TY - JOUR
T1 - Phylogenetic relationships and protein modelling revealed two distinct subfamilies of group II HKT genes between crop and model grasses
AU - Hanchapola Appuhamilage, Chandima
AU - Francki, M.G.
AU - Belzile, F.
PY - 2016/5/18
Y1 - 2016/5/18
N2 - © 2016 Published by NRC Research Press.Molecular evolution of large protein families in closely related species can provide useful insights on structural functional relationships. Phylogenetic analysis of the grass-specific group II HKT genes identified two distinct subfamilies, I and II. Subfamily II was represented in all species, whereas subfamily I was identified only in the small grain cereals and possibly originated from an ancestral gene duplication post divergence from the coarse grain cereal lineage. The core protein structures were highly analogous despite there being no more than 58% amino acid identity between members of the two subfamilies. Distinctly variable regions in known functional domains, however, indicated functional divergence of the two subfamilies. The subsets of codons residing external to known functional domains predicted signatures of positive Darwinian selection potentially identifying new domains of functional divergence and providing new insights on the structural function and relationships between protein members of the two subfamilies.
AB - © 2016 Published by NRC Research Press.Molecular evolution of large protein families in closely related species can provide useful insights on structural functional relationships. Phylogenetic analysis of the grass-specific group II HKT genes identified two distinct subfamilies, I and II. Subfamily II was represented in all species, whereas subfamily I was identified only in the small grain cereals and possibly originated from an ancestral gene duplication post divergence from the coarse grain cereal lineage. The core protein structures were highly analogous despite there being no more than 58% amino acid identity between members of the two subfamilies. Distinctly variable regions in known functional domains, however, indicated functional divergence of the two subfamilies. The subsets of codons residing external to known functional domains predicted signatures of positive Darwinian selection potentially identifying new domains of functional divergence and providing new insights on the structural function and relationships between protein members of the two subfamilies.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84977589393
U2 - 10.1139/gen-2016-0035
DO - 10.1139/gen-2016-0035
M3 - Article
C2 - 27203707
SN - 0831-2796
VL - 59
SP - 509
EP - 517
JO - Genome
JF - Genome
IS - 7
ER -