4.6 Article

Step-wise and lineage-specific diversification of plant RNA polymerase genes and origin of the largest plant-specific subunits

Journal

NEW PHYTOLOGIST
Volume 207, Issue 4, Pages 1198-1212

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nph.13432

Keywords

gene duplication; parallel evolution; Pol IV; Pol V; protein complex; RNA polymerase

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [91131007]
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology of China [2011CB944600]
  3. State Key Laboratory of Genetic Engineering

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Proteins often function as complexes, yet little is known about the evolution of dissimilar subunits of complexes. DNA-directed RNA polymerases (RNAPs) are multisubunit complexes, with distinct eukaryotic types for different classes of transcripts. In addition to Pol I-III, common in eukaryotes, plants have Pol IV and V for epigenetic regulation. Some RNAP subunits are specific to one type, whereas other subunits are shared by multiple types. We have conducted extensive phylogenetic and sequence analyses, and have placed RNAP gene duplication events in land plant history, thereby reconstructing the subunit compositions of the novel RNAPs during land plant evolution. We found that Pol IV/V have experienced step-wise duplication and diversification of various subunits, with increasingly distinctive subunit compositions. Also, lineage-specific duplications have further increased RNAP complexity with distinct copies in different plant families and varying divergence for subunits of different RNAPs. Further, the largest subunits of Pol IV/V probably originated from a gene fusion in the ancestral land plants. We propose a framework of plant RNAP evolution, providing an excellent model for protein complex evolution.

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