Abstract

Respiratory burst oxidase homologs (RBOHs), which catalyze the production of superoxide from oxygen and NADPH, play key roles in plant growth and development, hormone signaling, and stress responses. Compared with extensive studies in model plants arabidopsis and rice, little is known about RBOHs in other species. This study presents a genome-wide analysis of Rboh family genes in jatropha (Jatropha curcas) as well as the comparison with castor bean (Ricinus communis), another economically important non-food oilseed crop of the Euphorbiaceae family. The family number of seven members identified from the jatropha genome is equal to that present in castor bean, and further phylogenetic analysis assigned these genes into seven groups named RBOHD, -C, -B, -E, -F, -N, and -H. In contrast to a high number of paralogs present in arabidopsis and rice that experienced several rounds of recent whole-genome duplications, no duplicate was identified in both jatropha and castor bean. Conserved synteny and one-to-one orthologous relationship were observed between jatropha and castor bean Rboh genes. Although exon-intron structures are usually highly conserved between orthologs, loss of certain introns was observed for JcRbohB, JcRbohD, and RcRbohN, supporting their divergence. Global gene expression profiling revealed diverse patterns of JcRbohs over various tissues. Moreover, expression patterns of JcRbohs during flower development as well as various stresses were also investigated. These findings will not only improve our knowledge on species-specific evolution of the Rboh gene family, but also provide valuable information for further functional analysis of Rboh genes in jatropha.

Highlights

  • Respiratory burst oxidase, first identified in human phagocytic cells, is a key enzyme that catalyzes the production of superoxide from oxygen and NADPH (Sumimoto, 2008)

  • A survey of the jatropha genome resulted in seven loci that were proven to encode Rboh genes

  • Considering the extensively functional analysis performed in arabidopsis, JcRbohB, JcRbohC, JcRbohD, JcRbohE, JcRbohF, and JcRbohH were named after their best orthologs in arabidopsis, whereas JcRbohN represents a novel group member with no ortholog in arabidopsis as well as rice

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Summary

Introduction

Respiratory burst oxidase, first identified in human phagocytic cells, is a key enzyme that catalyzes the production of superoxide from oxygen and NADPH (Sumimoto, 2008). In higher plants, this enzyme is known as respiratory burst oxidase homolog. Evidence showed that RBOHs play key roles in growth, development, hormone signaling, and stress responses of plants (Marino et al, 2012; Kaur et al, 2014; Angelos & Brandizzi, 2018; Wang et al, 2018; Zou & Yang, 2019a). Compared with extensive studies in arabidopsis, research in other plants is still in its infancy

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