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Combined haploinsufficiency and purifying selection drive retention of RPL36a paralogs in Arabidopsis
Whole-genome duplication events have driven to a large degree the evolution of angiosperm genomes. Although the majority of redundant gene copies after a genome duplication are lost, subfunctionalization or gene balance account for the retention of gene copies. The Arabidopsis 80S ribosome represent...
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Published in: | Scientific reports 2014-02, Vol.4 (1), p.4122-4122, Article 4122 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Whole-genome duplication events have driven to a large degree the evolution of angiosperm genomes. Although the majority of redundant gene copies after a genome duplication are lost, subfunctionalization or gene balance account for the retention of gene copies. The Arabidopsis 80S ribosome represents an excellent model to test the gene balance hypothesis as it consists of 80 ribosomal proteins, all of them encoded by genes belonging to small gene families. Here, we present the isolation of mutant alleles of the
APICULATA2
(
API2
) and
RPL36aA
paralogous genes, which encode identical ribosomal proteins but share a similarity of 89% in their coding sequences.
RPL36aA
was found expressed at a higher level than
API2
in the wild type. The loss-of-function
api2
and
rpl36aa
mutations are recessive and affect leaf development in a similar way. Their double mutant combinations with
asymmetric leaves2-1
(
as2-1
) caused leaf polarity defects that were stronger in
rpl36aa as2-1
than in
api2 as2-1
. Our results highlight the role of combined haploinsufficiency and purifying selection in the retention of these paralogous genes in the Arabidopsis genome. |
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ISSN: | 2045-2322 2045-2322 |
DOI: | 10.1038/srep04122 |