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  4. Genome-wide analysis revealed the stepwise origin and functional diversification of HSDs from lower to higher plant species
 
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Genome-wide analysis revealed the stepwise origin and functional diversification of HSDs from lower to higher plant species

Type
Journal article
Language
English
Date issued
2023
Author
Saleem, Noor
Aziz, Usman
Ali, Muhammad
Liu, Xiangling
Alwutayd, Khairiah Mubarak
Alshegaihi, Rana M.
Niedbała, Gniewko 
Elkelish, Amr
Zhang, Meng
Faculty
Wydział Inżynierii Środowiska i Inżynierii Mechanicznej
Journal
Frontiers in Plant Science
ISSN
1664-462X
DOI
10.3389/fpls.2023.1159394
Web address
http://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpls.2023.1159394/full
Volume
14
Pages from-to
art. 1159394
Abstract (EN)
Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (HSDs) is an oil-body sterol protein (steroleosin) with an NADP(H) binding domain that belongs to the short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase (SDR) superfamily. There are numerous studies on the characterization of HSDs in plants. However, thus far, the evolutionary differentiation and divergence analysis of these genes remain to be explored. The current study used an integrated method to elucidate the sequential evolution of HSDs in 64 sequenced plant genomes. Analyses were conducted on their origins, distribution, duplication, evolutionary paths, domain functions, motif composition, properties, and cis-elements. Results indicate that except for algae, HSD1 was widely distributed in plant species ranging from lower to higher plants, while HSD5 was restricted to terrestrial plants, and HSD2 was identified in fewer monocots and several dicot plants. Phylogenetic analysis of HSD proteins revealed that monocotyledonous HSD1 in moss and ferns appeared closest to the outgroup, V. carteri HSD-like, M. musculus HSD1, and H. sapiens HSD1. These data support the hypothesis that HSD1 originated in bryophytes and then in non-vascular and vascular plants, followed by HSD5 only in land plants. Gene structure analysis suggests that HSDs in plant species came up with a fixed number of six exons, and the intron phase was primarily 0, 1, 0, 0, and 0. Similarly, duplication analysis revealed that segmental duplications were the main reason for HSDs in plant species. Physicochemical properties suggest that dicotyledonous HSD1s and HSD5s were mainly acidic. The monocotyledonous HSD1s and HSD2s and the dicotyledonous HSD2s, HSD3s, HSD4s, and HSD6s were mainly basic, implying that HSDs in plants may have a variety of functions. Cis-regulatory elements and expression analysis revealed that HSDs in plants might have roles in several abiotic stresses. Due to the high expression of HSD1s and HSD5s in seeds, these HSDs in plants may have roles in fatty acid accumulation and degradation.
Keywords (EN)
  • HSDs

  • oil body

  • seed development

  • steroleosins

  • NADP(H)

  • SDR

License
cc-bycc-by CC-BY - Attribution
Open access date
June 15, 2023
Fundusze Europejskie
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