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Evolution of Terpene Synthases in Orchidaceae

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22136947

Keywords

terpene synthase; Orchidaceae; evolution; phylogenetic tree

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan [MOST 107-2313-B-006-003-MY3]

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Terpenoids are important compounds in plants with functions of attracting pollinators, defense, and insecticidal properties. The evolution of terpene synthases (TPSs) in Orchidaceae, one of the largest and most diverse families of flowering plants, shows a diversification pattern with increased duplicated copies in derived orchid species.
Terpenoids are the largest class of plant secondary metabolites and are one of the major emitted volatile compounds released to the atmosphere. They have functions of attracting pollinators or defense function, insecticidal properties, and are even used as pharmaceutical agents. Because of the importance of terpenoids, an increasing number of plants are required to investigate the function and evolution of terpene synthases (TPSs) that are the key enzymes in terpenoids biosynthesis. Orchidacea, containing more than 800 genera and 28,000 species, is one of the largest and most diverse families of flowering plants, and is widely distributed. Here, the diversification of the TPSs evolution in Orchidaceae is revealed. A characterization and phylogeny of TPSs from four different species with whole genome sequences is available. Phylogenetic analysis of orchid TPSs indicates these genes are divided into TPS-a, -b, -e/f, and g subfamilies, and their duplicated copies are increased in derived orchid species compared to that in the early divergence orchid, A. shenzhenica. The large increase of both TPS-a and TPS-b copies can probably be attributed to the pro-duction of different volatile compounds for attracting pollinators or generating chemical defenses in derived orchid lineages; while the duplications of TPS-g and TPS-e/f copies occurred in a species-dependent manner.

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