The Mitochondrial Iron-Regulated (MIR) gene is Oryza genus specific and evolved before speciation within the Oryza sativa complex
Main conclusion The MIR gene is not an Oryza sativa orphan gene, but an Oryza genus-specific gene that evolved before AA lineage speciation by a complex origination process. Rice ( Oryza sativa L.) is a model species and an economically relevant crop. The Oryza genus comprises 25 species, with gen...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Planta 2020-04, Vol.251 (5), p.94-94, Article 94 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Main conclusion
The
MIR
gene is not an
Oryza sativa
orphan gene, but an
Oryza
genus-specific gene that evolved before AA lineage speciation by a complex origination process.
Rice (
Oryza sativa
L.) is a model species and an economically relevant crop. The
Oryza
genus comprises 25 species, with genomic data available for several
Oryza
species, making it a model for genetics and evolution. The
Mitochondrial Iron-Regulated
(
MIR
) gene was previously implicated in the
O. sativa
Fe deficiency response, and was considered an orphan gene present only in rice. Here we show that
MIR
is also found in other
Oryza
species that belong to the
Oryza sativa
complex, which have AA genome type and constitute the primary gene pool for
O. sativa
breeding. Our data suggest that
MIR
originated in a stepwise process, in which sequences derived from an exon fragment of the
raffinose synthase
gene were pseudogenized into non-coding, which in turn originated the
MIR
gene de novo. All species with a putative functional
MIR
gene conserve their regulation by Fe deficiency, with the exception of
Oryza barthii
. In
O. barthii
, the
MIR
coding sequence was translocated to a different chromosomal position and separated from its regulatory region, leading to a lack of Fe deficiency responsiveness. Moreover, the
MIR
co-expression subnetwork cluster in
O. sativa
is responsive to Fe deficiency, evidencing the importance of the newly originated gene in Fe uptake. This work establishes that
MIR
is not an orphan gene as previously proposed, but a de novo originated gene within the genus
Oryza
. We also showed that
MIR
is undergoing genomic changes in one species (
O. barthii
), with an impact on Fe deficiency response. |
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ISSN: | 0032-0935 1432-2048 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00425-020-03386-2 |