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Analysis of the hybrid proline-rich protein families from seven plant species suggests rapid diversification of their sequences and expression patterns

BACKGROUND: Plant hybrid proline-rich proteins (HyPRPs) are putative cell wall proteins consisting, usually, of a repetitive proline-rich (PR) N-terminal domain and a conserved eight-cysteine motif (8 CM) C-terminal domain. Understanding the evolutionary dynamics of HyPRPs might provide not only ins...

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Autores principales: Dvořáková, Lenka, Cvrčková, Fatima, Fischer, Lukáš
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2216038/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17997832
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-8-412
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author Dvořáková, Lenka
Cvrčková, Fatima
Fischer, Lukáš
author_facet Dvořáková, Lenka
Cvrčková, Fatima
Fischer, Lukáš
author_sort Dvořáková, Lenka
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Plant hybrid proline-rich proteins (HyPRPs) are putative cell wall proteins consisting, usually, of a repetitive proline-rich (PR) N-terminal domain and a conserved eight-cysteine motif (8 CM) C-terminal domain. Understanding the evolutionary dynamics of HyPRPs might provide not only insight into their so far elusive function, but also a model for other large protein families in plants. RESULTS: We have performed a phylogenetic analysis of HyPRPs from seven plant species, including representatives of gymnosperms and both monocot and dicot angiosperms. Every species studied possesses a large family of 14–52 HyPRPs. Angiosperm HyPRPs exhibit signs of recent major diversification involving, at least in Arabidopsis and rice, several independent tandem gene multiplications. A distinct subfamily of relatively well-conserved C-type HyPRPs, often with long hydrophobic PR domains, has been identified. In most of gymnosperm (pine) HyPRPs, diversity appears within the C-type group while angiosperms have only a few of well-conserved C-type representatives. Atypical (glycine-rich or extremely short) N-terminal domains apparently evolved independently in multiple lineages of the HyPRP family, possibly via inversion or loss of sequences encoding proline-rich domains. Expression profiles of potato and Arabidopsis HyPRP genes exhibit instances of both overlapping and complementary organ distribution. The diversified non-C-type HyPRP genes from recently amplified chromosomal clusters in Arabidopsis often share their specialized expression profiles. C-type genes have broader expression patterns in both species (potato and Arabidopsis), although orthologous genes exhibit some differences. CONCLUSION: HyPRPs represent a dynamically evolving protein family apparently unique to seed plants. We suggest that ancestral HyPRPs with long proline-rich domains produced the current diversity through ongoing gene duplications accompanied by shortening, modification or loss of the proline-rich domains. Most of the diversity in gymnosperms and angiosperms originates from different branches of the HyPRP family. Rapid sequence diversification is consistent with only limited requirements for structure conservation and, together with high variability of gene expression patterns, limits the interpretation of any functional study focused on a single HyPRP gene or a couple of HYPRP genes in single plant species.
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spelling pubmed-22160382008-01-29 Analysis of the hybrid proline-rich protein families from seven plant species suggests rapid diversification of their sequences and expression patterns Dvořáková, Lenka Cvrčková, Fatima Fischer, Lukáš BMC Genomics Research Article BACKGROUND: Plant hybrid proline-rich proteins (HyPRPs) are putative cell wall proteins consisting, usually, of a repetitive proline-rich (PR) N-terminal domain and a conserved eight-cysteine motif (8 CM) C-terminal domain. Understanding the evolutionary dynamics of HyPRPs might provide not only insight into their so far elusive function, but also a model for other large protein families in plants. RESULTS: We have performed a phylogenetic analysis of HyPRPs from seven plant species, including representatives of gymnosperms and both monocot and dicot angiosperms. Every species studied possesses a large family of 14–52 HyPRPs. Angiosperm HyPRPs exhibit signs of recent major diversification involving, at least in Arabidopsis and rice, several independent tandem gene multiplications. A distinct subfamily of relatively well-conserved C-type HyPRPs, often with long hydrophobic PR domains, has been identified. In most of gymnosperm (pine) HyPRPs, diversity appears within the C-type group while angiosperms have only a few of well-conserved C-type representatives. Atypical (glycine-rich or extremely short) N-terminal domains apparently evolved independently in multiple lineages of the HyPRP family, possibly via inversion or loss of sequences encoding proline-rich domains. Expression profiles of potato and Arabidopsis HyPRP genes exhibit instances of both overlapping and complementary organ distribution. The diversified non-C-type HyPRP genes from recently amplified chromosomal clusters in Arabidopsis often share their specialized expression profiles. C-type genes have broader expression patterns in both species (potato and Arabidopsis), although orthologous genes exhibit some differences. CONCLUSION: HyPRPs represent a dynamically evolving protein family apparently unique to seed plants. We suggest that ancestral HyPRPs with long proline-rich domains produced the current diversity through ongoing gene duplications accompanied by shortening, modification or loss of the proline-rich domains. Most of the diversity in gymnosperms and angiosperms originates from different branches of the HyPRP family. Rapid sequence diversification is consistent with only limited requirements for structure conservation and, together with high variability of gene expression patterns, limits the interpretation of any functional study focused on a single HyPRP gene or a couple of HYPRP genes in single plant species. BioMed Central 2007-11-12 /pmc/articles/PMC2216038/ /pubmed/17997832 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-8-412 Text en Copyright © 2007 Dvořáková et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Dvořáková, Lenka
Cvrčková, Fatima
Fischer, Lukáš
Analysis of the hybrid proline-rich protein families from seven plant species suggests rapid diversification of their sequences and expression patterns
title Analysis of the hybrid proline-rich protein families from seven plant species suggests rapid diversification of their sequences and expression patterns
title_full Analysis of the hybrid proline-rich protein families from seven plant species suggests rapid diversification of their sequences and expression patterns
title_fullStr Analysis of the hybrid proline-rich protein families from seven plant species suggests rapid diversification of their sequences and expression patterns
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of the hybrid proline-rich protein families from seven plant species suggests rapid diversification of their sequences and expression patterns
title_short Analysis of the hybrid proline-rich protein families from seven plant species suggests rapid diversification of their sequences and expression patterns
title_sort analysis of the hybrid proline-rich protein families from seven plant species suggests rapid diversification of their sequences and expression patterns
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2216038/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17997832
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-8-412
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