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Molecular Adaptation of rbcL in the Heterophyllous Aquatic Plant Potamogeton

BACKGROUND: Heterophyllous aquatic plants show marked phenotypic plasticity. They adapt to environmental changes by producing different leaf types: submerged, floating and terrestrial leaves. By contrast, homophyllous plants produce only submerged leaves and grow entirely underwater. Heterophylly an...

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Autores principales: Iida, Satoko, Miyagi, Atsuko, Aoki, Seishiro, Ito, Motomi, Kadono, Yasuro, Kosuge, Keiko
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2646136/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19247501
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004633
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author Iida, Satoko
Miyagi, Atsuko
Aoki, Seishiro
Ito, Motomi
Kadono, Yasuro
Kosuge, Keiko
author_facet Iida, Satoko
Miyagi, Atsuko
Aoki, Seishiro
Ito, Motomi
Kadono, Yasuro
Kosuge, Keiko
author_sort Iida, Satoko
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Heterophyllous aquatic plants show marked phenotypic plasticity. They adapt to environmental changes by producing different leaf types: submerged, floating and terrestrial leaves. By contrast, homophyllous plants produce only submerged leaves and grow entirely underwater. Heterophylly and submerged homophylly evolved under selective pressure modifying the species-specific optima for photosynthesis, but little is known about the evolutionary outcome of habit. Recent evolutionary analyses suggested that rbcL, a chloroplast gene that encodes a catalytic subunit of RuBisCO, evolves under positive selection in most land plant lineages. To examine the adaptive evolutionary process linked to heterophylly or homophylly, we analyzed positive selection in the rbcL sequences of ecologically diverse aquatic plants, Japanese Potamogeton. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Phylogenetic and maximum likelihood analyses of codon substitution models indicated that Potamogeton rbcL has evolved under positive Darwinian selection. The positive selection has operated specifically in heterophyllous lineages but not in homophyllous ones in the branch-site models. This suggests that the selective pressure on this chloroplast gene was higher for heterophyllous lineages than for homophyllous lineages. The replacement of 12 amino acids occurred at structurally important sites in the quaternary structure of RbcL, two of which (residue 225 and 281) were identified as potentially under positive selection. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our analysis did not show an exact relationship between the amino acid replacements and heterophylly or homophylly but revealed that lineage-specific positive selection acted on the Potamogeton rbcL. The contrasting ecological conditions between heterophyllous and homophyllous plants have imposed different selective pressures on the photosynthetic system. The increased amino acid replacement in RbcL may reflect the continuous fine-tuning of RuBisCO under varying ecological conditions.
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spelling pubmed-26461362009-02-27 Molecular Adaptation of rbcL in the Heterophyllous Aquatic Plant Potamogeton Iida, Satoko Miyagi, Atsuko Aoki, Seishiro Ito, Motomi Kadono, Yasuro Kosuge, Keiko PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Heterophyllous aquatic plants show marked phenotypic plasticity. They adapt to environmental changes by producing different leaf types: submerged, floating and terrestrial leaves. By contrast, homophyllous plants produce only submerged leaves and grow entirely underwater. Heterophylly and submerged homophylly evolved under selective pressure modifying the species-specific optima for photosynthesis, but little is known about the evolutionary outcome of habit. Recent evolutionary analyses suggested that rbcL, a chloroplast gene that encodes a catalytic subunit of RuBisCO, evolves under positive selection in most land plant lineages. To examine the adaptive evolutionary process linked to heterophylly or homophylly, we analyzed positive selection in the rbcL sequences of ecologically diverse aquatic plants, Japanese Potamogeton. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Phylogenetic and maximum likelihood analyses of codon substitution models indicated that Potamogeton rbcL has evolved under positive Darwinian selection. The positive selection has operated specifically in heterophyllous lineages but not in homophyllous ones in the branch-site models. This suggests that the selective pressure on this chloroplast gene was higher for heterophyllous lineages than for homophyllous lineages. The replacement of 12 amino acids occurred at structurally important sites in the quaternary structure of RbcL, two of which (residue 225 and 281) were identified as potentially under positive selection. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our analysis did not show an exact relationship between the amino acid replacements and heterophylly or homophylly but revealed that lineage-specific positive selection acted on the Potamogeton rbcL. The contrasting ecological conditions between heterophyllous and homophyllous plants have imposed different selective pressures on the photosynthetic system. The increased amino acid replacement in RbcL may reflect the continuous fine-tuning of RuBisCO under varying ecological conditions. Public Library of Science 2009-02-27 /pmc/articles/PMC2646136/ /pubmed/19247501 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004633 Text en Iida et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Iida, Satoko
Miyagi, Atsuko
Aoki, Seishiro
Ito, Motomi
Kadono, Yasuro
Kosuge, Keiko
Molecular Adaptation of rbcL in the Heterophyllous Aquatic Plant Potamogeton
title Molecular Adaptation of rbcL in the Heterophyllous Aquatic Plant Potamogeton
title_full Molecular Adaptation of rbcL in the Heterophyllous Aquatic Plant Potamogeton
title_fullStr Molecular Adaptation of rbcL in the Heterophyllous Aquatic Plant Potamogeton
title_full_unstemmed Molecular Adaptation of rbcL in the Heterophyllous Aquatic Plant Potamogeton
title_short Molecular Adaptation of rbcL in the Heterophyllous Aquatic Plant Potamogeton
title_sort molecular adaptation of rbcl in the heterophyllous aquatic plant potamogeton
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2646136/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19247501
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004633
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