Abstract

BackgroundStarch is the main source of carbon storage in the Archaeplastida. The starch biosynthesis pathway (sbp) emerged from cytosolic glycogen metabolism shortly after plastid endosymbiosis and was redirected to the plastid stroma during the green lineage divergence. The SBP is a complex network of genes, most of which are members of large multigene families. While some gene duplications occurred in the Archaeplastida ancestor, most were generated during the sbp redirection process, and the remaining few paralogs were generated through compartmentalization or tissue specialization during the evolution of the land plants. In the present study, we tested models of duplicated gene evolution in order to understand the evolutionary forces that have led to the development of SBP in angiosperms. We combined phylogenetic analyses and tests on the rates of evolution along branches emerging from major duplication events in six gene families encoding sbp enzymes.ResultsWe found evidence of positive selection along branches following cytosolic or plastidial specialization in two starch phosphorylases and identified numerous residues that exhibited changes in volume, polarity or charge. Starch synthases, branching and debranching enzymes functional specializations were also accompanied by accelerated evolution. However, none of the sites targeted by selection corresponded to known functional domains, catalytic or regulatory. Interestingly, among the 13 duplications tested, 7 exhibited evidence of positive selection in both branches emerging from the duplication, 2 in only one branch, and 4 in none of the branches.ConclusionsThe majority of duplications were followed by accelerated evolution targeting specific residues along both branches. This pattern was consistent with the optimization of the two sub-functions originally fulfilled by the ancestral gene before duplication. Our results thereby provide strong support to the so-called “Escape from Adaptive Conflict” (EAC) model. Because none of the residues targeted by selection occurred in characterized functional domains, we propose that enzyme specialization has occurred through subtle changes in affinity, activity or interaction with other enzymes in complex formation, while the basic function defined by the catalytic domain has been maintained.

Highlights

  • Starch is the main source of carbon storage in the Archaeplastida

  • For each family we identified paralogous genes maintained after duplication events that we matched to known compartmental or functional specialization

  • We detected several instances of positive selection accompanying compartmentalization or functional specializations along the two branches emerging from duplication events at various steps during the evolution of the starch biosynthesis pathway

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Summary

Introduction

Starch is the main source of carbon storage in the Archaeplastida. The Starch Biosynthesis Pathway (SBP) emerged from cytosolic glycogen metabolism shortly after plastid endosymbiosis and was redirected to the plastid stroma during the green lineage divergence. We combined phylogenetic analyses and tests on the rates of evolution along branches emerging from major duplication events in six gene families encoding SBP enzymes. Starch is a storage polysaccharide made of α-1.4-glucans with α-1.6 branches [1]. Starch is found mostly in lineages derived from primary plastid endosymbiosis: the Archaeplastida. A majority of the enzymes in the Starch Biosynthesis Pathway (SBP) are derived from members of the eukaryotic glycogen metabolism pathway. ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase and Granule Bound Starch Synthase I were acquired through endosymbiotic gene transfer from the plastid ancestor. Archaeplastidal pullulanases are distinctively polyphyletic and were acquired from diverse unidentified proteobacterial sources

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