| Literature DB >> 29089032 |
Seungill Kim1, Jieun Park1,2, Seon-In Yeom3, Yong-Min Kim4, Eunyoung Seo1, Ki-Tae Kim5, Myung-Shin Kim1, Je Min Lee6, Kyeongchae Cheong2,5, Ho-Sub Shin1, Saet-Byul Kim1, Koeun Han1,7, Jundae Lee8, Minkyu Park9, Hyun-Ah Lee1, Hye-Young Lee1, Youngsill Lee1, Soohyun Oh1, Joo Hyun Lee1, Eunhye Choi1, Eunbi Choi1, So Eui Lee1, Jongbum Jeon2, Hyunbin Kim2, Gobong Choi2, Hyeunjeong Song2, JunKi Lee1, Sang-Choon Lee1, Jin-Kyung Kwon1,7, Hea-Young Lee1,7, Namjin Koo4, Yunji Hong4, Ryan W Kim4, Won-Hee Kang3, Jin Hoe Huh1, Byoung-Cheorl Kang1,7, Tae-Jin Yang1, Yong-Hwan Lee2,5, Jeffrey L Bennetzen9, Doil Choi10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Transposable elements are major evolutionary forces which can cause new genome structure and species diversification. The role of transposable elements in the expansion of nucleotide-binding and leucine-rich-repeat proteins (NLRs), the major disease-resistance gene families, has been unexplored in plants.Entities:
Keywords: Disease-resistance gene; Genome evolution; LTR-retrotransposon; NLR; Retroduplication
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29089032 PMCID: PMC5664825 DOI: 10.1186/s13059-017-1341-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol ISSN: 1474-7596 Impact factor: 13.583
Fig. 1Lineage-divergence and genome structure comparisons of three Capsicum species. a The reconstructed phylogenetic tree of eight plant genomes indicates their evolutionary relationships and estimated divergence times. b The circular diagram shows the distribution of repeats, genes, genomic variations, and genome rearrangements in the pepper genomes. The subcategories indicate the density of repeats (A), genes (B), species-specific blocks (C), and SNPs (D) in the pepper genomes. The subcategory (E) depicts collinear and translocated blocks among the pepper genomes. c A linear comparison of the rearranged blocks in the pepper genomes. Colors in the bars indicate translocated regions when comparing to tomato and potato genomes. The line colors indicate translocations in the ancestral lineage leading to Annuum and Chinense (red), in Baccatum (green), and in the ancestor of Annuum and Chinense or Baccatum (dark gray)
Fig. 2Evolutionary history of LTR-Rs and duplications of protein-coding genes in the pepper genomes. a Distribution of LTR-R insertions. The graphs in the left and right panels depict the predicted insertion dates of LTR-R superfamilies (gypsy, copia) and two specific families (del, athila). The x- and y-axes indicate the insertion times and the number of insertions at each time, respectively. b Time-scaled gene duplication history (left) and top ten repertoires of massive gene duplication (right). The x- and y-axes of the graph in the left panel indicate the approximate duplication time (MYA) and the number of gene duplications, respectively. The x- and y-axes of the histogram in the right panel represent the number of genes and domain description, respectively
Fig. 3Emergence of large NLR gene families by retroduplication. a Intact NB-ARC domains of retroduplicated and normal NLRs are used for the phylogenetic tree construction as previously described method [21]. Each color of the phylogenetic tree indicates each subgroup. b The bar graph indicates the number of retroduplicated NLRs in each subgroup. The x- and y-axes indicate the numbers of genes and subgroups, respectively. c, d The exon lengths and the numbers of normal and retroduplicated NLRs are depicted. c The x- and y-axes indicate the normal and retroduplicated NLR groups and their exon lengths, respectively. d The x- and y-axes mean the groups of NLRs and the exon numbers, respectively
Fig. 4Emergence and evolution of L and R3a genes in the pepper and potato genomes. Models for the evolution of L and R3a in the pepper and potato are depicted. The gene names in the R3a cluster are from the previous analysis of Huang et al. [33]. The model proposes that L and R3a gene ancestors were first created by retroduplication, followed by the accumulation of point mutations and tandem duplication, respectively. DNA sequence indicative of a poly(A) tail and flanking terminal repeat (TR) sequences are depicted in the diagram as genomic evidence for a retroduplicated origin of L
Fig. 5Potential anthracnose resistance genes in chromosome 3 of C. baccatum. Baccatum-specific NLRs in the major QTL region are visualized on 3.8 Mb of chromosome 3. The chromosome plot shows the subgroups, proposed retroduplication events, and expression results for the NLRs. The black and red texts indicate NLR IDs that emerged before and after the speciation of Baccatum, respectively