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Evolution of the class IV HD-zip gene family in streptophytes.


ABSTRACT: Class IV homeodomain leucine zipper (C4HDZ) genes are plant-specific transcription factors that, based on phenotypes in Arabidopsis thaliana, play an important role in epidermal development. In this study, we sampled all major extant lineages and their closest algal relatives for C4HDZ homologs and phylogenetic analyses result in a gene tree that mirrors land plant evolution with evidence for gene duplications in many lineages, but minimal evidence for gene losses. Our analysis suggests an ancestral C4HDZ gene originated in an algal ancestor of land plants and a single ancestral gene was present in the last common ancestor of land plants. Independent gene duplications are evident within several lineages including mosses, lycophytes, euphyllophytes, seed plants, and, most notably, angiosperms. In recently evolved angiosperm paralogs, we find evidence of pseudogenization via mutations in both coding and regulatory sequences. The increasing complexity of the C4HDZ gene family through the diversification of land plants correlates to increasing complexity in epidermal characters.

SUBMITTER: Zalewski CS 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3773374 | biostudies-literature | 2013 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Evolution of the class IV HD-zip gene family in streptophytes.

Zalewski Christopher S CS   Floyd Sandra K SK   Furumizu Chihiro C   Sakakibara Keiko K   Stevenson Dennis W DW   Bowman John L JL  

Molecular biology and evolution 20130727 10


Class IV homeodomain leucine zipper (C4HDZ) genes are plant-specific transcription factors that, based on phenotypes in Arabidopsis thaliana, play an important role in epidermal development. In this study, we sampled all major extant lineages and their closest algal relatives for C4HDZ homologs and phylogenetic analyses result in a gene tree that mirrors land plant evolution with evidence for gene duplications in many lineages, but minimal evidence for gene losses. Our analysis suggests an ances  ...[more]

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