Tangled history of a multigene family: The evolution of ISOPENTENYLTRANSFERASE genes.

ISOPENTENYLTRANSFERASE (IPT) genes play important roles in the initial steps of cytokinin synthesis, exist in plant and pathogenic bacteria, and form a multigene family in plants. Protein domain searches revealed that bacteria and plant IPT proteins were to assigned to different protein domains fami...

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Main Authors: Kanae Nishii, Frank Wright, Yun-Yu Chen, Michael Möller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6071968?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-7a8fa2cde6d2460da68cc6f451064c482020-11-25T01:35:48ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01138e020119810.1371/journal.pone.0201198Tangled history of a multigene family: The evolution of ISOPENTENYLTRANSFERASE genes.Kanae NishiiFrank WrightYun-Yu ChenMichael MöllerISOPENTENYLTRANSFERASE (IPT) genes play important roles in the initial steps of cytokinin synthesis, exist in plant and pathogenic bacteria, and form a multigene family in plants. Protein domain searches revealed that bacteria and plant IPT proteins were to assigned to different protein domains families in the Pfam database, namely Pfam IPT (IPTPfam) and Pfam IPPT (IPPTPfam) families, both are closely related in the P-loop NTPase clan. To understand the origin and evolution of the genes, a species matrix was assembled across the tree of life and intensively in plant lineages. The IPTPfam domain was only found in few bacteria lineages, whereas IPPTPfam is common except in Archaea and Mycoplasma bacteria. The bacterial IPPTPfam domain miaA genes were shown as ancestral of eukaryotic IPPTPfam domain genes. Plant IPTs diversified into class I, class II tRNA-IPTs, and Adenosine-phosphate IPTs; the class I tRNA-IPTs appeared to represent direct successors of miaA genes were found in all plant genomes, whereas class II tRNA-IPTs originated from eukaryotic genes, and were found in prasinophyte algae and in euphyllophytes. Adenosine-phosphate IPTs were only found in angiosperms. Gene duplications resulted in gene redundancies with ubiquitous expression or diversification in expression. In conclusion, it is shown that IPT genes have a complex history prior to the protein family split, and might have experienced losses or HGTs, and gene duplications that are to be likely correlated with the rise in morphological complexity involved in fine tuning cytokinin production.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6071968?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kanae Nishii
Frank Wright
Yun-Yu Chen
Michael Möller
spellingShingle Kanae Nishii
Frank Wright
Yun-Yu Chen
Michael Möller
Tangled history of a multigene family: The evolution of ISOPENTENYLTRANSFERASE genes.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Kanae Nishii
Frank Wright
Yun-Yu Chen
Michael Möller
author_sort Kanae Nishii
title Tangled history of a multigene family: The evolution of ISOPENTENYLTRANSFERASE genes.
title_short Tangled history of a multigene family: The evolution of ISOPENTENYLTRANSFERASE genes.
title_full Tangled history of a multigene family: The evolution of ISOPENTENYLTRANSFERASE genes.
title_fullStr Tangled history of a multigene family: The evolution of ISOPENTENYLTRANSFERASE genes.
title_full_unstemmed Tangled history of a multigene family: The evolution of ISOPENTENYLTRANSFERASE genes.
title_sort tangled history of a multigene family: the evolution of isopentenyltransferase genes.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description ISOPENTENYLTRANSFERASE (IPT) genes play important roles in the initial steps of cytokinin synthesis, exist in plant and pathogenic bacteria, and form a multigene family in plants. Protein domain searches revealed that bacteria and plant IPT proteins were to assigned to different protein domains families in the Pfam database, namely Pfam IPT (IPTPfam) and Pfam IPPT (IPPTPfam) families, both are closely related in the P-loop NTPase clan. To understand the origin and evolution of the genes, a species matrix was assembled across the tree of life and intensively in plant lineages. The IPTPfam domain was only found in few bacteria lineages, whereas IPPTPfam is common except in Archaea and Mycoplasma bacteria. The bacterial IPPTPfam domain miaA genes were shown as ancestral of eukaryotic IPPTPfam domain genes. Plant IPTs diversified into class I, class II tRNA-IPTs, and Adenosine-phosphate IPTs; the class I tRNA-IPTs appeared to represent direct successors of miaA genes were found in all plant genomes, whereas class II tRNA-IPTs originated from eukaryotic genes, and were found in prasinophyte algae and in euphyllophytes. Adenosine-phosphate IPTs were only found in angiosperms. Gene duplications resulted in gene redundancies with ubiquitous expression or diversification in expression. In conclusion, it is shown that IPT genes have a complex history prior to the protein family split, and might have experienced losses or HGTs, and gene duplications that are to be likely correlated with the rise in morphological complexity involved in fine tuning cytokinin production.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6071968?pdf=render
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