Abstract

GRAS genes belong to a gene family of transcription regulators that function in the regulation of plant growth and development. Our knowledge about the expansion and diversification of this gene family in flowering plants is presently limited to the herbaceous species Arabidopsis and rice. Numerous aspects, including the phylogenetic history, expansion, functional divergence and adaptive evolution await further study, especially in woody tree species. Based on the latest genome assemblies, we found 106, 34 and 60 putative GRAS genes in Populus, Arabidopsis and rice, respectively. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that GRAS proteins could be divided into at least 13 subfamilies. Tandem and segmental duplications are the most common expansion mechanisms of this gene family, and their frequent joint action may explain the rapid expansion in Populus. Site-specific shifts in evolutionary rates might be the main force driving subfamily-specific functional diversification. Adaptive evolution analysis revealed that GRAS genes have evolved mainly under purifying selection after duplication, suggesting that strong functional constraints have a bearing on the evolution of GRAS genes. Both expressed sequence tags (EST) and microarray data revealed that GRAS genes in Populus have broad expression patterns across a variety of organs/tissues. Expression divergence analyses between paralogous pairs of GRAS genes suggested that the retention of GRAS genes after duplication could be mainly attributed to substantial functional novelty such as neo-functionalization or sub-functionalization. Our study highlights the expansion and diversification of the GRAS gene family in Populus and provides the first comprehensive analysis of this gene family in the Populus genome.

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