Abstract

BackgroundPHOSPHATE1 (PHO1) gene family members have diverse roles in plant growth and development, and they have been studied in Arabidopsis, rice, and Physcomitrella. However, it has yet to be described in other plants. Therefore, we surveyed the evolutionary patterns of genomes within the plant PHO1 gene family, focusing on soybean (Glycine max) due to its economic importance.ResultsOur data show that PHO1 genes could be classified into two major groups (Class I and Class II). Class I genes were only present and expanded in dicotyledonous plants and Selaginella moellendorffii; Class II genes were found in all land plants. Class I sequence losses in other lineages may be attributed to gene loss after duplication events in land plant evolution. Introns varied from 7 to 14, and ancestral state reconstruction analyses revealed that genes with 13 introns were ancestral, thus suggesting that the intron loss was a chief constituent of PHO1 gene evolution. In the soybean genome, only 12 PHO1-like genes (GmaPHO1) were detected at the mRNA level. These genes display tissue-specific or tissue-preferential expression patterns during soybean plant and fruit development. Class I genes were more broadly expressed than Class II. GmaPHO1 genes had altered expression in response to salt, osmotic, and inorganic phosphate stresses.ConclusionsOur study revealed that PHO1 genes originated from a eukaryotic ancestor and that two major classes formed in land plants. Class I genes are only present in dicots and lycophytes. GmaPHO1genes had diverse expression patterns in soybean, indicating their dramatic functional diversification.

Highlights

  • PHOSPHATE1 (PHO1) gene family members have diverse roles in plant growth and development, and they have been studied in Arabidopsis, rice, and Physcomitrella

  • AthPHO1 has been suggested to play an important role in the stomatal response to abscisic acid (ABA); its expression in guard cells is induced by ABA treatment [17]

  • Class I genes were expanded in dicotyledonous plants and Selaginella moellendorffii, while Class II genes were found in all land plants

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Summary

Introduction

PHOSPHATE1 (PHO1) gene family members have diverse roles in plant growth and development, and they have been studied in Arabidopsis, rice, and Physcomitrella. PHOSPHATE1 (PHO1) genes play diverse roles in plant growth and development; for example, some are important for inorganic phosphate (Pi) sensing and transport. The PHO1 homolog xenotropic and polytropic retrovirus receptor 1 (XPR1) in mammals functions as a receptor [18]; and the suppressor of yeast Gα protein deletion (SYG1) protein is involved in the mating pheromone signal transduction pathway [19]. Such functions suggest that PHO1 genes have diversified over time

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