4.7 Article

Cryogenian Origin and Subsequent Diversification of the Plant Cell-Wall Enzyme XTH Family

Journal

PLANT AND CELL PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 62, Issue 12, Pages 1874-1889

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/pcp/pcab093

Keywords

Alphaproteobacteria; Cryogenian; Glycoside hydrolase family 16; Horizontal gene transfer; Streptophyta; Xyloglucan endotransglucosylase/hydrolase

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [JP24114005, JP17H03691, JP18H05489]

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This study reveals that the non-plant origin of the XTH family is from ExoKs in Alphaproteobacteria, not licheninases in Firmicutes as previously believed, with the relevant HGT event traced back to the Cryogenian geological period, supporting the adaptation of plants and fungi to the ancient icy environment.
All land plants encode large multigene families of xyloglucan endotransglucosylase/hydrolases (XTHs), plant-specific enzymes that cleave and reconnect plant cell-wall polysaccharides. Despite the ubiquity of these enzymes, considerable uncertainty remains regarding the evolutionary history of the XTH family. Phylogenomic and comparative analyses in this study traced the non-plant origins of the XTH family to Alphaproteobacteria ExoKs, bacterial enzymes involved in loosening biofilms, rather than Firmicutes licheninases, plant biomass digesting enzymes, as previously supposed. The relevant horizontal gene transfer (HGT) event was mapped to the divergence of non-swimming charophycean algae in the Cryogenian geological period. This HGT event was the likely origin of charophycean EG16-2s, which are putative intermediates between ExoKs and XTHs. Another HGT event in the Cryogenian may have led from EG16-2s or ExoKs to fungal Congo Red Hypersensitive proteins (CRHs) to fungal CRHs, enzymes that cleave and reconnect chitin and glucans in fungal cell walls. This successive transfer of enzyme-encoding genes may have supported the adaptation of plants and fungi to the ancient icy environment by facilitating their sessile lifestyles. Furthermore, several protein evolutionary steps, including coevolution of substrate-interacting residues and putative intra-family gene fusion, occurred in the land plant lineage and drove diversification of the XTH family. At least some of those events correlated with the evolutionary gain of broader substrate specificities, which may have underpinned the expansion of the XTH family by enhancing duplicated gene survival. Together, this study highlights the Precambrian evolution of life and the mode of multigene family expansion in the evolutionary history of the XTH family.

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