Background

Heteroblasty is a developmental trajectory event where plants have rapid ontogenetic changes across multiple traits, as exemplified by plants switching from distinct juvenile to adult leaves [1]. Heteroblastic leaves, which exhibit different morphologies and functions, enable plants to adapt to environmental heterogeneity, serving as a prime example of adaptive evolution. For thriving in undulating air-water environments, amphibious and aquatic plants tend to form heteroblastic leaves at different developmental stages [2, 3]. While previous studies uncovered some of the underlying differences of heteroblasty at the morphological, physiological, and molecular levels in aquatic seed plants [4,5,6,7], the mechanism behind sterile-fertile leaf dimorphy, i.e., heteroblasty with divergent functionalities, remains relatively unexplored in aquatic ferns.

Ferns are an ancient lineage of vascular plants and occupy a key phylogenetic position as a sister to the seed plants [8,9,10]. Given their wide distribution and diverse habitats, ranging from submerged environments to alpine environments, ferns exhibit a remarkable diversity in leaf shape, and sterile-fertile heteroblasty is common [11, 12]. The genus Ceratopteris, a model aquatic fern with heteroblastic leaves, displays distinctive patterns of genomic evolution compared to terrestrial ferns and seed plants [13, Full size image

Because the heteroblastic leaves were produced by the same plant, differences in the gene expression and regulation play important roles [25, 26]. However, due to the large genome size of most ferns, reference assembly by whole genome sequencing is not straightforward and limits genomic research [27]. Recently, only a few fern genomes have been sequenced [15, 28,29,30], including five homosporous ferns: C. richardii [15], Adiantum capillus-veneris [30], A. nelumboides [31], Marsilea vestita [32], and Alsophila spinulosa [28], as well as two heterosporous ferns: Azolla filliculoides and Salvinia cucullata [29]. C. chingii belongs to the homosporous ferns, which generally have relatively large genomes compared to their heterosporous counterparts [18, 27, 33]. Full-length transcriptome sequencing has provided an attractive alternative for gathering information on gene transcripts and predicting gene models without a reference genome [34, 35]. The strategy of combining long- and short-read transcriptome sequencing has been widely applied to study species-specific traits in seed plants [36, 37].

In this study, we applied the same strategy of combining long- and short-read RNA sequencing to construct reference gene models and study gene expression relevant to sporophyll, trophophyll, and root tissues in C. chingii. Given the key roles of expansin genes in the leaf development of seed pants [22, 38], we aimed to investigate the expression patterns of C. chingii expansin (CcEXP genes) and how they regulated the formation of heteroblastic leaves in C. chingii. We found that CcEXP genes were highly expressed in young sporophylls and trophophylls. Building on the previous study of expansin in several ferns [39, 40], we further constructed phylogenies of the expansin gene family and identified, by means of coexpression analysis, regulatory factors that positively or negatively affect CcEXP gene expression. In addition, we compared the expression conservation of orthologs between ferns and lycophytes, as well as the co-expressed orthologous relationships between C. chingii and the model seed plant Arabidopsis thaliana.