TY - BOOK AU - Zeng,H.Y.;Deng,S.;Jin,C.;Shang,Z.;Chang,L.;Wang,J.;Wei,N. TI - Origin and evolution of auxin-mediated acid growth T2 - Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci., 121(51), p.e2412493121, 2024 KW - ACID GROWTH KW - CELL EXPANSION KW - AUXIN KW - EVOLUTION KW - PLANT TERRESTRIALIZATION N1 - Artículo N2 - The classical acid growth theory suggests that auxin stimulates cell expansion by triggering apoplast acidification via plasma membrane (PM)-localized H+ -ATPase. Here, we reconstructed the origin and evolutionary history of auxin-mediated acid growth. Comparative phylogenomic analysis showed that most core components of acid growth originated in Charophyta and then underwent subclass expansion and functional innovation during plant terrestrialization. In Charophyceae algae Chara braunii, we found that PM H+ -ATPase has formed a core regulatory module with TMK and PP2C.D, which can be activated by photosynthesis-dependent phosphorylation through light rather than auxin. Despite the lack of canonical auxin receptor TRANSPORT INHIBITOR RESPONSE 1/AUXIN SIGNALING F-BOX (TIR1/AFB), auxin elicits significant internodal elongation and transcriptional reprogramming in C. braunii, implying the existence of an ancient auxin-mediated growth mechanism. We propose that the evolution of acid growth represents a neofunctional adaptation to terrestrial environments, in which PM H+ -ATPase in carbon concentrating for photosynthesis was utilized to acidify apoplast for cell expansion, and the core components responsible for acid growth eventually established a regulatory network in land plants by connecting with the TIR1/ AFB pathway UR - https://drive.google.com/file/d/1HscNCj-UGyWpGY1qM3kKIzlg3OcHdqV7/view?usp=drive_link ER -