Duckweed Evolution: from Land back to Water.

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作者:Fang 方扬 Yang, Tian 田雪平 Xueping, Jin 靳艳玲 Yanling, Du 杜安平 Anping, Ding 丁彦强 Yanqiang, Liao 廖志华 Zhihua, He 何开泽 Kaize, Zhao 赵永贵 Yonggui, Guo 郭铃 Ling, Xiao 肖瑶 Yao, Xu 许亚良 Yaliang, Chen 陈爽 Shuang, Che 车育青 Yuqing, Tan 谭力 Li, Wang 汪松虎 Songhu, Li 李家堂 Jiatang, Yi 易卓林 Zhuolin, Chen é™ˆå °é’— Lanchai, Zhao 赵乐伊 Leyi, Zhang 张芳源 Fangyuan, Li 李国友 Guoyou, Li 李瑾萌 Jinmeng, Xiong 熊勤犁 Qinli, Zhang å¼ å’æ¢ Yongmei, Zhang 张庆 Qing, Cao Xuan Hieu, Zhao 赵海 Hai
Terrestrialization is an important evolutionary process that plants experienced. However, little is known about how land plants acquired aquatic growth behaviors. Here, we integrate multiproxy evidence to elucidate the evolution of the aquatic plant duckweed. Three genera of duckweeds show chronologically gradual degeneration in root structure and stomatal function and a decrease in lignocellulose content, accompanied by the contraction of relevant gene families and/or a decline in their transcription levels. The number of genes in main phytohormone pathways is also gradually decreased. The coordinated action of genes involved in auxin signaling and rhizoid development causes a gradual decrease in adventitious roots. Additionally, the significant expansion of the flavonoid pathway is related to the adaptation of duckweeds to floating growth. This study reconstructs the evolutionary history of duckweeds, tracing its journey from land back to water - a reverse trajectory of early land plants.

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