4.6 Article

Evolution of the Brassicaceae-specific MS5-Like family and neofunctionalization of the novel MALE STERILITY 5 gene essential for male fertility in Brassica napus

Journal

NEW PHYTOLOGIST
Volume 229, Issue 4, Pages 2339-2356

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nph.17053

Keywords

Brassica MS5; lineage‐ specific gene; male fertility; neofunctionalization; new gene; SUN protein; telomeric dynamics

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31671733]
  2. National Grand Project of Science and Technology [2018ZX0801104B]
  3. Major Research Project of CAAS Science and Technology Innovation Program
  4. Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China [LQ18C060004]

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The research identified that the MS5 gene in Brassica napus is inherited from a basic diploid ancestor and it has functional differences in the plant. This gene belongs to a Brassicaceae-specific new gene family and has gained a novel function crucial for male fertility in B. napus through neofunctionalization.
New genes (or lineage-specific genes) can facilitate functional innovations. MALE STERILITY 5 (MS5) in Brassica napus is a fertility-related new gene, which has two wild-type alleles (BnMS5(a) and BnMS5(C)) and two mutant alleles (BnMS5(b) and BnMS5(d)) that could induce male sterility. Here, we studied the history and functional evolution of MS5 homologs in plants by phylogenetic analysis and molecular genetic experiments. We identified 727 MS5 homologs and found that they define a Brassicaceae-specific gene family that has expanded partly via multiple tandem gene duplications and also probably transpositions. The MS5 in B. napus is inherited from a basic diploid ancestor of B. rapa. Molecular genetic experiments indicate that BnMS5(a) and BnMS5(C) are functionally distinct in B. napus and that BnMS5(d) can inhibit BnMS5(a) in B. napus in a dosage-dependent manner. The BnMS5(a) protein can move in coordination with meiotic telomeres and interact with the nuclear envelope protein SUN1, with a possible crucial role in meiotic chromosome behavior. In summary, BnMS5 belongs to a Brassicaceae-specific new gene family, and has gained a novel function that is essential for male fertility in B. napus through neofunctionalization that has likely occurred since the origin of B. rapa.

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