Looking back to look forward: protein-protein interactions and the evolution of development
- PMID: 31494948
- DOI: 10.1111/nph.16179
Looking back to look forward: protein-protein interactions and the evolution of development
Abstract
The evolutionary modification of development was fundamental in generating extant plant diversity. Similarly, the modification of development is a path forward to engineering the plants of the future, provided we know enough about what to modify. Understanding how extant diversity was generated will reveal productive pathways forward for modifying development. Here, I discuss four examples of developmental pathways that have been remodeled by changes to protein-protein interactions. These are cases where changes to developmental pathways have been paralleled by recent changes, selected for or engineered by humans. Extant plant diversity represents a vast treasure trove of molecular solutions to ecological problems. Mining this treasure trove will allow for the intentional modification of plant development for solving future problems.
Keywords: DELLA; TOPLESS; evo-devo; evolution of gene regulation; genome editing; phytoplasmas; plant development.
© 2019 The Author. New Phytologist © 2019 New Phytologist Trust.
References
-
- Allan AC. 2019. Domestication: colour and flavour joined by a shared transcription factor. Current Biology 29: R57-R59.
-
- Bartlett ME. 2017. Changing MADS-Box transcription factor protein-protein interactions as a mechanism for generating floral morphological diversity. Integrative and Comparative Biology 57: 1312-1321.
-
- Boden SA, Østergaard L. 2019. How can developmental biology help feed a growing population? Development 146: dev172965.
-
- Bowman JL, Briginshaw LN, Fisher TJ, Flores-Sandoval E. 2019. Something ancient and something neofunctionalized - evolution of land plant hormone signaling pathways. Current Opinion in Plant Biology 47: 64-72.
-
- Butelli E, Licciardello C, Ramadugu C, Durand-Hulak M, Celant A, Reforgiato Recupero G, Froelicher Y, Martin C. 2019. Noemi controls production of flavonoid pigments and fruit acidity and illustrates the domestication routes of modern citrus varieties. Current Biology 29: 158-164.e2.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources