Diversified molecular adaptations of inorganic nitrogen assimilation and signaling machineries in plants

Author:

Zhang Zhenhua1ORCID,Diao Runjie1ORCID,Sun Jingyan1ORCID,Liu Yannan1ORCID,Zhao Mengru1ORCID,Wang Qiuping1ORCID,Xu Zilong1ORCID,Zhong Bojian1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Life Sciences Nanjing Normal University Nanjing 210023 China

Abstract

Summary Plants evolved sophisticated machineries to monitor levels of external nitrogen supply, respond to nitrogen demand from different tissues and integrate this information for coordinating its assimilation. Although roles of inorganic nitrogen in orchestrating developments have been studied in model plants and crops, systematic understanding of the origin and evolution of its assimilation and signaling machineries remains largely unknown. We expanded taxon samplings of algae and early‐diverging land plants, covering all main lineages of Archaeplastida, and reconstructed the evolutionary history of core components involved in inorganic nitrogen assimilation and signaling. Most components associated with inorganic nitrogen assimilation were derived from the ancestral Archaeplastida. Improvements of assimilation machineries by gene duplications and horizontal gene transfers were evident during plant terrestrialization. Clusterization of genes encoding nitrate assimilation proteins might be an adaptive strategy for algae to cope with changeable nitrate availability in different habitats. Green plants evolved complex nitrate signaling machinery that was stepwise improved by domains shuffling and regulation co‐option. Our study highlights innovations in inorganic nitrogen assimilation and signaling machineries, ranging from molecular modifications of proteins to genomic rearrangements, which shaped developmental and metabolic adaptations of plants to changeable nutrient availability in environments.

Funder

Priority Academic Program Development of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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