Adaptive evolution of the chrysanthemyl diphosphate synthase gene involved in irregular monoterpene metabolism

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Abstract

Background: Chrysanthemyl diphosphate synthase (CDS) is a key enzyme in biosynthetic pathways producing pyrethrins and irregular monoterpenes. These compounds are confined to plants of the tribe Anthemideae of the Asteraceae, and play an important role in defending the plants against herbivorous insects. It has been proposed that the CDS genes arose from duplication of the farnesyl diphosphate synthase (FDS) gene and have different function from FDSs. However, the duplication time toward the origin of CDS and the evolutionary force behind the functional divergence of the CDS gene are still unknown. Results: Two duplication events were detected in the evolutionary history of the FDS gene family in the Asteraceae, and the second duplication led to the origin of CDS. CDS occurred after the divergence of the tribe Mutisieae from other tribes of Asteraceae but before the birth of the Anthemideae tribe. After its origin, CDS accumulated four mutations in sites homologous to the substrate-binding and catalysis sites of FDS. Of these, two sites were involved in the binding of the nucleophilic substrate isopentenyl diphosphate in FDS. Maximum likelihood analyses showed that some sites in CDS were under positive selection and were scattered throughout primary sequences, whereas in the three-dimensional structure model they clustered in the large central cavity. Conclusion: Positive selection associated with gene duplication played a major role in the evolution of CDS. © 2012 Liu et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

Figures

  • Figure 1 Phylogenetic relationships of major clades of Asteraceae and phylogeny of the FDS gene family. (A) Phylogenetic relationships of major clades of Asteraceae modified from the Figure 1 of Panero & Funk [41]. Bold branches indicate those most likely for the duplication event in the CDS family. (B) Phylogeny of the FDS gene family reconstructed by the ML method. Numbers next to branches are bootstrap percentages from Maximum Likelihood analysis, and posterior probabilities from Bayesian analysis. The accession numbers of each sequence are given in Additional file 2. The arrows indicate the duplication events. The asterisks indicate sequences that were not used in the codon-based analysis because of their incomplete coding regions. The colors indicate the tribes to which the species belong.
  • Figure 2 (See legend on next page.)
  • Table 1 Parameter estimates under branch, site and branch-site models

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Liu, P. L., Wan, J. N., Guo, Y. P., Ge, S., & Rao, G. Y. (2012). Adaptive evolution of the chrysanthemyl diphosphate synthase gene involved in irregular monoterpene metabolism. BMC Evolutionary Biology, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-12-214

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