Abstract
BackgroundHistone lysine methylation plays an important role in plant development and stress responses by activating or repressing gene expression. Histone lysine methylation is catalyzed by a class of SET-domain group proteins (SDGs). Although an increasing number of studies have shown that SDGs play important regulatory roles in development and stress responses, the functions of SDGs in apple remain unclear.ResultsA total of 67 SDG members were identified in the Malus×domestica genome. Syntenic analysis revealed that most of the MdSDG duplicated gene pairs were associated with a recent genome-wide duplication event of the apple genome. These 67 MdSDG members were grouped into six classes based on sequence similarity and the findings of previous studies. The domain organization of each MdSDG class was characterized by specific patterns, which was consistent with the classification results. The tissue-specific expression patterns of MdSDGs among the 72 apple tissues in the different apple developmental stages were characterized to provide insight into their potential functions in development. The expression profiles of MdSDGs were also investigated in fruit development, the breaking of bud dormancy, and responses to abiotic and biotic stress; the results indicated that MdSDGs might play a regulatory role in development and stress responses. The subcellular localization and putative interaction network of MdSDG proteins were also analyzed.ConclusionsThis work presents a fundamental comprehensive analysis of SDG histone methyltransferases in apple and provides a basis for future studies of MdSDGs involved in apple development and stress responses.
Highlights
Histone lysine methylation plays an important role in plant development and stress responses by activating or repressing gene expression
Identification and syntenic analysis of SET-domain group (SDG) proteins in apple A total of 67 SDG members were identified in the apple genome, and they were further assigned to the 17 apple chromosomes; five of them could not be assigned (Fig. 1)
The duplication events among MdSDG members are connected by lines, and the tandem duplicated gene pairs are marked by red lines (Fig. 1)
Summary
Histone lysine methylation plays an important role in plant development and stress responses by activating or repressing gene expression. Histone lysine methylation plays an important role in plant development and stress responses by regulating gene expression and is catalyzed. The N-terminal region of the core histones ( called the “histone tail”) is covalently modified by various posttranslational modifications, including acetylation, methylation, phosphorylation, ubiquitination, and sumoylation [4, 5]. These modifications can regulate gene expression by affecting chromatin structure and accessibility [6, 7]. The SET-domain group (SDG) protein family is the only known group of HMTs in plants
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