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Ancestral light and chloroplast regulation form the foundations for C4 gene expression.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Burgess, Steven J 
Granero-Moya, Ignasi 
Grangé-Guermente, Mathieu J 
Boursnell, Chris 
Terry, Matthew J 

Abstract

C4 photosynthesis acts as a carbon concentrating mechanism that leads to large increases in photosynthetic efficiency. The C4 pathway is found in more than 60 plant lineages1 but the molecular enablers of this evolution are poorly understood. In particular, it is unclear how non-photosynthetic proteins in the ancestral C3 system have repeatedly become strongly expressed and integrated into photosynthesis gene regulatory networks in C4 leaves. Here, we provide clear evidence that in C3 leaves, genes encoding key enzymes of the C4 pathway are already co-regulated with photosynthesis genes and are controlled by both light and chloroplast-to-nucleus signalling. In C4 leaves this regulation becomes increasingly dependent on the chloroplast. We propose that regulation of C4 cycle genes by light and the chloroplast in the ancestral C3 state has facilitated the repeated evolution of the complex and convergent C4 trait.

Description

Keywords

Biological Evolution, Carbon, Carbon Cycle, Chloroplasts, Cleome, Gene Expression Regulation, Plant, Light

Journal Title

Nat Plants

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2055-026X
2055-0278

Volume Title

2

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Sponsorship
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BB/I002243/1)
European Commission (289582)
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BB/J011754/1)
The work was funded by the European Union 3to4 project and Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) grant BB/J011754/1. I.G.-M. was supported by the Amgen Foundation. Research on chloroplast signalling by M.J.T. was supported by BBSRC grant (BB/J018139/1).