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The role of promiscuous molecular recognition in the evolution of RNase-based self-incompatibility in plants. | LitMetric

The role of promiscuous molecular recognition in the evolution of RNase-based self-incompatibility in plants.

Nat Commun

The Robert H. Smith Institute of Plant Sciences and Genetics in Agriculture, Faculty of Agriculture, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, P.O. Box 12, Rehovot, 7610001, Israel.

Published: June 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how biological networks, specifically in plant self-incompatibility systems, evolve to prevent self-fertilization through complex molecular interactions between female and male proteins.
  • A new theoretical framework is introduced that allows for more interactions between proteins and recognizes the importance of diversity in mating partners, which previous models overlooked.
  • The findings reveal that this promiscuity in molecular recognition promotes the formation of different "classes" within the population and indicates potential applications of the framework in other biological systems.

Article Abstract

How do biological networks evolve and expand? We study these questions in the context of the plant collaborative-non-self recognition self-incompatibility system. Self-incompatibility evolved to avoid self-fertilization among hermaphroditic plants. It relies on specific molecular recognition between highly diverse proteins of two families: female and male determinants, such that the combination of genes an individual possesses determines its mating partners. Though highly polymorphic, previous models struggled to pinpoint the evolutionary trajectories by which new specificities evolved. Here, we construct a novel theoretical framework, that crucially affords interaction promiscuity and multiple distinct partners per protein, as is seen in empirical findings disregarded by previous models. We demonstrate spontaneous self-organization of the population into distinct "classes" with full between-class compatibility and a dynamic long-term balance between class emergence and decay. Our work highlights the importance of molecular recognition promiscuity to network evolvability. Promiscuity was found in additional systems suggesting that our framework could be more broadly applicable.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11161657PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-49163-7DOI Listing

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