| Literature DB >> 25802151 |
Christof Lind1, Ingo Dreyer2, Enrique J López-Sanjurjo1, Katharina von Meyer1, Kimitsune Ishizaki3, Takayuki Kohchi3, Daniel Lang4, Yang Zhao5, Ines Kreuzer1, Khaled A S Al-Rasheid6, Hans Ronne7, Ralf Reski4, Jian-Kang Zhu5, Dietmar Geiger8, Rainer Hedrich1.
Abstract
During the transition from water to land, plants had to cope with the loss of water through transpiration, the inevitable result of photosynthetic CO2 fixation on land [1, 2]. Control of transpiration became possible through the development of a new cell type: guard cells, which form stomata. In vascular plants, stomatal regulation is mediated by the stress hormone ABA, which triggers the opening of the SnR kinase OST1-activated anion channel SLAC1 [3, 4]. To understand the evolution of this regulatory circuit, we cloned both ABA-signaling elements, SLAC1 and OST1, from a charophyte alga, a liverwort, and a moss, and functionally analyzed the channel-kinase interactions. We were able to show that the emergence of stomata in the last common ancestor of mosses and vascular plants coincided with the origin of SLAC1-type channels capable of using the ancient ABA drought signaling kinase OST1 for regulation of stomatal closure.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25802151 DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2015.01.067
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Biol ISSN: 0960-9822 Impact factor: 10.834