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Delineation of plant caleosin residues critical for functional divergence, positive selection and coevolution

BACKGROUND: The caleosin genes encode proteins with a single conserved EF hand calcium-binding domain and comprise small gene families found in a wide range of plant species. These proteins may be involved in many cellular and biological processes coupled closely to the synthesis, degradation, or st...

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Autores principales: Song, Wanlu, Qin, Yajuan, Zhu, Yan, Yin, Guangjun, Wu, Ningning, Li, Yaxuan, Hu, Yingkao
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4057654/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24913827
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-14-124
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author Song, Wanlu
Qin, Yajuan
Zhu, Yan
Yin, Guangjun
Wu, Ningning
Li, Yaxuan
Hu, Yingkao
author_facet Song, Wanlu
Qin, Yajuan
Zhu, Yan
Yin, Guangjun
Wu, Ningning
Li, Yaxuan
Hu, Yingkao
author_sort Song, Wanlu
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The caleosin genes encode proteins with a single conserved EF hand calcium-binding domain and comprise small gene families found in a wide range of plant species. These proteins may be involved in many cellular and biological processes coupled closely to the synthesis, degradation, or stability of oil bodies. Although previous studies of this protein family have been reported for Arabidopsis and other species, understanding of the evolution of the caleosin gene family in plants remains inadequate. RESULTS: In this study, comparative genomic analysis was performed to investigate the phylogenetic relationships, evolutionary history, functional divergence, positive selection, and coevolution of caleosins. First, 84 caleosin genes were identified from five main lineages that included 15 species. Phylogenetic analysis placed these caleosins into five distinct subfamilies (sub I–V), including two subfamilies that have not been previously identified. Among these subfamilies, sub II coincided with the distinct P-caleosin isoform recently identified in the pollen oil bodies of lily; caleosin genes from the same lineage tended to be clustered together in the phylogenetic tree. A special motif was determined to be related with the classification of caleosins, which may have resulted from a deletion in sub I and sub III occurring after the evolutionary divergence of monocot and dicot species. Additionally, several segmentally and tandem-duplicated gene pairs were identified from seven species, and further analysis revealed that caleosins of different species did not share a common expansion model. The ages of each pair of duplications were calculated, and most were consistent with the time of genome-wide duplication events in each species. Functional divergence analysis showed that changes in functional constraints have occurred between subfamilies I/IV, II/IV, and II/V, and some critical amino acid sites were identified during the functional divergence. Additional analyses revealed that caleosins were under positive selection during evolution, and seven candidate amino acid sites (70R, 74G, 88 L, 89G, 100 K, 106A, 107S) for positive selection were identified. Interestingly, the critical amino acid residues of functional divergence and positive selection were mainly located in C-terminal domain. Finally, three groups of coevolved amino acid sites were identified. Among these coevolved sites, seven from group 2 were located in the Ca(2+)-binding region of crucial importance. CONCLUSION: In this study, the evolutionary and expansion patterns of the caleosin gene family were predicted, and a series of amino acid sites relevant to their functional divergence, adaptive evolution, and coevolution were identified. These findings provide data to facilitate further functional analysis of caleosin gene families in the plant lineage.
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spelling pubmed-40576542014-06-15 Delineation of plant caleosin residues critical for functional divergence, positive selection and coevolution Song, Wanlu Qin, Yajuan Zhu, Yan Yin, Guangjun Wu, Ningning Li, Yaxuan Hu, Yingkao BMC Evol Biol Research Article BACKGROUND: The caleosin genes encode proteins with a single conserved EF hand calcium-binding domain and comprise small gene families found in a wide range of plant species. These proteins may be involved in many cellular and biological processes coupled closely to the synthesis, degradation, or stability of oil bodies. Although previous studies of this protein family have been reported for Arabidopsis and other species, understanding of the evolution of the caleosin gene family in plants remains inadequate. RESULTS: In this study, comparative genomic analysis was performed to investigate the phylogenetic relationships, evolutionary history, functional divergence, positive selection, and coevolution of caleosins. First, 84 caleosin genes were identified from five main lineages that included 15 species. Phylogenetic analysis placed these caleosins into five distinct subfamilies (sub I–V), including two subfamilies that have not been previously identified. Among these subfamilies, sub II coincided with the distinct P-caleosin isoform recently identified in the pollen oil bodies of lily; caleosin genes from the same lineage tended to be clustered together in the phylogenetic tree. A special motif was determined to be related with the classification of caleosins, which may have resulted from a deletion in sub I and sub III occurring after the evolutionary divergence of monocot and dicot species. Additionally, several segmentally and tandem-duplicated gene pairs were identified from seven species, and further analysis revealed that caleosins of different species did not share a common expansion model. The ages of each pair of duplications were calculated, and most were consistent with the time of genome-wide duplication events in each species. Functional divergence analysis showed that changes in functional constraints have occurred between subfamilies I/IV, II/IV, and II/V, and some critical amino acid sites were identified during the functional divergence. Additional analyses revealed that caleosins were under positive selection during evolution, and seven candidate amino acid sites (70R, 74G, 88 L, 89G, 100 K, 106A, 107S) for positive selection were identified. Interestingly, the critical amino acid residues of functional divergence and positive selection were mainly located in C-terminal domain. Finally, three groups of coevolved amino acid sites were identified. Among these coevolved sites, seven from group 2 were located in the Ca(2+)-binding region of crucial importance. CONCLUSION: In this study, the evolutionary and expansion patterns of the caleosin gene family were predicted, and a series of amino acid sites relevant to their functional divergence, adaptive evolution, and coevolution were identified. These findings provide data to facilitate further functional analysis of caleosin gene families in the plant lineage. BioMed Central 2014-06-09 /pmc/articles/PMC4057654/ /pubmed/24913827 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-14-124 Text en Copyright © 2014 Song 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 credited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver ( http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Song, Wanlu
Qin, Yajuan
Zhu, Yan
Yin, Guangjun
Wu, Ningning
Li, Yaxuan
Hu, Yingkao
Delineation of plant caleosin residues critical for functional divergence, positive selection and coevolution
title Delineation of plant caleosin residues critical for functional divergence, positive selection and coevolution
title_full Delineation of plant caleosin residues critical for functional divergence, positive selection and coevolution
title_fullStr Delineation of plant caleosin residues critical for functional divergence, positive selection and coevolution
title_full_unstemmed Delineation of plant caleosin residues critical for functional divergence, positive selection and coevolution
title_short Delineation of plant caleosin residues critical for functional divergence, positive selection and coevolution
title_sort delineation of plant caleosin residues critical for functional divergence, positive selection and coevolution
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4057654/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24913827
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-14-124
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