model for studying C4 evolution. Comparative, transgenic and semi-in-vitro experiments were used to study molecular basis that underlies stomatal traits along C4 evolution. Novel results: the evolution from C3 to C4 species through intermediate species is accompanied by a stepwise rather than an abrupt change in the stomatal traits. The initial change occurs near Type II and dramatic change occurs at the C4-like species. On the road to C4, stomata become less in number but bigger in size and changes in stomatal density dominates changes in maximum stomatal conductance (gsmax). The reduction of FSTOMAGEN expression underlies altered gsmax between Flaveria species with different photosynthetic pathways and likely occurs in other C4 lineages. Our study provides insight into the pattern, mechanism and role of stomatal evolution along the road towards C4. This work highlights the stomatal traits in the current C4 evolutionary model and the co-evolution of photosynthetic pathway and stomata.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory