Expansion of the MutS Gene Family in Plants.

bioRxiv

Unidad de Genómica Avanzada, Centro de Investigación y de Estudios Avanzados del Instituto Politécnico Nacional, Irapuato, Gto, México.

Published: July 2024

The gene family is distributed across the tree of life and is involved in recombination, DNA repair, and protein translation. Multiple evolutionary processes have expanded the set of genes in plants relative to other eukaryotes. Here, we investigate the origins and functions of these plant-specific genes. Land plants, green algae, red algae, and glaucophytes share cyanobacterial-like and genes that presumably were gained via plastid endosymbiotic gene transfer. was subsequently lost in some taxa, including seed plants, whereas was duplicated in Viridiplantae (i.e., land plants and green algae) with widespread retention of both resulting paralogs. Viridiplantae also have two anciently duplicated copies of the eukaryotic gene (i.e., and ) and acquired via horizontal gene transfer - potentially from a nucleocytovirus. Despite sharing the same name, "plant " is not directly related to the gene known as in some fungi and animals, which may be an ancestral eukaryotic gene acquired via mitochondrial endosymbiosis and subsequently lost in most eukaryotic lineages. There has been substantial progress in understanding the functions of and / in plants, but the roles of the cyanobacterial-like and genes remain uncharacterized. Known functions of bacterial homologs and predicted protein structures, including fusions to diverse nuclease domains, provide hypotheses about potential molecular mechanisms. Because most plant-specific MutS proteins are targeted to the mitochondria and/or plastids, the expansion of this family appears to have played a large role in shaping plant organelle genetics.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11275761PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.07.17.603841DOI Listing

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