The humble quillworts are an ancient group of about 250 small aquatic plants that have largely been ignored by modern botanists.
A group of researchers, led by Boyce Thompson Institute’s , have sequenced the first quillwort genome and uncovered some secrets of the plant’s unique method of photosynthesis – secrets that could eventually lead to the engineering of crops with more efficient use of water and carbon dioxide.
Most plants breathe in carbon dioxide (CO2) and use sunlight to turn the gas into sugar during the day, and then stop breathing when the sun goes down. But plants in arid regions have evolved to breathe in CO2 at night, and then stop breathing during the day while they conduct photosynthesis. This strategy – called CAM photosynthesis – helps the plants save water.
Forty years ago, quillworts – plants of the genus Isoetes – became the first group of aquatic plants discovered to use CAM photosynthesis. Daytime water loss is clearly not a problem for the aquatic plants. Instead, quillworts use CAM to collect CO2 dissolved in water and store it overnight, to avoid competing with other aquatic plants and organisms, such as algae, that deplete water levels of the gas during the daytime.
To investigate the genetic mechanisms regulating quillworts’ CAM photosynthesis process, Li’s team assembled a high-quality genome for I. taiwanensis, and found some similarities between quillwort and land plant CAM photosynthesis, but also a number of differences.
“As aquatic plants, Isoetes have evolved CAM photosynthesis in a fundamentally different environment than terrestrial plants in dry habitats,” said Li, who is also an adjunct assistant professor of plant biology in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. “These results tell us there are more evolutionary pathways to CAM than we previously thought.”
The findings were published Nov. 3 in Nature Communications.
The team used the genome to identify CAM pathway genes and to examine their expression patterns, including how those patterns changed across 24 hours. One notable difference between CAM in quillworts and terrestrial plants is in the function of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC). All plants have two types of PEPC: plant-type, long known for its essential role in photosynthesis; and bacterial-type, which resembles the PEPC found in bacteria.
“In all other plants, bacterial-type PEPC plays a role in a range of metabolic processes but not photosynthesis,” said David Wickell, a doctoral student in Li’s laboratory and first author on the study. “In Isoetes, both types appear to be involved in CAM – something that hasn’t been found in any other plant and points to a distinct role for bacterial-type PEPC in aquatic CAM.”
All plants have the multiple components of CAM, which is why the process has evolved so many times, Li said. But aquatic and terrestrial plants recruited different versions of those components, possibly to meet the needs imposed by their differing environments.
The team also found that expression levels of a few circadian regulators peaked at different times of day in quillworts than in terrestrial plants, indicating the circadian clock might regulate CAM functions differently in Isoetes.
In the long term, the findings could potentially be used to engineer crops to withstand environmental stresses. “It would boil down to manipulating the circadian clock genes that regulate CAM components to help plants become more efficient at conserving water or making better use of the available CO2,” Wickell said. “It’s an exciting idea to consider.”
The group’s interest in Isoetes builds on a research legacy at BTI. The standard reference summarizing the characteristics and habitats of the genus is still Norma Pfeiffer’s , published in 1922. Pfeiffer was one of BTI’s original scientists when the institute opened its doors in Yonkers, New York, in 1924. The plant morphologist remained at BTI until she retired in 1955.
The quillwort team included researchers from ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Tsing Hua University; the University of Göttingen; the Taiwan Forestry Research Institute; the University of Texas, Austin; the University of Arizona; and the Salk Institute for Biological Studies.
The research was supported by funding from BTI, the European Research Council (ERC) and the International Max Planck Research School for Genome Science.
Michael J. Haas is a freelance writer for the Boyce Thompson Institute.