Articulo
Stomatal Guard Cells Co-opted an Ancient ABA-Dependent Desiccation Survival System to Regulate Stomatal Closure
Fecha
2015Registro en:
1150054
WOS:000352091100030
Institución
Resumen
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. Keywords. KeyWords Plus:KINASE-PHOSPHATASE PAIR SNRK2 PROTEIN-KINASES ABSCISIC-ACID PHYSCOMITRELLA-PATENS LAND PLANTS OSMOTIC-STRESS ANION CHANNEL DROUGHT-STRESS ARABIDOPSIS EVOLUTION