The evolution of flavonoid biosynthesis: A bryophyte perspective
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Date
2020-02
Type
Journal Article
Fields of Research
ANZSRC::060702 Plant Cell and Molecular Biology, ANZSRC::060705 Plant Physiology, ANZSRC::060701 Phycology (incl. Marine Grasses), ANZSRC::060409 Molecular Evolution, ANZSRC::060309 Phylogeny and Comparative Analysis, ANZSRC::110101 Medical Biochemistry: Amino Acids and Metabolites, ANZSRC::3004 Crop and pasture production, ANZSRC::3108 Plant biology
Abstract
The flavonoid pathway is one of the best characterized specialized metabolite pathways of plants. In angiosperms, the flavonoids have varied roles in assisting with tolerance to abiotic stress and are also key for signaling to pollinators and seed dispersal agents. The pathway is thought to be specific to land plants and to have arisen during the period of land colonization around 550–470 million years ago. In this review we consider current knowledge of the flavonoid pathway in the bryophytes, consisting of the liverworts, hornworts, and mosses. The pathway is less characterized for bryophytes than angiosperms, and the first genetic and molecular studies on bryophytes are finding both commonalities and significant differences in flavonoid biosynthesis and pathway regulation between angiosperms and bryophytes. This includes biosynthetic pathway branches specific to each plant group and the apparent complete absence of flavonoids from the hornworts.
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© 2020 Davies, Jibran, Zhou, Albert, Brummell, Jordan, Bowman and Schwinn.
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