4.8 Article

Coordination between growth and stress responses by DELLA in the liverwort Marchantia polymorpha

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 16, Pages 3678-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2021.06.010

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Spanish Agencia Estatal de Inves-tigacion
  2. FEDER [BFU2016-80621-P, PID2019-110717GB]
  3. JSPS/MEXT KAKENHI [JP17H07424, JP19H05675, 20H04884]
  4. Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sport [FPU15/01756]
  5. MSCA Individual Fellowship [H2020-MSCA-IF-2016-746396]
  6. Japanese Government (MEXT) Scholarship Program
  7. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [20H04884] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The role of DELLA proteins in coordinating growth and stress responses is crucial for plant survival, as shown by their conservation over the past 450 million years in land plants, suggesting that this function may have been encoded in the common ancestor of all land plants.
Plant survival depends on the optimal use of resources under variable environmental conditions. Among the mechanisms that mediate the balance between growth, differentiation, and stress responses, the regulation of transcriptional activity by DELLA proteins stands out. In angiosperms, DELLA accumulation promotes defense against biotic and abiotic stress and represses cell division and expansion, while the loss of DELLA function is associated with increased plant size and sensitivity toward stress.(1) Given that DELLA protein stability is dependent on gibberellin (GA) levels(2) and GA metabolism is influenced by the environment,(3) this pathway is proposed to relay environmental information to the transcriptional programs that regulate growth and stress responses in angiosperms. (4,5)However, DELLA genes are also found in bryophytes, whereas canonical GA receptors have been identified only in vascular plants(.6-10) Thus, it is not clear whether these regulatory functions of DELLA predated or emerged with typical GA signaling. Here, we show that, as in vascular plants, the only DELLA in the liverwort Marchantia polymorpha also participates in the regulation of growth and key developmental processes and promotes oxidative stress tolerance. Moreover, part of these effects is likely caused by the conserved physical interaction with the MpPIF transcription factor Therefore, we suggest that the role in the coordination of growth and stress responses was already encoded in the DELLA protein of the common ancestor of land plants, and the importance of this function is underscored by its conservation over the past 450 million years.

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