Abstract

PINOID is a kinase belonging to the AGCVIII family, which regulates the polar distribution of PIN proteins and plays an important role in plant geotropism. However, the origin and evolutionary history of this gene family is not fully known. In this study, we identified 79 similar sequences across 17 plant species genomes (PINOID, D6PK, PINOID2, “hypothetical kinase”). Our results show that the AGCVIII kinase family may have originated from related “Hypothetical Kinases” that come out sister to the rest of the gene family members. These kinases differentiated their functions are found in different plant classes: D6PK in moss and PINOID and PINOID2 evolving in angiosperms including the pioneer plant Amborella trichopoda. Our study investigates the evolution of PINOID kinases from a phylogenetic perspective giving us insight into how this important plant signal transduction network switch evolved to play a fundamental and important function in plant growth and development. We highlight the importance of whole genome duplications and dispersed duplications as opposed to tandem duplications in the evolution of this gene family.

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