4.6 Article

Phylogenetic distribution and expression pattern analyses identified a divergent basal body assembly protein involved in land plant spermatogenesis

Journal

NEW PHYTOLOGIST
Volume 236, Issue 3, Pages 1182-1196

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nph.18385

Keywords

basal body protein; chromatin reorganization; elimination of cytoplasm; flagella formation; molecular evolution; plant spermatogenesis; Streptophyta

Categories

Funding

  1. EM facility of the National Institute for Physiological Sciences
  2. JSPS KAKENHI [19H04870, 19H04872, 19H05675, 21H02515, 20K15824, 15H04413, 19K22448, 18K06367]

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This study identified candidate genes involved in spermatozoid formation in land plants, including BLD10, which plays important roles in basal body and flagella formation. Additionally, it was found that MpBLD10 may have acquired additional functions in spermatozoid formation through rapid molecular evolution.
Land plant spermatozoids commonly possess characteristic structures such as the spline, which consists of a microtubule array, the multilayered structure (MLS) in which the uppermost layer is a continuum of the spline, and multiple flagella. However, the molecular mechanisms underpinning spermatogenesis remain to be elucidated. We successfully identified candidate genes involved in spermatogenesis, deeply divergent BLD10s, by computational analyses combining multiple methods and omics data. We then examined the functions of BLD10s in the liverwort Marchantia polymorpha and the moss Physcomitrium patens. MpBLD10 and PpBLD10 are required for normal basal body (BB) and flagella formation. Mpbld10 mutants exhibited defects in remodeling of the cytoplasm and nucleus during spermatozoid formation, and thus MpBLD10 should be involved in chromatin reorganization and elimination of the cytoplasm during spermiogenesis. We identified orthologs of MpBLD10 and PpBLD10 in diverse Streptophyta and found that MpBLD10 and PpBLD10 are orthologous to BLD10/CEP135 family proteins, which function in BB assembly. However, BLD10s evolved especially quickly in land plants and MpBLD10 might have acquired additional functions in spermatozoid formation through rapid molecular evolution.

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