18 research outputs found

    Increased Expression and Protein Divergence in Duplicate Genes Is Associated with Morphological Diversification

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    The differentiation of both gene expression and protein function is thought to be important as a mechanism of the functionalization of duplicate genes. However, it has not been addressed whether expression or protein divergence of duplicate genes is greater in those genes that have undergone functionalization compared with those that have not. We examined a total of 492 paralogous gene pairs associated with morphological diversification in a plant model organism (Arabidopsis thaliana). Classifying these paralogous gene pairs into high, low, and no morphological diversification groups, based on knock-out data, we found that the divergence rate of both gene expression and protein sequences were significantly higher in either high or low morphological diversification groups compared with those in the no morphological diversification group. These results strongly suggest that the divergence of both expression and protein sequence are important sources for morphological diversification of duplicate genes. Although both mechanisms are not mutually exclusive, our analysis suggested that changes of expression pattern play the minor role (33%–41%) and that changes of protein sequence play the major role (59%–67%) in morphological diversification. Finally, we examined to what extent duplicate genes are associated with expression or protein divergence exerting morphological diversification at the whole-genome level. Interestingly, duplicate genes randomly chosen from A. thaliana had not experienced expression or protein divergence that resulted in morphological diversification. These results indicate that most duplicate genes have experienced minor functionalization

    Evolutionary Persistence of Functional Compensation by Duplicate Genes in Arabidopsis

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    Knocking out a gene from a genome often causes no phenotypic effect. This phenomenon has been explained in part by the existence of duplicate genes. However, it was found that in mouse knockout data duplicate genes are as essential as singleton genes. Here, we study whether it is also true for the knockout data in Arabidopsis. From the knockout data in Arabidopsis thaliana obtained in our study and in the literature, we find that duplicate genes show a significantly lower proportion of knockout effects than singleton genes. Because the persistence of duplicate genes in evolution tends to be dependent on their phenotypic effect, we compared the ages of duplicate genes whose knockout mutants showed less severe phenotypic effects with those with more severe effects. Interestingly, the latter group of genes tends to be more anciently duplicated than the former group of genes. Moreover, using multiple-gene knockout data, we find that functional compensation by duplicate genes for a more severe phenotypic effect tends to be preserved by natural selection for a longer time than that for a less severe effect. Taken together, we conclude that duplicate genes contribute to genetic robustness mainly by preserving compensation for severe phenotypic effects in A. thaliana

    A Chaperonin Subunit with Unique Structures Is Essential for Folding of a Specific Substrate

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    Type I chaperonins are large, double-ring complexes present in bacteria (GroEL), mitochondria (Hsp60), and chloroplasts (Cpn60), which are involved in mediating the folding of newly synthesized, translocated, or stress-denatured proteins. In Escherichia coli, GroEL comprises 14 identical subunits and has been exquisitely optimized to fold its broad range of substrates. However, multiple Cpn60 subunits with different expression profiles have evolved in chloroplasts. Here, we show that, in Arabidopsis thaliana, the minor subunit Cpn60Ξ²4 forms a heterooligomeric Cpn60 complex with Cpn60Ξ±1 and Cpn60Ξ²1–β3 and is specifically required for the folding of NdhH, a subunit of the chloroplast NADH dehydrogenase-like complex (NDH). Other Cpn60Ξ² subunits cannot complement the function of Cpn60Ξ²4. Furthermore, the unique C-terminus of Cpn60Ξ²4 is required for the full activity of the unique Cpn60 complex containing Cpn60Ξ²4 for folding of NdhH. Our findings suggest that this unusual kind of subunit enables the Cpn60 complex to assist the folding of some particular substrates, whereas other dominant Cpn60 subunits maintain a housekeeping chaperonin function by facilitating the folding of other obligate substrates

    Bending angles of protonema tip cells (<i>n</i> = 50).

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    <p>Data were analyzed using the SPSS software running the nonparametric Kruskal–Wallis test to identify subgroups (a, b and c; <i>P</i> < 0.01). Data for chloronema and caulonema were analyzed separately.</p><p>Bending angles of protonema tip cells (<i>n</i> = 50).</p

    Bending of Protonema Cells in a Plastid Glycolate/Glycerate Transporter Knockout Line of <i>Physcomitrella patens</i>

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    <div><p><i>Arabidopsis</i> LrgB (synonym PLGG1) is a plastid glycolate/glycerate transporter associated with recycling of 2-phosphoglycolate generated via the oxygenase activity of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO). We isolated two homologous genes (<i>PpLrgB1</i> and <i>B2</i>) from the moss <i>Physcomitrella patens</i>. Phylogenetic tree analysis showed that PpLrgB1 was monophyletic with LrgB proteins of land plants, whereas PpLrgB2 was divergent from the green plant lineage. Experiments with PpLrgB–GFP fusion proteins suggested that both PpLrgB1 and B2 proteins were located in chloroplasts. We generated <i>PpLrgB</i> single (βˆ†B1 and βˆ†B2) and double (βˆ†B1/βˆ†B2)-knockout lines using gene targeting of <i>P</i>. <i>patens</i>. The βˆ†B1 plants showed decreases in growth and photosynthetic activity, and their protonema cells were bent and accumulated glycolate. However, because βˆ†B2 and βˆ†B1/βˆ†B2 plants showed no obvious phenotypic change relative to the wild-type or βˆ†B1 plants, respectively, the function of PpLrgB2 remains unclear. <i>Arabidopsis</i> LrgB could complement the βˆ†B1 phenotype, suggesting that the function of PpLrgB1 is the same as that of AtLrgB. When βˆ†B1 was grown under high-CO<sub>2</sub> conditions, all novel phenotypes were suppressed. Moreover, protonema cells of wild-type plants exhibited a bending phenotype when cultured on media containing glycolate or glycerate, suggesting that accumulation of photorespiratory metabolites caused <i>P</i>. <i>patens</i> cells to bend.</p></div
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