1. Evolutionarily conserved hierarchical gene regulatory networks for plant salt stress response
- Author
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Ming-Jung Liu, Honzhen Goh, Christina B. Azodi, Daisuke Urano, Ting-Ying Wu, and Shalini Krishnamoorthi
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Regulation of gene expression ,biology ,Gene regulatory network ,Plant Science ,Computational biology ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,WRKY protein domain ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Phylogenetics ,Arabidopsis thaliana ,Adaptation ,Transcription factor ,Gene ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Plant cells constantly alter their gene expression profiles to respond to environmental fluctuations. These continuous adjustments are regulated by multi-hierarchical networks of transcription factors. To understand how such gene regulatory networks (GRNs) have stabilized evolutionarily while allowing for species-specific responses, we compare the GRNs underlying salt response in the early-diverging and late-diverging plants Marchantia polymorpha and Arabidopsis thaliana. Salt-responsive GRNs, constructed on the basis of the temporal transcriptional patterns in the two species, share common trans-regulators but exhibit an evolutionary divergence in cis-regulatory sequences and in the overall network sizes. In both species, WRKY-family transcription factors and their feedback loops serve as central nodes in salt-responsive GRNs. The divergent cis-regulatory sequences of WRKY-target genes are probably associated with the expansion in network size, linking salt stress to tissue-specific developmental and physiological responses. The WRKY modules and highly linked WRKY feedback loops have been preserved widely in other plants, including rice, while keeping their binding-motif sequences mutable. Together, the conserved trans-regulators and the quickly evolving cis-regulatory sequences allow salt-responsive GRNs to adapt over a long evolutionary timescale while maintaining some consistent regulatory structure. This strategy may benefit plants as they adapt to changing environments.
- Published
- 2021