4.8 Review

The origin and evolution of stomata

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 11, Pages R539-R553

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2022.04.040

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Leverhulme trust [RPG-2019-004]
  2. UK BBSRC [BB/M011151/1]
  3. Royal Society University Research and Leverhulme Trust [URF/R/201024, SRF\R1\21000149]
  4. UK Research and Innovation Future Leaders Fellowship [MR/T018585/1]
  5. New Phytol Foundation

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Stomata, an important innovation for land plants, originated in the common ancestor of land plants and have undergone reductive evolution. The ability of stomata to open and close is an ancestral state present in all lineages. Stomata's role in early land plants was to optimize carbon gain per unit water loss. Further research is needed to understand the origin and evolution of stomata.
The acquisition of stomata is one of the key innovations that led to the colonisation of the terrestrial environment by the earliest land plants. However, our understanding of the origin, evolution and the ancestral function of stomata is incomplete. Phylogenomic analyses indicate that, firstly, stomata are ancient structures, present in the common ancestor of land plants, prior to the divergence of bryophytes and tracheophytes and, secondly, there has been reductive stomatal evolution, especially in the bryophytes (with complete loss in the liverworts). From a review of the evidence, we conclude that the capacity of stomata to open and close in response to signals such as ABA, CO2 and light (hydroactive movement) is an ancestral state, is present in all lineages and likely predates the divergence of the bryophytes and tracheophytes. We reject the hypothesis that hydroactive movement was acquired with the emergence of the gymnosperms. We also conclude that the role of stomata in the earliest land plants was to optimise carbon gain per unit water loss. There remain many other unanswered questions concerning the evolution and especially the origin of stomata. To address these questions, it will be necessary to: find more fossils representing the earliest land plants, revisit the existing early land plant fossil record in the light of novel phylogenomic hypotheses and carry out more functional studies that include both tracheophytes and bryophytes.

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