4.8 Article

The emergence and evolution of intron-poor and intronless genes in intron-rich plant gene families

Journal

PLANT JOURNAL
Volume 105, Issue 4, Pages 1072-1082

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/tpj.15088

Keywords

abiotic stresses; adaptation; duplication; intronless gene; intron‐ poor sub‐ family

Categories

Funding

  1. State Key Laboratory of Crop Genetics and Germplasm Enhancement [ZW201813]
  2. Priority Academic Program Development of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions
  3. Bioinformatics Center of Nanjing Agricultural University
  4. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union [833522]
  5. European Research Council (ERC) [833522] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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This study identified multiple gene families in plant genomes containing intronless or intron-poor genes, which play important roles in response to drought and salt stress, epigenetic processes, and plant development. The origin, evolution, and potential functions of these intronless and intron-poor sub-families provide insights into plant genome evolution and gene functional divergence.
Eukaryotic genes can be classified into intronless (no introns), intron-poor (three or fewer introns per gene) or intron-rich. Early eukaryotic genes were mostly intron-rich, and their alternative splicing into multiple transcripts, giving rise to different proteins, might have played pivotal roles in adaptation and evolution. Interestingly, extant plant genomes contain many gene families with one or sometimes few sub-families with genes that are intron-poor or intronless, and it remains unknown when and how these intron-poor or intronless genes have originated and evolved, and what their possible functions are. In this study, we identified 33 such gene families that contained intronless and intron-poor sub-families. Intronless genes seemed to have first emerged in early land plant evolution, while intron-poor sub-families seemed first to have appeared in green algae. In contrast to intron-rich genes, intronless genes in intron-poor sub-families occurred later, and were subject to stronger functional constraints. Based on RNA-seq analyses in Arabidopsis and rice, intronless or intron-poor genes in AP2, EF-hand_7, bZIP, FAD_binding_4, STE_STE11, CAMK_CAMKL-CHK1 and C2 gene families were more likely to play a role in response to drought and salt stress, compared with intron-rich genes in the same gene families, whereas intronless genes in the B_lectin and S_locus_glycop gene family were more likely to participate in epigenetic processes and plant development. Understanding the origin and evolutionary trajectory, as well as the potential functions, of intronless and intron-poor sub-families provides further insight into plant genome evolution and the functional divergence of genes.

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