Differentiation of the two rice subspecies indica and japonica: a Gene Ontology perspective.

Funct Integr Genomics

Department of Biological Sciences, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, IL, 60115, USA.

Published: April 2007

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines the polymorphism levels of genes in cultivated rice (Oryza sativa), specifically comparing the japonica and indica subspecies using the Gene Ontology (GO) system to classify gene functions.
  • Researchers found that protein-coding sequences exhibited significant nonrandom distribution in polymorphism categories, while intron sequences showed random distribution, indicating potential evolutionary pressures on certain gene functions.
  • Further analysis of the genes indicated that categories with above-average polymorphism often displayed signs of positive selection, particularly in genes related to defense compounds, cell walls, signaling, and transcription factors.

Article Abstract

Cultivated rice (Oryza sativa) is comprised of two subspecies: japonica and indica. Polymorphism levels between putative homologues were determined for genes whose japonica homologue had been classified into functional categories using the Gene Ontology (GO) system. Genes were partitioned into below-average and above-average polymorphism groups, and then the set of genes having each GO term was checked for the randomness of its distribution into these polymorphism groups using a series of False Discovery Rate (FDR) tests. The robustness of the conclusions was enhanced by employing different cutoff values and sequence samplings in the FDR tests. Significant nonrandom polymorphism distributions were found for protein-coding sequences in many GO categories. In contrast, a random distribution for nearly all GO terms was seen with intron sequences. These results were extended by measuring the nonsynonymous to synonymous codon usage ratio (dN/dS) using a permutation test, which showed that some above-average polymorphism GO categories also had a high proportion of genes with a dN/dS ratio greater than one, suggesting positive selection on these GO categories during indica-japonica differentiation. An analysis of predominant gene names in the significant GO categories divided them into four functional classes: production of defense-related compounds, cell wall, cell signaling, and transcription factors.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10142-006-0036-1DOI Listing

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