Great moments in evolution: the conquest of land by plants

Curr Opin Plant Biol. 2018 Apr:42:49-54. doi: 10.1016/j.pbi.2018.02.006. Epub 2018 Mar 8.

Abstract

500Ma ago the terrestrial habitat was a barren, unwelcoming place for species other than, for example, bacteria or fungi. Most probably, filamentous freshwater algae adapted to aerial conditions and eventually conquered land. Adaptation to a severely different habitat apparently included sturdy cell walls enabling an erect body plan as well as protection against abiotic stresses such as ultraviolet radiation, drought and varying temperature. To thrive on land, plants probably required more elaborate signaling pathways to react to diverse environmental conditions, and phytohormones to control developmental programs. Many such plant-typical features have been studied in flowering plants, but their evolutionary origins were long clouded. With the sequencing of a moss genome a decade ago, inference of ancestral land plant states using comparative genomics, phylogenomics and evolutionary developmental approaches began in earnest. In the past few years, the ever increasing availability of genomic and transcriptomic data of organisms representing the earliest common ancestors of the plant tree of life has much informed our understanding of the conquest of land by plants.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Biological Evolution
  • Embryophyta / genetics*
  • Embryophyta / physiology
  • Genome, Plant / genetics
  • Plant Growth Regulators / metabolism
  • Plants / genetics*
  • Plants / metabolism

Substances

  • Plant Growth Regulators