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In Planta Recapitulation of Isoprene Synthase Evolution from Ocimene Synthases

Authors :
Claudio Varotto
Urska Vrhovsek
Alberto Algarra Alarcon
Enrico Barbaro
Francesco Loreto
Jia Xu
Mingai Li
Luca Cappellin
Violeta Velikova
Silvia Carlin
Li, M
J, Xu
A Algarra, Alarcon
S, Carlin
E, Barbaro
L, Cappellin
V, Velikova
U, Vrhovsek
Loreto, F
C, Varotto
Source :
Molecular Biology and Evolution
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2017.

Abstract

Isoprene is the most abundant biogenic volatile hydrocarbon compound naturally emitted by plants and plays a major role in atmospheric chemistry. It has been proposed that isoprene synthases (IspS) may readily evolve from other terpene synthases, but this hypothesis has not been experimentally investigated. We isolated and functionally validated in Arabidopsis the first isoprene synthase gene, AdoIspS, from a monocotyledonous species (Arundo donax L., Poaceae). Phylogenetic reconstruction indicates that AdoIspS and dicots isoprene synthases most likely originated by parallel evolution from TPS-b monoterpene synthases. Site-directed mutagenesis demonstrated invivo the functional and evolutionary relevance of the residues considered diagnostic for IspS function. One of these positions was identified by saturating mutagenesis as a major determinant of substrate specificity in AdoIspS able to cause invivo a dramatic change in total volatile emission from hemi- to monoterpenes and supporting evolution of isoprene synthases from ocimene synthases. The mechanism responsible for IspS neofunctionalization by active site size modulation by a single amino acid mutation demonstrated in this study might be general, as the very same amino acidic position is implicated in the parallel evolution of different short-chain terpene synthases from both angiosperms and gymnosperms. Based on these results, we present a model reconciling in a unified conceptual framework the apparently contrasting patterns previously observed for isoprene synthase evolution in plants. These results indicate that parallel evolution may be driven by relatively simple biophysical constraints, and illustrate the intimate molecular evolutionary links between the structural and functional bases of traits with global relevance.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15371719 and 07374038
Volume :
34
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Biology and Evolution
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8a63e632abff8797e39796ad2a0a92e8