Testing the chilling: Before drought-tolerance hypothesis in Pooideae grasses
Temperate Pooideae are a large clade of economically important grasses distributed in some of the Earth’s coldest and driest terrestrial environments. Previous studies have inferred that Pooideae diversified from their tropical ancestors in a cold montane habitat, suggesting that above-freezing cold...
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Zusammenfassung: | Temperate Pooideae are a large clade of economically important grasses
distributed in some of the Earth’s coldest and driest terrestrial
environments. Previous studies have inferred that Pooideae diversified
from their tropical ancestors in a cold montane habitat, suggesting that
above-freezing cold (chilling) tolerance evolved early in the subfamily.
By contrast, drought tolerance is hypothesized to have evolved multiple
times independently in response to global aridification that occurred
after the split of Pooideae tribes. To independently test predictions of
the chilling before-drought hypothesis in Pooideae, we assessed the
conservation of whole plant and gene expression traits in response to
chilling versus drought. We demonstrated that both trait responses are
more similar across tribes in cold as compared to drought, suggesting that
chilling responses evolved before, and drought responses after, tribe
diversification. Moreover, we found significantly more overlap between
drought and chilling-responsive genes within a species than between
drought-responsive genes across species, providing evidence that chilling
tolerance genes acted as precursors for the novel acquisition of increased
drought tolerance multiple times independently, partially through the
cooption of chilling responsive genes. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.0k6djhb3r |