Literature DB >> 21659092

Auxin regulation of axial growth in bryophyte sporophytes: its potential significance for the evolution of early land plants.

Dorothybelle Poli1, Mark Jacobs, Todd J Cooke.   

Abstract

To identify developmental mechanisms that might have been involved in the evolution of axial sporophytes in early land plants, we examined the effects of auxin-regulatory compounds in the sporophytes of the hornwort Phaeoceros personii, the liverwort Pellia epiphylla, and the moss Polytrichum ohioense, members of the three divisions of extant bryophytes. The altered growth of isolated young sporophytes exposed to applied auxin (indole-3-acetic acid) or an auxin antagonist (p-chlorophenoxyisobutyric acid) suggests that endogenous auxin acts to regulate the rates of axial growth in all bryophyte divisions. Auxin in young hornwort sporophytes moved at very low fluxes, was insensitive to an auxin-transport inhibitor (N-[1-naphthyl]phthalamic acid), and exhibited a polarity ratio close to 1.0, implying that auxin moves by simple diffusion in these structures. Emerging liverwort sporophytes had somewhat higher auxin fluxes, which were sensitive to transport inhibitors but lacked any measurable polarity. Thus, auxin movement in liverwort sporophytes appears to result from a unique type of apolar facilitated diffusion. In young Polytrichum sporophytes, auxin movement was predominantly basipetal and occurred at high fluxes exceeding those measured in maize coleoptiles. In older Polytrichum sporophytes, acropetal auxin flux had increased beyond the level measured for basipetal flux. Insofar as acropetal and basipetal fluxes had different inhibitor sensitivities, these results suggested that moss sporophytes carry out bidirectional polar transport in different cellular pathways, which resembles the transport in certain angiosperm structures. Therefore, the three lineages of extant bryophytes appear to have evolved independent innovations for auxin regulation of axial growth, with similar mechanisms operating in moss sporophytes and vascular plants.

Entities:  

Year:  2003        PMID: 21659092     DOI: 10.3732/ajb.90.10.1405

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Bot        ISSN: 0002-9122            Impact factor:   3.844


  7 in total

Review 1.  Morphological evolution in land plants: new designs with old genes.

Authors:  Nuno D Pires; Liam Dolan
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2012-02-19       Impact factor: 6.237

2.  Convergences and divergences in polar auxin transport and shoot development in land plant evolution.

Authors:  Tomomichi Fujita; Mitsuyasu Hasebe
Journal:  Plant Signal Behav       Date:  2009-04

Review 3.  Major transitions in the evolution of early land plants: a bryological perspective.

Authors:  Roberto Ligrone; Jeffrey G Duckett; Karen S Renzaglia
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2012-02-22       Impact factor: 4.357

Review 4.  The bryophytes Physcomitrium patens and Marchantia polymorpha as model systems for studying evolutionary cell and developmental biology in plants.

Authors:  Satoshi Naramoto; Yuki Hata; Tomomichi Fujita; Junko Kyozuka
Journal:  Plant Cell       Date:  2022-01-20       Impact factor: 12.085

5.  The evolution of the plant genome-to-morphology auxin circuit.

Authors:  Ulrich Kutschera; Karl J Niklas
Journal:  Theory Biosci       Date:  2016-06-22       Impact factor: 1.919

6.  Hormonal regulation in green plant lineage families.

Authors:  M M Johri
Journal:  Physiol Mol Biol Plants       Date:  2008-06-15

7.  Multiple innovations underpinned branching form diversification in mosses.

Authors:  Yoan Coudert; Neil E Bell; Claude Edelin; C Jill Harrison
Journal:  New Phytol       Date:  2017-05-04       Impact factor: 10.151

  7 in total

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