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The molecular evolution of β-carbonic anhydrase in Flaveria

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 62, Issue 9, Pages 3071-3081

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/err071

Keywords

C-4 photosynthesis; carbonic anhydrase; Flaveria; molecular evolution; photosynthetic intermediate

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Limited information exists regarding molecular events that occurred during the evolution of C-4 plants from their C-3 ancestors. The enzyme beta-carbonic anhydrase (CA; EC 4.2.1.1), which catalyses the reversible hydration of CO2, is present in multiple forms in C-3 and C-4 plants, and has given insights into the molecular evolution of the C-4 pathway in the genus Flaveria. cDNAs encoding three distinct isoforms of beta-CA, CA1-CA3, have been isolated and examined from Flaveria C-3 and C-4 congeners. Sequence data, expression analyses of CA orthologues, and chloroplast import assays with radiolabelled CA precursor proteins from the C-3 species F. pringlei Gandoger and the C-4 species F. bidentis (L.) Kuntze have shown that both contain chloroplastic and cytosolic forms of the enzyme, and the potential roles of these isoforms are discussed. The data also identified CA3 as the cytosolic isoform important in C-4 photosynthesis and indicate that the C-4 CA(3) gene evolved as a result of gene duplication and neofunctionalization, which involved mutations in coding and non-coding regions of the ancestral C-3 CA3 gene. Comparisons of the deduced CA3 amino acid sequences from Flaveria C-3, C-4, and photosynthetic intermediate species showed that all the C-3-C-4 intermediates investigated and F. brownii, a C-4-like species, have a C-3-type CA3, while F. vaginata, another C-4-like species, contains a C-4-type CA3. These observations correlate with the photosynthetic physiologies of the intermediates, suggesting that the molecular evolution of C-4 photosynthesis in Flaveria may have resulted from a temporally dependent, stepwise modification of protein-encoding genes and their regulatory elements.

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