Anatomy and habitat shape the oxygen sensing machinery of angiosperms

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Abstract

Hypoxia sensing via the Cys/Arg branch of the N-degron pathway (Cys-NDP) is central for flooding responses in plants, yet how evolutionary and ecological factors have shaped the core oxygen sensing mechanism remains poorly understood. Leveraging the publication of multiple angiosperm genomes, we systematically analysed known Cys-NDP components in 55 angiosperms spanning aquatic, epiphytic, xerophytic, and mesophytic lineages. We also complemented this survey with hypoxia profiling and transcriptomic analyses in a selected panel of plants. This comparative effort revealed variation in Cys-NDP components, with Plant Cysteine Oxidases (PCOs) and group VII Ethylene Response Factors (ERFVIIs) emerging as major sources of diversification. Aquatic monocots displayed complete loss of A-type PCOs and dramatic expansion of a novel clade of ERFVIIs (HREaqua), frequently accompanied by loss or modification of the Cys-degron, uncoupling them from oxygen-dependent turnover. By contrast, xerophytes and epiphytes retained core Cys-NDP elements but showed shared hypoxia-induced gene expression, suggesting endogenous developmental or metabolic pressures for pathway conservation in habitats with limited flooding risk. Across all species, we identified a conserved transcriptional core of 11 orthogroups, including fermentation enzymes and regulatory factors, highlighting the early recruitment of these genes to hypoxia responses. Functional assays confirmed contributions of conserved MYB and LBD transcription factors to hypoxia tolerance in Arabidopsis. Together, our results demonstrate that both habitat and anatomy influence the evolution and deployment of oxygen-sensing networks in angiosperms. While persistent submergence promoted diversification of ERFVIIs and PCOs, retention of the core pathway across lineages points to fundamental roles in coping with endogenous oxygen gradients and fluctuations.

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