藻类和植物在6亿年的时间里共享着相同的环境胁迫响应机制。
600M years of shared environmental stress response found in algae and plants

原始链接: https://phys.org/news/2025-03-million-years-environmental-stress-response.html

一项新的研究发现了藻类和陆地植物之间共享的环境胁迫响应网络,揭示了可追溯到6亿年前的进化联系。哥廷根大学的研究人员比较了苔藓和合子藻(陆地植物最近的藻类近亲)的数据,以了解早期植物如何克服陆地压力源。 通过分析这些生物在胁迫下的基因活动和生化特征,他们确定了一个共同的基因调控网络。令人惊讶的是,尽管进化距离遥远,“中心”基因(在网络中高度连接的基因)却被发现是共享的。这些中心基因似乎整合信息并指导整体胁迫响应。这个关于遗传和生化反应的综合数据集为了解植物多样性中胁迫的生理影响提供了宝贵的见解,并突出了植物胁迫抗性的古老起源。

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原文

Without plants on land, humans could not live on Earth. From mosses to ferns to grasses to trees, plants are our food, fodder and timber. All this diversity emerged from an algal ancestor that conquered land long ago. The success of land plants is surprising because it is a challenging habitat. On land, rapid shifts in environmental conditions lead to stress, and plants have developed an elaborate molecular machinery for sensing and responding.

Now, a research team led by the University of Göttingen has compared algae and plants that span 600 million years of independent evolution and pinpointed a shared stress response using advanced bioinformatic methods. The results were published in Nature Communications.

The closest algal relatives of land plants are the filamentous and unicellular conjugating algae, the zygnematophytes. This group of organisms has received major attention because when researchers compared data about land plants with data about these algae, they could trace back to the very first plants on land. One of the big questions is how the earliest overcame terrestrial stressors.

To find out, the team generated hundreds of samples from a moss model system and two zygnematophyte algae challenged by environmental stressors found on land. Using high-throughput sequencing of the active genes and profiling of the compounds produced by the moss and under stress, they obtained a comprehensive picture of how the organisms react to the challenges over a course of several hours. By combining evolutionary analysis with statistical modeling and machine learning methods, a shared network of gene regulation was predicted.

Professor Jan de Vries of Göttingen University, who led the research, explains, "One of the big surprises was that we found several highly connected genes—known as 'hubs'—in the network shared by these very different organisms that actually split from each other in evolutionary terms around 600 million years ago. These hubs appear to bundle information and shape the overall network response."

"Now we have a comprehensive dataset of stress responses, combining genetic and biochemical information that can be further explored for its physiological impact across plant diversity," adds Dr. Tim Rieseberg, first author of the study and also at Göttingen University.

More information: Tim P. Rieseberg et al, Time-resolved oxidative signal convergence across the algae–embryophyte divide, Nature Communications (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-56939-y

Citation: 600 million years of shared environmental stress response found in algae and plants (2025, March 10) retrieved 24 March 2025 from https://phys.org/news/2025-03-million-years-environmental-stress-response.html

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