4.7 Article

A Study of GUS Expression in Arabidopsis as a Tool for the Evaluation of Gene Evolution, Function and the Role of Expression Derived from Gene Duplication

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PLANTS-BASEL
卷 12, 期 10, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants12102051

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gene duplication; GUS genes; evolutionary tree; expression pattern; function change

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Gene duplication is a vital process in the evolution of eukaryotes, leading to the presence of multiple copies of a gene with differentiated expressions and functions. To test this hypothesis, the expression domains of three beta-glucuronidase genes (AtGUS) in Arabidopsis thaliana were compared with the GUS evolutionary tree in angiosperms. The study confirmed that the differentiation of gene copies can be indicated by their maintenance in all derived species. The results also revealed the presence of different clusters of gene copies originating from ancient duplication events.
Gene duplication played a fundamental role in eukaryote evolution and different copies of a given gene can be present in extant species, often with expressions and functions differentiated during evolution. We assume that, when such differentiation occurs in a gene copy, this may be indicated by its maintenance in all the derived species. To verify this hypothesis, we compared the histological expression domains of the three beta-glucuronidase genes (AtGUS) present in Arabidopsis thaliana with the GUS evolutionary tree in angiosperms. We found that AtGUS gene expression overlaps in the shoot apex, the floral bud and the root hairs. In the root apex, AtGUS3 expression differs completely from AtGUS1 and AtGUS2, whose transcripts are present in the root cap meristem and columella, in the staminal cell niche, in the epidermis and in the proximal cortex. Conversely, AtGUS3 transcripts are limited to the old border-like cells of calyptra and those found along the protodermal cell line. The GUS evolutionary tree reveals that the two main clusters (named GUS1 and GUS3) originate from a duplication event predating angiosperm radiation. AtGUS3 belongs to the GUS3 cluster, while AtGUS1 and AtGUS2, which originate from a duplication event that occurred in an ancestor of the Brassicaceae family, are found together in the GUS1 cluster. There is another, previously undescribed cluster, called GUS4, originating from a very ancient duplication event. While the copy of GUS4 has been lost in many species, copies of GUS3 and GUS1 have been conserved in all species examined.

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