| Literature DB >> 32503414 |
Chao Zhang1, Nana Kong1, Minxuan Cao1, Dongdong Wang1, Yue Chen2, Qin Chen3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Nitrogen is an indispensable nutrient for plant growth. It is used and transported in the form of amino acids in living organisms. Transporting amino acids to various parts of plants requires relevant transport proteins, such as amino acid permeases (AAPs), which were our focus in this study.Entities:
Keywords: AAP family; Duplication events; Evolution; Phylogenetic analysis; Sequencing plants
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32503414 PMCID: PMC7275304 DOI: 10.1186/s12864-020-6729-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
The number of AAPs, clade, and genetic characteristics of AAP genes in 17 different stage plants
| Number of | Number of Group I | Number of Group II | Tandem duplication (pairs) | Segmental duplication (pairs) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clade 1A | Clade 1B | Clade 2 | Clade 3 | Clade 4 | Clade 5 | |||||
Fig. 1Phylogenetic tree of AAP proteins. The unroot tree contains 154 protiens from Chlorophyta to Angiosperms and 7 different colors indicate AAPs from different stages. The protein distribution can easily divide into 2 main parts which were showed by greenyellow and violet colors’ dash lines and the group II might be divided into 2 subgroups indicated by gray and lightgray lines, respectively
Fig. 2The division of whole AAP proteins. The tree shows that the 2 main groups are divided; group I is represented by violet and group II by green. It can be inferred from the phylogenetic tree that the two groups are genetically. Eleven plants in 5 main different evolutionary stages were used to build the phylogenetic tree. The main domain, Aa_trans and transmembrane structure. The blue bar in each protein is the location and numbers of Aa_trans and the red boxes are transmembrane structures. There are no distinct differences between group members
Fig. 3Phylogenetic tree of group I AAP members. Group I members are divided into 5 clades are indicated in different colors. The circles represent the bootstrap value. This value is an important for classifying the clades
Fig. 4Hypothetical evolutionary models for AAPs from plants. The circles represent gene duplication events inferred from the phylogenetic analysis. The blue color indicates the number of tandem duplication and the green one means segmental duplication. The semicircle is divided into 6 parts, and each part is filled with color to represent a duplication event. Representative species of each major taxonomic group are shown at the branch tip. Branches are colored depending on their taxonomy classification
Fig. 5The annotation of gene ontology in whole AAPs. Colors indicate the type of gene annotation. The x-axis indicates the logarithm of protein numbers and the y-axis, the number of AAP members in each GO term
Fig. 6The presence of proteins in different groups and clades. The check mark within boxes indicate the group/clade have AAP members. This visually indicated the distribution of the group of proteins in each stage