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Review
. 2025 Aug;48(8):5847-5860.
doi: 10.1111/pce.15566. Epub 2025 Apr 18.

Phenotypic Plasticity and Stability in Plants: Genetic Mechanisms, Environmental Adaptation, Evolutionary Implications, and Future Directions

Affiliations
Review

Phenotypic Plasticity and Stability in Plants: Genetic Mechanisms, Environmental Adaptation, Evolutionary Implications, and Future Directions

Peigang Li et al. Plant Cell Environ. 2025 Aug.

Abstract

The phenotypic display, survival, and reproduction of organisms depend on genotype-environment interactions that drive development, evolution, and diversity. Biological systems exhibit two basic but paradoxical features that contribute to developmental robustness: plasticity and stability. However, the understanding of these concepts remains ambiguous. The morphology and structure of plant reproductive organs-flowers and fruits-exhibit substantial stability but display a certain level of plasticity under environmental changes, thus representing promising systems for the study of how stability and plasticity jointly govern plant development and evolution. Beyond the genes underlying organ formation, certain genes may maintain stability and induce plasticity. Variations in relevant genes can induce developmental repatterning, thereby altering stability or plasticity under light and temperature fluctuations, which often affects fitness. The regulation of developmental robustness in plant vegetative organs involves transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulation, epigenetics, and phase separation; however, these mechanisms in the reproductive organs of flowering plants remain poorly investigated. Moreover, genes that specifically determine phenotypic plasticity have rarely been cloned. This review clarifies the concepts and attributes of phenotypic plasticity and stability and further proposes potential avenues and a paradigm to investigate the underlying genes and elucidate how plants adapt and thrive in diverse environments, which is crucial for the design of genetically modified crops.

Keywords: adaptive evolution; environmental change; fitness; flower; fruit; phenotypic plasticity.

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