Literature DB >> 32645485

Phylogenomics reveals convergent evolution of red-violet coloration in land plants and the origins of the anthocyanin biosynthetic pathway.

Bryan T Piatkowski1, Karn Imwattana2, Erin A Tripp3, David J Weston4, Adam Healey5, Jeremy Schmutz6, A Jonathan Shaw2.   

Abstract

The flavonoids, one of the largest classes of plant secondary metabolites, are found in lineages that span the land plant phylogeny and play important roles in stress responses and as pigments. Perhaps the most well-studied flavonoids are the anthocyanins that have human health benefits and help plants attract pollinators, regulate hormone production, and confer resistance to abiotic and biotic stresses. The canonical biochemical pathway responsible for the production of these pigments is well-characterized for flowering plants yet its conservation across deep divergences in land plants remains debated and poorly understood. Many early land plants such as mosses, liverworts, and ferns produce flavonoid pigments, but their biosynthetic origins and homologies to the anthocyanin pathway remain uncertain. We conducted phylogenetic analyses using full genome sequences representing nearly all major green plant lineages to reconstruct the evolutionary history of the anthocyanin biosynthetic pathway then test the hypothesis that genes in this pathway are present in early land plants. We found that the entire pathway was not intact until the most recent common ancestor of seed plants and that orthologs of many downstream enzymes are absent from seedless plants including mosses, liverworts, and ferns. Our results also highlight the utility of phylogenetic inference, as compared to pairwise sequence similarity, in orthology assessment within large gene families that have complex duplication-loss histories. We suggest that the production of red-violet flavonoid pigments widespread in seedless plants, including the 3-deoxyanthocyanins, requires the activity of novel, as-yet discovered enzymes, and represents convergent evolution of red-violet coloration across land plants.
Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Anthocyanin biosynthetic pathway; Anthocyanins; Flavonoids; Phylogenomics; Plant pigments

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32645485     DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2020.106904

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Phylogenet Evol        ISSN: 1055-7903            Impact factor:   4.286


  4 in total

1.  Evolution of Flavylium-Based Color Systems in Plants: What Physical Chemistry Can Tell Us.

Authors:  Fernando Pina; Alfonso Alejo-Armijo; Adelaide Clemente; Johan Mendoza; André Seco; Nuno Basílio; António Jorge Parola
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2021-04-07       Impact factor: 5.923

2.  Insights into the biosynthesis pathway of phenolic compounds in microalgae.

Authors:  Angelo Del Mondo; Clementina Sansone; Christophe Brunet
Journal:  Comput Struct Biotechnol J       Date:  2022-04-20       Impact factor: 6.155

3.  A Moss 2-Oxoglutarate/Fe(II)-Dependent Dioxygenases (2-ODD) Gene of Flavonoids Biosynthesis Positively Regulates Plants Abiotic Stress Tolerance.

Authors:  Huijuan Wang; Shenghao Liu; Fenghua Fan; Qian Yu; Pengying Zhang
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2022-07-29       Impact factor: 6.627

Review 4.  Stress, senescence, and specialized metabolites in bryophytes.

Authors:  Samarth Kulshrestha; Rubina Jibran; John W van Klink; Yanfei Zhou; David A Brummell; Nick W Albert; Kathy E Schwinn; David Chagné; Marco Landi; John L Bowman; Kevin M Davies
Journal:  J Exp Bot       Date:  2022-07-16       Impact factor: 7.298

  4 in total

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