Cargando…

The Evolutionary History of R2R3-MYB Proteins Across 50 Eukaryotes: New Insights Into Subfamily Classification and Expansion

R2R3-MYB proteins (2R-MYBs) are one of the main transcription factor families in higher plants. Since the evolutionary history of this gene family across the eukaryotic kingdom remains unknown, we performed a comparative analysis of 2R-MYBs from 50 major eukaryotic lineages, with particular emphasis...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Du, Hai, Liang, Zhe, Zhao, Sen, Nan, Ming-Ge, Phan Tran, Lam-Son, Lu, Kun, Huang, Yu-Bi, Li, Jia-Na
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4603784/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26047035
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep11037
_version_ 1782394956908855296
author Du, Hai
Liang, Zhe
Zhao, Sen
Nan, Ming-Ge
Phan Tran, Lam-Son
Lu, Kun
Huang, Yu-Bi
Li, Jia-Na
author_facet Du, Hai
Liang, Zhe
Zhao, Sen
Nan, Ming-Ge
Phan Tran, Lam-Son
Lu, Kun
Huang, Yu-Bi
Li, Jia-Na
author_sort Du, Hai
collection PubMed
description R2R3-MYB proteins (2R-MYBs) are one of the main transcription factor families in higher plants. Since the evolutionary history of this gene family across the eukaryotic kingdom remains unknown, we performed a comparative analysis of 2R-MYBs from 50 major eukaryotic lineages, with particular emphasis on land plants. A total of 1548 candidates were identified among diverse taxonomic groups, which allowed for an updated classification of 73 highly conserved subfamilies, including many newly identified subfamilies. Our results revealed that the protein architectures, intron patterns, and sequence characteristics were remarkably conserved in each subfamily. At least four subfamilies were derived from early land plants, 10 evolved from spermatophytes, and 19 from angiosperms, demonstrating the diversity and preferential expansion of this gene family in land plants. Moreover, we determined that their remarkable expansion was mainly attributed to whole genome and segmental duplication, where duplicates were preferentially retained within certain subfamilies that shared three homologous intron patterns (a, b, and c) even though up to 12 types of patterns existed. Through our integrated distributions, sequence characteristics, and phylogenetic tree analyses, we confirm that 2R-MYBs are old and postulate that 3R-MYBs may be evolutionarily derived from 2R-MYBs via intragenic domain duplication.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4603784
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher Nature Publishing Group
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-46037842015-10-23 The Evolutionary History of R2R3-MYB Proteins Across 50 Eukaryotes: New Insights Into Subfamily Classification and Expansion Du, Hai Liang, Zhe Zhao, Sen Nan, Ming-Ge Phan Tran, Lam-Son Lu, Kun Huang, Yu-Bi Li, Jia-Na Sci Rep Article R2R3-MYB proteins (2R-MYBs) are one of the main transcription factor families in higher plants. Since the evolutionary history of this gene family across the eukaryotic kingdom remains unknown, we performed a comparative analysis of 2R-MYBs from 50 major eukaryotic lineages, with particular emphasis on land plants. A total of 1548 candidates were identified among diverse taxonomic groups, which allowed for an updated classification of 73 highly conserved subfamilies, including many newly identified subfamilies. Our results revealed that the protein architectures, intron patterns, and sequence characteristics were remarkably conserved in each subfamily. At least four subfamilies were derived from early land plants, 10 evolved from spermatophytes, and 19 from angiosperms, demonstrating the diversity and preferential expansion of this gene family in land plants. Moreover, we determined that their remarkable expansion was mainly attributed to whole genome and segmental duplication, where duplicates were preferentially retained within certain subfamilies that shared three homologous intron patterns (a, b, and c) even though up to 12 types of patterns existed. Through our integrated distributions, sequence characteristics, and phylogenetic tree analyses, we confirm that 2R-MYBs are old and postulate that 3R-MYBs may be evolutionarily derived from 2R-MYBs via intragenic domain duplication. Nature Publishing Group 2015-06-05 /pmc/articles/PMC4603784/ /pubmed/26047035 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep11037 Text en Copyright © 2015, Macmillan Publishers Limited http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
spellingShingle Article
Du, Hai
Liang, Zhe
Zhao, Sen
Nan, Ming-Ge
Phan Tran, Lam-Son
Lu, Kun
Huang, Yu-Bi
Li, Jia-Na
The Evolutionary History of R2R3-MYB Proteins Across 50 Eukaryotes: New Insights Into Subfamily Classification and Expansion
title The Evolutionary History of R2R3-MYB Proteins Across 50 Eukaryotes: New Insights Into Subfamily Classification and Expansion
title_full The Evolutionary History of R2R3-MYB Proteins Across 50 Eukaryotes: New Insights Into Subfamily Classification and Expansion
title_fullStr The Evolutionary History of R2R3-MYB Proteins Across 50 Eukaryotes: New Insights Into Subfamily Classification and Expansion
title_full_unstemmed The Evolutionary History of R2R3-MYB Proteins Across 50 Eukaryotes: New Insights Into Subfamily Classification and Expansion
title_short The Evolutionary History of R2R3-MYB Proteins Across 50 Eukaryotes: New Insights Into Subfamily Classification and Expansion
title_sort evolutionary history of r2r3-myb proteins across 50 eukaryotes: new insights into subfamily classification and expansion
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4603784/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26047035
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep11037
work_keys_str_mv AT duhai theevolutionaryhistoryofr2r3mybproteinsacross50eukaryotesnewinsightsintosubfamilyclassificationandexpansion
AT liangzhe theevolutionaryhistoryofr2r3mybproteinsacross50eukaryotesnewinsightsintosubfamilyclassificationandexpansion
AT zhaosen theevolutionaryhistoryofr2r3mybproteinsacross50eukaryotesnewinsightsintosubfamilyclassificationandexpansion
AT nanmingge theevolutionaryhistoryofr2r3mybproteinsacross50eukaryotesnewinsightsintosubfamilyclassificationandexpansion
AT phantranlamson theevolutionaryhistoryofr2r3mybproteinsacross50eukaryotesnewinsightsintosubfamilyclassificationandexpansion
AT lukun theevolutionaryhistoryofr2r3mybproteinsacross50eukaryotesnewinsightsintosubfamilyclassificationandexpansion
AT huangyubi theevolutionaryhistoryofr2r3mybproteinsacross50eukaryotesnewinsightsintosubfamilyclassificationandexpansion
AT lijiana theevolutionaryhistoryofr2r3mybproteinsacross50eukaryotesnewinsightsintosubfamilyclassificationandexpansion
AT duhai evolutionaryhistoryofr2r3mybproteinsacross50eukaryotesnewinsightsintosubfamilyclassificationandexpansion
AT liangzhe evolutionaryhistoryofr2r3mybproteinsacross50eukaryotesnewinsightsintosubfamilyclassificationandexpansion
AT zhaosen evolutionaryhistoryofr2r3mybproteinsacross50eukaryotesnewinsightsintosubfamilyclassificationandexpansion
AT nanmingge evolutionaryhistoryofr2r3mybproteinsacross50eukaryotesnewinsightsintosubfamilyclassificationandexpansion
AT phantranlamson evolutionaryhistoryofr2r3mybproteinsacross50eukaryotesnewinsightsintosubfamilyclassificationandexpansion
AT lukun evolutionaryhistoryofr2r3mybproteinsacross50eukaryotesnewinsightsintosubfamilyclassificationandexpansion
AT huangyubi evolutionaryhistoryofr2r3mybproteinsacross50eukaryotesnewinsightsintosubfamilyclassificationandexpansion
AT lijiana evolutionaryhistoryofr2r3mybproteinsacross50eukaryotesnewinsightsintosubfamilyclassificationandexpansion