4.7 Article

Conservation and Divergence of Phosphoenolpyruvate Carboxylase Gene Family in Cotton

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants11111482

Keywords

cotton; Gossypium; phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC); gene duplication; evolution; abiotic stress

Categories

Funding

  1. Cotton Incorporated
  2. National Science Foundation [1658709]
  3. Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region [2021D14007]
  4. State Key Laboratory of Cotton Biology Open Fund [CB2019A01]
  5. Central Plains Science and Technology Innovation Leader Project [214200510029]
  6. Office Of The Director
  7. Office Of Internatl Science &Engineering [1658709] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This study identified and analyzed the PEPC genes in cotton, revealing their presence and differentiation in different sub-genomes. The expression patterns of these genes were also examined during development and under stress conditions, uncovering their importance and functional diversity in cotton evolution.
Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) is an important enzyme in plants, which regulates carbon flow through the TCA cycle and controls protein and oil biosynthesis. Although it is important, there is little research on PEPC in cotton, the most important fiber crop in the world. In this study, a total of 125 PEPCs were identified in 15 Gossypium genomes. All PEPC genes in cotton are divided into six groups and each group generally contains one PEPC member in each diploid cotton and two in each tetraploid cotton. This suggests that PEPC genes already existed in cotton before their divergence. There are additional PEPC sub-groups in other plant species, suggesting the different evolution and natural selection during different plant evolution. PEPC genes were independently evolved in each cotton sub-genome. During cotton domestication and evolution, certain PEPC genes were lost and new ones were born to face the new environmental changes and human being needs. The comprehensive analysis of collinearity events and selection pressure shows that genome-wide duplication and fragment duplication are the main methods for the expansion of the PEPC family, and they continue to undergo purification selection during the evolutionary process. PEPC genes were widely expressed with temporal and spatial patterns. The expression patterns of PEPC genes were similar in G. hirsutum and G. barbadense with a slight difference. PEPC2A and 2D were highly expressed in cotton reproductive tissues, including ovule and fiber at all tested developmental stages in both cultivated cottons. However, PEPC1A and 1D were dominantly expressed in vegetative tissues. Abiotic stress also induced the aberrant expression of PEPC genes, in which PEPC1 was induced by both chilling and salinity stresses while PEPC5 was induced by chilling and drought stresses. Each pair (A and D) of PEPC genes showed the similar response to cotton development and different abiotic stress, suggesting the similar function of these PEPCs no matter their origination from A or D sub-genome. However, some divergence was also observed among their origination, such as PEPC5D was induced but PEPC5A was inhibited in G. barbadense during drought treatment, suggesting that a different organized PEPC gene may evolve different functions during cotton evolution. During cotton polyploidization, the homologues genes may refunction and play different roles in different situations.

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