Complexity and innovation in carnivorous plant genomes.
Albert VA, Ávila Robledillo L, Fleck SJ, Guo Y, Kanamori S
Convergent Evolution
PubMedUnderstanding how exotic plants like the Venus flytrap evolved their remarkable insect-trapping abilities could one day help scientists engineer more resilient crops or pest-resistant garden plants.
Scientists took a deep look at the DNA of several carnivorous plants and found some surprising things: many of them, including the Venus flytrap, are descended from ancestors whose entire genome was accidentally copied multiple times — like having four or more sets of instructions instead of two. One bladderwort species went the opposite direction, shrinking its genome dramatically while keeping roughly the same number of working genes. What's especially cool is that completely unrelated carnivorous plants independently evolved the same chemical tricks to digest insects, suggesting nature keeps arriving at the same clever solutions.
Key Findings
The Venus flytrap (Dionaea muscipula) has a hybrid tetraploid origin, meaning it carries four sets of chromosomes from two ancestral species, while the Cape sundew is a dodecaploid with twelve sets.
The humped bladderwort underwent extreme genome compaction — shrinking its total DNA dramatically — yet retained a typical number of functional genes, challenging the idea that genome size and gene number must track together.
Multiple carnivorous plant lineages independently evolved the same digestive enzyme adaptations and repeated amino acid changes, demonstrating striking molecular convergence across distantly related species.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Carnivorous plants have surprisingly complex and varied genomes — many species arose from ancient duplications of their entire genetic code, while others drastically shrank their genomes. These findings reveal carnivorous plants as powerful models for understanding how plant genomes evolve and adapt.
Abstract Preview
Carnivorous plants are a paradigm of convergent evolution, yet their genomes reveal even deeper layers of complexity. Recent work has revealed widespread polyploidy in carnivorous plants, including...
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Species Mentioned
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The Venus flytrap is a carnivorous plant native to the temperate and subtropical wetlands of North Carolina and South Carolina, on the East Coast of the United States. Although various modern hybrids have been created in cultivation, D. muscipula is the only species of the monotypic genus Dionaea...