Evolutionary Trade-off Between Stomatal Defense and Gas Exchange in Brassicaceae

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Abstract

Stomatal opening is crucial for gas exchange, but it unavoidably offers invasion by pathogens. In response, plants close stomata to prevent pathogen entry, while the bacterial pathogen Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato DC3000 ( Pto ) produces coronatine (COR), a jasmonate (JA) mimic, to counteract this plant response. Here, we demonstrate that by COR, Pto exploits CYP707A1 activation in Arabidopsis thaliana , encoding an enzyme that degrades abscisic acid, essential for stomatal closure. Notably, COR-induction of CYP707A1 is absent in other Brassicaceae species, such as Capsella rubella and Eutrema salsugineum , rendering them resistant to Pto invasion. In contrast, in A. thaliana , CYP707A1 enables rapid stomatal opening at dawn in a JA-dependent manner, enhancing gas exchange and chlorophyll content, unlike C. rubella and E. salsugineum . Promoter-swap experiments confirm that the regulatory region of CYP707A1 underlies these evolutionary diversifications. Together, our study presents a mechanism underlying an evolutionary trade-off between stomatal defense and gas exchange.

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